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Windows 7 is your old bicycle.

23 Aug 2010

You’re gonna fend off Google and cloud computing with a touch screen?? Good luck. I do hope there’s a skunkworks Plan B in the labs. No wonder buying Yahoo “isn’t strategic.”

So, apparently, the 2009-2010 version of Windows will still not have the next-gen file system I was writing about more than 10 years ago — when “Cairo” was the lead codename — let alone a microkernel with modules for OS “personalities” and compatibility.

David Card on Microsoft’s plans for
Windows 7.

Also amusing is the Microsoft reaction to Tiger’s search capabilities.

Closed Facebook-ConnectU hearing ends with no ruli

23 Aug 2010

“I’ve made a judgment that it could be beneficial to the court” to conduct at least the first portion of the hearing “in a closed courtroom,” Ware said Monday morning.

A lawsuit between ConnectU and Facebook was settled earlier this year. ConnectU now says Facebook, the most popular social network in the world, entered into the settlement fraudulently. Therefore, it says, the case must be reopened.

Updated 1:12 p.m. PDT to reflect that the hearing session has ended.

U.S. District Judge James Ware plans to issue a ruling before too much time has elapsed, attorneys involved in the matter said as they left the courthouse here following the hearing, which lasted somewhat less than two hours.

SAN JOSE, Calif.–A hearing in a dispute between Facebook and ConnectU wrapped up early Monday afternoon with no ruling, after the federal judge overseeing the matter had closed the proceedings to the public and the press.

Reporters from CNET News.com, the San Jose Mercury News, and Bloomberg had objected to the courtroom being closed, which is uncommon in federal civil cases, and asked for a delay so their attorneys could be present. Ware rejected the request, saying he would “set up a time to make objections.”

Many documents in the case have been filed under seal, including instant messages reportedly sent by Zuckerberg to colleagues at Facebook.

The beef stems from allegations by ConnectU’s founders that Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg stole their business idea in 2003, when the founders were students at Harvard University.

Is Twitter responsible for Germany’s massive socce

23 Aug 2010

This woman is faking. She is not, however, a politician.

However, the players needed clearer instructions.

Then the tracking tool went haywire too.

Or, indeed, a Verne Troyer to any of Verne’s passionate lovers.

They replied such things as: “Rabid bull? Should I drool excessively?”

According to her favorite player, the suspiciously and excessively blond Bastian Schweisteiger, she weighed in with tactical suggestions.

The word spread quickly that in order to get fuller, quicker and more interactive expert instructions to more of the players, the Chancellor had decided to use Twitter rather than ancien regime SMS.

Germany’s Chancellor, Angela Merkel, really wanted her national soccer team to win the 2008 European Football Championships, which concluded today in Vienna.

Initially, her instructions were getting through.

Next, she suggested “Tell Torres he’s a girl.”

Yet, to the surprise of a Chancellor who seemed swollen with a frustration not seen since David Hasselhoff rose to the top of the German recording charts, Germany’s game suddenly resembled a cement pancake.

The texts were not merely expressions of positive fortune and celestial speed.

British Prime Minister, Gordon Brown, to his 400-meter relay team: “Imagine you are being chased by Margaret Thatcher.”

In any case, this was a humungous loss for both Germany and technology.

The squad’s adrenalin was pumping at the suggestion that they should “gore those Spaniards like a rabid bull.”

So, with the moisture from the Chancellor’s technological sweet talk still wetting their earlobes, the Germans marched all the way to the Final.

(Fernando Torres, the Spanish striker, tends to wear a rather effeminate headband during games.)

(Credit:
Orin Optiglot)

I know that there were several Heads of State who were looking to the German Chancellor’s initiative to help their own countrymen succeed in the forthcoming Olympics.

Naturally, the Germans were favorites.

And “A girl? You sure? Chancellor, you are a girl too.”

So the Chancellor could not be sure that her charges, in a state of heightened nervousness, had not succumbed to the delights of Viennese night life and, in their unreplied confusion, tried to gore barhoppers like rabid bulls while calling them girls.

Expressing her obviously heartfelt enthusiasm for the German team (and not her need to get re-elected next year), she began to text them.

And, of course, George W. Bush to LeBron James: “Imagine you are being chased by Dick with a gun.”

Or, perhaps, “We’re playing the Turks. Annoy them by telling them about your fabulous Greek holiday.”

