EditorsAbout the SiteComes vs. MicrosoftUsing This Web SiteSite ArchivesCredibility IndexOOXMLOpenDocumentPatentsNovellNews DigestSite NewsRSS

09.03.09

Microsoft/Waggener Edstrom Vista 7 Laptop Giveaways Still Paying Off

Posted in Google, Microsoft, Vista 7, Windows at 4:57 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

House gift

Summary: The Register lets Microsoft evangelists write the news and reporters in general show their sheer bias

IT HAS been almost a year since Waggener Edstrom gave Vista 7 laptops to people who were fond of Microsoft. The intention was to generate positive coverage and set the tone for future debates about this incarnation of Windows Vista.

One of the recipients of these expensive laptops was Tim Anderson, whose writings about Windows are always positive. Putting it plainly, he’s a “Microsoft guy”. He also writes for The Register, which changed a lot since signing that deal with Microsoft. His colleague Gavin Clarke, for example, writes a lot about Microsoft products and even does an audiocast about it (with Mary Jo Foley). Many have argued that The Register changed dramatically after those engagements with Microsoft, but we all digress, eventually.

“The intention was to generate positive coverage and set the tone for future debates about this incarnation of Windows Vista.”The Register has just published this article from Tim Anderson, which is no faint praise of Microsoft’s next operating system that Anderson was granted access to ahead of everyone. One of our readers called it a “puff piece on Windows 7 Snow Leopard.”

“Is the delay with Windows 7 anything to do with it being a buggy first version,” asks this reader. “The whole tone of this advert er… article smacks of nothing but me-too-ism. The not-out-yet Windows 7 is as good-as Snow Leopard and if W7 doesn’t impress then blame the OEMs… there… didn’t take as long to say…”

To quote from this article/advert:

Windows works better when properly managed, which is why a skilled business user gets a better experience than the hapless crapware-laden consumer

“Yet more blame the OEMs/endusers waffle… shame on you El Reg,” remarks the reader, who is a long time follower of The Register.

Anderson continues:

Malware is also a factor, since Windows is by far the most popular target

The translation of this, argues our reader, is that “Malware isn’t caused by any intrinsic defects in the Operating System.”

“Could have been piped in directly from Redmond,” he adds. “Why not just label this whole thing ADVERTISING?”

The whole thing makes The Register somewhat self contradictory. Yesterday from The Register: “MS warns of forced Messenger update”

Microsoft has outlined plans to push a mandatory Windows Live Messenger upgrade in order to plug a security hole related to a vulnerable code library.

From The Register (two days go): “Malware thrown on California bush fires”

From The Register (yesterday): “Microsoft confirms IIS bug gives complete server control”

From The Register (today): “Microsoft rejects call to fix SQL password-exposure risk”

Microsoft is butting heads with a company that provides software for database security over a weakness in SQL Server that can expose user passwords to anyone with administrative access to the program.

Yes, Microsoft really takes security seriously. Really.

Anderson would also love us to believe that the operating system is secure and it’s everyone else’s fault if it is not. Well, does it not matter that Vista 7 has already been shown to be critically flawed, e.g. in:

Vista 7 was also found to be vulnerable less than a month ago (“critical”). These are just a handful of examples, so there are more.

According to today’s report from Heise, the “cost to council of computers [is] crippled by viral infection.”

It seems local government in the UK still has not learned how to maintain effective IT security or to control the costs when things go wrong. A story published today (3rd of September) in the Evening Standard newspaper reveals that the true cost of a crippling infection of Tory run Ealing Council’s IT systems which occurred back in May, is only now starting to emerge.

The cost of Microsoft’s insecurities may all in all exceed trillions of dollars, far more than Microsoft has ever made in revenue (even combined).

From The Register today we also learn that the publication is concerned about writers who are influenced by schwag. “Beware evangelists,” alerts the headline.

