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VCSY - A Laughing Place #2
Saturday, 7 April 2007
Maybe it's at a different funeral home
Mood:  quizzical
Topic: Off the Wall Speculation

 Uhhhh... after reading through I think Mister Graham thinks he's figured it out. He has the timeframe correct and he recognizes the exodus of XMLhttpRequest but if he thinks buying the Web 2.0 startups no matter how cheap they can be had for now, he's still behind the curve.

http://www.networkworld.com/community/?q=node/13561

Microsoft is Dead

April 2007

A few days ago I suddenly realized Microsoft was dead. I was talking to a young startup founder about how Google was different from Yahoo. I said that Yahoo had been warped from the start by their fear of Microsoft. That was why they'd positioned themselves as a "media company" instead of a technology company. Then I looked at his face and realized he didn't understand. It was as if I'd told him how much girls liked Barry Manilow in the mid 80s. Barry who?

Microsoft? He didn't say anything, but I could tell he didn't quite believe anyone would be frightened of them.

Microsoft cast a shadow over the software world for almost 20 years starting in the late 80s. I can remember when it was IBM before them. I mostly ignored this shadow. I never used Microsoft software, so it only affected me indirectly—for example, in the spam I got from botnets. And because I wasn't paying attention, I didn't notice when the shadow disappeared.

But it's gone now. I can sense that. No one is even afraid of Microsoft anymore. They still make a lot of money—so does IBM, for that matter. But they're not dangerous.

When did Microsoft die, and of what? I know they seemed dangerous as late as 2001, because I wrote an essay then about how they were less dangerous than they seemed. I'd guess they were dead by 2005. I know when we started Y Combinator we didn't worry about Microsoft as competition for the startups we funded. In fact, we've never even invited them to the demo days we organize for startups to present to investors. We invite Yahoo and Google and some other Internet companies, but we've never bothered to invite Microsoft. Nor has anyone there ever even sent us an email. They're in a different world.

What killed them? Four things, I think, all of them occurring simultaneously in the mid 2000s.

The most obvious is Google. There can only be one big man in town, and they're clearly it. Google is the most dangerous company now by far, in both the good and bad senses of the word. Microsoft can at best limp along afterward.

When did Google take the lead? There will be a tendency to push it back to their IPO in August 2004, but they weren't setting the terms of the debate then. I'd say they took the lead in 2005. Gmail was one of the things that put them over the edge. Gmail showed they could do more than search.

Gmail also showed how much you could do with web-based software, if you took advantage of what later came to be called "Ajax." And that was the second cause of Microsoft's death: everyone can see the desktop is over. It now seems inevitable that applications will live on the web—not just email, but everything, right up to Photoshop. Even Microsoft sees that now.

Ironically, Microsoft unintentionally helped create Ajax. The x in Ajax is from the XMLHttpRequest object, which lets the browser communicate with the server in the background while displaying a page. (Originally the only way to communicate with the server was to ask for a new page.) XMLHttpRequest was created by Microsoft in the late 90s because they needed it for Outlook. What they didn't realize was that it would be useful to a lot of other people too—in fact, to anyone who wanted to make web apps work like desktop ones.

The other critical component of Ajax is Javascript, the programming language that runs in the browser. Microsoft saw the danger of Javascript and tried to keep it broken for as long as they could. [1] But eventually the open source world won, by producing Javascript libraries that grew over the brokenness of Explorer the way a tree grows over barbed wire.

The third cause of Microsoft's death was broadband Internet. Anyone who cares can have fast Internet access now. And the bigger the pipe to the server, the less you need the desktop.

The last nail in the coffin came, of all places, from Apple. Thanks to OS X, Apple has come back from the dead in a way that is extremely rare in technology. [2] Their victory is so complete that I'm now surprised when I come across a computer running Windows. Nearly all the people we fund at Y Combinator use Apple laptops. It was the same in the audience at startup school. All the computer people use Macs or Linux now. Windows is for grandmas, like Macs used to be in the 90s. So not only does the desktop no longer matter, no one who cares about computers uses Microsoft's anyway.

And of course Apple has Microsoft on the run in music too, with TV and phones on the way.

