The InformationWeek -- Blogs
Outsourcing

Topics:   Microsoft : Outsourcing : Security

  • Email this page E-mail this page
  • Print this page Print this page
  • Bookmark and Share
  • icon

The InformationWeek Weblog Community Sounds Off


Posted by Mitch Wagner, Dec 20, 2006 08:54 PM

The community discusses the death of outsourcing advocate Sunil Mehta, tools for getting the most from two PCs, outsourcing security, upgrading Windows, and getting around Windows activation.


India Loses An Outsourcing Advocate

  • Martin Conboy, FoobooOnLine.com: "India will miss one of its outsourcing champions. It is a tragedy when a man so young is taken from his family at the very point in his life when he had everything to live for."

  • Barb: "The 'win-win' concept of outsourcing sounds great, but how often was it implemented in practice? The gap between how we should be treating each other and how we do is often a deep canyon. I also grieve for the competent, high-performing American IT workers who made this country an international technology and innovation leader, long before outsourcing became a managerial fad, and who were then discarded like last week's trash."

Tools For Getting The Most From Two PCs

  • Thomas: "In case you haven't already - check out the Firefox extension Foxmarks. Synchronizes bookmarks without the social sharing stuff that you don't seem to want... simple and sweet."

Person Of The Year: Hey, It's The Digital You!

  • Peter Altschuler: "It wasn't the You-ness of Time's perspective that was so irksome. It was the fifteen photos with only one person (maybe two) over thirty, and the fifteen profiles with only two in their thirties, one 43-year-old, and one person over 50. Given the ever-increasing number of people over 65 who use the Internet, the proliferation of 50-and-older visitors to YouTube, and the simple fact that much of the technology on which Web 2.0 is built was developed by people who are now over 40, it's an odd imbalance."

Outsource Security Carefully, And Carry A Big Audit Plan

  • R. Lawson: "Why on Earth would you give away the keys to your company's data for a third party to manage?"

Ready Or Not, Time To Upgrade Windows

  • Carl: "Even IBM, paragon of supporting stuff way longer than you'd expect, does eventually end support. And W2K is OLD. What would be nice is Microsoft making a current OS that's as simple and reliable as W2K. XP is almost there, but XP Pro is so expensive that IT depts have been reluctant to upgrade."

  • Jeffrey: "Forever? Wouldn't that require an infinite number of employees to cover an infinite number of OSs? Do we really have to support the spinster refusing to move from Windows 3.1 or a DOS box? How about users of the Commodore C-4 and 128? Microsoft did write that OS also."

Windows 2000: The Heat Is On

  • Lee: "I would imagine that for most of us techies, this is just the natural evolution of the platform and fortunately, I transitioned out of 2000 a few years ago."

  • william moss: "Lack of support for W2K has no meaning for me except to prove that MS is a greedy monopoly; imagine if the car manufacturers changed their tire every 5 years and the old tires were no long available. Would you tolerate that kind of nonsense?"

Craigslist Flummoxes Financial Analysts

  • Frank: "Craigslist looks at doing one thing and trying to do it as simply as possible, which in turn is what makes it so successful."

  • How To (Partially) Get Around Windows Activation

  • Matt:: "Anybody looking for a 'license to steal' at least with XP, would be using a pirated copy of XP and the most current WGA workaround, which is at least as easy as installing a legit copy of XP, to say nothing of also jumping through the hoops with Narrator. This 'information' seems of rather dubious use to pirates, so I don't feel there's any harm in publishing it."

« Delta Troubles Offer A Tech Career Reminder | Main | Apple Customers Want Apple To Make A Phone. Will They? »



Sign Up Now
For InformationWeek News Alerts




This is a public forum. United Business Media and its affiliates are not responsible for and do not control what is posted herein. United Business Media makes no warranties or guarantees concerning any advice dispensed by its staff members or readers.

Community standards in this comment area do not permit hate language, excessive profanity, or other patently offensive language. Please be aware that all information posted to this comment area becomes the property of United Business Media LLC and may be edited and republished in print or electronic format as outlined in United Business Media's Terms of Service.

Important Note: This comment area is NOT intended for commercial messages or solicitations of business.




 
 

  1. Sequential Programming: Like Eating Peas with a Straw.
  2. Biomolecular device using self-assembled DNA nanostructures?
  3. Coreinfo v2.0: A Simple Utility to Understand the Manycore Complexity in Windows


Join The InformationWeek Group On LinkedIn


                           


  1. More Reasons Why Linux Misses The Desktop
  2. Too Much Netbook For Too Litl?
  3. Verizon: $350 ETF Is A Go
  4. Motorola Explains Why Droid Doesn't Have Multi-Touch


  1. Florida Hospital Dials Up iPhones For Nurses
  2. Full Nelson: A Web Presence Needs Sizzle, My Nizzle
  3. Is Antivirus Software Dead?
  4. Practical Analysis: The Fastest-Growing Security Threat
  5. InformationWeek Analytics Research: Federated Search
  6. Securing The Cyber Supply Chain

 

  Ars Technica
Boing Boing
Channel 9 Forums
CRN Blogs
Dr.Dobb's Portal: Blogs
Engadget
Gizmodo
GrokLaw
  Lifehacker
Schneier on Security
Slashdot
TechCrunch
Techdirt
Techmeme
Valleywag

  DECEMBER 2008
NOVEMBER 2008
OCTOBER 2008
SEPTEMBER 2008
AUGUST 2008
JULY 2008
JUNE 2008
MAY 2008
  APRIL 2008
MARCH 2008
FEBRUARY 2008
JANUARY 2008
DECEMBER 2007
NOVEMBER 2007
OCTOBER 2007
SEPTEMBER 2007