Ripcord
Senior Lurker
From this article:
Microsoft Moves to Weather Time of Slow Growth
(It's a NYT article, so free registration is required) comes this comment:
I wonder what percentage crash only once per day?
I have to say that this doesn't fit with my personal experience. I use PCs most of the time (Win2k mostly, or sometimes WinXP) and they rarely crash - MAYBE once per week (Then again my B&W Mac has crashed once that I can remember, my Dig. Aud. G4 has gone to lunch once this year (not so much a crash as things went a bit haywire and I needed to reboot)). However, I wonder if Mr. Gates thought this was an OK stat or not? I know that if, say, 5% of cars died more than twice a day, more than 5% of refrigerators needed to be unplugged and replugged in more than twice a day to get them working, etc. that there'd be a consumer revolt.
Rip
Microsoft Moves to Weather Time of Slow Growth
(It's a NYT article, so free registration is required) comes this comment:
Mr. Gates acknowledged today that the company's error reporting service indicated that 5 percent of all Windows-based computers now crash more than twice each day.
I wonder what percentage crash only once per day?
I have to say that this doesn't fit with my personal experience. I use PCs most of the time (Win2k mostly, or sometimes WinXP) and they rarely crash - MAYBE once per week (Then again my B&W Mac has crashed once that I can remember, my Dig. Aud. G4 has gone to lunch once this year (not so much a crash as things went a bit haywire and I needed to reboot)). However, I wonder if Mr. Gates thought this was an OK stat or not? I know that if, say, 5% of cars died more than twice a day, more than 5% of refrigerators needed to be unplugged and replugged in more than twice a day to get them working, etc. that there'd be a consumer revolt.
Rip