Which, if the evidence of the games is anything to go by, must have gone along the lines of “Kick that Portuguese pillock up the rear end.”

Their opponents were the Spanish, each of whom was a Verne Troyer to the Germans’ Dwayne Johnson.

The Twitter reply facility was, unfortunately, down at these moments.

French president Nicolas Sarkozy to one of his male sprinters, for example: “Imagine you are chasing Carla..”

Converter cable makes PSP Go fat again

23 Aug 2010

We’re just about ready to post our PSP Go review but we couldn’t wait to share this accessory with you. This absolutely ridiculous-looking contraption is the Sony PSP Go Converter Cable Adapter, a device you’ll need to buy for your PSP Go if you don’t want all those PSP 1000 - 3000 accessories to become useless. That’s right, almost all of the original PSP accessories will not work with the Go.

The PSP Go Converter Cable Adapter goes on sale in Japan on December 24 for around $21 and should show up in the U.S. in January.

Judging by the photo, we’re not sure why this gadget needs to be mounted on the top and bottom of the PSP Go, and we can’t imagine having a comfortable grip on the device when the screen is slid open.

We also agree with the Ars Technica blogger who pointed out that this basically negates the PSP Go’s main attraction, its slim and sleek form factor. Of course, you’ll be able to purchase all new PSP Go accessories when they go on sale alongside the new handheld on October 1.

(Credit:
Ars Technica)

Another Adobe Reader security hole emerges

23 Aug 2010

Updated 4:35 p.m. PDT with Adobe saying Windows,
Mac and Unix versions of Reader are affected and more details.

Just last month, Adobe issued a fix for an Acrobat Reader hole that attackers had been exploiting for months, after issuing a patch for a critical vulnerability in Flash player the month before.

The company said it would release updates for all the platforms but did not yet have a time frame for that. “We are currently not aware of any reports of exploits in the wild for this issue,” the advisory said.

At the RSA security conference last week, F-Secure Chief Research Officer Mikko Hypponen said Internet users should switch to using an alternative PDF reader because of the security issues with Adobe Reader. A list of them is available on the PDFReaders.org Web site.

Security experts are recommending that people disable JavaScript in Adobe Reader following reports of a vulnerability in the popular portable document format reader on Tuesday.

The vulnerability appears to be due to an error in the “getAnnots()” JavaScript function and exploiting it could allow someone to remotely execute code on the machine, according to an advisory from the US-CERT.

All currently supported shipping versions of Adobe Reader (8.1.4, 9.1 and 7.1.1 and earlier) are vulnerable and Windows, Macintosh and Unix platforms are affected, Adobe said in an advisory.

“US-CERT encourages users and administrators to disable JavaScript in Adobe Reader to help mitigate the risk,” the post said. “To disable JavaScript in Adobe Reader, open the General Preferences dialog box. From the Edit-Preferences-JavaScript menu, uncheck ‘Enable Acrobat JavaScript.’”

Of the targeted attacks so far this year, more than 47 percent exploit holes in Acrobat Reader, while six vulnerabilities have been discovered that target the program, he said.

Microsoft e-mails reveal Intel pressure over Vista

23 Aug 2010

“Intel has the biggest challenge. Their “945″ chipset which is the baseline Vista set “barely” works right now and is very broadly used. The “915″ chipset which is not Aero capable is in a huge number of laptops and was tagged as “Vista Capable” but not Vista Premium. I don’t know if this was a good call. But these function will never be great. Even the 945 set has new builds of drivers coming out consistently but hopes are on the next chipset rather than this one.”

Allchin appeared to agree in his response, but seemed resigned to fate.

Microsoft is now defending itself against claims the Vista Capable program was misleading and unfair, all thanks to a decision to allow Intel to sell older chipsets that couldn’t run Vista’s Aero interface–really one of the main reasons to upgrade–with the word “Vista” attached. As the e-mails show, many within the company knew they were heading down this path when they embarked on a two-tier logo program, but the need to keep Intel happy–over the objection of the world’s largest PC maker–won out in the end.

In February 2006, one month after Will Poole informed the Vista team of the decision, Microsoft’s Will Johnson wrote an e-mail laying out some more of the specifics.

