Rupert Goodwins' Diary

Daily Newsletters

Sign up to ZDNet UK's daily newsletter.

Topics

diary, Bay, Nortel

NEWS
(Apologies for the non-appearance of last week's diary. This was due to the entire Online department - and hangers-on, such as I - vanishing over to Amsterdam for four days R&R. I wrote a short round-up of the events that took place but following legal advice I'm only left with the words Rain, Sofa, Leather, Boat, The Lost Twelve Hours, Where's Eugene?, and "It was there when I left the bar, officer". Everyone has now recovered, except Saul Hazeldine, our Web programmer. He's resigned and gone to live on an ex-Admiralty survey ship). Monday. Nortel buys Bay! If you're not involved in networking or telecoms, this short phrase could mean anything; Sheik Albeh-ben Nortel invests in some racehorse, for example. The truth behind the words is far more interesting: Nortel is still a telephone company at heart, while Bay is a troubled but still very useful purveyor of networking hardware. Everything is rushing together: it's a bit like the first microseconds of an atomic bomb blast, where the circular shell of explosives have gone off and are busy sending a compression wave through the fissile material. Providing the world economy doesn't go into spasm thanks to an unholy combination of Far Eastern recession, Y2K panic and sabre-rattling, we'll be moving to the ideal data distribution model of everything, all the time, everywhere within the decade. Tuesday Windows NT Server 4.0 Terminal Server Edition is here. One big server in the corner and everyone can run Windows on cheap little networked pooters. Lard the rafters with shouts of praise! Well... no. Don't bother. Its many hundreds of dollars per user licence fee somewhat swamps the fact that Acorn (you remember Acorn) has announced a $199 terminal that'll use this technology: it'll cost more per year to run this than to buy everyone a computer in the first place. It's also not very impressive. A super-duper dual Pentium II running at 300MHz will perhaps be able to manage 100 users, if you have absolutely lashings of memory: when I were a lad, I worked on a VAX 11/780 with something like sixty users. That had about a megabyte of memory - shared between all of us - and a processor that approximated to the grunt of 33MHz 80386. No, we didn't have all this Windows stuff but we managed to design computers, cars, chips and code nonetheless. Ironically, NT took a lot of the ideas of VMS (the VAX operating system) in the first place... There is one compelling edge to Terminal Server, though: with ADSL giving us permanent domestic Internet access, someone else can go to all the bother of making Windows run properly and you and I can just log on and use it from home. Wednesday If you can remember the days of real computers - bare boards, 512 bytes of RAM, hex with everything - you'll remember Circuit Cellar. That was a long-running hardware feature in Byte (RIP), featuring loads of clever little things to do with your soldering iron. It finished years ago but I've just discovered it's turned into a magazine of its own - Circuit Cellar Ink (That's probably an engineer's joke, but I can't work it out). Leafing through the pages I find that the spirit of the true hacker is alive and well and working with smart chips embedded in dumb objects. This stirs my long-quiescent hardware hacker instincts and I uncover some old plans I had for a fab PC toy. Basically, it's a huge panel of lights you hang on one side of your monitor to make it look like a Real Hollywood Computer: every fiftieth of a second or so, the computer dumps the binary contents of its stack onto the lights, so they twinkle along in time to whatever the thing's thinking about at the time. I check the adverts in CCI for the bits and make a couple of phone calls to component distributors. Alas. There's one particular bit that would make the design much, much easier. Nobody will sell me one. They'll sell me twenty - at £150 each - but not one. "How am I supposed to build a prototype if I have to cough up £3000 for just one part?" I ask. The shrug on the other end of the phone is audible - they have the part but wouldn't even consider selling it. Obviously, the overhead in putting it in an envelope makes it uneconomical. They still have their parts, and I still have my design. On paper. Thursday Phone call: "Hello, you naughty English technical journalist. Madame Fifi den Harg here. We have found your underpants." (*) Friday Bill Gates buys Cliveden! This sprawling country house in Buckinghamshire has seen more famous people behaving infamously than has the broom cupboard in the Commons - and it's proved the downfall of many. It was at the centre of the Profumo scandal, and has one hell of a reputation. As the Guardian said today, when Macmillan was told that there had been 13 judges in an orgy there he replied "Five, I could believe...". I've only once been in a situation where the ruling classes let their wigs down: through circumstances too unsettling to relate, I found myself invited to the 21st birthday party of the son of the Marquis of Bath, at Longleat. It was a fancy dress bash, and as it's hard to find much in the way of hire costumes when one is as rotund as I: I went as a monk. After the first drunken baroness asked if she could secretly confess to being a Roman Catholic, I realised that this was going to be no normal evening... Yes, there were clandestine couplings and so on and so forth - nothing you can't find going on in parties from Penzance to Peterhead, wherever people with more money than morals congregate - but the overriding sense was of people who knew that they played by their own rules. The whole place dripped with breathtaking self-confidence that bordered on the careless, and it's this that eventually trips people up... hmmm. I'm sure Bill and Cliveden will be very happy together. ----- (*) Not true. And in any case, I stole the underpants line from another journalist. Have we no shame?

