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November 2007 - Posts

  • Xbox 360 Fall Dashboard Update detailed: DivX, XBLA Hits, and more

    Big news, video game fans.  Joystiq has the scoop:

    For their second Xbox 360 Fall Dashboard Update, Microsoft decided to trickle the features out instead of dropping them on us all at once. Around Halloween, we realized things were awful quiet, so we asked you what you wanted to see in the Fall Update. On November 7, Microsoft kicked things off by announcing the Parental Timer, a feature we're certain you're all eager to try out. They followed that up on November 13 by confirming Xbox Originals, downloadable Xbox 1 games for your 360. On the 26th, they spilled the beans on the social-networky "Friends of Friends" feature, ostensibly to give paranoid folks some time to disable the functionality (which they can do here). Capping it all off a day later, MS Japan dropped some info, notably the ability to set your real name (your real name is xXsmokezmadbluntz420Xx?), your location, and a brief bio – more of that social networking stuff the kids are crazy about.

    Finally, after what seemed an interminable wait, Microsoft was ready to let us in on the big picture. We spoke with Microsoft's Aaron Greenberg about next Tuesday's update and what was still in store. "There are three different categories that speak to a majority of the updates," Greenberg told us.

    First in that list is downloadable games – that's your Xbox Originals and your Xbox Live Arcade Hits. Though he couldn't tell us how many Xbox games they're looking to put up on the service, he did say they expected it to be more of a portfolio-style system ala XBLA than a library service ala Wii Virtual Console. In other words, don't expect every one of the 465 back-compat Xbox games to suddenly appear in the Marketplace, but they will have six games to kick the service off – Crash Bandicoot: Wrath of Cortex, Crimson Skies: High Road to Revenge, Halo, Fable, Fuzion Frenzy, and Psychonauts.

    On to part two of this three part update: the social functionality! They've got a new "Inside Xbox" feed just below your gamercard on the Xbox Live blade. What's in there? Think of it as an RSS feed straight outta Redmond – updates on the service, the offerings, the new games that week.

    The final component of the update is a little amorphous. They've got the Parental Timer, which we'll gloss over here. There are also some notable updates on the video side. Small update: full-screen previews. Megaton update: MPEG-4 Part 2 video codec support. Specifically, MPEG-4 Part 2 ASP (advanced simple profile) and SP (simple profile) in an AVI container. What does that mean to us humans? Greenberg decodes, "What that basically means is that our users should find that most of their DivX and Xvid files will work because they're under that umbrella of the MPEG-4 Part 2 codec." Of course, this is probably the single most requested feature for the console.

    The Fall Update drops next Tuesday, December 4th.

    Awesome. Thanks Bryan.

  • Xbox 360 Boasts Greatest Release Schedule Ever ... Now What?

    I've described this as the greatest year ever for video gaming, assuming of course you're an Xbox 360 gamer. Go figure, but Microsoft apparently agrees:

    2007 will be a year to remember for Xbox 360 players – a packed release schedule offers a wide range of incredible titles including exclusive, genre-defining games such as Blue Dragon (Microsoft Game Studios - MGS), Project Gotham Racing 4 (MGS), Naruto Rise of a Ninja (Ubisoft), Viva Piñata: Party Animals (MGS), Ace Combat 6: Fires of Liberation (Namco Bandai Games) and Scene It? Lights, Camera, Action (MGS), not to mention some of the highest scoring games of all time in the form of BioShock (2K Games), Mass Effect (MGS), The Orange Box (EA) and the legendary Halo 3 (MGS), all of which have already been released or are set to arrive before the end of the year.

    From the end of summer to the festive period, Xbox 360 boasts over 60 new releases contributing to a portfolio of over 300 high-definition titles.

    Xbox 360 continues to hold the record for highest games attach rate across the globe, at 6.3 games sold per console. With life-to-date sales of 13.4 million consoles worldwide this represents incredible software sales.

    This brings up two related points, both of which are somewhat important to me:

    1. Microsoft has maintained a list of original Xbox games that work on the Xbox 360. Because this list has always been so horribly formatted, I created my own version, which is both nicer looking and more accurate. However,  this month, Microsoft released another update to the compatibility list, so I'll be updating my own list ASAP, hopefully today. Here's the thing: Now that we're two full years into the Xbox 360 life cycle, and there are over 300 original Xbox games on the list, this month's update will likely be the last I make to my version of the list. This topic just isn't as important now as it was two years ago.