Eric Charbonneau, an unidentified Microsoft executive, told his direct reports in August 2005 in an e-mail that the older 915 chipset wouldn’t cut it. “Any OEM who plans to ship an Intel 915 chipset system (using UMA, without separate discrete graphics hardware) for Summer 2006 needs to know that: 1. Their systems will not be eligible for the Windows Vista Ready designation…” Simply put, the 915 chipset couldn’t support the Windows Vista Display Driver Model (WDDM), and that capability was a requirement at the time for being able to slap a “Vista Ready” sticker on a PC.

UPDATED: 6:25 p.m., PST - Microsoft issued the following statement after this blog was posted: “We included the 915 chipset as part of the Windows Vista Capable program based on successful testing of beta versions of Windows Vista on the chipset and the broad availability of the chipset in the market. Computers equipped with this chipset were and are capable of being upgraded to Windows Vista Home Basic. Microsoft authorized the use of the Premium Ready designation on PCs that could support premium features of Windows Vista.”

“Based on the objective criteria that exist today for capable even a piece of junk would qualify. :) So based on that yes 865 would qualify. For the sake of Vista customers, it would be a complete tragedy if we allowed it. I don’t know how to help you prevent it.”

Intel declined to comment on specific e-mails until it had a chance to review them. But in response to the Kalkman e-mail, read to a Intel representative, the company said, “We do not know who John Kalkman is. We do know that he is not qualified to know anything about Intel’s internal financials or forecasts related to chipsets, motherboard or any other products. He would have no visibility into our financial needs in any given quarter.”

In early 2006, Intel’s Renee James, vice president and general manager of Intel’s software and solutions group, was able to prevail on Microsoft’s Will Poole to change the proposed requirements for Microsoft’s proposed “Vista Ready” marketing program to include an older integrated graphics chipset that couldn’t run Vista’s Aero interface. At the time, Intel was worried that it wouldn’t be able to ship the more advanced 945 chispet, which was capable of running Aero, in step with Microsoft’s proposed schedule for the introduction of the marketing upgrade plan.

But perhaps the most surprised executive inside Microsoft at the move was Allchin, the head of the Vista development team.

“It might be a mistake. I wasn’t involved and it is hard for me to step in now and reverse everything again,” he wrote to Ybarra. “We might be able to thread the needle here if we make ‘capable’ just related to ‘old’ type hardware.”

Steven Sinofsky, Microsoft senior vice president, Windows and Windows Live Engineering Group

Microsoft knew that Vista’s Aero interface would put a significant strain on the hardware used in those PCs, and so in 2005 it started putting requirements together for the Vista Ready program using Intel’s 945 chipset as the baseline chipset needed for designation as “Vista Ready.”

Hewlett-Packard was particularly incensed, since it had decided to adopt Intel’s 945 chipset more aggressively, believing it was the only chipset that would support the Vista Ready program.

(Credit:
Intel)

A Vista Capable sticker would simply mean the PC could run Vista Basic, allowing PC makers to promote their PCs as “Vista” PCs while glossing over the fact that the minimum hardware requirements for that label couldn’t really handle the improved graphics that were one of the major reasons to upgrade to Vista. This confusion was exactly what Microsoft and its PC partners hoped to avoid when they were first drawing up the requirements in the first place, and several e-mails show those concerns were shared widely prior to, and following, Poole’s decision.

“We really botched this,” he wrote in a thread responding to Poole’s e-mail. “I was not involved in the decision making process and I will support it because I trust you thinking behind the logic. BUT, you have to do a better job with customers that what was shown here. This was especially true because you put me out on a limb making a commitment. This is not ok.”

Steve Sinofsky, the former head of
Microsoft office development and current head of Windows and Windows Live development, wrote an e-mail to Microsoft’s Brad Goldberg in July 2006 asking about a Dell Latitude he purchased that he thought was labeled as “Vista Ready,” but in reality didn’t have enough graphics hardware to run Vista.

The 865 was eventually scrubbed from the program, but the 915 was allowed to remain. And so, PCs with the 915 chipset were sold as Windows Vista Capable, while others sold with the 945 chipset or better were labeled Vista Premium Ready. As predicted, confusion ensued, and even Microsoft executives and directors were snared.

We updated this blog at 6:25 p.m. PST after Microsoft released a statement.