I'm glad Microsoft is dead. They were like Nero or Commodus—evil in the way only inherited power can make you. Because remember, the Microsoft monopoly didn't begin with Microsoft. They got it from IBM. The software business was overhung by a monopoly from about the mid-1950s to about 2005. For practically its whole existence, that is. One of the reasons "Web 2.0" has such an air of euphoria about it is the feeling, conscious or not, that this era of monopoly may finally be over.

Of course, as a hacker I can't help thinking about how something broken could be fixed. Is there some way Microsoft could come back? In principle, yes. To see how, envision two things: (a) the amount of cash Microsoft now has on hand, and (b) Larry and Sergey making the rounds of all the search engines ten years ago trying to sell the idea for Google for a million dollars, and being turned down by everyone.

The surprising fact is, brilliant hackers—dangerously brilliant hackers—can be had very cheaply, by the standards of a company as rich as Microsoft. So if they wanted to be a contender again, this is how they could do it:

  1. Buy all the good "Web 2.0" startups. They could get substantially all of them for less than they'd have to pay for Facebook.

  2. Put them all in a building in Silicon Valley, surrounded by lead shielding to protect them from any contact with Redmond.
I feel safe suggesting this, because they'd never do it. Microsoft's biggest weakness is that they still don't realize how much they suck. They still think they can write software in house. Maybe they can, by the standards of the desktop world. But that world ended a few years ago.

I already know what the reaction to this essay will be. Half the readers will say that Microsoft is still an enormously profitable company, and that I should be more careful about drawing conclusions based on what a few people think in our insular little "Web 2.0" bubble. The other half, the younger half, will complain that this is old news.



Notes

[1] It doesn't take a conscious effort to make software incompatible. All you have to do is not work too hard at fixing bugs—which, if you're a big company, you produce in copious quantities. The situation is exactly analogous to the writing of bogus literary theorists. Most don't try to be obscure; they just don't make an effort to be clear. It wouldn't pay.

[2] In part because Steve Jobs got pushed out by John Sculley in a way that's rare among technology companies. If Apple's board hadn't made that blunder, they wouldn't have had to bounce back.



Comment on this essay.

 


Posted by Portuno Diamo at 1:11 PM EDT
Updated: Saturday, 7 April 2007 1:12 PM EDT
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Tuesday, 3 April 2007
Yes, Virginia, there is a borg...
Topic: Off the Wall Speculation

 And resistance is futile.

... oh darn I forgot the url. How borg am I? I need a tuneup on the nanocircuits and I think I'm going to get one of those eye doohickeys. No eye-boogers with those things I bet...

http://www.programmersheaven.com/c/MsgBoard/read.asp?Board=810&MsgID=357099&Setting=A9999F0001 

Re: mountains and movement
By: Portuno_Diamo on April 03, 2007 at 9:46:04 AM
Read 1 times (Updated daily).
Reply    Edit    Delete message   Bookmark Thread   

