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wnevets 6 hours ago

> A. Are these major issues with cloud/SaaS tools becoming more common, or is it just that they get a lot more coverage now? It seems like we see major issues across AWS, GCP, Azure, Github, etc. at least monthly now and I don't remember that being the case in the past.

FWIW Microsoft is convinced moving Github to Azure will fix these outages

Lammy 6 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Everything old is new again.

https://www.zdnet.com/article/ms-moving-hotmail-to-win2000-s...

https://jimbojones.livejournal.com/23143.html

codethief 5 hours ago | parent [-]

From the second link:

> In 2002, the amusement continued when a network security outfit discovered an internal document server wide open to the public internet in Microsoft's supposedly "private" network, and found, among other things, a whitepaper[0] written by the hotmail migration team explaining why unix is superior to windows.

Hahaha, that whitepaper is pure gold!

[0]: https://web.archive.org/web/20040401182755/http://www.securi...

hotsauceror 15 minutes ago | parent [-]

And 25 years later, a significant portion of the issues in that whitepaper remain unresolved. They were still shitting on people like Jeffrey Snover who were making attempts to provide more scalable management technologies. Such a clown show.

tombert an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Microsoft is a company that hasn't even figured out how to get system updating working consistently on their premier operating system in three decades. It seems unlikely to me that somehow moving to Azure is going to make anything more stable.

einsteinx2 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

The same Azure that just had a major outage this month?

bovermyer 6 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Microsoft is also convinced that its works are a net benefit for humanity, so I would take that with a grain of salt.

andrewstuart2 6 hours ago | parent [-]

I think it would be pretty hard to argue against that point of view, at least thus far. If DOS/Windows hadn't become the dominant OS someone would have, and a whole generation of engineers cut their teeth on their parents' windows PCs.

tombert an hour ago | parent | next [-]

If Microsoft hadn't tried to actively kill all its competition then there's a good chance that we'd have a much better internet. Microsoft is bigger than just an operating system, they're a whole corporation.

Instead they actively tried to murder open standards [1] that they viewed as competitive and normalized the antitrust nightmare that we have now.

I think by nearly any measure, Microsoft is not a net good. They didn't invent the operating system, there were lots of operating systems that came out in the 80's and 90's, many of which were better than Windows, that didn't have the horrible anticompetitive baggage attached to them.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Embrace,_extend,_and_extinguis...

cdaringe 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

There are some pretty zany alternative realities in the Multiverses I’ve visited. Xerox Parc never went under and developed computing as a much more accessible commodity. Another, Bell labs invented a whole category of analog computers that’s supplanted our universe’s digital computing era. There’s one where IBM goes directly to super computers in the 80s. While undoubtedly Microsoft did deliver for many of us, I am a hesitant to say that that was the only path. Hell, Steve Jobs existed in the background for a long while there!

bilegeek 5 hours ago | parent | next [-]

I wish things had gone differently too, but a couple of nitpicks:

1.) It's already a miracle Xerox PARC escaped their parent company's management for as long as they did.

3.) IBM was playing catch-up on the supercomputer front since the CDC 6400 in 1964. Arguably, they did finally catch up in the mid-late 80's with the 3090.

noir_lord 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

AT&T sold Unix machines (actually a rebadged Olivetti for the hardware) and Microsoft has Xenix when windows wasn't a thing.

So many weird paths we could have gone down it's almost strange Microsoft won.

andrewstuart2 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Yeah, I'm absolutely not saying it was the only path. It's just the path that happened. If not MS maybe it would have been Unix and something else. Either way most everyone today uses UX based on Xerox Parc's which was generously borrowed by, at this point, pretty much everyone.

switchbak 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

DOS and Windows kept computing behind for a VERY long time, not sure what you're trying to argue here?

krabizzwainch 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

What’s funny is that we were some bad timing away from IBM giving the DOS money to Gary Kildall and we’d all be working with CP/M derivatives!

Gary was on a flight when IBM called up the Digital Research looking for an OS for the IBM-PC. Gary’s wife, Dorothy, wouldn’t sign an NDA without it going through Gary, and supposedly they never got negotiations back on track.

goda90 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

What if that alternate someone had been better than DOS/Windows and then engineers cut their teeth on that instead?

andrewstuart2 3 hours ago | parent [-]

Then my comment may have been about a different OS. Or I might never have been born. Who knows?

bovermyer 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I'm not convinced of your first point. Just because something seems difficult to avoid given the current context does not mean it was the only path available.

Your second point is a little disingenuous. Yes, Microsoft and Windows have been wildly successful from a cultural adoption standpoint. But that's not the point I was trying to argue.

andrewstuart2 3 hours ago | parent [-]

My first comment is simply pointing out that there's always a #1 in anything you can rank. Windows happened to be what won. And I learned how to use a computer on Windows. Do I use it now? No. But I learned on it as did most people whose parents wanted a computer.

tombert an hour ago | parent [-]

The comment you were replying to was about Microsoft.

Even if Windows weren't a dogshit product, which it is, Microsoft is a lot more than just an operating system. In the 90's they actively tried to sabotage any competition in the web space, and held web standards back by refusing to make Internet Explorer actually work.

hobs 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

And how does it follow that microsoft is the good guy in a future where we did it with some other operating system? You could argue that their system was so terrible that its displacement of other options harmed us all with the same level of evidence.