“We have removed the WDDM requirement for Vista Capable machines, the modern CPU and 512 RAM requirements remain intact, but the specific component that enables the graphical elements of Windows Vista (re: aeroglass) has been removed. This was based on a huge concern raised by Intel regarding 945 chipset production supply and the fact that we wanted to get as many PCs as possible logo’d by the 4/1 US retail REV date. The push to retail should be that while this opens up a wider band of machines to being Vista Capable retailers should be very aggressive in communicating to their OEMs (and thus Intel) to maximize production of 945 chipset equipped machines going forward.”

Jim Allchin, Microsoft's former head of Windows development, currently retired

In January 2007, Jon Shirley, a former Microsoft COO and current member of the board of directors, wrote CEO Steve Ballmer an e-mail complaining about driver support for some peripherals he wanted to use with his Vista PC. Ballmer forwarded the e-mail to Sinofsky, asking for input on whether Microsoft should be doing anything differently.

This led to the creation of the “Vista Capable” logo, which is the reason Microsoft is now in court, facing a class-action lawsuit on the part of PC owners who bought so-called Vista Capable machines in late 2006 only to find those machines could only run Vista Basic, which doesn’t feature the Aero interface. The potential for confusion was well-understood both outside the company, as noted here in this CNET News.com story from March 2006, and within the company, as multiple e-mail threads reveal.

Intel's Renee James, head of the chip maker's software and solutions group

(Credit:
Microsoft)

Sinofsky launched into a post-mortem on Vista itself, with this graph pertaining to Intel.

(Credit:
Microsoft)

And so, confusion began, just as Microsoft employees and partners predicted it would. Some Microsoft marketing units started saying that the even older 865 chipset would now qualify for the Vista logo program, which was squashed. But it was easy to see where the confusion stemmed once the requirement for WDDM was dropped, as essentially anything relatively modern that could easily run Windows XP would be capable of running Vista Basic.

Will Poole, co-head of Microsoft’s emerging markets efforts, who authored the e-mail acknowledging pressure from Intel.

Ballmer’s response? “Righto thanks.”

In January 2006, Poole sent an e-mail to several Microsoft executives informing them that the plan had changed, and that Intel approved. “I went over the new plan with Renee tonight. Not surprisingly, she is pleased with the outcome. I told her we wanted to communicate to OEMs and retail first, and then they can cascade their own communication. They are losing orders every day, so we need to get a simple communication out ASAP.”

“In the end, we lowered the requirement to help Intel make their quarterly earnings so they could continue to sell motherboards with the 915 graphics embedded,” Microsoft’s John Kalkman wrote in a February 2007 e-mail to Scott Di Valerio, who at the time managed Microsoft’s relationships with the PC companies and recently took a job with Lenovo. The change took place in January 2006, and was formally rolled out by Poole, currently corporate vice president of Microsoft’s unlimited potential group, without the knowledge of Jim Allchin, the now-departed Microsoft executive who was supposed to be in charge of Vista’s development

Later, in a private e-mail, Mike Ybarra of Microsoft pleaded with Alchin to step in and reverse the decision. “Jim, I am passionate about this and believe this decision is a mistake,” he wrote. “We are caving to Intel. We worked hard the last 18 months to drive the UI experience and we are giving this up.”

The planning for the Vista Capable program started long before it was publicly announced in May 2006, a few months after the final delay in Vista’s ship date was announced. The idea was to mimic what Microsoft did with Windows XP, to assure customers buying PCs sold within a few months of the launch date that their hardware could run the new operating system when it was formally released. This helps PC makers avoid a swoon in demand in the weeks and months prior to the launch of a new operating system.

A treasure trove of e-mails has been released as part of that case, and the Seattle Post-Intelligencer’s Todd Bishop has spotlighted a number of e-mails that call into question whether Microsoft was acting, at least in part, on Intel’s behalf when it set the requirements for the Vista Capable marketing program. (Read all the e-mails released by the court in this PDF.) Several pages of e-mails were redacted by the court. All e-mails quoted in this report were taken verbatim, typos and all, from a PDF file put together by the Seattle Post-Intelligencer in a blog posted by Bishop yesterday.

“In the end, we lowered the requirement to help Intel make their quarterly earnings so they could continue to sell motherboards with the 915 graphics embedded.” –John Kalkman, Microsoft

With notebooks a far-faster growing segment of the PC market than desktops, Intel apparently felt that if only 945 chipsets were deemed Vista Ready, that demand for systems with 915 chipsets–still a significant mix of its products–would fall off the face of the earth. And also, that it would be unable to produce enough 945 chipsets to meet its committments to PC makers–orders that might otherwise go to Advanced Micro Devices.

