Good Week
In January 2004, storage giant EMC made
what some thought was an unusual move in doling out $625m to acquire
VMware, a pioneer in virtualisation
software for x86 servers. After all, what could a firm that sold disks know
about this new field based on commodity boxes? Last week, Intel took a $218.5m
stake in VMware but for that large outlay, the chip behemoth got just 2.5
percent of the company. At the same time, VMware announced its own IPO filing
and many watchers believe that a $10bn valuation is likely to be reached – a
nice little earner for EMC.
Bad Week
Web sites that count page views to demonstrate their huge popularity suffered
a blow last week. Ratings firm
Nielsen NetRatings will no
longer use these as a primary gauge, so we won’t have to attempt to figure out
those mind-boggling numbers. Instead, NN will use another unreliable indicator –
time spent at sites. Unfortunately, most alternative guides are also vulnerable
to being horribly gamed. The change is being occasioned by new(ish) technologies
that affect the way sites work with media streams that automatically refresh,
and Ajax code that can update elements rather than whole pages.
Word of the Week
Crapware. This unlovely term was only christened recently but the concept
might already be on its way out after Dell announced a PC line dubbed
Vostro.
The new range goes some way towards dispensing with the icons that resemble an
outbreak of boils on even the most box-fresh systems. Good riddance to “free”
anti-malware, media players, ISP trials and their entire ilk.
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