
Posts Tagged ‘windows’
o internet explorer 6 é um navegador antigo e usar ele atualmente é como querer ver filmes em alta definição em uma televisão em preto e branco de 14 polegadas. ele é antiquado e a internet é um espaço para novas tecnologias, que substituem as antigas, principalmente as que pararam no tempo. o ie6 tem mais de 8 anos de vida, um vovô no mundo windows, e só vale a pena usá-lo se você quiser saber como se navegava na internet do passado. ele tem muitos bugs, é pesado, consome a maior parte da memória do computador, trava toda hora e é cheio de brechas de segurança. é uma doença digital, um câncer binário!
há navegadores melhores disponíveis e gratuitos! sirva-se:
há um movimento que varre a internet pela morte do ie6, decretada para março de 2009:
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IE Death March
A internet tem que avançar sem o IE6
quem está comigo?
Why Your Next Computer Might Be A Linux PC
(…) Without the economic crisis to factor in to people’s spending decisions, people probably wouldn’t have considered the Linux option as strongly as they’re doing today. When every dollar saved counts, the decision to go Linux may be more about cost savings than anything else, but that might be what it takes to get people to try the OS computer geeks have been raving about for years.
Linux at 17 – What Windows promised to be
(…) Linux is what Windows had once promised to be – at least in terms of cross-platform support. In the wake of the PowerPC alliance from IBM, Apple, and Motorola in 1991, Microsoft made a commitment to support Windows NT 3.51 on PowerPC chips. Windows eventually added support for Digital’s Alpha NEC’s and SGI’s MIPS chips. Workstation maker Intergraph ported Windows NT 3.51 to its Clipper chips and said it was creating a port to Sparc chips from Sun. Neither ports saw the light of day.
Windows NT 4.0, which came out in 1996, only supported nothing more than f32-bit x86, Alpha, and MIPS chips, and by the turn of the millennium, only x86 chips were supported. (Interestingly, the PowerPC alliance also lined up IBM’s OS/2 and AIX Unixes – the OS/2 was never delivered – and even Sun Microsystems’ SunOS Unix was slated for the PowerPC chips. IBM also ported its OS/400 minicomputer operating system to the 64-bit variants of PowerPC).
While Microsoft has expanded support to cover Itanium processors – mostly at the urging of Hewlett-Packard, Intel’s Itanium development partner and the one with the most to gain from Windows-on-Itanium for its high-end Integrity servers – Microsoft has not made good on the initial cross-platform promises for Windows server. Microsoft has suffered from this, but not as much as Intel has been helped.
Alguém aí se acha capaz de fazer um Windows 3.11 rodar como sistema nativo de um computador “atual”?
