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November 1998
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Magazines & Journals
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| Magazine | 98 Web Influence | 96 Web Influence | 30-month Shift | MIPS* | Outline/Quotes Ed. - Editorial comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SCO World: UNIX Business Solutions |
91 | N/A | N/A | Ernest H. Rice | The biggest problem is diversity. The commands issued on the remote system are not always consistent among Unix versions. In most cases there are options to get a specific output. However, the options may differ from system to system. |
| Shift | 72 | 69 | -3 | Barnaby Marshall | Justice should split Microsoft into two parts, an OS and Application division, and then quietly remove itself from the picture, silencing the critics and clearing the way for the next stage in the battle for silicon supremacy. |
| Service News | 69 | 86 | +17 | Fred Van Bennekom | Capturing customer feedback should not be a casual exercise. Specific events should be examined in detail, but the best organizations actively solicit feedback to maximize their learning opportunities. |
| SunWorld Online | 19 | 34 | +15 | Rebecca Sykes and James Niccolai | The cooperation between AOL, Netscape and Sun is very
much about Microsoft. Scott McNealy, Sun's president, chief executive officer and
chairman, did not hesitate to trumpet the new life he said the deal will bring to
Java.
|
| Sys Admin | 64 | N/A | N/A | Chris Hare IT Security Coming of Age |
Fundamentally, information security is in the hands of the users. Regardless of the measures that may be implemented, carelessness of individuals involved in the preparation, consolidation, processing, recording, or movement of information may compromise any or all security measures. |
| Magazine | 98 Web Influence | 96 Web Influence | 30-month Shift | MIPS* | Outline/Quotes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tech Links | 95 | N/A | N/A | Nick Vance WebSight:He got 'Hire' with a Little Help from His Friends |
E-mail remains the most popular Internet feature by far. It's laughably faster than regular mail, eliminates "phone tag," and is more efficient and less obtrusive than a fax. Its uses are limited only by your imagination. Read how one savvy executive used e-mail to recruit a manager for a new project on short notice. |
| Technology Review | 84 | N/A | N/A | Simson L. Garfinkel | A little-known group that holds closed meetings is the closest thing the Web has to a central
authority. The consortium, known to insiders as W3C, has at last count
275 member organizations, including companies, nonprofit organizations, industry
groups and government agencies from all over the world. Ed. - Big Brother is here. And he brought his brothers. |
| tele.com | 61 | N/A | N/A | Steven Titch | In every office, in every cubicle, there are still two
wall jacks that connect to two networks. And that continues to
bug the hell out of everybody. Ed. - They're concerned about the wall jacks, but not the fact they are in cubicles? |
| Think Leadership (IBM) | 96 | N/A | N/A | Nick Donofrio | It's going to happena trillion devices connected to the Net. These devices will
include smart cards and cell-phones. But they also will be things you might not expect,
like cars, vending machines, buildings, all with embedded microprocessors, all joined to a
network. Ed. - For the reading-impaired, you can download audio clips to hear the narrations of this well illustrated story. |
| ThinWorld | 81 | N/A | N/A | Jim Crocco | While many may not yet know about thin-client computing, industry analysts say thin clients will account for more than 20 percent of the entire desktop market by the year 2002. An industry watcher, Zona Research Inc., estimates that the worldwide thin-client market will experience an increase of more than 350 percent next year, jumping from $582 million in 1998 to over $2 billion in 1999. |
| TidBITS | 29 | 7 | -22 | Matt Deatherage Who Do You Antitrust? |
Exploitation of workers was a staple of Adam Smith's era also, but in
Smith's economy, such business owners could be held personally responsible for their
actions. Today that responsibility lies with the corporations themselves,
and corporations can be punished only economically unless specific charges can be proven
against specific people. The buck stops nowhere, and lack of
responsibility leads to a lack of social conscience. Ed. - The buck stops where the CEO says it does. |
| Magazine | 98 Web Influence | 96 Web Influence | 30-month Shift | MIPS* | Outline/Quotes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UGeek | 93 | N/A | N/A | Does e-commerce pay? Intel says, "YES!" | What's exciting about this is that it shows that Intel was able to convince
its customers to buy over $1 billion worth of merchandise over
the Internet. This is definitely a statement that companies trust the Internet
(or an extranet) as a viable purchasing mechanism. Ed. - $1 Billion? Big deal... Intel makes that in 9 days... |
| Upside | 25 | 19 | -6 | Richard
L. Brandt So Long, Jim Barksdale |
Assuming the merger goes through, it's time to say goodbye to Jim Barksdale. He joins the AOL board, but he will no longer play a managerial role at Netscape. After the transition, it's so long, Jim. That's a shame. I like the guy. But I think he's acknowledging reality by moving on. Netscape would have been killed by Microsoft. |
| User Friendly Online | 90 | N/A | N/A | Gordon Missimer | Wendy Goldman Rohm: The Microsoft File: Using largely unnamed
sources, she writes about how Gates allegedly used every trick in a monopolist's
book to force computer manufacturers to sell his software and deny the
public innovation. The book also details how Microsoft blatantly copied
competitors' products. But if you're looking for the "smoking
gun," you won't find one in "The Microsoft File." Ed. - Did you try looking under Bill's bed? |
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