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

You can also log in with Facebook. Log in or create your ZDNet UK account below

  • Login

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy. Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Community FAQ

Get ZDNet UK's daily newsletter

Enter your email address to sign up

ZDNet UK Live

JCB33

How dare film makers, artists or anybody that invests in creativity stop us pirating their works for free. I want to be able to walk into my local...

2 hours ago by JCB33 on ACTA stumbles in Germany
Moley

@GrueMaster. I prefer horses for courses rather than one size fits all. I, and I suspect most other computer users, do not really wish to have...

4 hours ago by Moley on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
greycynic

The product that scares me every time I have to use it is the Office 2007 version of Excel. The first bug that I found was applying the median...

4 hours ago by greycynic on Ten flawed products that derail productivity
GrueMaster

Nice review and very informative. One thing I'd like to add (in reply to whs001's 1st question), the main reason to have the same interface from...

6 hours ago by GrueMaster on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
Frederick Wrigley

I'be been using Mint 12 since the RC came out, and I am far more happy with the Cinnamon, the Mate, and, yes (with extensions), theGnome 3...

7 hours ago by Frederick Wrigley via Facebook on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
bdantas

Excellent article. One small correction, though--although a fresh installation of Linux Mint 12 will, indeed, provide the user with a version of...

7 hours ago by bdantas on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
Alan Ralph

In related news, the ISPs club together to get the members of the Home Affairs Select Committee (ya goofed on that part, ZDNet UK) copies of "The...

8 hours ago by Alan Ralph via Facebook on MPs urge ISPs to take down terrorist material
Alan Ralph

In related news, the ISPs club together to get the members of the Home Affairs Select Committee (ya goofed on that part, ZDNet UK) copies of "The...

8 hours ago by Alan Ralph via Facebook on MPs urge ISPs to take down terrorist material
Moley

For Gnome 2 die-hards, it is possible to add icons to the bottom panel (or top top panel, if you prefer) which provide the exact Gnome 2...

9 hours ago by Moley on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
ramwellian

Your comments would seem pretty naive and immature. Your 'solution' appears to be, "gee, let's all just give in to the hackers and give them...

9 hours ago by ramwellian on Cloud computing security: no more oxymoron?
BugStalker

"Interesting thought ... If you installed Win7 as a dual boot on a machine that previously only had Linux, and it wrecked your Linux installation,...

9 hours ago by BugStalker on Windows 7 Declares War on GRUB
whs001

This is an excellent summary of Ubuntu and Mint and the interface differences between them. Most such articles take a very partisan position for...

9 hours ago by whs001 on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
Moley

@ewallace. Not so clear. Anyone can obtain the text, for example from here http://www.ustr.gov/webfm_send/2379. I support ACTA so long as it and...

9 hours ago by Moley on ACTA: Facts, misconceptions and questions
45283

I think WinRT is fantastic. I just wish it was an option for people that didn't want to go through Microsoft's App Store with its attendant...

13 hours ago by 45283 on Why Windows 8 needs architectural hygiene for WOA
Burn-IT

Nine people? £30m? Who's back pocket is that lot going in? And IF they say it is for new buildings, what about all the ones the government has...

14 hours ago by Burn-IT on Police set to launch three £30m e-crime hubs
ewallace

Just to be clear, nobody knows what is in the text of ACTA, here is a photograph of the text of ACTA http://twitpic.com/8h9iju as submitted to the...

14 hours ago by ewallace on ACTA: Facts, misconceptions and questions
fgvrg56

Unfortunately main issue is that ASUS is refusing to accept that they make some mistake on this version of asus Transformer prime. 1 - GPS sensor...

15 hours ago by fgvrg56 on Asus Eee Pad Transformer Prime Wi-Fi & GPS problems?
Ben Woods

@Marcus A fair question. Just talked with Archos which said it was working on an announcement for next week....

16 hours ago by Ben Woods on Archos confirms G9 Ice Cream Sandwich update schedule
Marcus Karlsson

Any update on this, considering the claimed "first week of February"?

17 hours ago by Marcus Karlsson via Facebook on Archos confirms G9 Ice Cream Sandwich update schedule
apexwm

Bill Goodrich : Just as al_langevin pointed out, with Windows Server 2008 there is no Services for Macintosh anymore. It's gone, not available....

1 day ago by apexwm on Windows Server 2008 drops the ball for Mac compatibility