by DAN CALLOWAY
Published 31 January 2010 @ 03:57 UTC

REDMOND, WASHINGTON – This author was recently searching on the Internet looking for an old acquaintance—he called OS/2—with which he had lost touch. While searching numerous online newspapers, this author stumbled across an obituary for his friend that confirmed his demise. The obituary was from a newspaper in the Redmond, Washington area that announced the death of OS/2, someone with whom this author was very familiar and had worked with many years ago. This author knew that he had not seen or heard from his old acquaintance in some time but never realized why until he went searching for him and discovered that the OS had passed away.

The obituary that was found was short but very revealing. It described where and when his acquaintance had lived, what the acquaintance had accomplished in his short life span that others like him had not achieved, and it reported what the cause of death was to have been. The obituary, dated 31 December 2006, read something like the following:

“A once prominent figure in the OS world, OS/2, was found dead this morning in his Redmond, Washington home at the young age of 17. Born to the parents of Microsoft and IBM in April, 1987, OS/2 was the brainchild of both companies, which resulted from a Joint Development Agreement between the two parties in 1985. Just prior to his birth, Microsoft and IBM had wanted to name their offspring, CP/DOS, but after his birth, following two years of labor, they settled on the name OS/2, which stood for Operating System/2 because it sprang from the 2nd generation line of Personal System (PS/2) computers that IBM had sired earlier. OS/2 was reared as a text-mode OS but quickly featured a rich API for controlling the video display and handling mouse and keyboard events so that programmers who were writing protected-mode programs no longer had to call the BIOS or access the hardware directly. Other achievements of OS/2, during his short life, included a set of development tools consisting of video and keyboard APIs as linkable libraries that allowed family mode programs to run under MS-DOS, something unparalleled at the time. In addition, a task switcher called Program Selector was developed in OS/2 that allowed for text-mode multitasking of text sessions that could run multiple programs. OS/2 promised a GUI for its text-mode OS and, in October, 1988, OS/2 came through with a graphical interface that was similar to its predecessor Windows 2.1. Later in life, OS/2 introduced distributed database support for IBM databases and SNA communications support for IBM mainframe networks. Also, toward the end of his life, OS/2 developed installable filesystems, introducing the HPFS filesystem, which allowed long filenames for files in the OS. During his warp years starting in 1994, OS/2 offered greater hardware support, the ability to run multimedia programs, Internet-compatible networking, and a basic office application suite called IBM Works (OS/2, 2010; OS/2 Warp – OS/2 Withdrawal from Marketing and Change in Support, 2010).

The cause of death of OS/2 seems to have been associated with its lack of mass market appeal and dropping market share in the technology market with the sales of OS/2 dropping off sharply in December, 2005. It appears that OS/2 never fully recovered and finally succumbed to its financial-illness a year later in December, 2006. OS/2 is survived by its desktop relatives: Windows 95, 98, NT, 2000, XP, Vista, and 7” (OS/2, 2010).

Did OS/2 deserve to die the way it did? This author would support the notion that during its warp years, OS/2 was considered an OS that had promise to be the OS of the future. However, due to the splitting up of IBM and Microsoft, in 1990, OS/2 lost much needed support from IBM and, as a result, Microsoft’s Windows 3.0 became extremely more popular among users primarily because it came bundled in most new PCs sold by Microsoft while OS/2 remained an expensive standalone OS. Furthermore, OS/2 did not have the driver support of Windows 3.0 and this oversight led to its ultimate demise. As a result, OS/2 may not have met with the death that it deserved, but it certainly lost its battle with the support of its user-base and the market share.

References:

OS/2. (2010). Retrieved January 29, 2010, from Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OS/2

OS/2 Warp – OS/2 Withdrawal from Marketing and Change in Support. (2010). Retrieved January 29, 2010, from IBM – OS/2 Warp: http://www-01.ibm.com/software/os/warp-withdrawal/

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by DAN CALLOWAY
Published 3 January 2010 @ 20:45 UTC

WEAVERVILLE, NC – Jesse Ventura, ex-Governor, ex-Navy Seal, exposes an elite secret society of power brokers known as The Bilderbergs who he claims are launching a Global Death Plot against all humankind, and a plot to control every aspect of our lives.

Please watch this intriguing and informative video and decide for yourself.

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by DAN CALLOWAY
Published 22 December 2009 @ 14:06 UCT

WASHINGTON, DC – Early this morning, the Senate made history and health reform cleared its most important hurdle yet — garnering the 60 votes needed to move toward a final vote in that chamber later this week.