This message was edited by Portuno_Diamo at 2007-4-3 9:46:4

: This message was edited by willowstump at 2007-4-3 8:30:11

:
: :
: : : http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/memoranda/fy2007/m07-11.pdf
: : : : :
: : : : :
: : "... IA is a client application that resides with the Microsoft operating system ..."
: : : : : http://www.vcsy.com/press/releases.php?year=2007&month=03&day=14&num=00
: : : : :
: : : : : What do we make of that?---a few ideas come to mind...$$$$
: : : : : _____________________________________________
: : : : :
: : : : : Press blurb on the above.
: : : : : http://news.com.com/The+feds+weigh+in+on+Windows+security/2100-7348_3-6172158.html?tag=nefd.lede
: : : : : ____________________________________
: : : :
: : : : :
: : : : :
: : : : :
: : : : :
: : : : ----- oh could they be talking about are our baseline
: : : : GENO200
: : :
: : : ______________
: : :
: : :we have had a number of discussions regarding delay and the security products-- and the idea of signing up prospective end users---as stated in the press . Wouldnt it be a hoot if the delay we've been trying to get a hold of was none other than the repeated delays of the Vista operating system??--you gotta admit--thats worth a smile. Alot may have been connected in this regard--Vista--the Networx contracts--Saas rollout and acceptance---all with delays since the beginning of announcements this time last year of the security suite.----
: : :
: : : From one of the press releases..."...VCSY may register prospective customers..."----
: : : they started projecting instead of selling from the very beginning--we just dont know on what they were waiting.
: : : -------------------------------------------
: :
: : Anybody have thoughts about this. Microsoft and fog (or dog) may have described something similar for a few years but the company is what it is. No way does a major security rollout occur without Vista inclusion.
: :
: : "...The NSA's impact may be felt widely. Windows commands more than 90 percent of the worldwide market share in desktop operating systems, and Vista, which is set to be released to consumers Jan. 30, is expected to be used by more than 600 million computer users by 2010, according to Al Gillen, an analyst at market research firm International Data..."
: : http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/01/08/AR2007010801352.html
: :
: : ____________________________________
:
: Thinking of the past 12 months wait being related to Vista debut is---well enough has been said.---It makes some sense---what is now available addresses the requirements like a girdle.
:
: http://blog.tmcnet.com/regulations/security/nist-omb-tout-major-windows-policy-fixes-for-federal-agencies.asp
:
: Port---whats an 'image'
:
: "....April 20th, 2007 – OMB and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) will make available XP and Vista images that hardware and software vendors can use for testing..."
: ___________________________

w - an 'image' in a general sense is a way of describing a copy of a single body of data loaded into memory for computer operation. For the most part, the file can be any body of data for any purpose but it would get pretty confusing to refer to various different purposed files as an 'image' so you will find image generally refers to an Operating System unit.

Short story: You can either load 1000 OS configurations one at a time by hand or you can load 1 OS configuration on a machine and then copy the image of that installation on to the 999 other same machines. Big job done quick.

If you have something able to tell what machines are the same configuration sand which machines are of a different configuration class you can target just the right machines and do management of the machine/software base at a higher abstraction.

VCSY technology provides a base for other vendors to provide knowledge and capabilities. This is the beginning of machine managed machines on a large scale.

Prognosis: The operation was a success. The patient will die before long. Or we can just pull the plug.

+++++++++++++++++++++

Long story:
Copies of the image stored on a hard drive can be loaded into random access memory for use provided you know the image is going to be residing on hardware that is compliant with all the configured settings in that particular image.

Copies of that image, for instance, will have all the setup and alignment capabilities necessary for operation already loaded in the image. So it is theoretically possible to open the OS software box, load the OS on a server (jump thru all the hoops that you as an installer are required to do) then copy that single image to all the remaining servers in your facility.

If any server becomes corrupted it can be reloaded with a fresh image of that OS and on it without harm to the data. This is only possible in situations where all the computers in the entire system are of the same configuration as the first OS installed computer (even on little setup wizard check box difference or 'delta').

I believe the President's directive on standard configuration computers is intended to do a number of things of which standardized images are a critical goal. However... consider a world (especially a government world) where EVERY computer out there was the same configuration because some catnap in the acquisition branch doesn't want to have to be confused. Maybe in Stalin's world but not in the real one, honey.

However. If you had a system wide watcher that would recognize an authorized valid 'standard' installation and the subsequently distributed images.

This system would allow only the same types of configurations for that particular user group. The authorized user hierarchy would decide who gets what kind of machine in each department/group/coffee-clatch. Once decided and configured so, current state XML documents would provide human governance over the machines in an automated fashion.

Thus the system would decide which user group an image was to go to, check the current status of those machines and verify all standard and current configurations, squirt the image on to the hardware memory (RAM or drive as needed - consider if you will being able to do this using web-based memory like Amazon S3 ( http://aws.amazon.com/s3 )) and off you would go with another computer installation ready for the user to use.

This is the only scenario I can think of that would make sense for the government to use the words 'standard configuration' beyond a small departmental strategery.

p-

NOTE: Info on memory. Considering the concept is being stretched by new devices and schemes this is only the beginning of what 'memory' can mean to a computer and a human. We are waiting for analog memory for true 'intelligence' to aggregate.

