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| Website about Software Developers - online portal of Internet Technology Architecture and Development. Other useful information: Regular columnist Bill Thompson argues that people need to know more about programming and what programmes do" /
BBC NEWS | Technology | A nation of programmers?
A nation of programmers?
We don't need a nation of programmers, but we do need to be confident that everyone knows what programmers do and what programs look like.
A nation of programmers?
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| | BBC NEWS | Technology | A Nation Of Programmers? - BBC NEWS | Technology | A nation of programmers?
A nation of programmers?
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Page last updated at 12:47 GMT, Tuesday, 21 April 2009 13:47 UK
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Are we a nation of technophiles or technophobes?
Computer skills must mean more than word processing, says Bill Thompson.
I've had my own website for 15 years now, running on a wide variety of different computers.
I started off with some space on the Pipex WorldServer, a large - for the time - system that offered web hosting back in the days when getting online was a dark art and I was lucky enough to work for one of the early commercial internet service providers. On leaving Pipex I moved over to Cityscape, another Cambridge-based provider from the early days. When it went out of business I set up a server at home for a while before relocating the hardware to a shelf in the corner of a friend's office, where he was happy to offer bandwidth and a power supply for a very modest monthly payment.
Three years ago I moved the whole thing again, this time onto a virtual server at Bytemark, one of the many small hosting companies that offer friendly and reliable server space for all sorts of organisations.
A virtual server is a way to get lots of different sites on one physical computer. From the outside you can't really tell, and when you log on to the virtual server it acts just like a real box, but it's a lot cheaper to run and you get the benefit of having serious hardware, a secure power supply and an easy way to upgrade.
Far too many people who use computers every day, and have them in their homes, aren't even capable of applying the system updates that Microsoft and Apple automatically send out
Bill Thompson
If you run your own computer, even a virtual one, then you also have to take responsibility for keeping it up to date. Mostly this involves applying patches, checking system logs and other relatively straightforward tasks, but servers, like cars, sometimes need a proper service.
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