POV-Ray : Newsgroups : povray.off-topic : OS as a Service : Re: OS as a Service Server Time
6 Oct 2024 06:43:35 EDT (-0400)
  Re: OS as a Service  
From: Anthony D  Baye
Date: 31 Jul 2015 15:40:01
Message: <web.55bbce633093f3f2aaea5cb0@news.povray.org>
Orchid Win7 v1 <voi### [at] devnull> wrote:
> On 31/07/2015 09:56 AM, scott wrote:
> >> I've read scuttlebutt about M$ moving Windows to a SaaS model, but I
> >> fail to
> >> understand how this could possibly work.
> >
> > Locally you'd have an OS that was stripped down to just run Remote
> > Desktop (or equivalent) and interface with your hardware. When you
> > logged on it would start a remote desktop session with an MS VM
> > somewhere. *Assuming internet speeds were fast enough* you wouldn't
> > notice the difference to running full windows locally.
>
> The more I look at the IT world, the more cyclic it seems to be.
>
> There was a time when you bought the biggest, most powerful mainframe
> that money could buy, and all the users sat at dumb terminals logged in
> to the giant monster in the middle.
>
> And then everybody said "hey, putting a single desktop at each person's
> desk means you can more easily add and remove computer power depending
> on staffing levels, equip different people with different versions of
> software, etc."
>
> And now everybody's like "hey, it's a pain to manage multiple individual
> desktops. Let's virtualise everything to get a bigger return on
> investment..."
>
> And so the industry continues to alternate between centralised and
> decentralised. Because, frankly, each has different pros and cons; it's
> just that every decade or so people forget the pros of one and forget
> the cons of the other.
>
> > The benefits are obvious (a machine that has all your files and looks
> > the same no matter where you log on, an almost limitless supply of CPU
> > power and RAM if you wanted to do CPU intenstive tasks, automatic
> > backups for everyone, etc)
>
> I think you mean "we can give you less and less CPU and RAM while still
> charging the same amount of money for it, so you will continually have
> to give us more money or suffer horrendously unusable system response".
>
> And then of course, you have the problem that each morning, you log into
> your desktop, and there's a 50% probability that the software will have
> changed, and you can't prevent it changing. Already we see every time
> Facebook changes the colour of a button, somebody creates a page
> entitled "if one million users Like this page, Facebook will turn the
> button colour back to how it was before". [Erm, no they won't honey.]
> Imagine if every day, all your software could be deleted and replaced
> with something else that you didn't ask for or want.
>
> To say nothing of the privacy and confidentiality issues of having
> Microsoft have access to every file you ever create. (I doubt too many
> corporate types would like having their propriety data on a hostile 3rd
> party server.)
>
> > Their big problem will be the medium-large corporations that take
> > months, if not years to test and roll out major software updates. There
> > is no way they would accept the possibility of one day their entire
> > company coming to a halt with millions of pounds lost due to an MS
> > "update" that has broken something somewhere within their business. Also
> > a lot of systems are not connected to the internet for various reasons,
> > how would they work?
>
> They also have a problem with SOHO setups where people wouldn't know
> what "computer security" is if it hit them in the face.
>
> Why no, I'm not bitter. Why do you ask?

The difference between a company with a gigantic mainframe that all the
employees log into from a single campus and the idea of Windows as a Service, is
a pretty big one, IMHO.

Now we have people whose office is the world.  They take their computers into
the field where they sometimes won't have internet access for days on end, and
when they do, it's in some third world country over a satellite feed that has
limited bandwidth.

Then too, at what point do you think that the governments of the world will
become comfortable with their internal communications being stored -- even
temporarily -- in the buffer of someone else's computers? Personally, I think
they'll go back to using typewriters first, but realistically, they'll probably
just switch to linux.

Regards,
A.D.B.


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