    2. With over 300 games now available for the Xbox 360, there's simply no way I can give this topic the ongoing attention it deserves. As such, I've decided to change the way I handle Xbox 360 reviews and articles on the SuperSite. Starting after the holidays, I will not be writing full-length reviews as I've been doing, but will rather write shorter write-ups, with ratings, perhaps through the blog. I'd like to change my coverage in the video game field to focus more on two things: The few stellar PC and 360 games that ship each year and the PC-to-360 connectivity features (Media Center, media sharing) that I've ignored so far. The weird thing is, I know some people will be freaked by this, while others will wonder what took so long. There's a lot going on here, but I still feel like no one really covers video games correctly. Too much of the "traditional" video game press is childish and full of profanity, which helps sell the notion that video games are not so much art as they are adolescent. I wish I could fix this, but clearly the industry is too far gone.

    Anyway. I play a lot of video games, and that won't stop. Nor will the conversations about this. But I think it's time, two years in, to change the way this conversation is framed on the SuperSite. It's just getting too complicated and time-consuming to try and do it all.

  • Netscape releases Navigator 9

    I'm a bit confused why anyone would want this, but what the heck: Netscape has released the latest version of its Navigator browser, which appears to be based on Mozilla Firefox 2.0.0.10. It has a different set of (green) toolbar icons and a few unique, but not particularly compelling, features:

    Cross-platform - Run Navigator 9 on Windows, Mac OS X, or Linux!

    URL correction - Navigator will automatically correct common typos made in Web addresses

    Link Pad - Use the Link Pad as a holding area for interesting links that don’t merit bookmarking

    FF2 Extensions - Install any Firefox 2-compatible extension

    Sidebar - Use the sidebar as a "mini browser" to keep a page in plain sight while you surf through other pages

    Related: What’s New in Netscape Navigator 9?
    Related: Welcome to Netscape Navigator 9

  • Fun with Headlines, November 28, 2007

    In my ongoing effort to bring features from old Nexus blog over here to the SuperSite blog, here's the latest (or first, depending on your perspective) edition of Fun with Headlines...

    Microsoft Sued Over Halo 3's 'Consistent' Crashes
    They should be sued for not calling it Halo 2.5.

    Why Do I Use Apple's Apps?
    Because you're a tool?

    Orange will sell unlocked iPhones in France for $964
    Expensive, yes, but it will be just $764 in two months.

    How Do I Play Windows Games on a Mac?
    Slowly?

    Poor Battery Life May Doom Zune
    Hey, it doomed the iPod, right?

    Microsoft’s Windows Live Yahoo Hotmail Problem
    Actually, that will be named Microsoft’s Windows Live Yahoo Hotmail 2008

    Lawyers: Vista branding confused even Microsoft
    Any liar will tell you to keep it simple, stupid.

    Nintendo, Microsoft blasted for toxic game consoles
    Presumably the attack was non-toxic

    Linus Torvalds: Microsoft can't catch Linux
    "Mark my words, you'll never lose that much market share."

    Google expands into alternative energy
    Because every click-through wastes one kilowatt of energy.
    Or...
    Yeah, this one will be in perpetual beta too.

    Activision CEO: PS3 and Xbox 360 Must Drop to $199
    And the Wii must be given away in cereal boxes. Or else.

    Failing Seagate drives haunt MacBook owners
    That and the smugness.

    Universal Music CEO Doug Morris Speaks, Recording Industry in Even Deeper S*** Than We Thought
    That one kinds of stands on its own.

  • Windows Live Writer beta to final upgrade

    Windows Live Writer blog:

    Today we will be starting to distribute the final version of Windows Live Writer as an Important update on Microsoft Update. This means that users of Windows Live Writer Beta 2 and Beta 3 will see the update available in Microsoft Update, or have the update automatically installed if they have opted to have Important updates automatically installed.

    You can learn more about the update here. If you are a Beta 2 or Beta 3 user and you aren't seeing the update, make sure that you have opted in to Microsoft Update. Of course, you can also just download and install the final version of Writer directly, if you'd like.

    Windows Live Writer Final is the same Writer that you know and love, but with the final fit and finish applied. Thanks everyone who used a Beta version of Writer—we hope you like the final version.

  • Curious GDrive factoid

    I wrote a story today about Google's long-rumored GDrive, which is rumored to be hitting the Web soon, according to reports in The Wall Street Journal and elsewhere. But here's the curious thing. Of the three Google blogs that I check each day, not one mentioned GDrive at all. I find that quite odd.

    Here are the ones I check, listed in my preferred order:

    Google Blogoscoped:  Posted about Google and renewable energy, an online novel by Aaron Schwartz (??), and a new Terrain button on Google Maps.

    Google Watch: No posts today at all.

    News.com Google Blog: No posts today at all.

    What the heck?

    Posted Nov 27 2007, 02:08 PM by pthurrott with no comments
    Filed under:
  • Five secrets to faster Vista starts

    I've come to really like and appreciate Ed Bott, and here's a typical example of why: Not only does this article actually help Vista owners in general, it includes a very necessary call-out to Walt Mossberg, who baldfacedly promotes all things Apple and makes spurious complaints about Microsoft at the drop of a hat. Bravo, Ed. And shame on the Mossman. Again.

