You are looking at posts in the category Technology.

Posted on May 10th, 2007 by Chris.
Filed under: Chris' Stuff, Linux, News, Technology.
An email was sent out yesterday by my boss to the entire organization I work within.
—–Original Message—–
From:, Pete
Sent: Monday, May 07, 2007 9:17 AM
To: SouthEast Market
Cc:
Subject: Congratulations to Chris Gkikas on Red Hat Certified Technician certificationPlease join me in congratulating Chris Gkikas on his attaining the Red Hat Certified Technician - Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 certification. Chris is looking pretty spiffy walking around with his red fedora!
BTW, as much as I enjoy basking in the glory or Chris’ achievement, I’d really appreciate it if the congrats were directed to him as opposed to a REPLY ALL (and I suspect many of you would too! :>)
It’s extremely cool to get feedback and praise like this.
So now, this makes me, professional-certification-wise,
Chris Gkikas, RHCT, MCSA, A+, Net+, iNet+, Linux+, CNA. Talk about alphabet soup.
Posted on December 2nd, 2006 by Chris.
Filed under: Chris' Stuff, News, Rant, Technology.
Among a zillion reasons not to use Microsoft products, including its latest OS release Thursday with Vista, here are some more reasons. From a recent article on Red Herring, among the biggest goofs Microsoft has once again pulled off…
But some of the rejection of Vista is because it locks up customers, once again, into proprietary software that is expensive, Mr. Perens said. Vista is also trying lock up users with digital rights management, which will prevent the software from sharing video and music. “Unfortunately, this is very anti-customer technology,” Mr. Perens said.
Aside from its expensive price point ($200-$400) and out-of-the-box technical defects, there’s the philosophical side to this. Consumer democracy will do to Microsoft, the obviously dominant software behemoth, the same that it’s done to other dynasties in the past. Eventually more people will turn to Mac, Linux, or whatever future alternative is presented to the status-quo.
It’s technolution… the inevitable shift of preference, perspective, possibilities and priorities in the modern realms of computer usage.