Gary Wisniewski posted part 2 of his 5 part series on fixing Windows and Microsoft at-large. When I saw the first post yesterday, it prompted me to have a mini braindump of the issues I've found to be issues a lot of people don't always recognize immediately.
I've had a chance to read through Gary's new post twice now, and I'm not sure how I feel just yet. I don't think it's because I'm not a "well-educated computer scientist" (read: idiot) but rather because I'm extremely pragmatic when it comes to technology. After my first pass through the posting, I was surprised by the negativity of the tone overall and felt it was very much in the style of Michael Moore. It includes facts here and there with some quotes from reputable sources tied together with lots of heavy editorial assumptions that are kind of slipped in nonchalantly.
After reading through it the second time I was able to focus on the facts a little more, and I realize that a lot of thought went into it. I do recognize that Gary's working to make a valid point about why Windows should be scrapped in favor of Linux (or starting over from scratch even), but I don't think I even agree with the problem as Gary defines it to begin with. I don't think he's wrong exactly, I just think we're from very different schools of thought.
While I don't agree with Gary's trajectory on this, I think there are two points that are pretty valid from my own personal perspective:
I'm interested to see where this goes. I'd love to see Gary's ideas lead into something great for Microsoft. I just hope the next post isn't an anti-Windows pro-Linux anything-but-Microsoft rant guised in an editorial. I get enough of that from the Windows team as it is
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