microsoft

Interview on Make Web Not War

A recent interview focusing on my involvement in open source development (mostly centering around my work with Make Web Not War website:

Make Web Not War - Interview with Jeff Geerling
Interview - Jeff Geerling - Open Source Catholic

In the interview, I speak about my involvement in Drupal, and my appreciation for a variety of different open source projects. I'm glad Microsoft is putting some resources behind sites like 'Make Web Not War', and I hope they continue to reach out into different developer communities.

They still have a stigma of being closed and have tech that's hard to develop for (which, in some cases, is true), but that could change (it is changing, but very slowly)...

Xbox 360 Red Ring of Death - Repaired! (in St. Louis)

Achievement Unlocked - Red Ring of Death (Xbox 360 T-Shirt)About a month ago, when I was settling down with my wife to watch a quick episode of Cake Boss via Netflix, I turned on the Xbox 360, but all the sudden, I received (for the third time on this Xbox) a nice present from Microsoft: the dreaded red ring of death (RROD).

"Not to fear!" said I, "I'll get a free warranty repair, like I did the first two times this happened!"

Little did I know. Luckily, however, I found a guy via Craigslist who repairs Xboxes and lives in St. Peters, MO (not too far from here!).

He has a small website (Xbox 360 Repair) with a little information about his repair process, but the bottom line is that he charges only $35 (and nothing—$0—if he can't fix it) to take a sad Xbox 360 and turn it into a happy Xbox 360. And he does the repair right—he uses a solder reflow machine to fix the broken connections between the Xbox 360's GPU and the motherboard, then turns up the fan speed to compensate for the overworked GPU.

Just wanted to post the information here for (a) my own future reference—the thing will likely break again!—and (b) for anyone else in the St. Louis area who has a broken Xbox 360. Because for some people it's an addition... and who wants to live in the real world when Xbox LIVE is calling? ;-)

As if It Couldn't Get Any Worse... [Windows 7 Launch Party]

As if Microsoft couldn't get any worse... introducing the dumbest video ever made, "Hosting Your Own Windows 7 Launch Parties." And the video's actually serious, which is the worst (saddest?) part.

Some nice responses to this horrid video:

Microsoft Windows 7 Launches Thursday. Meh.

"We're living in a different world today," Microsoft Vice President Tami Reller said in an interview with CNET News.

The world is a lot different. That's for sure. It's not the same world that Bill Gates successfully launched Windows 95 into, causing a great stir in the world of personal computing. Anti-Microsoft prejudices aside, I don't know if Microsoft knows this 'new world.'

It's a world where flashy and appealing advertising, and a 'hip' CEO makes your software and hardware seem cool (e.g. Apple). It's a world where free as in beer is the norm, and things don't have to be perfect, but if they work okay and solve problems, people stick around (e.g. Google, Twitter). It's a world where office and work communication and collaboration are no longer tied to a certain computer or operating system—it's all done online (e.g. everyone but Microsoft).

Do they know what they're doing? I don't know. Vista was a flop, that's for sure. Windows 7 is much more solid, stable and secure, of course... it's basically Vista, but done correctly. But that doesn't matter so much. What matters is that Microsoft's operating system works well, gets out of the user's way, and costs nothing, or as close to nothing as possible.

Mac OS X 10.0 and Windows 7 Desktop Shots

The OS now works well, so Microsoft gets a point there. But Windows 7 is still not refined enough or kind enough to be a serious operating system—it feels to me somewhat like Mac OS 10.1 felt like—nice and stable compared to 10.0, but still way too gaudy, with candy-stripe lines, bright bubbly colors, and too much 'bling' to do serious work. Also, Microsoft loses big time on the cost aspect. A guy like me couldn't survive without business premium, and that would set me back more than two Hamiltons. The only software packages I have ever spent that much money on are Final Cut Express and Adobe Creative Suite—and those programs replaced multi-thousand dollar solutions in days past, so in essence they're dirt cheap.

C'mon Microsoft: up the ante. I'm not going to buy Office ever again, since I work in the cloud, with local backups, so you're going to have to get me on your OS. That's not going to happen unless you hit 3/3. Give Apple something to mock, and maybe I'll consider you.

 

Subscribe to Reviews Subscribe to Articles Subscribe to All Content Subscribe to Blog Subscribe to RSS - microsoft