On Tue, Jun 15, 2010 at 12:15 PM, Phil Brutsche <[email protected]> wrote:
>> And why is a solution like this missing from MS operating systems??
>
> It isn't.

  Comparing MSI/WSUS to RPM/YUM (or dpkg/APT or...) is really missing
a lot.  MSI is a beast to develop for, it's a compatibility nightmare
across releases, MSI packages frequently require an interactive
presence, MSIs vary radically in design, they're a bear to customize,
the post-install management functions are non-existent, WSUS is a
completely different framework vs MSI, I could go on and on and on.

> Third parties who refuse to publish catalogs SCUP can use (like Adobe)
> are as much as fault as anyone else.

  So, basically, practically the entire software industry.

  Microsoft has been working on Windows software installation for a
decade plus, and it's still very hairy, especially if you want to also
support not-the-latest-release-of-Windows.  I can't really blame
third-party developers for (1) resorting to doing their own thing and
(2) not wanting to jump aboard Microsoft's bandwagon when Microsoft
themselves weren't done building it yet (and still may not be).

  Now, a lot of this is due to the "legacy" Microsoft built with
classic Windows, which was completely ad hoc.  The entire Windows
software industry ecosystem is built up around that.  It's way too
late to get it right the first time, so now Microsoft has to come up
with a way to migrate the world's largest installed base to something
more manageable.  That's not going to be quick.  Microsoft is still
responsible, since they built it like that way-back-when, but even
Microsoft can't change the past.  They work in the world they built,
and it's not realistic to expect them to fix it overnight.

  But for those same reasons, expecting the rest of the software
industry to adopt what Microsoft's latest idea quickly is also
unrealistic.

  In contrast, all the current Linux distributions were designed
"right" the right time, with strong package management from day one.
So everything has been and continues to be much smoother on the
package/update management front.

-- Ben

~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
~ <http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/>  ~

Reply via email to