Updated: 4/4/06; 7:05:54 PM.
Ted's Radio Weblog
Mission: Interoperable. Competition breeds Innovation. Monopolies breed stagnation. Working Well with Others is Good.
        

Wednesday, December 8, 2004

With the release of Thunderbird, some folks complain that it isn't an Outlook-killer, as it doesn't have built in calendaring and task lists (it does have an address book). The Mozilla Foundation is building separate components for most of those features, whereas the Mozilla (nee' Netscape) browser had everything on one executable file. Jon Udell takes a look at the Sunbird calendar in Jon's Radio today and reports: Mozilla Calendar. "It's been a while since I looked at Mozilla Calendar, so this morning I installed the Firefox version and gave it another whirl. My first reaction was that this descendant of Netscape's calendar program must share a lot of DNA with the original -- it feels a tad clunky, UI-wise, in the same kinds of ways..."
1:53:31 PM    comment []

InfoWorld: Top News reports that China's Lenovo to buy IBM's PC business. "TOKYO - China's Lenovo Group Ltd. signed a definitive agreement on Wednesday to acquire IBM Corp.'s personal computing division. Lenovo will pay US$1.25 billion in cash for the business, which is expected to transform it into the world's number three PC maker, the companies announced."

This is certainly a worry for those of us who depend on the reliability and ruggedness of our ThinkPads. While the manufacture of the machines has been outsourced for years, the responsibility has always fallen to the company with those three letters on the case: IBM. Expect a conservative IT market to shy away from the machines for a while. With luck, the spinoff can be as successful as the Lexmark deal.

Follow-up: A news.com editorial opines "Why Lenovo-IBM is a tough sell"
9:59:04 AM    comment []


InfoWorld: Top News reports that China's Lenovo to buy IBM's PC business. "TOKYO - China's Lenovo Group Ltd. signed a definitive agreement on Wednesday to acquire IBM Corp.'s personal computing division. Lenovo will pay US$1.25 billion in cash for the business, which is expected to transform it into the world's number three PC maker, the companies announced."

This is certainly a worry for those of us who depend on the reliability and ruggedness of our ThinkPads. While the manufacture of the machines has been outsourced for years, the responsibility has always fallen to the company with those three letters on the case: IB/font>. Expect a conservative IT market to shy away from the machines for a while. With luck, the spinoff can be as successful as the Lexmark deal.
9:58:37 AM    comment []


© Copyright 2006 Ted Roche.   

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