In a way, the easiest ones to deal with are those that have ‘Evangelist’ printed on their business cards. They’re being paid by someone to persuade others of the folly of their ways. You’ll find these folk in many major IT companies. Others are not so obvious. Perhaps a company has plied them with gifts or other, more subtle, bribes. Recently I was talking with a Toyota (non-employee) iQ evangelist. Turns out she’d ‘won’ the car for a six month trial, in exchange for blogs and other social media outreach. Others are just total believers in ‘the cause’ simply because it makes sense to them within their own frame of reference.

The hypocrites. Right there we’ve shown how reviewers of Vista 7 at The Register are recipients of expensive computers (not just an operating system, which is the actual product to review). If that’s the standard maintained by The Register, then its status deserves to diminish.

“They are stupid enough just to mention that “GMail was down” without further investigation.”
      –Tony Manco
One of our contributors, Tony Manco, said today: “I’m tired of reading s**t from these “pseudo-journalists” repeating the same bulls**t over and over again about GMail. They are stupid enough just to mention that “GMail was down” without further investigation. Only the web interface was down, IMAP and POP where always online… why do these “pseudo-journalists” insist that GMail is only the Web interface?”

We wrote about this before [1, 2] because whenever there is a small Google glitch, enormous coverage in the press is to be expected. The same standards are not being applied to other companies and this is quite likely part of the FUD against SaaS in general.

“Two security researchers have developed a new technique that essentially bypasses all of the memory protection safeguards in the Windows Vista operating system…”

Dennis Fisher, August 7th, 2008

“Acer and Intel, for example, are already complaining that Windows 7 Starter Edition simply won’t sell.”

Source

Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • co.mments
  • DZone
  • email
  • Google Bookmarks
  • LinkedIn
  • NewsVine
  • Print
  • Propeller
  • Slashdot
  • Technorati
  • TwitThis
  • Webnews
  • YahooMyWeb

If you liked this post, consider subscribing to the RSS feed or join us now at the IRC channel. To use your own IRC client, join channel #boycottnovell in FreeNode.

Pages that cross-reference this one

2 Comments

  1. Will said,

    September 4, 2009 at 8:13 am

    Gravatar

    Well, it’s kinda like this:

    If Bing were to go down for an hour or two, who would notice?

    And if an Exchange server were to go down for an hour or two, how is that news? That’s just weekly routine.

    Roy Schestowitz Reply:

    I’ve seen Exchange go down for well over a day due to virus infections. And that’s just the server side; Windows client side is also prone to downtime that requires a lot of user intervention to resolve (maybe a complete reinstall and compromise of data).

What Else is New


  1. Latest SCO-Novell Drama in a Nutshell

    How SCO orchestrated attacks on Groklaw and other takes on the trial against Novell



  2. Vulture Fund Rumoured to be Planning to Break Novell Apart, Vultures Deny the Claim

    Disagreement between the press and the hostile acquirer as to whether or not Novell would stay in tact



  3. AstroTurfing for Vista 7 Still Alive

    Andre Da Costa is still trolling the competition of Vista 7 while promoting this incarnation of Vista in exchange for gifts from Microsoft



  4. Links 13/3/2010: Fedora 13 Benchmarked; OpenGL 3.3, OpenGL 4.0

    Links for the day



  5. IRC: #boycottnovell @ FreeNode: March 12th, 2010

    IRC Log for March 12th, 2010



  6. Microsoft's Latest Harms to the Web and Shallow Press Coverage That Neglects to Name Culprits

    Coverage about security issues is abundant, but the cause of many of these issues is simply not named



  7. Microsoft MVP Miguel de Icaza Leaves CodePlex Foundation Board

    Creator of land mines for the Free desktop ends his time at Microsoft's group and returns to more risky activity



  8. Microsoft Pays for Linux Phones to Redirect Users to Microsoft

    Microsoft spends a lot of money ensuring that it becomes the only gateway to misinformation to more people, even users of Linux



  9. Why Would Anyone Develop for Software Patent Bullies?

    New reasons for developers and defenders of Apple to reconsider their position and stand up to Software Engineering, not patent racketeering



