Marc,

For me it's been centralized storage (Equallogic iSCSI SAN) and
virtualization (ESX 3.5).  I'm five servers away from having my entire
infrastructure virtualized and this process has totally changed my
thinking and approach to IT as a whole (BC, DR, migrations, warranties,
capacity planning, day-to-day admin tasks, you name it).  Lastly, it may
sound cheesy but I haven't been this excited about a specific technology
in several years, so this whole process is incredibly motivating...

 

Lastly, thanks for your input and assistance on this list; you're one of
the many who make my job easier.

 

Shook

http://www.linkedin.com/in/andyshook  

________________________________

From: Marc Maiffret [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Monday, December 31, 2007 2:44 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: OT: Most impactful technology Was: Silverlight?

 

 

First hand knowledge from friends of mine employed at MS that
specifically tell me the who/what/why of things that happen at
Microsoft.

 

You are right Silverlight is a defensive measure, but again that is only
because someone else has already done it right (regardless of security).
Because Flash has done it "right" they are responsible for a technology
that has become an extremely prevalent part of the average consumers
online experience. They are simply reacting to the prevelance of the
technology, forget which company label it falls under, I promise you. I
mean heck you could call it a nobody name like "Netscape." As long as
the _technology_ was a perceived threat to them, in some way, they would
be getting the monkeys to work cloning it in a heartbeat. Either way I
think Silverlight is a good thing, because I think competition is a good
thing. As long as they don't use their market dominance to shove it down
IT administrators throats, because you guys have enough crap to deal
with already.

 

Microsoft is indeed responsible for the explosion of the scroll wheel
but not the inventor or first to do it by any means. There were already
two different companies making scroll wheel mice before Microsoft.
Microsoft did however "invent" and patent the horizontal scroll wheel.
That does not mean that Microsoft's market reach didn't help make the
scroll wheel jjnprolific, but that again is them being good on business
and borrowing on technology.

 

Obviously I am sure Microsoft has invented a lot of things, a quick
patent search would show that. But it is sad when you see companies as
large as Microsoft and never having done half of what places like Xerox
PARC did from a technology innovation perspective. And thus a subtle jab
to my MS Research friend who trolls this list for ideas :-) 

 

Either way not picking on Microsoft, they are undoubtedly one of the
most brilliant companies I will know of in my lifetime, but more for
their business cunning than technology innovation.

 

Which brings me to a question I love hearing answers for, what has been
a recent technology that has had the most impact on you? Could be
something that makes your IT job easier, or could be your car that
parallel parks itself.

 

-Marc Maiffret

Freelance Security Consultant

http://www.marcmaiffret.com

 

From: Ken Schaefer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Sunday, December 30, 2007 8:37 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Silverlight?

 

 

Marc,

 

Do you have any inside knowledge on this product? Or is this just your
speculation?

 

Having talked to a few people in the WT&P group, Silverlight started off
as a defensive measure to ward off Adobe. When Macromedia owned Flash,
no one at Microsoft really cared that much about it. Now that Adobe owns
it, people felt that Microsoft couldn't stand still. Nothing to do with
waiting for someone else to make it successful and then copying it. More
to do with "we can't sit buy and have no response"

 

As for innovation - I'm sure Microsoft was the first vendor to put a
scroll wheel on a mouse. I think everyone has them these days.

 

I'm sure they've done a few other things during their time as well.

 

Cheers

Ken

 

From: Marc Maiffret [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Sunday, 30 December 2007 9:21 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Silverlight?

 

 

This is the Microsoft MO and has been for years. They have never
innovated anything in the history of their existence. Well, Microsoft
Bob maybe, hah.

 

Wait for someone else to succeed in doing it right, copy them and use
monopolistic business practices to crush them. There are a million
examples but you already know them all.

 

Things are changing however, Microsoft's, wait, bait, obliterate,
strategy plan is losing legs against companies like Google. Mostly
because the world consumers are being less dependent on the operating
system and more dependent on the services the internet provides as a
platform. But even there Microsoft is trying their damndest to clone
everything that Google and the likes are doing.

 

-Marc Maiffret

Freelance Security Consultant

http://www.marcmaiffret.com

 

From: Carl Houseman [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, December 27, 2007 2:56 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Silverlight?

 

 

Just what the world needs - a new VHS vs. Beta war.  How many of these
crusades (challenging the estabilshed leader in web/Internet technology)
have been outright winners for MS since Internet Explorer?   Will they
ever learn?

 

The effort and investment would be better spent on moving the technology
to an open standard.

 

Carl

 

________________________________

From: Michael B. Smith [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, December 27, 2007 3:39 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Silverlight?

 

Well, I think that Flash is "evil". 

 

Silverlight actually can do some things that Flash can't and from a
development perspective is much easier to use. I'm certain that Flash
can do things that Silverlight can't.

 

Regards,

 

Michael B. Smith

MCSE/Exchange MVP

http://TheEssentialExchange.com

 

From: Micheal Espinola Jr [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, December 27, 2007 2:31 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Silverlight?

 


Glad to have another attack vector integrated into your browser that
does the same thing as another well-established product?

No thanks - I'll pass (for now).

On Dec 27, 2007 2:20 PM, Rod Trent < [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

 

If you've messed with it at all from a development standpoint, you
really like it.  If you've watched the news, there are a lot of sites
already on board with it.

Personally, I'm glad to see something else besides Flash come out.  Now,
if we could just rid ourselves of this PDF stuff...

 

 

 










 
 
    

 

 





 
    

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