    Here we go again.

    The wise old men of mainstream tech journalism are once again repeating the conventional wisdom that Vista is slow to start up and slow to shut down. They’re wrong.

    In this post, I’ll explain why they’re wrong and show you how you can fix the problem if you encounter a slow startup.

    The latest to repeat this accusation is the Wall Street Journal’s Walt Mossberg, who slipped this doozy in his review of Leopard:

    Even though I had cleared out all of the useless trial software Sony had placed on the Vaio, it still started up painfully slowly compared with the Leopard laptop ... It took the Vista machine nearly two minutes to perform a cold start and be ready to run, including connecting to my wireless network. The Leopard laptop was up, running and connected to the network in 38 seconds.


    Three minutes to start up? This is the same crappy Sony notebook that Mossberg was complaining about back in April, and it seems downright unfair to pick this one sluggish machine and continue using it as the benchmark. But whatever. Walt, if you’re really interested in fixing this machine’s slow startup times, keep reading. Or call me and I’ll help walk you through it.

    Ah ha ha. Excellent. Read the whole article. Lots of good advice. For you and Walt.

    And for the record: Once again, the conventional wisdom about Vista is wrong. I've certainly never experienced slow system boot times, but it's interesting to me how quickly and easily people just accept this stuff as fact.

    Posted Nov 27 2007, 02:01 PM by pthurrott with 46 comment(s)
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  • Microsoft welcomes its newest OEM ... Apple

    This isn't as high profile as I'd like, coming as it does on a pseudo-Microsoft blog, but Microsoft is finally responding, sort of, to those silly Apple "I'm a PC" ads...

    Apple is currently paying a lot of money for an ad that pitches Apple Macintosh as an alternative to Vista.  That's bizarre, since 10% of all new Vista licenses are sold to Macintosh owners.  Considering Apple's small overall PC market share, Mac owners are great Vista customers, and Vista runs great on Macs.  Apple has shaped up to be a fine hardware OEM for Vista.  I guess if they've decided that the weird "us vs. them" thing sells product, more power to 'em.

    Posted Nov 27 2007, 01:59 PM by pthurrott with 6 comment(s)
    Filed under: ,
  • New Friends Of Friends feature coming to Xbox Live in December

    Xbox.com:

    After the software update to Xbox in early December, you will be able to meet new friends by browsing the Friends lists of other Xbox LIVE members. You can determine who can see your Friends list now on this page – Everyone, Friends Only, or Blocked. You will be able to check your status and change your Friends list setting anytime after the software update in the Account Management section of Marketplace on your Xbox 360 or My Xbox on Xbox.com.

    The default setting for who will be able to see your Friends lists depends on your age:

    Adults – Everyone

    Teens (13-17) – Friends Only

    Children (under 13) – Blocked

  • [Insert Year Here] is the Year of Desktop Linux (tm)

    I used to do a regular comedy bit on the Internet Nexus blog every year about the amazing number of articles that popped up every year declaring that, seriously, this was the year of desktop Linux. Obviously, it never happened. Perhaps equally obviously, it's never going to happen. But those Linux guys. They do need to hope, and something to write about. Here's the latest example. And it's not even January yet.

    This survey helps support the recent Forrester study, which found that Linux is becoming a credible threat to Windows on the desktop. Indeed, another recent desktop operating system survey, by KACE, a systems management appliance company, found that more Windows users are considering migrating to Mac OS and/or Linux (44 percent) than to Vista (13 percent).

    What the survey failed to point out, of course, is that several hundred million Windows users will, in fact, migrate to Vista, regardless of what they're apparently thinking. And I'm here to tell you that they'll be pretty psyched about it when they do. There's a lot of wishful thinking in this article, but I think the truly relevant bit is as follows. And I'd point out that these results were found in a survey that was specifically aimed at people actually using Linux on the desktop.

    In those businesses and organizations that have deployed Linux desktops, 39.5 percent are running Linux on more than half of their machines. Even in Linux-oriented groups, Windows remains the single most popular desktop system, with 59.6 percent running on half or more of their desktops.

    So there you go. You can talk about what people intend to do all you want. But what people really do is run Windows. Even in the so-called Linux shops.  I'm sure that explains why the article is titled "Desktop Linux on the rise, Linux Foundation reports" instead of something more truthful like "Even Linux users use Windows."

    Posted Nov 26 2007, 11:58 AM by pthurrott with 11 comment(s)
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  • Macworld tries to throw cold water on Zune success

    This one is cute. The following report from the UK version of Macworld tries to suggest that Microsoft's recent successes with the Zune are temporary and have already passed. They may be temporary, and certainly the lack of Zune 80 models is problematic. But watch how this one bends the truth:

    While Microsoft's Zune may have briefly toppled Apple's iPod from the top of the Amazon.com bestseller's list, US customers are having a hard time getting hold of the new version of the product.