(RAM - random access http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Random_access_memory - or the processing chips in the computer intended to store data for use by the processing units. The 'hard drive memory' http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hard_disk and 'hybrid drive' http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hybrid_drive items are for long term storage.)


Some wiki info on software images:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single-system_image
The subject and the theoretical boundaries are so vast (especially when you talk about distributed schemes) so you should take your time and think through what the nice people are telling you here to begin with.

And before you slap the keys with delight to ask the question 'This sounds like StatePointPlus' yes it does but with other things attached to it as is the wont with VCSY's technology.

StatePointPlus + Empath + Enabler + SiteFlash could easily cobble together just such a system which becomes a template driven hardware configuration and software installation system gated for governance and validation by other automated features.

See how easy it is to build a brand new business platform by connecting stuff together?

Another note: 'image' generally refers to an Operating System. The word 'instance' is usually used to refer to an application or a document image. Image refers to the body of data contained in a slug of memory. Thus the transfer from drive to ram and ready to go operation in an instant is the prime attraction to image and instance management.

There is no reason, given the nature of tools IBM has in their arsenal from the Rational acquisition in speculated conjunction with such a system, IBM would not be able build systems capable of configuring departments (not just their hardware and operating systems but their applications and documents - in hours or minutes rather than days and weeks.) by push button from the administrators desk. By ONE pushbutton that is... This kind of problem solving on large scale demonstrates the power of arbitrary referencing and true virtualized performance. Those qualities empowered by enablement, interconnection and interoperation and massive affiliation provide a very scalable and manageable platform for building extremely large interoperative installations with minimal human care and oversight.

Connect the code words with their realities and VIOLA! Gimme a beer! you have organic computational evolutions.

Yes, Virginia. The machines will eat your mommy. Sleep tight.


Posted by Portuno Diamo at 1:32 PM EDT
Updated: Tuesday, 10 April 2007 2:59 PM EDT
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Sunday, 1 April 2007
Pommelgranite
Mood:  amorous
Topic: Off the Wall Speculation

http://images.google.com/images?q=pomegranate&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a&um=1&sa=N&tab=wi

The above is an example (not a particularly good one) of what some people would refer to as 'code'. As in 'speaking in code'. The amount of meaning in symbolic literacy is limited only by the imagination of the individual. Some simply know more what those signals mean thatn the average doberman. Birds and bees do it everyday and others feel left out because they can't imagine being a bee or a bird. They just sit there like a dog drooling on the patio.

 So if you come across language or images in word or 1kpicture you don't understand but a lot of others seem to understand perfectly don't feel alienated. You just need to be indoctrinated into treeforting and V watching.

 And remember; just because you don't understand the language of the birds and the bees doesn't mean things that peck and sting when you intrude are trying to screw everybody. 


Posted by Portuno Diamo at 12:46 PM EDT
Updated: Sunday, 1 April 2007 12:46 PM EDT
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Uhhh Yo Teach. Ovuh heya...I like saw the bat signal and all.
Mood:  cool
Topic: Off the Wall Speculation

Ye be peep he. Tired of the rat race. Escaped the home and found a duplex on the south side. Moved in with a blind woman with rug rats. If I don't move around alot she don't know I stays up in here. If I don't move around alot the rug rats think I'm furniture. Know what I mean? Some foo shorty tied theys baby to the dog and chased that around the neighborhood for hours. Little Baby had that little Lone Ranger hat on down around his ears tight with the string around his chin and all. Funny $#!@ homes. Looking like a old Roy Rogers movie.

I be stays up in heya fa shnotz. Drop me a cement any time. Shalom out. 

http://ragingbull.quote.com/mboard/boards.cgi?board=VCSY&read=180123
By: teachrcoach
29 Mar 2007, 12:22 AM EDT
    Msg. 180123 of 180466
Jump to msg. #  
Anyone know what happened to Rastamafoo? After reading many of his posts and posts by many of the other knowledgeable longs like RR, Beach, Arthur,etc., and after doing a little DD myself I decided to buy some shares(not a huge amount as I am a school teacher after all!). Did Rasta get tossed or is he back under another name?