This marks the first time in our nation’s history that comprehensive health reform has come to this point. And it appears that the American people will soon realize the genuine reform that offers security to those who have health insurance and affordable options to those who do not.

I’m grateful to Senator Harry Reid and every senator who’s been working around the clock to make this happen. And I’m grateful to you, and every member of the Organizing for America community, for all the work you have done to make this progress possible.

After a nearly century-long struggle, we are now on the cusp of making health insurance reform a reality in the United States of America.

As with any legislation, compromise is part of the process. But I’m pleased that recently added provisions have made this landmark bill even stronger. Between the time when the bill passes and the time when the insurance exchanges get up and running, insurance companies that try to jack up their rates do so at their own peril. Those who hike their prices may be barred from selling plans on the exchanges.

And while insurance companies will be prevented from denying coverage on the basis of pre-existing conditions once the exchanges are open, in the meantime there will be a high-risk pool where people with pre-existing conditions can purchase affordable coverage.

A recent amendment has made these protections even stronger. Insurance companies will now be prohibited from denying coverage to children immediately after this bill passes. There’s also explicit language in this bill that will protect a patient’s choice of doctor. And small businesses will get additional assistance as well.

These protections are in addition to the ones we’ve been talking about for some time. No longer will insurance companies be able to drop your coverage if you become sick and no longer will you have to pay unlimited amounts out of your own pocket for treatments that you need.

Under this bill families will save on their premiums; businesses that would see their costs rise if we don’t act will save money now and in the future. This bill will strengthen Medicare and extend the life of the program. Because it’s paid for and gets rid of waste and inefficiency in our health care system, this will be the largest deficit reduction plan in over a decade.

Finally, this reform will extend coverage to more than 30 million Americans who don’t have it.

These are not small changes. These are big changes. They’re fundamental reforms. They will save money. They will save lives.

And your passion, your work, your organizing helped make all of this possible. Now it’s time to finish the job.

Thank you,

President Barack Obama

by DAN CALLOWAY
Published 26 November 16:20 UCT

Source: Samzenpus; Slashdot

WEAVERVILLE, NC – CNN reports that for most of the past week, when someone did a Google image search for ‘Michelle Obama,’ one of the first images that came up was a picture of the First Lady altered to resemble a monkey. After being hit with a firestorm of criticism over the episode, Google first banned the site that posted the photo, saying it could spread malware. Then, when the image appeared on another site, Google displayed the photo in its search results, but displayed an apologetic Google ad above it. On Wednesday morning, the racially offensive image appeared to have been removed from any Google Image searches for ‘Michelle Obama.’ Google officials could not immediately be reached for comment.

 

by DONALD CALLOWAY
Posted September 26, 2009; The Chronicler’s Web

Don CallowayCLARKSBURG, WV — I’ve been using the Clickfree Model HD225 Automatic Backup storage device from Storage Appliance Corp. for a couple of years now and just love the convenience of being able to simply plug in the device to my Windows PCs’ USB port and let the device take care of the backing up all my important files on all my computers running Windows Vista Home Premium.  It couldn’t be easier using the device to safely store over 400 different file types, including emails and photos, for retrieval and reloading in the event of a dreaded system hard drive crash.

All was well until about 5 months ago when my Clickfree device suddenly and inexplicably stopped functioning as expected when I plugged it in to one of my desktop PCs.   Instead of booting up automatically and starting the search for files to backup as usual, the device merely presented a Windows explorer view of the devices storage and system drives used to perform the backup.   For months I tried in vain to figure out on my own why my Clickfree worked just fine on all my other PCs except my desktop with the problem.    After getting nowhere, I enlisted the help of a Clickfree support technician.   He worked with me on the phone for over an hour, telling me that I must have a problem with my PC.  An interesting aspect of the issue I was having was the Clickfree technician had me execute a Disk Management view of my system with the Clickfree device plugged in and was baffled as to why my Clickfree system drive properties showed it as an HFS file system rather than the usual CDFS file system.  Incidentally, the HFS file system is used by linux systems and the Mac from Apple Macintosh.   Frustrated even further, I enlisted the help of my brother who is a computer technician with a master’s degree in IT.  He asked if I had ever dual-booted Linux on my PC with the problem, and I told him that I had.   He suspected the problem may be due to the linux partition still residing on the hard drive.  He suspected the Clickfree device (which can backup both PCs and Mac’s) might be seeing that partition and defaulting to Mac rather than PC backup mode.   So, I deleted the linux partition and incorporated the unallocated disk space to my system’s C:/ drive, and finally fixed the Vista boot image.   All that work turned out for naught as the problem still persisted. (more…)

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