I am not putting down Microsoft I just think this Idea stinks.
http://www.cnn.com/2008/TECH/12/29/microsoft.metered.computing/index.html
http://www.cnn.com/2008/TECH/12/29/microsoft.metered.computing/index.html
There seems to be an uptick in Political comments in recent months. Those of us who are long time members of the site know that Political and Religious content has been banned for years. Nothing has changed. Please leave all political and religious comments out of the forums.
If you recently joined the forums you were not presented with this restriction in the terms of service. This was due to a conversion error when we went from vBulletin to Xenforo. We have updated our terms of service to reflect these corrections.
Please note any post refering to a politician will be considered political even if it is intended to be humor. Our experience is these topics have a way of dividing the forums and causing deep resentment among members. It is a poison to the community. We appreciate compliance with the rules.
The Staff of SOH
If I buy something, that's it. I refuse to pay a fee for usage. That is BS.
NC
FengZ, if what you say happens, it'll be the death blow to computing as we now know it.
I for one wouldn't rent a computer if my life depended on it. And there's a lot of people out there that do rent them... from Rent A Center. The biggest ripoff in the nation.... IMHO.
I agree- I buy a computer- I put on it what i want, and at the moment I keep my privacy. Where would be the privacy using this method?
Too many people able to decide what I do and when-
You want everything you do on a computer to be able to be accessed by God knows who?
And if the ISP went down, I can't use my puter? Till he comes back on line- or the server goes down? Same thing.
No thanks.
It will only be the death blow to the PC as we know it. We'll all be using Macs with some form of older Windows (XP 64 is fine) and jolly well be still flying our old FS9 and FSX.
Caz
I do believe that operating systems and office applications is a step too far. Possibly the one big step-up that MacOSX and Linux have needed, though, to enter the mainstream. What's far more likely is that MS will use it for corporate schemes, allowing "leases" for x amount of time (thus protecting against temporary internet outages) and allowing a code to be typed in given down a telephone, the same as activation keys can be now, if required. I can't see it working, even in the "always online" world that people seem determined to have now, in a consumer environment, though. Too many people would agree with the sentiments already stated here.
Ian P.
i believe almost all major software will go "server mode only" eventually (including the operating system itself), similar to what games like WoW has