(Voluntary Disclosure: ST Rating- Strong Buy; LT Rating- Strong Buy)


Posted by Portuno Diamo at 1:21 AM EDT
Updated: Sunday, 1 April 2007 1:38 AM EDT
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Wednesday, 28 March 2007
Check out THIS $#!@
Mood:  accident prone
Topic: Off the Wall Speculation

I've endured my share of phishing expeditions and I know what these people are talking about but I also am suspect of those who believe there should be an 'acceptable  code' for speech.

Do I REALLY need to climb up on the coffee table and make my 'we are all Spartacus' speech again?

 

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/6502643.stm 

Last Updated: Wednesday, 28 March 2007, 11:41 GMT 12:41 UK

Kathy Sierra went public on her fears in her blog

(me: Excerpts only. I can't stomach the entire thing on here. Imagine people so vile as to prohibit a person from speaking their mind and calling things as they are seen. Wow. And THEN you got people telling you they're going to kill you for what you write. Well thankee Jesus cause they'll be killing me for your name's sake cause I just cemented it to the wall here. Thankee.) 

Among those calling for a bloggers' code of conduct is Tim O'Reilly - one of the web's most influential thinkers.

Tim O'Reilly
The fact that there's all these really messed-up people on the internet is not a statement about the internet
Tim O'Reilly
He told BBC Radio Five Live that it could be time to formalise blogging behaviour.

"I do think we need some code of conduct around what is acceptable behaviour, I would hope that it doesn't come through any kind of [legal/government] regulation it would come through self-regulation."

While condemning the bloggers who issued the threats, Mr O'Reilly was keen that the whole blogosphere should not be tarred with the same brush.

"The fact that there's all these really messed-up people on the internet is not a statement about the internet. It is a statement about those people and what they do and we need to basically say that you guys are doing something unacceptable and not generalise it into a comment about this is what's happening to the blogosphere."


Posted by Portuno Diamo at 4:28 PM EDT
Updated: Wednesday, 28 March 2007 4:35 PM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink
Thursday, 22 February 2007
What could possibly happen? Hey y'all watch this!
Mood:  accident prone
Topic: Off the Wall Speculation

This from the VCSY Laughing Place at ProgrammersHeaven. 

 http://www.programmersheaven.com/c/MsgBoard/read.asp?MsgID=354461&Board=810&Setting=A9999F0001

Re: bet on the US Government.......what a hoot
By: Portuno_Diamo on February 22, 2007 at 12:43:07 PM

: : W - When is the IBM shareholder vote? I know I've seen it somewhere here.
: ____________________________________________________________________
: Hello Port! I believe this is the info that you were looking for:
:
: Item 8.01. Other Events.
: The Company will be asking IBM stockholders to approve amendments to our Certificate of Incorporation at our 2007 Annual Meeting that will lower all statutory supermajority voting thresholds now applicable to the Company under the New York Business Corporation Law. Under existing statutory voting provisions now applicable to the Company, the approval of two-thirds of all outstanding shares entitled to vote are presently required to effect each of the following extraordinary transactions:
: · a plan to merge IBM into another company or to consolidate our Company with another company;
: · to dispose of all or substantially all of our assets outside the ordinary course of business;
: · to effect a share exchange under which IBM would become a subsidiary of another company and its stock exchanged for the stock of that other company (IBM’s new parent); or
: · to dissolve.
: IBM has never sought to undertake any of these extraordinary actions, and does not anticipate doing so. However, as a result of the vote at the Company’s 2006 annual meeting on a stockholder proposal that asked IBM to lower all supermajority voting provisions and other considerations, the Board will recommend to IBM stockholders in the Company’s 2007 proxy statement that stockholders vote to approve four (4) separate management proposals. Approval of these proposals will implement the stockholder proposal in a manner consistent with New York State law. The four proposals, if approved, would add new provisions to the Company’s Certificate of Incorporation, lowering the existing statutory supermajority voting provisions on the four matters listed above to the lowest possible voting threshold; that is, a majority of all outstanding shares entitled to vote on each matter. There are no other statutory supermajority voting provisions now applicable to the Company that can be lowered. Full details relating to the amendments the Company will be recommending to stockholders will be set forth in the Company’s 2007 Definitive Proxy Statement, which is presently scheduled to be filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in early March 2007.
:
: Any speculation as to why IBM put out this 8-K and if there is a
: connection with us? There just has been many dots being connected
: lately with the technologies and timelines plus we seem to be
: uncovering things daily that could be connected. I myself feel as
: though we will hear something real soon! But this is just a hunch!
: Poscash
:

Pure Speculation:
My sense is IBM would be best served by merging their own corporate structure with all the structure of their technology partners they apparently signed on for this ride from 2001.

