>
> A part of me feels sad to see things all going to the cloud. Perhaps one
> day we won’t even be able to do anything meaningful “locally” on our device
> if there is no Internet access.
>
[It's not Friday but] I'm so sick of decades of installing, configuring,
repairing and updating operating s
Then you get one service going down that takes multiple important services
with it. Off the top of my head recently
https://www.zdnet.com/article/akamai-apologises-after-outage-left-australias-major-banks-and-airline-systems-offline/
https://www.zdnet.com/article/sabre-systems-it-outage-cripples-
A part of me feels sad to see things all going to the cloud. Perhaps one
day we won’t even be able to do anything meaningful “locally” on our device
if there is no Internet access. Kind of like how we now need electricity
and Internet access for our phones at home whereas before with land lines
we
We have a lot of customers already there with AVD - which is an interesting
value prop with paying for the resources you use. One of the surprisingly
few clear use cases for cloud elasticity.
Apparently Windows 11 runs on the Raspberry PI too - interesting $ entry
point for an AVD client if it run
Probably the same will be said about Windows in general down the road.
We’ll probably just have our whole OS somewhere in the cloud and we’ll just
“remote” to it from our laptops.
On Sat, 10 Jul 2021 at 17:18, David Connors wrote:
> SQL Server of Linux has been out for a while and I think it was
SQL Server of Linux has been out for a while and I think it was shortly
after it was released that it was shown to outperform on Linux compared to
Windows Server on the same hardware.
When you're selling cloud like we the $ story for Windows Server isn't
great these days ... on a larger virtual ma
https://www.sqlservercentral.com/?na=v&nk=43198-5c996ba084cea&id=1013
Are they ceding the server market to Linux?
Mike