T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1877.1 | | MU::PORTER | obnoxious, though interesting | Thu Apr 30 1992 16:26 | 16 |
| Well, it seems pretty near the mark to me.
DEC made money by riding the minicomputer wave while other
computer manufacturers stuck obstinately to the old way of
computing - classic mainframe installations. Other companies
went to the wall because they couldn't change.
Well, computing's changed again. Minicomputers are not where
the money is. Companies which cannot deal with that will
not last. Can DEC deal with that? I don't know.
IBM is a bit of a special case here; they didn't die along
with the other glasshouse mainframe manufacturers because of
the immense size of their installed base, who were locked
in to the IBM way of life. IBM never really did get
the hang of departmental computing.
|
1877.2 | | SALSA::MOELLER | Money talks - mine says 'Bye!' | Thu Apr 30 1992 17:06 | 7 |
| >IBM never really did get the hang of departmental computing.
Oh, I don't know.. the RS/6000 does pretty well.. even talks 802.5 and
5250 just fine. Not to mention the RS/6000 scales from desktop to a
100SPECmark data center system.
karl
|
1877.3 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Thu Apr 30 1992 17:13 | 2 |
| Isn't the AS400 a departmental system? Last I heard, that line did as
much biz as all of Digital combined.
|
1877.4 | and then to nano-machines | TRUCKS::WINWOOD | Life has surface noise too | Fri May 01 1992 09:36 | 4 |
| Given the trend perhaps we should be looking into pico-computers,
as ubiquitous as knuckle joints?
Calvin
|
1877.5 | "Movie critics!" | PHDVAX::RICCIO | H. Ross Perot for President! | Fri May 01 1992 12:11 | 45 |
|
This is just another example of what I call "movie critic"
expertise. I've mentioned this before (maybe even in this notes-
file?)
To use a couple of examples. Remember the Gulf War? Every
network had their own middle eastern expert and military expert.
I never realized this country had so many middle eastern experts.
In fact, if that's the case, how come we still don't understand
the culture(s)? Any way, each one of these experts had a different
opinion. You'd change channels and get a completely different
"expert" opinion of what was about to happen.
The same goes for the economy, how many different stories have
we heard here? These experts, in all fields, are no more then movie
critics voicing their opinion based on what they think. If I avoided
every movie the critics trashed, I would have missed some great stuff.
What really annoys me is these people change their tune at the
drop of a hat. Just a few weeks ago (before the Q3 results) I had seen
a couple of very positive articles on DEC. One went so far as to say,
"The biggest problem DEC will have by early 1994, will be hiring enough
good people fast enough." Then of course after the Q3 earnings, DEC is
doomed! If they are such experts, why didn't they see this coming?
The one that gets me is, about 3 or 4 months before the formal
announcement of the VAX 9000, there were a couple of articles on DEC.
One I remember was in the Wall Street Journal and it basically said
that DEC was on the forefront of making major cuts into IBMs mainframe
market. It went on to talk about the 9000 and it's price performance
and how that would put DEC on a new "plateau" in the industray. Well,
we all know what (didn't) happened there. But what burns me up is the
same people who said the 9000 would bring us to new heights, were
saying we misjudged the market, we came out with a mainframe when
customers were "changing direction" and going towards a client/server
and desktop environment. Well why didn't they say that to begin with?
In my opinion, the so called experts, make (educated?) guesses,
and if they're right, thay make sure they pat themselves on the back
and tell everyone, "I told you so." If they're wrong, they just change
their story, and say there is new data, or the previous information
was inconclusive, or some BS like that.
My father once told me, "Believe half of what you see, and none
of what you read". I know it's not original, but it is good advice.
Phil...
|
1877.6 | what is an expert? | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | All's well that ends | Fri May 01 1992 13:10 | 11 |
| Re: <<< Note 1877.5 by PHDVAX::RICCIO "H. Ross Perot for President!" >>>
As far as I know, the old definition of an expert still holds:
"An expert comes from more than fifty miles away and brings slides."
Apparently, this definition is applied by editors of trade
magazines, the WSJ, and the Globe, as well as by some of our
managers. :-)
Dick
|
1877.7 | | TEMPE::MCAFOOS | Spiff readies his daring escape plan... | Fri May 01 1992 14:32 | 14 |
| re .6
>> As far as I know, the old definition of an expert still holds:
>> "An expert comes from more than fifty miles away and brings slides."
hmmmm.... The definition I always relied on:
expert: Used to be a spurt.
