PG: Who are you?
JB: Joachim Benjamins
PG: Where do work? What do you do?
JB: Mensys.
PG: Why did you come to Warpstock?
JB: Partly because I was paid to come. To communicate in real life. It was also an excellent holiday.
PG: Is this your first Warpstock?
JB: No. Atlanta was my first. This is my second in America.
PG: How is this year's convention different than previous years? How is it the same?
JB: Less vendors. Less general interest, I'm afraid. Less attendance.
PG: Why do you think it's changed?
JB: Economic reasons; it's a steep entrance price.
PG: How long have you used OS/2?
JB: Since I started with Mensys in March '95. It took me one week to be totally into it.
PG: Where do you see OS/2 heading?
JB: I see two directions. I think OS/2 will remain strong in the large entereprise where eCS will never set foot and I hope that eCS will enter the SOHO market with current OS/2 users and maybe Linux users.
PG: What is your opinion of eCS?
JB: It's not where I would like it to be; the GA is not what I would have liked but it's a great improvement over MCP or OS/2 Warp. We're definitely heading in the right direction, the direction we're going to is just great.
PG: What do you use OS/2 for?
JB: Everything. Mainly internet, surfing or developing. Not games. I don't play games at all.
PG: Is there anything you'd like to do on your OS/2 box that you can't do?
JB: Yeah. The real thing I'm missing is a decent WYSYWIG web design app.
PG: While earlier Warpstocks had sessions dealing with OS/2 advocacy, this year's schedule seems totally devoted to product information and technical issues. Is this significant? Why/why not?
JB: I would think it says [Warpstock is] more serious, more product-oriented in a way.
PG: Do you have an OS/2 wish list?
JB: Of course. Most of my wish list is going into eCS.
PG: Where should OS/2 go and how should it get there?
JB: Use the solid base and go from there. It would also really shine in embedded versions.
PG: Is it going in a direction you can follow?
JB: Yes.
PG: What is the most signifcant issue facing the OS/2 community?
JB: You [all] should remember that it's just a computer and it's just an operating system; don't take it too seriously.
PG: Can OS/2 users influence the direction that the operating system takes? If so, how?
JB: Definitely. The community can be actively involved in development. [Mensys and Serenity Systems] are not that large. We need people.
PG: Does IBM still have a significant influence on our community?
JB: No. I'm afraid not. [If it does,] it is through Serenity. Not directly any more.
PG: Any parting thoughts?
JB: We're getting somewhere and the community is still great and events like Warpstock show it. And I highly appreciate it and so does the company I work for.
This article is courtesy of www.os2ezine.com. You can view it online at http://www.os2ezine.com/20011216/page_7.html.