Subscribe to Test & Measurement World
RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email
Average Rating:
  • (3)
    Rate this:
  • Opaque Windows

    Brad Thompson, Contributing Technical Editor -- Test & Measurement World, 6/1/2008 2:00:00 AM


    E-mail

    In his Test & Measurement World blog for April 14, 2008, my colleague Martin Rowe suggested that our readers should sign a petition requesting that Microsoft extend support for Windows XP past the published cutoff date of June 30, 2008. Created by InfoWorld, the petition so far has accumulated more than 180,000 signatures but will probably have all the impact of a June bug hitting Microsoft’s windshield.

    Having spent the better part of a week resurrecting my PC and reinstalling Windows after a complicated failure cascade involving a motherboard problem that caused a hard-disk crash in a RAID-1 array, accompanied by unexplainable damage to the master hard drive’s Windows system image, I’m not in the mood to adopt Microsoft’s latest offering.

    Today, my PC provides me with a workspace, a toolkit, and test-instrument control. I shouldn’t have to care about what’s going on inside the operating system nor worry about anything except the work that I’m performing. And I can’t afford to replace certain older software packages that Windows Vista won’t support.

    In an ideal world, Microsoft’s next operating system would feature improved (and understandable) error messages, modular design, and detailed diagnostics that locate and facilitate replacement of damaged parts of the operating system. Put another way, the PC and its operating system should resemble a full-featured oscilloscope. If half of a scope’s screen goes blank, you can consult a troubleshooting manual and check various things—connectors, power-supply voltages, and circuit subassemblies—to isolate the failure to a particular subcircuit or component.

    Does any Linux version or the current Macintosh operating system appear logically designed and easier to troubleshoot? I doubt it, but I’m experimenting with Linux. In the meantime, I’ll continue to use Windows 2000 and build on my understanding of its failure modes and foibles. But I’m not interested in starting anew with yet another Microsoft operating system.

    Average Rating:
  • (3)
    Rate this:
  • RSS
    Reprints/License
    Print
    Email
    Talkback
    Similar Content from T&MW

    No related content found.

    »MORE

    • 0 rated items found.

    Datasheets.com Electronic Parts & Inventory Search

    185 million searchable parts
    • Part Number
    • Description
    • Inventory
    • Products
    • Manufacturers
    Canon Resource Center

    Featured Company


    Most Recent Resources

    Featured Job On
    Scroll for More Jobs
    Advertisement
    More Content
    • Blogs
    • Webcasts

    Sorry, no blogs are active for this topic.

    » VIEW ALL BLOGS RSS
    • All


    Advertisement
    Advertisement
    About Us   |   Advertising Info   |   Site Map   |   Contact Us   |   FREE Subscription
    © 2011 UBM Electronics . All rights reserved.
    Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

    Feedback Form
    Feedback Analytics