Bob.
|
1877.8 | Another view... | SWAM2::KELLER_FR | | Fri May 01 1992 14:47 | 8 |
| Re .7:
More accurately: an "ex" is a has-been and a "spert" is a drip under
pressure. Not sure if this fits, but....
Fred :^)
|
1877.9 | One way to say it | FNOPST::MAINST::RAJALA | The Wonder Child of Technique | Fri May 01 1992 17:15 | 2 |
|
An expert is a person who knows everything of nothing.
|
1877.10 | | ROYALT::KOVNER | Everything you know is wrong! | Fri May 01 1992 18:09 | 13 |
| Some of these experts are about as good as the psychics
in the National Enquirer - and no one checks the records
in either case, except that they both trumpet their few right
predictions.
In that vein, I'll give some of my own predictions:
Elvis will buy Digital, move the headquarters to Memphis, and
institute a dress code requiring everyone to wear blue suede shoes.
Then, with the technology Elvis brought back from the aliens,
we'll blow all the competition away.
|
1877.11 | Hey!!!! | SWAM2::KELLER_FR | | Fri May 01 1992 20:54 | 4 |
| Was Elvis seen at DECworld??????
fjk :^)
|
1877.12 | | LABRYS::CONNELLY | globally suboptimized in '92 | Sat May 02 1992 00:37 | 8 |
| re: .11
> Was Elvis seen at DECworld??????
Well, rumor has it that Elvis has been seen more frequently than certain
managers in Digital by their direct reports! (But not in my group.;-))
;-) paul
|
1877.13 | future schlock | WMOIS::RAINVILLE | A clear and pleasant danger! | Sat May 02 1992 09:39 | 11 |
| Just to get serious for a moment, the 'fallable expert' syndrome
is just an indication that people in supposed 'leadership' positions,
cannot make useful forecasts or assesments because the rate of change
has outstripped their training and experience. This is true in
virtually every arena, but shows up mostly in the business and
politics. I'ts a bit easier to be a technical expert, as the
problem set is more bounded, but, even there, technology is now
driven by what the market will buy, not the limitations of
our ability to design and build. In addition, hoards of totally
inadequate people have risen to positions which give them credibility
far beyond their cognitive abilities...mwr
|
1877.14 | ELVIS was there!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! | EJOVAX::JFARLEY | | Sat May 02 1992 20:58 | 2 |
| Elvis was seen at DECWORLD and if the rumors are correct. He was
giving the Pathworks Demo last Friday between 2 and 5 PM.
|
1877.15 | Big market for Elvis-related stuff | WHELIN::CASHMAN | | Thu May 07 1992 12:44 | 5 |
| According to the Boston Globe about a year ago, the market for goods
and services identified with Elvis was about $500M annually. Maybe we
should rename some of our stuff...
-- Paul
|
1877.16 | | MU::PORTER | disadvantaged networks | Thu May 07 1992 18:24 | 6 |
| Well, I tried to get "Elvis" adopted as the code name for
a software product I was working on (I can't stand all those
names from astronomy, Greek mythology, and the like -- too
self-important). The rest of the team turned it down.
We ended up with "Boris" instead; Mr. Y. was big in the
news at that time.
|
1877.17 | Payback is a b*tch | GOTIT::harley | Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain... | Thu May 07 1992 18:34 | 8 |
| re .-1
> We ended up with "Boris" instead; Mr. Y. was big in the
> news at that time.
Well, you could try to get even and name your next project Natasha :^)
/harley
|
1877.18 | | MU::PORTER | disadvantaged networks | Thu May 07 1992 22:08 | 1 |
| I beg your pardon?
|
1877.19 | | CREATV::QUODLING | Ken, Me, and a cast of extras... | Fri May 08 1992 00:07 | 9 |
| The natasha reference, is to Boris and Natasha, the team of Bad guys in
the old Rocky and Bullwinkle Cartoon series.
Gee, doesn't anyone know anythin important anymore???
:-)
q
|
1877.20 | | MU::PORTER | disadvantaged networks | Fri May 08 1992 13:55 | 1 |
| Oh, it's an American cultural reference!
|