Quote:Regarding OS'es the problem still remains quite unchanged: they are nowhere as fast as they could be, and you can't make them run as you "could make a lego house" (every piece could be added and extracted easily, only the base couldn't be).
Apart from that OS'es are far from being secure. If they were 99% secure, every time you would make a wrong change, the system would simply lock, and you would have to format your hard-drive. We know this is not the case. Security holes, if not too many, are needed sometimes.
Thats probably the most misinformed statement I've ever heard. We don't need security holes, only a crazed Win32 fan could come out with that one.
Quote:Even Linux, although it's better than Windows in some aspects, it's still lacking a lot of good things. Given the last rumour that Linux could become a payed OS (even if it is a joke, it could happen somewhere in the future) things don't look so bright.
What? Linux is better than Win32 from every aspect, it's flexible constantly updated, secure, free etc. Linux won't become a "payed" OS. I presume you mean proprietary software?
Quote:Also, there is still no Free Developer Programming Platform free language, designed from ground-up to suit year 2004-2010 period (not the old C, C++ designed in the 70's and 80's). This probably won't happend too soon, so here we go in the never-ending game: OS-Programs-CPU-Hardware, all being more or less obsolete (in design) compared to what would be needed today.
C has never been superceded, it is a powerful platform independent language. UNIX/Linux and Microsoft Windows are coded in C. There is no reason to change because C does it's job. C is also "free", you don't have to buy expensive proprietary IDE's for C develpoment.