• Sun Microsystems to fire 6000. Crazy wording in FT.
  • Jerry Yang quits.
  • AOL kills Hometown.
  • $21M in repairs for Hadron Collider?
  • USB 3.0 released (finalized) today.
  • I highlight two stories about USB 3.0 showing how bad todays tech coverage has become.

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  1. DaDude says:

    Sun never made money selling software. It never was their business, they’re a hardware and support company.

  2. Angel H. Wong says:

    Ahhh.. The Hadron Collider.. Maybe it’s God’s way of telling them to not do it on Earth. All the other planets he imbued with life build one and that is the reason why the Fermi Paradox is valid.

  3. Somebody_Else says:

    Good to see I’m not the only person who hates it when they try to explain bandwidth or capacity in terms of books/movies/games/whatever.

  4. Listen to TWIT Floss ep. 39: http://twit.tv/floss39 to hear in depth interview with S.Phipps, who outlines Sun Open Source reasoning very clearly (for the masses). It is long term strategy, won’t bring them money “right now”. As #1 DaDude mentions, their goal is hardware and support money.

  5. ECA says:

    USB 3??
    Why not Firewire 3200…? as well as they are aiming at 6.4Gbps with FIBER..

    ALSO did anyone know:
    Cable TV system support

    Cable TV providers (in the US, with digital systems) must, upon request of a customer, provide a high-definition capable cable box with a functional FireWire interface. This applies only to customers leasing high-definition capable cable boxes from said cable provider after April 1, 2004. The relevant law is CFR 76.640 Section 4 Subsections i and ii.[13] The interface can be used to display or record Cable TV, including HDTV programming.[14]

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FireWire

  6. GregA says:

    #5,

    Well from a consumer point of view… If I record an hour of HD video on my cam corder… That is maybe what??? 2-3 gig tops, and takes maybe a minute or three to transer to my computer on plain old usb 2.0… With many core processors becoming the norm negating the host bus complaints…

    Firewire is dead…

    I guess USB 3.0 and whatever the next firewire is have a future in copying obsessive compulsive porn addicts child porn collection… but outside of that application not really seeing the application there.

    Im sticking with USB 2.0 for now and forseeable future. Also, why would I would to hook a firewire cable to my cable or satelite box? For that application it is easier just to go to internet and download it. Fallout 3 for example, is a meager 6.2 gig and that took less than two hours for me to download over steam…

    I totally get more cores on processors, bigger hard drives, more ram, more internet bandwidth, but USB 2.0 is basically fast enough. I doubt my camcorder could feed data and firewire or USB 3+ speeds.

    Even on my digital picture frame, which I have enhanced with video files (pan and zoom pictures) rather than just picture show with transitions… It takes longer for the thing to reboot than it does to fill its 512Mb of memory…

  7. James Hill says:

    Firewire is dead? Then why do they keep selling drives with FW connections, and why does the video editing industry still use it?

    Don’t get pissy now: We’re used to you being wrong.

  8. QB says:

    Sergeant Shultz – nice.

    Sun is going to need more than free software to get people to buy their hardware.

    They didn’t jump into bed with the enterprise software vendors (SAP, Oracle, Siebel, etc) to make their software run best on the Sun platform and let Microsoft (of all people) do that. Now Microsoft is killing everyone in the enterprise server market while Dell and HP supply commodity hardware.

    Now here’s the really ironic part. Java Servers run better on a frickin’ 32 bit Windows server than on a big honkin’ Niagara server. Saavy.

  9. Bernard_Marx says:

    USB 3.0 will also transmit more power which will cut back on the time it takes to recharge connected mp3 players, etc.

  10. Chris Mac says:

    USB works. Firewire doesn’t.

  11. JoaoPT says:

    #10
    Whaddayamean? Firewire works dandy! It’s just pricier, and not as widely supported by mobo manufacturers…

  12. GregA says:

    #7,

    Steve Jobbs says you don’t need firewire.

    http://www.macuser.com/hardware/steve_says_you_dont_need_firew.php?lsrc=murss

    Not only is it dead, but the corpse has been buried and people are now forgetting about it.

  13. Paddy-O says:

    # 7 James Hill said, “Firewire is dead? Then why do they keep selling drives with FW connections, and why does the video editing industry still use it?”

    What % of new PCs ship with FW connection?

  14. Dallas says:

    Firewire has no future. It died when Apple dropped it several years ago. Even then, it was niche as the licensing was so steep that the PC industry dumped it and then finally Apple.

    The TV manufactures and the Set Top Box suppliers also DUMPING firewire as a protected content port. Most consumer video recording equipment also on USB now.

    Angry James Hill needs to come to terms that everything he likes is lost, dying or dead. Give up that floppy drive too, James.

  15. QB says:

    Apple just moved off firewire for their laptops but will probably continue to support it on desktops, especially the pros, for a while. iPods haven’t had the cable for a while.

    The costs weren’t huge, Apple (and others) renegotiated the licensing in 1999 from USD$1 per unit to USD.25 per unit. That price set the standard for other major licensees like Dell and Compaq/HP. Dallas is right, consumer video is really driving it’s demise. That was a Sony and their friends fighting Intel and Canon.

    A lot of graphics guys use firewire so they are giving them time to upgrade. The last pocket drive I bought has both. What makes it fast, though, is the 7200 rpm rating.

  16. Glenn E. says:

    Weren’t they building this multi-billion dollar super collider down in Texas, until its cost overruns killed it? I read once that rodents were gnawing on the miles of cabling. Billions of dollars spend, and not a penny on anything to keep the rats out. Well that project got canned, because they simply couldn’t justify its steep price tag to Congress. And hearing that the Hadron Collider is suffering costly problems too, only makes me glad that the US taxpayers aren’t footing the bill this time.

  17. Glenn E. says:

    The other thing that I recalled about these super collider projects is this. The ones being build over in Europe are most likely just an excuse to employ ex-Soviet physicists, so they won’t build nukes for Islamic terrorists or nations. That the collider still isn’t working, isn’t much of a surprise. They don’t want to be put out of work, too soon, by finishing it.

  18. Vlad says:

    #19 Isn’t it the story with any contractor job, not just former Soviet engineers? 🙂


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