Thursday 25 February 2016

BLOATWARE IS BACK

With the advent of Android and iOS there was a hope, howsoever slim and shortlived it proved later, that software writers were back to being sensible once again. I was told the Windows XP had a billion lines of code. The initial years of Android and iOS were ruled by constraints of limited processing power, low memory in the mobile devices and need to quickly roll out software. Apps, the nifty little pieces of software, had made the routine easier and quicker. The mobile Operating Systems themselves were compact, yet functional and stable.

Soon, the cliques of code-writers realised that they would be out of business and jobs. So, the guild struck with a vengeance. They soon started writing bloatware once again like there was no tomorrow. And lo and behold, the hardware industry lapped up the opportunity like a drowning man clutches a life buoy thrown to him. So we are now commonly looking at 1.7GHz Octa Core processors, dedicated graphics processors and assisted cooling accompanied by 4GB of RAM and 64GB of storage.

We are back to the past, where software was distributed on double sided DVDs. Apps now are as big as half a Gigabyte. Even an upgrade is a few hundred Mega Bytes. Take a look at the attached screenshot - an upgrade of MS Word weighs in at 306 MB. A mere upgrade of just a component of the MS Office, that too of the mobile version is all of 300+MB or the size of half a CD! Not long ago, full MS Office came on ten floppies adding up to just about 14 MB and later on a CD of 700MB. Hard Disks were considered large if they had a capacity of 30GB. But that was before the bloatware took over.

That is not all. All other Apps that I fondly installed on my iPad or the Android phone also need  upgrades every two weeks. So if you have say 40 Apps, not an unusually large number, each one of these will "offer" a free upgrade (update) twice a month, demanding an average of 50MB data traffic for it. That makes nearly 4GB of data every month (2x40x50) just to make up for the stupid code-writers' slip-ups. Well, I often think that I am the stupid one to have fallen for all this. Even unlimited WiFi plan is not really unlimited - we all know that. There was a time, when the industry or the discerning users or at least the nerds cursed Microsoft for coming out with an upgrade (they called it a patch) every six months. But, now we do not even murmur at this rip off - in matter of data charges, personal time and possibly unknown security-holes in the App, which they want to plug every fortnight.

The Empire has Struck Back!

                                            ---ooo---

2 comments:

  1. The main challenge with such frequent updates is that nowadays the trend is to have only ROM say about 16/32GB with no expansion slots as in IPhone. One can't use OTGs also with these phones. So, with the successive updates swelling, ROM is occupied fully and the phone starts choking and starts to lag. We, as a poor addicted users to the so called freewares forced to reach out to OLXs/Quikrs and sell our still scratchless unsmart phones to paltry and upgrade at a price. That has become the order of the day.

    ReplyDelete
  2. The main challenge with such frequent updates is that nowadays the trend is to have only ROM say about 16/32GB with no expansion slots as in IPhone. One can't use OTGs also with these phones. So, with the successive updates swelling, ROM is occupied fully and the phone starts choking and starts to lag. We, as a poor addicted users to the so called freewares forced to reach out to OLXs/Quikrs and sell our still scratchless unsmart phones to paltry and upgrade at a price. That has become the order of the day.

    ReplyDelete