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Port's Pot
Wednesday, 30 April 2008
And before that, I was a buggy whip snapper...
Mood:  suave
Now Playing: Lost Horizons - Out of work writers make up new stories for their curriculum vittles (tragic humor)
Topic: Growth Charts

I like reading Joe Wilcox's column at Microsoft-Watch because I enjoy watching trends and reversals. Joe is an honest hearted guy who is willing to say so when he sees he's been driving on the service road instead of the highway.

So, this article here about SaaS Sasses Windows is a turning point I've been anticipating for a long time. Now that the revelation is in, perhaps we all might be able to have some fun dissecting this pickled frog labelled "Microsoft technology" in detail.

But FIRST, snookywookums, you need to do a little homework. I know you're just a baby, but, the sooner you start learning about the new world, the less disrupted your old world will be.

Joe noted this article in his blog:

I suggest you sharpen your pencil, stick it in your ear all the way until it pokes out the other side (just to let in a little fresh air) and READ.
In the meantime, I'll start stacking in some reading material.
We'll have this place looking like a real life cultist reading room before you know it.

Posted by Portuno Diamo at 3:18 PM EDT
Updated: Wednesday, 30 April 2008 3:32 PM EDT
Tuesday, 29 April 2008
Slap It and Give It a Name.
Mood:  don't ask
Now Playing: Wah Wah Wah - Gnashing of teeth amid hedge fund brokers (juvenile crime)
Topic: The Squirts

See how fresh this one is? Only 8 seconds old. Still got some slime on it. Yech.

http://messages.finance.yahoo.com/Stocks_%28A_to_Z%29/Stocks_V/threadview?m=tm&bn=33693&tid=3639&mid=3640&tof=1&frt=1

Re: Here's what vcsy.ob bagholders are saying about portapotty

portuno_diamo    8seconds ago    

Smells like money.

Why isn't Microsoft able to do what the rest of the industry is able to do? Why is Microsoft the only company VCSY is suing for infringing 744? Why is Microsoft the only company out of the giants unable to build anything useful on the web?

Why is Microsoft still billing Silverlight 2.0 as a video player when it's supposed to be a graphic user interface (GUI) for web applications when AIR engineers are "marching on".

I submit it is the fact Microsoft is afraid to transgress 521 out in the open. If so, that means the internet work in Microsoft that might be like 744 is also not being done. Thus we see delays in Dynamics and Live. And Silverlight remains a video player.

And all Ozzie can deliver is an RSS pipeline feeding XML from server to client. But, as posters on a technology forum said when they saw Feedsync: too bad Microsoft doesn't have a processing agent that can work those RSS feeds.

And is EVERYTHING a feed on the semantic web? Sounds like Microsoft (perhaps from the 8 years of Ballmer enforced discipline) treat every "conversation" in one direction. First it was SilkRoute and that was a uni-directional feed. Then there's SmartClient which is clunky with COM. Then there's Silverlight but no-where near what a real web application platform should be. Starved features tiptoeing around a ragged edge while Adobe addresses and produces.

Microsoft has the most experience of all in building software. Why can't they?


Posted by Portuno Diamo at 11:08 PM EDT
Updated: Wednesday, 30 April 2008 3:33 PM EDT
For those who wear their socks out:
Mood:  lazy
Now Playing: Paddling in the Skivvys - Girls' socker team gets beat badly and enjoys it. (adult thought)
Topic: Memories

I was surprised to see this post when it was first made. I thought I might put it here to show I'm not the only crack-pot in the building.

http://ragingbull.quote.com/mboard/boards.cgi?board=VCSY&read=197812+&submit=Go&endat=212474&numposts=60

By: arthurarnsley
18 Sep 2007, 09:13 PM EDT
Msg. 197812 of 197812
(This msg. is a reply to 197797 by shavisirons.)

shavisirons - You mentioned, "Yo and others here, with their techno knowledge, seem to think VCSY's patents hold the key to revolutionizing IP, or whatever, as we know it."