Anantha Kancheria wrote to Rajesh Srinivasan as part of a discussion in March 2006 around the 865 confusion, and employed a little gallows humor.

However, at some point between that e-mail and January 2006, Microsoft changed its stance on the 915 chipset. The 945 chipset was Intel’s top-of-the-line integrated graphics chipset when it was introduced in May 2005, but it still sold lots of lower-end 915 chipsets in both desktops and notebooks. Intel didn’t launch the notebook version of the 945 chipset until January 2006, and was apparently concerned that it would be unable to get enough 945 systems into the market by the middle of 2006, the (at the time) launch expectation for the Vista Ready program.

Microsoft’s Mark Croft wrote in response to Poole’s e-mail that, “We need good messaging for the elimination of WDDM in Capable, as we have had this as a requirement since inception over 18 months ago.”

Goldberg, then vice president of Windows product management, explained, “Some PCs that are windows vista capable will run aero and some will not. In the interim we’ve created a marketing designation that allows OEMs to market PCs as “premium ready.” every pc that is premium ready will run aero.”

As far back as 2005, Microsoft executives knew that confusing hardware requirements for the
Windows Vista Capable program might get them in trouble. But they did it anyway–over the objection of PC makers–at the behest of Intel, according to e-mails released as part of a class-action lawsuit pending against Microsoft.

Goldberg continued, “for holiday oems will be heavily pushing premium ready machines but because Intel was late with their integrated chipset the majority of the machines on the market today are windows vista capable but not premium ready. originally we wanted to set the capable bar around aero but there are a bunch of reasons why we had to back off…a bit messy and a long story that I’m happy to walk you through if helpful. :)” Goldberg has since been reassigned.

(Credit:
Microsoft)

According to e-mails exchanged, many inside Microsoft were appalled at the decision to let Intel’s supply concerns dictate its marketing policies. Now Microsoft had to go out and create a two-tiered program promoting both “Vista Capable” machines and “Vista Premium Ready” machines.

The end of battery-backed cache

23 Aug 2010

Adaptec is now using it for another application: NAND flash coupled with Supercapacitor technology to back up RAID controller cache in case of a system or power failure. RAID controllers use cache memory to accelerate I/O performance between the host system and disk. At any given moment during normal operations, there could be hundreds of write operations waiting to be transferred from cache to disk that. In the case of system or power failure, those could be lost. RAID controller vendors often deal with this exposure by including an optional battery power capability that keeps cache (i.e. RAM) powered-on for between 48 and 72 hours.

Adaptec has announced the immediate availability of a Series 5Z Unified Serial (SATA/SAS) RAID controller family with “Zero Maintenance Cache Protection.” It’s designed to replace the current generation of RAID controllers that use lithium ion batteries to protect data in cache memory.

It’s a breakthrough that other vendors of RAID controllers are also working toward. You can expect to see competitors release NAND/Supercap cache backup before the end of the year. For now, Adaptec stands alone. But it is likely that battery-backed cache is about to take a spot in the museum of computing history.

With delivery of the 5Z Series, Adaptec has replaced batteries altogether with Supercaps. Like batteries, Supercaps hold a charge over time but work from a different electrical principle. In the 5Z design they are used to power the data de-stage operation from cache to NAND flash storage. Unlike lithium ion batteries, they can be put into productive use immediately, don’t need to be checked periodically, and won’t get held up when crossing the border.

This announcement is significant for two reasons. First, its shows the expanding role of NAND flash. Recently, NAND flash has been associated with the second coming of solid state disk (SSD) in enterprise disk arrays. In spite of reliability issues (the more flash memory is written to, the less reliable it becomes over time), silicon vendors including Samsung and Intel now claim that flash can be made ready for prime-time data center applications by using a “wear leveling” process. Vendors like EMC and Sun have agreed by implementing flash as “Tier 0″ storage within their arrays.

But there is some pain involved. Lithium ion batteries have to be “conditioned” before they are put into productive use. Their operating temperature has to be controlled. They also require periodic testing, as they have a limited life-span. Many fail completely after three years. These shortcomings require that users periodically test the batteries, a process that forces the removal of cache from the I/O path during testing. Finally, vendors who ship products with lithium ion batteries outside the US have to endure a border-crossing “red tape” process which they say can be a royal pain.

