First concerns the current stagnation of Microsoft's web browser. While
other browsers such as
Mozilla, Konqueror, and
Safari sport surfer friendly features such as pop-up blocking and tabbed
browsing, IE has been stuck at version 6.0 longer than I was in college
it seems. Bill addresses his critics saying,
"How could we ignore the browser?," Gates responded. 'The Explorer
is fully integrated with the operating system, take it away and the OS
grinds to a halt. When you call up Help, you're using the browser. In
Office 2003 instead of going to the local files, the browser will go
online and fetch the latest documents." Without going into details,
Gates says he sees opportunities for reading and annotation
capabilities in Internet Explorer. However, the industry seems more
concerned about software talking to other software, Gates said, than
about software talking to the screen. "XML is going to be the key
technology here too."
Notice how he didn't answer the question? He talks about what things
the future browser might do and the capabilities he does talk about
have nothing whatsover to do with browsing the web. Reading Windows Help
files? Reading and annotation capabilities? Come on. It's clear that he
doesn't care about following standards and interoperating in a
heterogenous environemnt like the web.
The second item is quite amusing in a deja-vu,
haven't-we-heard-that-before kind of way. When talking about 64-bit
computing he says,
Gates also doesn't seem to have a lot of faith in 64 bit technologies
in the consumer space. "64 bit is coming to desktops, there is no
doubt about that," he said. "But apart from Photoshop, I can't
think of desktop applications where you would need more than 4
gigabytes of physical memory, which is what you have to have in order
to benefit from this technology. Right now, it is costly."
For the record, this sounds a lot like a quote that's been attributed
to him before about High Memory in DOS: "640K ought to be enough for
anybody. " Although there is some doubt about the
veracity of
said quote, he
won't be able to deny saying he can't fathom needing 4GB of physical
memory. I'll ask him about that when I'm playing a photo-realistic
first-person-shooter.