Shav, the moment VCSY announced a computer program application in an arbitrary framework that would separate Content, Form and Function of a computer application so that each may be accessed or modified separately I knew a Software/Internet revolution was coming based on the VCSY concept. This program was patented by VCSY and is now the '744 patent. If I had never heard of Portuno or Robert or if the Raging Bull VCSY board had never existed the result for me would still be the same. I've never been a programmer but I did work In IBM Field Engineering for 22 years and must have absorbed more than I realized. At least I absorbed enough to recognize unbridled genius when I saw it.

I am not surprised that the revolution is at hand. I am only surprised that it took so long to get here. Six years ago I assumed that in two years the old techniques would be replaced by the new. I didn?t know that VCSY could not start selling the product back then as doing so would establish a very low value for the product and get it out into the public forum before VCSY had patented control of it. VCSY executives did know that they had to contain their product until the patent was approved. Only after patent approval could they start selling licenses for it. Meanwhile, the thieves did break in and steal.

The bright spot here is that the patent is approved, the product has never been sold by VCSY and the Company has apparently been watching Microsoft for years surreptitiously developing their own programs using VCSY?s product.

My own unbridled enthusiasm for the ?744 product and other VCSY products has caused me to go totally overboard in buying VCSY shares at the exclusion of all else, especially in the last three years. When Microsoft tries to steal VCSY products they are directly stealing from the value of my stock portfolio. They are stealing from me.

Microsoft stealing from other small companies is nothing new. I?ve seen several battles go to court with Microsoft eventually paying off. I?m confident Microsoft will be told by the court to pay VCSY for license and use of the ?744 patent for both past and future use of it.

Being in the Eastern Texas Federal Court does not harm VCSY?s position but it should not make any difference which district court the lawsuit is in. VCSY has an extremely strong case, strong management and one of the strongest Intellectual Property Attorneys in the world.

Best wishes

Arthur


Posted by Portuno Diamo at 10:19 PM EDT
Updated: Tuesday, 29 April 2008 10:27 PM EDT
What did Farmer Brown Plant?
Mood:  hug me
Now Playing: Pumpkin Patch Pooch - Giant squash plant makes grease-spot out of family pet (excessive go and lots of poo)
Topic: Memories

Before we dive off in the potty pool here, let's take a glance back in the day to the kind of visions Bill Gates had for XML based technology.

I know this is seeing the world from Microsoft's view and what's that got to do with anything, but there's a reason for looking at how Bill Gates viewed the future. It's what he expected to leave as a legacy... not what he currently got stuck with.

Note the January 2003 lifting of the code name "Palladium" and the use of "now referred to as the next-generation secure computing base for Windows".

Microsoft was ready to take this to the field. The marketing posture was cast in that phrase. Have they brought that to the field? Not yet. 

But THIS, was back in the day when Bill was feeling free and easy.

http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2002/Jul02/07-24NETDayUmbrellaPR.mspx

Bill Gates Details Vision for Phase Two of .NET and Future of Web Services

Microsoft Announces Release Candidate 1 of Windows .NET Server, Previews Next Wave of Platform Technologies

EDITORS' UPDATE, January 25, 2003 -- Microsoft has discontinued use of the code name "Palladium." The new components being developed for the Microsoft® Windows® Operating System, which are described in this article under the code name "Palladium," are now referred to as the next-generation secure computing base for Windows.

REDMOND, Wash., July 24, 2002 — Microsoft Corp.'s Chairman and Chief Software Architect Bill Gates today outlined the company's vision and road map for phase two of Microsoft® .NET, the company's two-year-old software initiative for connecting information, people, disparate systems and devices. This next phase continues to build upon the XML-based interoperability of Web services, broadening the benefits to individuals, developers and organizations of all sizes. These efforts encompass software investments to help break down the technological barriers between people, systems and organizations as well as barriers to greater knowledge, trust and everyday use.

This next wave of technology investment builds upon today's Web services foundation to provide tangible benefits for the IT industry and goes beyond it to support dynamic business relationships between companies. Likewise, information workers will realize even greater productivity gains than they have in the past decade as Web services unlock critical information and enable them to make better business decisions. At the same time, Microsoft is providing a platform for innovation and opportunity that not only serves the needs of customers, but also of partners and the industry as a whole.

