Author Topic: Longhorn  (Read 1089 times)

mobrien_12

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Longhorn
« Reply #15 on: 9 December 2002, 23:29 »
"Neither Linux nor Unix ties the operating system to hardware," he said.

"This could bring a higher level of security than anything we've ever seen. It will almost completely prevent the platform from being compromised."

And again they fail to say who they are trying to keep from compromising the platform.  It's the actual USERS who they don't want compromising the DRM of the platform.  MS version of "security"
 
In brightest day, in darkest night, no evil shall escape my sight....

rtgwbmsr

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Longhorn
« Reply #16 on: 10 December 2002, 07:29 »
quote:
Yay! Now linux/win2k users don

DC

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Longhorn
« Reply #17 on: 11 December 2002, 01:18 »
quote:

Neither Linux nor Unix ties the operating system to hardware

Well duh. The idea of an operating system is tying the programs to the hardware. The OS *are* the 'ropes' in that analog.
An OS tied to the hardware is... well... stupid. That was the problem of Linux, it was tied too hard to x86 (yes, that has been solved). Why don't people learn?
GS/CS d- s-: a--- C++ UL+ P+ L++>+++ E W++ N>+ o K- w-- O- M V? PS+>++ PE- Y+ PGP t+ 5+ X R tv+ b+++ DI+ D+ G++ e>++++ h! r- y
A quantummechanical wavefunction describing an unknown amount of bottles of beer on the wall
A quantummechanical wavefunction describing an unknown amount of bottles of beer on the wall
We take a measurement, the wavefunction will collapse, and one of the bottles of beer will fall