One of the largest hindrances to acquiring a company has to do with being able to integrate the company with the acquiring company in culture, workflow and values.

THAT is a human to human exercise and the physical constraints imposed on traveling and meeting ANYone in a different company applies enough friction within the process that much of the advantages to acquiring the company may be washed out by adopting and indoctrination.

IBM no doubt has partners who provide a wide variety of components, IP, patents, expertise that have gone in to making up what we see as the IBM WebWorld. Would IBM BUY all those partners to ensure a solid WebWorld for their customers over the future years? Why BUY? How can you affix a value to a disruptive technology and the many businesses that will derive just from the paradigm shift.

Cannibalism of old model technologies would bring known services into the new medium, further rejuvenating obsolete technologies with existing die-hard user bases (like what WordPerfect was).

So, would YOU have sold Microsoft to IBM back in, say 1986? Really? And, how would IBM have been able to afford to pay what MSFT would have said they would be really worth?

Nope. I think VCSY and other technologies clumped together in WebWorld should be fed to the children first so your adult customers don't get sick.

The technology projected by XML enabled information and architecture theories will be able to virtualize anything to anything (beginning with the crude obvious analogs in service advancing to increasingly sophisticated re-uses of existing systems - the "find the diamond" exercise becomes a search for the most efficient and powerful system pieces from all available samples and cobble an increased efficiency out of free legacy code.) so that partners and customers may be viewed from the company clients and vendors as a single entity while preserving their own cultures, workflow and workstyle and still integrating by virtue of virtualization. In this way and with the power of convergence, "a company" takes on new meaning. It's my impression IBM is going to demonstrate the technological shift by impacting their own business in an unimaginable way.

How big could businesses aggregate to in this manner? With each "home office" as little more than a shack in the jungle, yet, able to present the same corporate branding and synergy, a "business" can evolve into profitable families and cultures rather than having dragged the common denominator to the point where "business" means a monolith tapping their toes with impatience at the snaring of a life's work in a "licensing" dispute for a ware.

IF YOU ARE SO C:!###$$$ INEPT AT PRODUCING A PRODUCT AND ACTUALLY MAKING THINGS MAYBE YOU COULD SERVICIZE YOUR POOL OF TALENT SO AT LEAST some OF YOUR PARTNERS AND THE REST OF THE WORLD MAY GET SOME VALUE OUT OF ALL THE r&d!

How hard is it to do this XML stuff, really? I must be crazy because it's easier for me to see an XML implementation diagrammed out than a proprietary to other proprietary workflow.

Every piece of software is a response to a need. When people are able to eliminate the expert middleman, they will build the implementations they need and not a stitch more fluff and expensive redundancy.

Holy $#!@ what have we found?
---
end article


Posted by Portuno Diamo at 2:53 PM EST
Updated: Thursday, 22 February 2007 7:38 PM EST
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Tuesday, 19 December 2006
And Furtermore...
Mood:  celebratory
Topic: Off the Wall Speculation

So now we see WinFS slinking off into the dark corners o Microsoft's R&D space.

December 18th, 2006
Can Microsoft’s ‘Harmonica’ create P2P harmony across all devices?
Posted by Mary Jo Foley @ 10:19 am
http://blogs.zdnet.com/microsoft/?p=157

Ever since Microsoft decided in June 2006 to ax the standalone version of its WinFS uber file system, the company has been noticeably silent about its data synchronization plans. But that doesn't mean the company has given up on its ambitious strategy to synchronize data across both Windows and non-Windows-based devices and services.