"In just two years, we've gone from debut to delivery of the first generation of Microsoft .NET. It's incredibly gratifying to see both its technology and its value to customers proven in the marketplace," Gates said during a briefing for press and analysts. "The broad industry consensus around XML-based Web services gives us a tremendous foundation for breakthrough work in many areas. The focus of phase two of .NET is on software that creates connected customer experiences that transform the way people live and work."

Breaking Down Barriers to a Connected World

Building upon the first phase of .NET that included the delivery of Visual Studio® .NET, a comprehensive suite of developer tools launched earlier this year, as well as the broad support for Extensible Markup Language (XML) and Web services across Microsoft's line of .NET Enterprise Servers, Jim Allchin, group vice president of the Platforms Group, outlined five areas of focus for the future. These areas capture the breadth of the company's future platform investments, all focused on breaking down technological barriers:

Breaking down barriers between systems and organizations. Tackling the problem of making it easier to connect different businesses and computer systems in a networked world, Microsoft described how it is advancing XML-based Web services working with the industry to provide a comprehensive foundation for distributed computing. Specifically, Microsoft demonstrated technologies that advance the XML Web services foundation to meet the requirements of businesses connecting their own disparate systems securely and reliably. Allchin also announced release candidate 1 (RC1) for Windows® .NET Server, which includes native support for the .NET Framework and will prove to be the most productive platform available for developing, deploying and managing XML Web services. Windows .NET Server will be one of the first products of the second phase of .NET.

Breaking down barriers to trust. Identifying security, privacy and reliability as critical to realizing trustworthy computing, Microsoft detailed key investments to advance these goals, including "Palladium," a recently disclosed effort to create a new architecture for building trusted hardware and software systems. Microsoft also demonstrated forthcoming Microsoft Passport privacy and consent tools offering users more control of personal information in their digital world. In particular, Allchin demonstrated new technologies that will allow Passport users to easily and explicitly control their personal information on a site-by-site basis, enabling a richer and more private online experience.

Breaking down barriers between people. Every communications mechanism -- e-mail, phone, instant messaging, group collaboration tools -- forces individuals to adapt to its approach. Microsoft's vision for next-generation communications uses Web services to enhance digital meetings and group collaboration and provides information-agent technology to unify and manage disparate communications mechanisms. Microsoft demonstrated its future direction for real-time communications and collaboration (RTC) server software code-named "Greenwich."

Breaking down barriers to knowledge. As the volume of digital information continues to explode, a key goal is to help people not only keep up with the growth, but to effectively harness and distill information into knowledge and appropriate action. Microsoft showcased tools and technologies that will help developers and IT professionals unlock information and more readily analyze, visualize, share and act on that information. Highlighted technologies included the next version of SQL Server (TM) , code-named "Yukon," with technologies that will be the first step toward Microsoft's vision of unified data, as well as the forthcoming SQL Server Notifications Services for SQL Server 2000, which provides a highly scalable notifications system to alert individuals about new or updated data across a variety of delivery channels.

Breaking down barriers to everyday use. Creating next-generation digital user experiences that are more useful and compelling and that work simply is a goal for users and technologists alike. Today, millions of people listen to or download their favorite music from the Internet and more than 35 percent of U.S. households take and store pictures with a digital camera and PC. Yet, it is still a challenge to seamlessly tie together the variety of experiences in a way that is useful and intrinsic to users and their needs. Microsoft highlighted key upcoming technologies designed to advance the quality of the user experience, including Windows XP Media Center Edition.

Customer Experiences

During the briefing, Microsoft executives Eric Rudder and Jeff Raikes each addressed how technology investments in the next phase of .NET will benefit a number of customer audiences by delivering an experience very different than the past.

Developers

Eric Rudder, senior vice president of the Developer and Platform Evangelism Division, provided an overview of future versions of Microsoft's flagship developer tool, Visual Studio .NET. Rudder highlighted forthcoming versions of Visual Studio "Everett" edition and Visual Studio for "Yukon." The products will be designed to take advantage of Windows .NET Server and "Yukon," respectively. Rudder also demonstrated Web Matrix, an easy-to-use Web development tool recently released to the Web, which has had tremendous response from the broader developer community as evidenced by more than 100,000 downloads.