  10. Links 12/3/2010: Mandriva Focus, Simon Phipps the OSI Director

    Links for the day



  11. Patents Roundup: Both Apple and Microsoft Use Software Patents Against GNU/Linux, Get Sued for Violation Along With Google and Facebook; Amazon-USPTO Comedy Resumes

    This week's latest patent news which has impact on the Free software world



  12. IDG Carries on Publishing Anti-GNU/Linux Rhetoric from Microsoft Evangelist in More Domains

    Without any disclosure, Gartenberg's smears continue to be disseminated by IDG, which cares about traffic rather than accuracy and conflicts of interests (Gartenberg is a former Microsoft employee)



  13. SourceForge Learns Not from Windows' Failures and Even Hires from Microsoft

    Microsoft's former employees, who encourage Free software developers to forget about GNU/Linux, become key staff in SourceForge/Geeknet



  14. IRC: #boycottnovell @ FreeNode: March 11th, 2010

    IRC Log for March 11th, 2010



  15. Vista 7 Unacceptable for Large Businesses and Windows XP Still Not Secure

    Intel migrates only about 3% of its workforce to Vista 7; many of the rest use an operation system with a "built-in" vulnerability that compromises designs/trade secrets



  16. Links 11/3/2010: Fedora 13 Frenzy, Free Software in City of Athens

    Links for the day



  17. Microsoft and Toyota

    Where Toyota's problems intersect with Microsoft's



  18. Microsoft Tries to Destroy Online Competitors Rather Than Improve Its Own Products

    A look at what Microsoft is doing to Google and what it has done to Yahoo!



  19. Patents Roundup: Microsoft, Apple, Nokia, Monsanto, Pfizer, and ACTA

    This is a list of news items of interest to Free software supporters



  20. IRC: #boycottnovell @ FreeNode: March 10th, 2010

    IRC Log for March 10th, 2010



  21. Apple's Legal Attack on GNU/Linux and Mistreatment of Developers Already Costing it Business

    Apple upsets some of the very same people who made the company what it is today, including some of the inspirers



  22. Ashley Highfield, Microsoft UK, Bill Gates, Murdoch, and the BBC

    The latest embarrassments from the BBC, including discrimination against users of GNU/Linux



  23. Microsoft Wants to be the Standard

    Microsoft plants another flag in W3C, MonoDevelop pushes .NET at Novell or elsewhere, and Vista 7 continues to repel businesses



  24. Microsoft Still Spreads Lies About GNU/Linux, Faces Rational Opposition

    The same old myths that Microsoft spreads in the media contradict reality and fact; the GNU/Linux userbase resists hostile intervention



  25. Microsoft-Sponsored GNU/Linux-Hostile Site, HowSoftwareIsBuilt.com, is Powered by GNU/Linux

    HowSoftwareIsBuilt.com is paid by Microsoft, promotes Microsoft, but it runs on the very same platform Microsoft is ridiculing and extorting



  26. Links 10/3/2010: Fedora 13 Alpha, Freescale+Linux

    Links for the day



  27. Videos: Peter Landrock on His Software Patent and DeGucht Defending ACTA

    Motion pictures that demonstrate the positions of people who pose dangers to the freedom of software



  28. Bill Gates and Steve Jobs Extortionists With Software Patents

    Bill Gates' personal role in racketeering is revealed by the CEO of Sun Microsystems; Steve Jobs is not any better



  29. Microsoft and Insecurity: Vulnerabilities, Botnets, and a Whole Lot of Nerve

    Windows insecurity a matter of persistence, Windows botnets a lost cause, and Microsoft's staff interferes with security policy



  30. Patents Roundup: Lawyer Takeover, Failed Reform, and Policy Laundering With ACTA

    What the latest news tells us about the use of law -- not improved products -- to compete in the market


RSS 64x64RSS Feed: subscribe to the RSS feed for regular updates

Home iconSite Wiki: You can improve this site by helping the extension of the site's content

Chat iconIRC Channel: Come and chat with us in real time

Recent Posts