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Archived from groups: comp.arch,comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)
"Tony Hill" <hilla_nospam_20@yahoo.ca> wrote in message
news😛j97e09ahuh9sdq8ha8go0rv3rvejlbmsi@4ax.com...
> On Wed, 30 Jun 2004 14:42:01 -0600, "Judd" <IhateSpam@stopspam.com>
> wrote:
> >"Tony Hill" <hilla_nospam_20@yahoo.ca> wrote in message
> >news:fts5e0536f09o7c2cj6g0no6jomnvre9u2@4ax.com...
> >>
> >> That's the last of 'em then. It looks like EVERY major Linux
> >> distribution has managed to beat Microsoft to market with a usable
> >> AMD64/x86-64 operating system (at least as long as you don't count
> >> Slackware as a "major distribution", which most people don't these
> >> days). SuSE, RedHat, Mandrake, Gentoo, Turbolinux and now Debian are
> >> all out there now. Debian's distribution is still in the "unstable"
> >> stream, but those who know Debian should know that Debian "unstable"
> >> is roughly equivalent to pre-SP1 release of Windows rather than a beta
> >> version.
> >>
> >> Ohh, and FreeBSD and OpenBSD also have full support for AMD64 as well.
> >> Kind of makes you wonder just what the heck is taking MS so long?!
> >
> >What is taking them so long? Answer = Intel! If 64-bit was such a big
deal
> >for consumers, we would be looking at Itanium Workstations. 64-bit = not
> >big deal = why MS hasn't pushed it very hard. Wait for Intel's 80+
percent
> >market share to join in and then release something for OEM's to sell
their
> >i64 and AMD64 systems. It's a very smart business move.
>
> Smart business move for who?!? For Intel maybe, but how exactly does
> it help MS' cause? It's not like they're selling more by not having a
> product now and I can't see any way that it would help them long-term.
> Not releasing the product until the end of this year or early next
> year (it looks like 64-bit Windows is being delayed *again*) is only
> going to hurt Microsoft relative to Linux.
>
It isn't hurting them at all. Development costs $$$... In today's world,
you don't develop unless the $$$ is there. The $$$ isn't there until Intel
is OEM'ing large quantities of 64-bit hardware. Linux isn't gaining
anything at all from this.
"Tony Hill" <hilla_nospam_20@yahoo.ca> wrote in message
news😛j97e09ahuh9sdq8ha8go0rv3rvejlbmsi@4ax.com...
> On Wed, 30 Jun 2004 14:42:01 -0600, "Judd" <IhateSpam@stopspam.com>
> wrote:
> >"Tony Hill" <hilla_nospam_20@yahoo.ca> wrote in message
> >news:fts5e0536f09o7c2cj6g0no6jomnvre9u2@4ax.com...
> >>
> >> That's the last of 'em then. It looks like EVERY major Linux
> >> distribution has managed to beat Microsoft to market with a usable
> >> AMD64/x86-64 operating system (at least as long as you don't count
> >> Slackware as a "major distribution", which most people don't these
> >> days). SuSE, RedHat, Mandrake, Gentoo, Turbolinux and now Debian are
> >> all out there now. Debian's distribution is still in the "unstable"
> >> stream, but those who know Debian should know that Debian "unstable"
> >> is roughly equivalent to pre-SP1 release of Windows rather than a beta
> >> version.
> >>
> >> Ohh, and FreeBSD and OpenBSD also have full support for AMD64 as well.
> >> Kind of makes you wonder just what the heck is taking MS so long?!
> >
> >What is taking them so long? Answer = Intel! If 64-bit was such a big
deal
> >for consumers, we would be looking at Itanium Workstations. 64-bit = not
> >big deal = why MS hasn't pushed it very hard. Wait for Intel's 80+
percent
> >market share to join in and then release something for OEM's to sell
their
> >i64 and AMD64 systems. It's a very smart business move.
>
> Smart business move for who?!? For Intel maybe, but how exactly does
> it help MS' cause? It's not like they're selling more by not having a
> product now and I can't see any way that it would help them long-term.
> Not releasing the product until the end of this year or early next
> year (it looks like 64-bit Windows is being delayed *again*) is only
> going to hurt Microsoft relative to Linux.
>
It isn't hurting them at all. Development costs $$$... In today's world,
you don't develop unless the $$$ is there. The $$$ isn't there until Intel
is OEM'ing large quantities of 64-bit hardware. Linux isn't gaining
anything at all from this.