The article is dated 13/Mar/09 out of Chennai.
Per Mr. Sinha, CTO Times Business Solutions, there is no open source virtualization solution.
<quote> However, companies looking at resource optimization holistically are also keen on virtualisation, for implementing which, there is no open source software. “However, virtualized hardware supports open source applications easily,” </quote>
You will also come to know that MySQL has become MySequel ...
Please send your comments to the Editor ET (editet@timesgroup.com) requesting him/her to check facts before putting it on the web site. Also, submit your view under the "comments" section of the article.
Hi,
You will also come to know that MySQL has become MySequel ...
"MySequel" is just an extension to "SeQueL" read "SQL". That is simply the way of speaking among quite a number of people. I was left wondering when I heard it the first time a few years ago.
Anyways, when a Non-Techie quotes the speaker, the way of speaking actually becomes the word.
Regards,
Cyril Chacko.
On Wednesday 18 Mar 2009, Cyril Chacko wrote:
Hi,
You will also come to know that MySQL has become MySequel ...
"MySequel" is just an extension to "SeQueL" read "SQL".
To the best of my knowledge MySQL is the name of a product.
To the best of my knowledge MySQL is the name of a product.
Arun Khan
What I meant was I have heard the "SQL " spoken as "Sequel". So, "MySql" spoken as "MySequel". The ET - reporter due to lack of knowledge printed it as it was probably spoken by the speaker.
My comment was that the reporter was being too true to his dictaphone without doing any background checks
Cyril Chacko
On Fri, Mar 20, 2009 at 11:00 AM, Cyril Chacko cyril.chacko@gmail.com wrote:
What I meant was I have heard the "SQL " spoken as "Sequel". So, "MySql" spoken as "MySequel". The ET - reporter due to lack of knowledge printed it as it was probably spoken by the speaker.
My comment was that the reporter was being too true to his dictaphone without doing any background checks
Lazy journalism. In the age of the internet, fact checks are just a click away.
Venky
On Friday 20 Mar 2009, Dinesh A. Joshi wrote:
Venkatesh Hariharan wrote:
Lazy journalism. In the age of the internet, fact checks are just a click away.
Not everybody has access to the Internet.
Ya. especially tech journos writing about databases. This one lives in the outer islands of tuvalu and sent the report to kandivali press by rfc 1149
On Fri, Mar 20, 2009 at 11:33 AM, jtd jtd@mtnl.net.in wrote:
On Friday 20 Mar 2009, Dinesh A. Joshi wrote:
Venkatesh Hariharan wrote:
Lazy journalism. In the age of the internet, fact checks are just a click away.
Not everybody has access to the Internet.
Ya. especially tech journos writing about databases. This one lives in the outer islands of tuvalu and sent the report to kandivali press by rfc 1149
I think the joke was lost on your audience. I will still try to revive it: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RFC_1149
There are so many goof ups in Indian newspapers these days, I think all editors do is smoothen out their political affiliations and all that proof readers do is check the red squiggly in Microsoft Word (R).
These journos are some of the most clueless people in the world, and usually they write motivated briefs. The Microsoft foundation is financially a much more potent force than the GNU variety. Even the more informed correspondents somehow start toeing the unethical line. Read the Patently Absurd byline in yesterday's Business Standard about IIT Bombay selling itself to Nathan Myhrvold, and you will know.
On Fri, Mar 20, 2009 at 6:41 PM, Nishit Dave stargazer.dave@gmail.com wrote:
On Fri, Mar 20, 2009 at 11:33 AM, jtd jtd@mtnl.net.in wrote:
On Friday 20 Mar 2009, Dinesh A. Joshi wrote:
Venkatesh Hariharan wrote:
Lazy journalism. In the age of the internet, fact checks are just a click away.
Not everybody has access to the Internet.
Ya. especially tech journos writing about databases. This one lives in the outer islands of tuvalu and sent the report to kandivali press by rfc 1149
I think the joke was lost on your audience. I will still try to revive it: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RFC_1149
Not all of the audience... at least not those who can google :P
On Friday 20 Mar 2009, Cyril Chacko wrote:
To the best of my knowledge MySQL is the name of a product.
What I meant was I have heard the "SQL " spoken as "Sequel". So, "MySql" spoken as "MySequel". The ET - reporter due to lack of knowledge printed it as it was probably spoken by the speaker.
My comment was that the reporter was being too true to his dictaphone without doing any background checks
Background check *is* essential in any reporting. A journo who puts his/her article on the 'Net cannot duck under the above excuse.
On 18/03/09 4:58 PM, "Arun Khan" knura@yahoo.com wrote:
The article is dated 13/Mar/09 out of Chennai.
Per Mr. Sinha, CTO Times
Business Solutions, there is no open source
virtualization
solution.
<quote> However, companies looking at resource optimization
holistically are
also keen on virtualisation, for implementing which, there
is no open
source software. ³However, virtualized hardware supports open
source
applications easily,² </quote>
Read more
at:
<http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/Infotech/Internet_/Web_based_companie
s_open_to_open_source_software/articlesh
At least it portrays open source in a good light (70% cost reductions). These type of stories are much better than glorifying people like Fadia. The other day I saw "India's youngest ethical hacker" who was 11 yrs old in mid-day.
Regards, Aniketh