IT Professionals

.NET is aimed squarely at three of the biggest IT pain points: connecting disparate systems inside the organization and with business partners, addressing the applications backlog through improved developer productivity, and helping IT "do more with less" in the current economic climate. Rudder also outlined a renewed focus on deployment and operations, including efforts to use Web services infrastructure to make management intrinsic to all applications as well as integrated management solutions that combine development, deployment and operations into a unified process for managing the applications life cycle and delivering customer benefit. The company demonstrated for the first time its "Server Manager Project," which builds on the capabilities of Microsoft Operations Manager and Application Center to deliver end-to-end service management of Web-based applications to allow quicker analysis and resolution of problems.

Information Workers

Jeff Raikes, group vice president of the Productivity and Business Services Group, discussed the challenges that businesses and information workers are currently facing -- such as productivity, organizational and IT efficiency, and disconnected islands of data -- and outlined the key investments Microsoft is making to address these issues. Raikes announced version two of the Office XP Web Services Toolkit, tools that use XML to unlock the data within organizations in a way that is useful and relevant for information workers. Raikes also articulated a vision for the future of the various software investments that companies make on behalf of their information workers, including productivity applications, business applications and collaboration software. Each of these categories is evolving to take advantage of XML Web services and will drive better decision-making, collaboration and productivity.

Consumers

Throughout the day, Microsoft demonstrated how XML Web services will enable a broad array of rich and compelling next-generation user experiences that will break down the barriers to trust, everyday use and people. Specifically, Microsoft showed how forthcoming Passport technology will enable users to have more fine-grained control over how their personal information is managed online as well as how Windows XP Media Center Edition will bring the power of the Windows-based PC to home entertainment. In addition, Microsoft demonstrated future technologies that will enable a unified treatment of people and groups across a range of applications. Microsoft also demonstrated future technology that integrates XML-based Web services, allowing for new visualization and presentation via an immersive, multimedia experience.

Microsoft also highlighted MSN® 8, the newest version of MSN, which will debut this fall, to deliver a smart client with rich offline capabilities that incorporate building-block services such as Passport and .NET Alerts. In addition, MSN 8 will feature dramatically improved spam protection, online safety and security features such as parental-control features and virus protection, as well as a personalized user experience through a new My MSN home page. And, because it deploys updated software seamlessly in the background with availability as a subscription service independent of underlying access, MSN 8 is an example of software as a service in both the technical and business sense.

Enabling Partner Opportunity

Microsoft's technology investments go beyond creating new customer experiences and extend to incredible opportunity for the industry in general and industry partners in particular. Microsoft outlined the principles of the company's long-standing commitment to industry partners, including low cost of doing business and how .NET provides the industry's best total cost of ownership benefits by enabling partners to take advantage of existing skills, investments and assets; faster time to market via an integrated suite of highly productive developer tools and consistent programming across all tiers of an application; and increased revenue opportunities through relevant solutions for IT professionals, business decision-makers and information workers in any industry. Such principles foster the development of a dynamic, healthy partner ecosystem comprising business application vendors, systems integrators, service providers and hardware vendors of all types and sizes.

Founded in 1975, Microsoft (Nasdaq "MSFT") is the worldwide leader in software, services and Internet technologies for personal and business computing. The company offers a wide range of products and services designed to empower people through great software -- any time, any place and on any device.

Microsoft, Visual Studios, Windows and MSN are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corp. in the United States and/or other countries.

The names of actual companies and products mentioned herein may be the trademarks of their respective owners.

Note to editors: If you are interested in viewing additional information on Microsoft, please visit the Microsoft Web page at http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/ on Microsoft's corporate information pages. Web links, telephone numbers and titles were correct at time of publication, but may since have changed. Journalists and analysts may contact Microsoft's Rapid Response Team for additional assistance.


