Archive for October, 2006

Dell Started to Sell AMD-based PC

Sunday, October 29th, 2006

You may have just noticed as well that Dell has quietly started to sell AMD based PCs, shortly after the AMD partnership annoucement a few days ago. This is a long-awaited good news to the PC industry.

Healthy competition makes a huge difference in pushing the best technology forward. The competition from AMD has been the only challenge to Intel’s dominance for the last a couple of decades. It has never been quite the level playing field due to the tremendous size and marketing muscle Intel possesses. Without AMD, Intel will probably force everyone to use the slow and power-hungry Itanium 64 chips instead of the Pentium-M based Core Duo and Core 2 Duo.

Dell has long recognized the market demand of AMD-based PCs. A simple market research in the DIY market will show the popularity of AMD-based mobo vs the Intel counterpart for their price and performance. But I guess it had been hard to part with Intel’s lucrative co-marketing moolah. It is so lucrative, in fact, it pretty much gives all the additional CPUs away to Dell once it reaches certain volume. Therefore it effectively smothered any incentive for Dell to seek alternative vendors.

Dell has long been a data-driven sales company. So what triggered this change of heart has everything to do with what happens in the corporate data centers. Many other vendors are not as loyal to Intel as Dell. For example HP has been offering both AMD and Intel-based servers. Since a few missteps by Intel regarding the 64-bit strategy, orders for AMD Opteron-based servers have been in a steady climb to the point that helped HP to overtake Dell as the biggest PC vendor. That finally got Dell’s attention – I guess the size and success of Dell has made it less nimble after all. But it is never too late to change course.

Bad software is good for the economy

Wednesday, October 18th, 2006

Many people redicule about the bloated, buggy and slow-performing software that companies produce – especially from Micro$oft due to their dominance in this department. However, I think these buggy software products is a major force in lifting the economy.

First of all, bloated and buggy software takes a lot of resource to produce (Longhorn should be called longhaul for example) and even more resource to maintain. Hundreds of thousands of software developers have to be hired to write those software products. And millions more of technology workers have to be hired by companies using those software to train and maintain them. This definitely helped the job market.

Secondly, slow running software not only means more employees are needed to run them, but more importantly it justfies and encourages home users and business users alike to continue to upgrade computer hardwares to keep up with the latest software demand. The world without the like of Microsoft would be bleak and gloomy – we will be all running computers with Linux which see no reason to upgrade beyond the 486 CPU with 16MB of memory and 500MB hard drives. The world of computing would have been forever devided between the elite super computer users and the lowly home users. Unlike today, we pretty much all have supercomputers of yesteryear at our fingertips in order to run the latest Office software at 3D resolution.

So “bad” software is good for the economy. It spurs job market. It pushes the envelope of computer technology. It continues to push the consumption of hundreds of billions of dollars of high-end computing equipments down market to average homes and offices.

Top-10 signs you have a short commute

Sunday, October 8th, 2006
  1. Often have to put in park to finish NPR news update;
  2. The AC starts to work half-way;
  3. It is faster to drive home for lunch than eating out;
  4. Have very little to talk to co-worker about at the morning coffee station;
  5. It is shorter than most shopping route;
  6. Feel slightly energized after the morning commute;
  7. Cup-holders are the most rarely used;
  8. Don’t care about gasoline prices;
  9. Very concerned about making the third free services within the 4-year warranty period;
  10. Feels a sense of accomplishment by just watching the opposite traffic.