Here Adaptec does it a bit differently. It uses 4GB of NAND flash coupled with Supercaps to preserve I/O transactions stuck in cache. In case of a system or power failure, transactions in cache are destaged to NAND, to be “replayed” when normal functioning is returned. In this application, reduced reliability over time is not an issue since the NAND flash would be used in rare occasions, as a failure recovery mechanism.

The elimination of batteries to support cache backup is the second reason this announcement is significant. Engineers who design RAID controllers have kept up with the advance of battery technology over the years. Here, good batteries are those which are small and powerful. Consequently, many have preferred to use the lithium ion variety.

A panoramic peek inside the Airbus A380 cockpit

23 Aug 2010

(Credit:
Airbus)

Wow. I wish I was a pilot.

You can be sure that as further A380 news comes along, I’ll feature it here. For now, though, just enjoy playing with this image. And try to not get nauseous, as the continuous movement of the panoramic is a little bit vertiginous.

Airbus’ mammoth A380 is the biggest passenger jet in history. Now, a French photographer has posted a panoramic image of the plane’s cockpit.

This is also one of those great panoramics that lets you move around, zoom in or out, and rotate up or down and so forth.

That’s all I could think Monday morning when I came across an amazing panoramic image of the cockpit of an Airbus A380.

I must admit I don’t understand most of what I see in the panoramic–I would show an image of it here, but as of this writing, I hadn’t gotten permission from the photographer, Gilles Vidal, to do so–but it just looks like one heck of a plane.

And out the cockpit is another A380, just across the tarmac.

Green news harvest 500-mile fuel cell car, Linux

23 Aug 2010

Linux captures the ‘green’ flag, beats Windows 2008 power-saving measures - Network World
Tests give Linux the edge on energy efficiency, although your "wattage may vary."
Toyota develops improved hydrogen fuel-cell vehicle - Reuters
The fuel cell vehicle, for lease in Japan, can go over 500 miles on a tank in very cold temperatures.
Stion leaves photovoltaic patent trail - Gunther Portfolio
Stealthy solar start-up Stion says it will beat everyone on price but never says how. Gunther Portfolio digs into patent applications for clues into its PV material.
Grease shortage worries Oregon’s fledgling biodiesel industry - OregonLive.com
The "grease crisis" is threatening to cripple the biodiesel industry in Oregon.
DuPont eyes generating $1 billion in solar-related revenue - MarketWatch
More solar production in China. The surge in production is expected to bring panel prices down significantly in a couple of years.
Water Arc’s water recycling gets a boost at Cleantech 2008 - Green Prophet
An Israeli firms says that 40 percent of a home’s water, including its gray water, can be reused.
Biofuel backlash: High prices, pollution worries hit consumers - Seattle Times
Reality check on rising prices of biodiesel, which at $6, is $2 more expensive than petro-diesel. Imperium is exporting to Europe where it can charge more, while some plants are being idled (via Earth2Tech).
The Democratic National Convention will run on beer - MainStreet

Coors will convert substandard beer into ethanol which will be used to transport delegates around Denver.
Harnessing microbes to meet our future energy needs - ScienceDaily
Biomass and PV panels aren’t the only way to harness the sun’s energy–tiny microbes can, too, be enlisted, says biotech researcher.

Here’s a sampling of
green-tech news and quick commentary:

Hand-coding HTML is still hip, says NY Times Desig

23 Aug 2010

In the meantime I continue to enjoy/loathe our blog system here at CNET that requires us to format HTML. I like the control versus other blog tools, but it gets a little onerous.

Being that my first “real” job was at a web design shop as a code monkey, it warmed my heart to see Khoi Vinh, Design Director for the NY Times state that they still write HTML code by hand. Of course, I have to believe that he was referring to templating and such, as there is no way they could maintain or deliver that amount of content without some kind of CMS.

It’s our preference to use a text editor, like HomeSite, TextPad or TextMate, to “hand code” everything, rather than to use a wysiwyg (what you see is what you get) HTML and CSS authoring program, like Dreamweaver. We just find it yields better and faster results.

At my company we’ve been through this ordeal several times, finally settling in on PHP templates for the corporate site and Atlassian’s Confluence for our developer sites. The corporate site still requires manual code intervention but we’re modularized enough where the risk vs. reward is still OK. I’m waiting for Matt Asay to give me the green light on the Alfresco web product before we move to a full blown CMS. He knows that I am a difficult customer.