Posted by Portuno Diamo at 12:33 AM EDT
Updated: Tuesday, 29 April 2008 1:01 AM EDT
One Wonders What The Piddies Know.
Mood:  accident prone
Now Playing: Scraping Your Knuckles is a Drag - Troglodyte nuptials at swank casino (light irony)
Topic: Ultrasounds

What have we seen, snookywookums? Did we see the big bad Microsoft sit on its ballmers?

A poster on Yahoo gave me the idea of collecting Yahoo! posts and storing them here. They just get buried under tons of garbage posts by skeptics so here there are no skeptics. Just me and you, my little snookywookums widda widdle piddies.

Can't read? Download something like this http://www.naturalreaders.com/download.htm and you can let your computer explain it all.

So, check this space before long and you'll get a chance to organize your thoughts with greater serenity and comfort. And no nasty people to try to outshout.


Posted by Portuno Diamo at 12:10 AM EDT
Saturday, 29 March 2008
Somewhere over the rainbow.
Mood:  accident prone
Now Playing: Audrey's Ashes - Cremated Landlady Returns for Rent (Mild Violence)
Topic: Prenatal Visits


How's my little snooky wookums? 

Have a bm lately? 

You know, sweety, I've been corking along trying to decide whether to return to "writing", as it were, rather than commentary. And It's been such a difficult decision simply because I do love commentary. But, commentary helps only those interested in one subject; the supposed subject matter of the commented field. "Writing", as such, may appeal to a broad spectrum of folks. Some who casually find you addressing their interests at some particular accidental intersection of idea and transaction. Some who haven't got a clue what you're talking about but, they love the feel of the community.

And, since I'm such an altruistic guy (Portuno Diamo means "to give" according to the language of those in the place where the Romans used to be) I have an urge to help the great unwashed; those who want to understand what they see around themselves but only know what they see. If all you  know is what you see, you're going to be victim to those who can hide in the brush a few feet away and become invisible to you.

They can manipulate you from that vantage point, and you don't even know you're the victim of a flimflam... whatever that is. Or, they can eat you.

You're like all "But, it's so much hard work to stay educated and vigilant".

True. But, if you had somebody or some group think about your problems while you walk fat dumb and happy along the path of life, just think how much free time you would have to make the world a better place. At least, that's what you would do on Oprah's show. In real life, you would be lazing on your boat sipping a juice joint.

And you're all indignant like because I've impuned your motives. Well, ok, you have the feelings and those things are real, so, the things you want to do would surely fall out should you be free to devote yourself to charity and philanthropy like Bill Gates and Chuck Feeney can. Sure. No doubt.

But, there's a problem there. Mister Gates and Mister Feeney have people to take care of all the mundane things of life and that costs money - the people and the mundanes.

So, you need a way to leverage your knowledge and your interests for free. Well, friend and neighbor, the internet has just that kind of liberating power. It's supposed to be as liberating as Guttenberg's press, but we mostly find ourselves beign wrapped in just more and more paper.

That's because the internet is up to now a display and interaction interface. Essentially, it's what you would have if you bought an application that was really pretty, but, upon firing the thing up, you find the application doesn't do anything new.

That's Content and Format without a demonstrable leap in Functionality. It's what we all call a hot check promising more than what's just been written on the paper... in this case, interface.

It's the kind of thing we've all watched Bill Gates do; promise a digital decade and produce a decimation. Since Mister Gates is leaving Microsoft for greener charity, we can safely assume his contribution to Microsoft is done. The latter years of his principality has been content and format with no function. All talk, lots of style but no do.

Mister Feeney may have suffered the same malaise of motivation. We do not know as Mister Feeney's efforts are as secret and inscrutible as any master disguiser. So we wait to see the legacy of General Atlantic. So far, his picks and puts are all seemingly wise moves, but, there's not theme to the pudding. We don't know if the man can cook.

The common person needs an assessment of what the big boys are doing to formulate a plan so as not to get stepped on. Let's just call this funky-skinned blogsite a way to see what's out in the trees...just beyond our discerning. Yeah. That's the ticket.

So, we wish both gentlemen well in all the good deed doing they may take on.

Just remember. It's not spelled philantrophy.


Posted by Portuno Diamo at 12:45 PM EDT
Updated: Tuesday, 29 April 2008 12:19 AM EDT

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