>> ... "Trust No One" ...

Cool, an Agent Mulder fan.  However, what about Scully? Surely we can
trust her.  And what about "The Lone Gunmen", I/T dudes we should all
emulate, as well as Agents Monica Reyes and John Doggett.  I am sure
that there are those who doubt Agent Skinner, but I'm not one of them.
Now, I don't think you could trust Diana Fowley, but it's wise to know
what she's up to.

Well, I better get back to it as, surely, "The Truth is out there."


Steve in Memphis



-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of MikeB
Sent: Friday, April 11, 2008 3:07pm 15:07
To: RBASE-L Mailing List
Subject: [RBASE-L] - RE: None RBase Question!


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "James Bentley" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "RBASE-L Mailing List" <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, April 11, 2008 3:49 PM
Subject: [RBASE-L] - RE: None RBase Question!


> Mike,
>
> If you believe that load of BS.  I have this bridge between
> Manhattan and Brooklyn you can buy for a very low price.
>
> I came to the PC world via many years installing, programming,
> and managing software packages in the IBM main frame world.  IBM
> upgrades to its operating systems(mainframe and mini) are
> evolutionary they didn't go out an break a significant part of
> existing software.  Yes there were changes that affected
> backward compatibility. There always is as that is the only way

    Actually most of the backward compatibility was preserved up thru
Win2K 
AFAIK.  The architecture was built around the NT Kernel, wrapped by the
HAL 
(Hardware Access Layer) and the Executive Layer (please forgive if the 
nomenclature is not exactly right as I covered this stuff in a class
about 10 
years ago and haven't set eyes on it since).  The original NT Kernel, as
many 
here recall preserved the Actual MSDOS SubSystem as well as the OS/2
SubSystem, 
so there was an effort to preserve Backward Compatibility and the recent

changes that seem to ignore all those issues is likely the thrust of the

article.  I have read in the barest of detail about Win7 from MS
Releases to 
ZDNet and others that also lends credence to the modular approach
mentioned in 
the article.

If the modular approach is in fact the structure of the next iteration,
I'm all 
for it, since the Win32 environment which nearly 100% of the Desktop 
applications today run against, including our beloved RBase.

As far as believing anything, at my age I am a little bit jaded, tending
to let 
things play out a bit till there is something substantive to get my head

around.   Kind of like the sign in Fox Mulders' office, "Trust NoOne"
.....


> to grow/enhance the operating system.  The opbect of the game is
> to cause minimal disruption of you customers operation.
> Microsoft never learned that lesson.  Each major release involve
> massive changes to the underling architecture rendering hardware
> and software obsolete.  This revolution instead of evolution
> allows them to ingnore all of the past unfixed problems.


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