In fact, there is a team inside the SQL Server database unit that is building an end-to-end, P2P data synchronization platform, code-named "Harmonica," that is designed to fulfill that task, according to sources close to the company.

Unlike some of Microsoft's other "anytime, anywhere" schemes, Harmonica doesn't seem to be complete vaporware. Microsoft's Windows Live Favorites synchronization capability is based on Harmonica, sources said.

Microsoft does have very ambitious plans for Harmonica, however. The ultimate goal is to have Harmonica provide the multimaster mesh underlying everything from the Zune MP3 player, to Microsoft's small-business services. If Microsoft can execute on its plan, existing and forthcoming Windows Live services will make extensive use of Harmonica to allow users to synchronize photos, e-mail, documents, music and video across applications, sources said. And the company is hoping to get third-party software and service developers to buy in, by providing them with a toolkit to allow them to make their offerings Harmonica-compatible, sources said.

In addition to providing the underlying Harmonica infrastructure, Microsoft also is working on consumer implementations of the Harmonica technology, sources said. One such implementation will be a file-sync utility developed by Microsoft, sources said. Perhaps this will be some kind of brand-new version of the SyncToy PowerToy.

Here's Microsoft's description of the Vista version of SyncToy:

"There are files from all kinds of sources that we want to store and manage. Files are created by our digital cameras, e-mail, cell phones, portable media players, camcorders, PDAs, and laptops. Increasingly, computer users are using different folders, drives, and even different computers (such as a laptop and a desktop) to store, manage, retrieve and view files. Yet managing hundreds or thousands of files is still largely a manual operation…. SyncToy, a free PowerToy for Microsoft Windows Vista, is an easy to use, highly customizable program that helps users to do the heavy lifting involved with the copying, moving, and synchronization of different directories."

P2P synchronization originally was slated to be a WinFS deliverable. A few years ago, Microsoft's goal was to integrate WinFS into Vista and Longhorn Server. Then, Microsoft was promising WinFS would be made available as an out-of-band add-on release to Windows XP, Windows Vista and Longhorn Server users at unspecified future date.

One of the sample applications that Microsoft made available as part of early WinFS builds was code-named "Rave." Rave sounds almost identical to Harmonica. According to a blog post by one of the lead WinFS team members, dated September 2005:

"WinFS Synchronization handles all the platform level details of peer to peer change enumeration and application, conflict detection, automatic conflict resolution and conflict logging.These are described in the WinFS SDK (software development kit).This represents a huge investment by Microsoft that makes it easy for an application to distribute its data. Rave was built on top of the platform level synchronization services. Rave implements a full mesh network topology to connect every user to every other user of a synchronized folder using WinFS Synchronization."

It's not clear how Microsoft currently plans to deliver Harmonica. Will it be an integrated component of "Katmai," the next version of SQL Server? Or a technology layer that will be part of future versions of Windows client and server?

Microsoft officials did not respond to a request for more information on Harmonica by the time this blog entry was posted. Officials said a couple of months ago not to expect Microsoft to discuss Katmai until some time in 2007.

Update: Microsoft's PR team provided the following statement regarding "Harmonica" at the end of the day on December 18: "Microsoft has no comment andhas nothing to announce at this time."

 (see Mary Jo's blog for additional information)


Posted by Portuno Diamo at 12:57 PM EST
Updated: Tuesday, 19 December 2006 12:58 PM EST
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Sunday, 8 October 2006
A painful and dangerous injury...
Topic: Off the Wall Speculation

Previously on ProgrammersHeaven. 

Re: As A Laughing Place is on life support...
By: Portuno_Diamo on October 08, 2006 at 5:02:24 PM
Read 1 times (Updated daily).

