Practical Technology

for practical people.

March 4, 2008
by sjvn01
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SCO CEO McBride gets ready to leave

It’s been an open secret that controversial SCO CEO Darl McBride was being forced out. Now, in an interview with the Salt Lake City Tribune, McBride admits that his days at SCO are numbered.

In the interview, McBride said, “Clearly when we draw up a battle plan for what we’ve been working for the last several years, trying to get SCO’s intellectual rights fought through in the courts and the marketplace, the endgame didn’t have this sort of outcome for me personally.”

It was under McBride’s leadership that SCO launched its kamikaze attack on IBM, Novell, and the Linux community and business at large on the grounds that Linux had violated SCO’s Unix IP (intellectual property) rights. SCO was never able to prove any of its IP claims in courts. What finally drove the company into bankruptcy was the continued decline of its Unix business, the costs of its never-ending lawsuits and—the final straw—a U.S. District Court ruling that Novell, and not SCO, actually owned Unix’s IP.

Stephen Norris & Co. Capital Partners has offered to bail SCO out with a $5 million injection of cash and loans of up to an additional $95 million. One of its conditions, though, is that McBride resign immediately after the deal is completed and approved by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Delaware.

In response, McBride told the Salt Lake Tribune, “I realized that by my winning the fight of staying engaged at SCO, it may be the huge detriment of shareholders, customers and employees.”

McBride agreed to this interview after SCO filed its Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Reorganization Plan Feb. 29, which includes the Stephen Norris & Co. buyout.

The capital venture company seems intent on continuing SCO’s Linux lawsuits, even though there appears to be no realistic chance of success. Some have speculated that Stephen Norris & Co., with its close ties to Bill Gates, wishes to pursue the legal actions simply as a way of annoying the Linux companies and spreading FUD about Linux.

No matter what the motivation or what actions the new SCO will take, it will be doing so without McBride. However, he won’t be leaving empty-handed. In addition to his CEO pay, McBride received a 70 percent bonus in 2007 on his base salary of $265,000. His total compensation for the year that SCO sank into bankruptcy was $571,220.

A version of this story first appeared in Linux-Watch.

March 4, 2008
by sjvn01
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Vista SP1: Still lagging behind the Linux desktop

I had really thought that Vista SP1 would be an improvement. I didn’t think it would be a big improvement, but still that it would be more competitive with Windows XP and the modern Linux desktop. I was wrong.

I’ve now been working with Vista SP1, the so-called RTM (release to manufacturing) version, for about two weeks. I am amazed at how little improvement I see in this so-called major update.

Last year, I took a long, hard look at Vista versus desktop Linux, testing SimplyMEPIS 6, in a four-part series. In the months since then, we’ve learned that Microsoft lied about how much hardware was needed to run Vista in an affair that we’re now calling Vistagate.

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March 3, 2008
by sjvn01
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The best Linux system repair disk graduates to 1.0

If you need to repair PCs, even if you don’t use Linux as a rule, you should have a Linux repair CD. These self-booting Linux distributions give you all the software tools you need to bring all but the deadest computers back to life. The best of these distributions is, hands-down, SystemRescueCd.

I’ve been using SystemRescueCd for years, and it has saved my rump many times. With every new version, SystemRescueCd has continued to get better.

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February 22, 2008
by sjvn01
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Apple TV Rentals Get Better

When Apple first talked about movie rentals, one of the downers about it was that movies would be released 30-days after they appeared in DVDs. Well, maybe some studios are holding out on Apple TV and video iPod customers, but many are letting Apple sell and/or rent movies at the same time as they appear as DVDs.

For example, one of my personal favorite movies from last year, the legal thriller Michael Clayton, is now not only available as a DVD, but from the iTunes Store as a rental in both SD (standard definition) and 720p HD (high definition). Other movies are also being released via iTunes in sync with their DVD releases. For example, the comedy No Reservations and the indy western, The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford, both came out on iTunes either on the same day or within a few days of their DVD release.

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February 22, 2008
by sjvn01
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Does Anyone Still Think Vista SP1 Was RTM-Ready?

I hate to say, “I told you so,” but I told you so. The RTMed Vista SP1 is anything but ready for prime time.

Microsoft has pinned its hopes for getting businesses to buy into Vista on the release of Vista Service Pack 1. So the company pushed SP1 out the door before it was ready, and now early adopters are discovering that Vista, with or without SP1, still isn’t business-ready.

This comes as no surprise to me. I knew that Vista SP1 was, at best, half-baked when Microsoft announced that Vista was being released to manufacturing Feb. 4 but really wasn’t going to made available, even to TechNet and MSDN members, until mid-March.

Based on recent news, I’m beginning to think that saying Vista SP1 will begin arriving in customers’ hands by mid-March may be optimistic.

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February 21, 2008
by sjvn01
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Microsoft Spins Legal Defeat into PR Fool`s Gold

If you didn’t know what was really behind Microsoft’s open standards and source promises, it might sound like Microsoft was making real changes.

You’ve got to give Microsoft credit for gall. They take a crunching defeat at the hands of the European Union court system for trying to conceal information and now that the court has forced them to reveal that same information, Microsoft is all about increasing “the openness of its products and drive greater interoperability, opportunity and choice for developers, partners, customers and competitors.”

Urgh. Excuse me. I feel a little ill.

One publication’s headline, Microsoft makes boldest move yet embracing open source, shows that you really can fool some of the people some of the time. Listen, Microsoft is doing nothing but trying to turn a complete and total defeat into a PR victory.

All those things Microsoft promises it will do—opening up the APIs for its major programs, documenting how Microsoft supports industry standards and extensions, working on document interoperability—they’re all required by the EU decision. In fact, according to the EU, Microsoft didn’t go far enough in its announcement.

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