Posts Tagged ‘operating systems’

“Future of the Appliance Based Model” -draft from previous research (not current)

Friday, August 10th, 2007

Most end users are trying to solve problems, automate a business process, write a letter, email a family member or play a game. They use the Windows operating system because it is already installed when purchased their computer. Most end users hear about other operating systems but give no thought to it if they are able to surf the web or write a research paper.

As computing advances, the idea of the application is becoming more important than the operating system. More and more we find that the operating system is not the reason the end user has chosen the application; it its the function and features of the application. And, if you are able to get an operating system that is designed specifically to run with your application; the advantages are clear and it becomes very compelling to do so. Additionally, you lessen the chances of competing resources by building the os around your application. (more…)

Seven Financial Reasons Not to Use Windows

Monday, August 6th, 2007

By Tina Gasperson on July 31, 2001 from: cio.com

Windows is often the most intuitive choice from the CIO’s perspective. Just like in the old days, when “nobody ever got fired for buying IBM,” Microsoft is safe, at least from the stockholder’s perspective. “That’s what we’ve always used, and it works” is a phrase you’re likely to hear coming from above and below in the corporate hierarchy. Lately, however, more and more companies are discovering that they have alternatives when it comes to choosing an IT infrastructure, and that there really are some sound reasons not to go with Windows.
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myOS “operating system design theory”

Tuesday, May 15th, 2007

from lab book January 2007

Research Project

Since the inception of a computer there has been many iterations of operating systems (os). Architectures were based on different requirements, platforms and goals. We have traversed back and forth on design, use and operation. Still the definition of an os is ambiguous at best. (more…)

Software’s Great Divide

Tuesday, March 27th, 2007

By Alan Radding | Published 11/1/2005 | Consulting magazine © 2009 BNA Subsidiaries, LLC.

In the land of open source computing, some consultants see only trees where a forest now grows.

Small IT consulting firms get it and have gotten it from the start. A few of the large IT consulting firms get it, too, and have grabbed leadership roles. The rest missed it initially and are scrambling to catch up. Some, maybe, still don’t get it.

“It,” in this case, is the open source software movement, often synonymous with Linux but encompassing far more than just Linux. Open source refers to not only operating systems like Linux but also open source application and infrastructure software, databases, and middleware. It also refers to the open source community and collaborative processes for development and governance. The open source movement has the potential to radically alter the way software is created, maintained, marketed, deployed, and supported. In the process, it will generate a host of new applications deployment, support, and integration opportunities for IT consulting companies.

Many consultants are scooping up these opportunities as fast as they can. “We are three years ahead of where we expected to be at this time,” reports Robert Whetsel, CEO and founder of Ravensong Open Technologies, Inc., Frederick, MD, a consulting firm focusing primarily, but not exclusively, on open source technology. Whetsel began focusing on open source technology in 1997, not long after Linux was introduced. Since then, Ravensong has attracted a steadily growing list of clients that includes government agencies, biotech firms, the military, and more. Adopting the open source community model for its own consulting practice, Ravensong is poised to introduce an open business collaborative framework to help its own staff and participating consultants grow even faster.

Still, the large, conventional IT consulting firms were slow to recognize Linux and open source as something other than an interesting variation of Unix for the PC. Others dismissed it as some utopian approach to software development with a go-to-market strategy on the extreme periphery of mainstream business. They certainly didn’t understand the community-oriented open source process.

Read the rest of the article: here

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  • RobertWhetsel.com is a BLOG by a computer scientist who works for a Think Tank specializing in Information Assurance planning and policy for the DoD. He is the founder of the Open Business Foundation, and the former CEO for RavenSong Open Technologies in Frederick, Maryland. E-mail him at rwhetsel@ravensong.com.
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