: I thought this appropriate.
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: First, a bit of nostalgia for the old time information. Hallelujah.
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http://72.14.253.104/search?q=cache:qq9_adxBfNwJ:sec.edgar-online.com/2001/04/02/0001015402-01-000902/Section16.asp+alung+terry+washburn&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=1
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: Always segment an individual's work with the biggest in his ranking.
:
: Then wonder why he "left". Was it because he got kicked out or is that a "spin"?
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: Because SOMEbody has come into some monies.
:
:
http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct/show/NCT00288964;jsessionid=14C624D69B73FB8FC78E069D3D134691?order=1
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: We will come across situations in life where we could have used something like this.
:


Something in here?

http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/tribune-review/business/s_186001.html
A fresh breath of air
By Dave Copeland
PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Wednesday, March 24, 2004

The technology for treating lung patients has been in use for more than 50 years in hospitals. Of the one million people placed on a ventilator machine each year, 10 percent develop pneumonia, and 80 percent need to be sedated to allow for insertion of the ventilator tube into their breathing canals.

Patients can't eat or talk when on a ventilator. And of the patients who develop pneumonia, 50 percent die.

But for its purpose, and for the time being, it's the best technology available.

A start-up company on the South Side is working to change that.

ALung Technologies Inc. is developing a new technology -- esstenially an artificial lung -- that its founders hope will replace the ventilator, which is so intrusive some patients sign legal documents that essentially say they would rather die than be ventilated.

"The bottom line advantage is it provides lung support while allowing your lung to rest and heal. A ventilator takes a lung that's already damaged and makes it work harder," said Dr. William Federspiel, a co-founder of ALung and director of the University of Pittsburgh's artificial lung research laboratory. "The analogy we always use is that if you break your leg, the doctor doesn't tell you to go out and start immediately exercising."

Federspiel, an engineer, connected with Dr. Brack G. Hattler in the mid-1990s and began working on a prototypes of the artificial lung. Hattler had some early patents from work on trying to develop an alternative to ventilation in the 1980s.

Hattler said he began working on prototypes back in the 1980s. All of the time since then, he said, has been spent improving the product and getting it ready for use in humans.

"We essentially made the devices in our own garages. We tested them in animals and, low and behold, the concept worked -- but not very efficiently," Hattler said. "What we showed at that time is that the concept was correct, but it wasn't at a level where it would be significant for patients."

Working together, Hattler and Federspiel developed what has become known as the Hattler Catheter. Inserted into a major artery through the upper thigh, the catheter feeds oxygen to the heart and takes carbon dioxide away, allowing an injured or damaged lung to heal.

In addition to improving patient comfort, the Hattler Catheter has some distinct advantages: patients are usually on mechanical ventilation for an average of 11 days at an average cost of $53,885, while the doctors expect the average patient on the catheter to be on the device for six days, at a cost of $24,493.

With about one million patients requiring ventilation each year in the United States, the two doctors recruited Nicholas Kuhn as chief executive and president of ALung to help raise capital and tap into an estimated $3 billion market.

"We've been pretty successful in positioning the company as a spin-out of the university," Federspiel said. "It's an interesting story about how it often takes a couple of different personalities with different skill sets to get a product off the ground."

In December, ALung moved into a new office in the Terminal Building on the South Side. The company has grown from two employees to 10, and expects to have 27 employees by next year.

"The university has no mechanism for taking technology and making it a reality where it would be available to patients, and that's really where it needs to be," Hattler added. "It's to the credit of the university that they have seen the necessity of allowing these ideas to be spun out and developed by industry. Hopefully, we'll be part of the Pittsburgh success story."

Kuhn has helped to raise close to $4 million to date. ALung expects to need $10 million to $12 million more to complete human trials, which are scheduled to begin this year. The company could gain regulatory approval and move the Hattler Catheter to market as early as 2006.

Kuhn also has helped the company tap into another potential market. He has been working with the Department of Defense to develop military applications. A soldier injured in a chemical attack, for example, could be placed on the catheter until his lungs had healed.

"If we had had this product ready before the last war, the army probably would have wanted to order a significant number of catheters," Kuhn said. "A soldier shot in the chest when he's wearing a flak jacket often gets a bruise on his lungs, which can cause fluid to build up. The catheter could be used in a situation like that."

"We think we can save hundreds of thousands of lives a year with this," Hattler said. "To be able to do that -- without even thinking about a company -- is very exciting."

Dave Copeland can be reached.

------------------

end

Happy hunting all.


Posted by Portuno Diamo at 8:09 PM EDT
Updated: Sunday, 8 October 2006 8:10 PM EDT
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