    Amazon briefly showed the last-generation Zune as its best-selling MP3 player earlier this week.

    Did it now? Aside from the poor use of the word "briefly" in two sentences in the row, I take  exception with the second of these statements. Why? Because I just looked at Amazon's list today, and the Zune is still number one.So, yeah, I get it: 7 of the top 10 MP3 players on Amazon are iPods. But two of them are Zunes. (The other is a SanDisk player.) And let's be honest here, Microsoft never said it was going to unseat Apple this Christmas. What they've said is that they're seeking to make this is a two-company race across the board, just as they did with hard drive-based MP3 players last year. That appears to be happening.

    The real story here, of course, isn't that Apple is still doing great, though one might understand why Macworld would push such a concept. It's that those two Zune players in the top 10 on Amazon aren't even the new ones. They're both Zune 30 models that have been discounted since last year. Yikes.

    So how are the new Zunes fairing on Amazon? Not too well: The Zune 80, which isn't even available, is number 13, while the highest-ranked Zune 4/8 model is number 69 from what I can tell. That doesn't seem right, but that's what it says.

    Posted Nov 23 2007, 08:27 AM by pthurrott with 30 comment(s)
    Filed under:
  • Live Documents debuts

    Hotmail co-founder Sabeer Bhatia launches his latest product:

    Indian software product company, InstaColl today announces the launch of Live Documents, a hybrid online-offline Office suite of applications.

    Live Documents is a full-featured suite of online Office productivity applications offering functionality equivalent to Word, Excel and PowerPoint. Built using RIA technologies such as Flash and Flex, Live Documents allow users to view and edit documents within any common browser on any operating system from anywhere. Live Documents uses a Flash-based user interface that offers a richer and responsive user experience that is comparable to native Office software applications.

    In addition, Live Documents is available as a optional desktop client application that wraps around Microsoft Office and embeds collaborative capabilities into these hitherto standalone software applications - Live Documents converts Microsoft Office applications from static standalone software to smart clients that are connected to the Internet and facilitate in-context document sharing (multiple people can edit a document at the same time) and management (security, access control and revision control) without requiring users to give up their familiar user interfaces. The Live Documents desktop client also ensures offline access to documents - a key failing of current online Office applications.

    With its hybrid “Services plus Software” approach, Live Documents gives users the choice and flexibility to work on their documents either on the desktop or on the browser and while they are online or offline – any changes made on either side are automatically synchronized to the other side ensuring that the desktop and web versions are always in sync without requiring manual actions like check-in/check-out, upload/download or import/export. Live Documents is designed to increase consumer choice when it comes to purchasing hardware, selecting an operating system, choosing a network and accessing and sharing file formats.

    Here's an interesting comparison of Live Documents, Google Docs, and Microsoft Office.

  • Microsoft Entertainment Unit President Robert Bach Sells 20,000 Shares

    Associated Press:

    The president of the entertainment division at software provider Microsoft Corp. sold 20,000 shares of common stock, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing.

    In a Form 4 filed with the SEC Tuesday, Robert J. Bach reported he sold the shares Tuesday for $34.33 to $34.90 apiece.

    Insiders file Form 4s with the SEC to report transactions in their companies' shares. Open market purchases and sales must be reported within two business days of the transaction.

    You know, the last time he did this, Microsoft announced a $1 billion warranty recall. I wonder if this is related to the Zune 80? :)

    Kidding, kidding. I'm a kidder. 

  • Windows Home Server update on the way

    The Windows Home Server blog reports on an upcoming update. My understanding is that these guys are going to continually update the product in this fashion. I think that's a good thing.

    Hi all. Next week on Tuesday, Nov 27 we will release a new update for Windows Home Server software.  This is a scheduled update - part of the ongoing process of continually enhancing the customer experience with Windows Home Server.  The new functionality will be downloaded via Windows Update and made available to existing Windows Home Server customers. 

    Details are available here, but the main benefit of the update is that it will improve the remote access experience for Windows Home Server users by providing them with a “trusted SSL certificate” for their home servers. That means customers will be able to access their home server from outside the home more seamlessly, without any security warnings.  The Windows Home Server team worked closely with Windows Live Domains and GoDaddy, a leading provider of Web domain addresses, to provide the certificate for the homeserver.com web pages customers use for remote access.

    In addition, this month’s update provides a new “Delete All” button to let users delete all home computer backups that are stored on the home server, as well as a few improvements to the Shared Folders and Server Storage components of Windows Home Server.

  • Reminder: HP MediaSmart home server Webinar next week

    Just as a heads-up, I wanted to reminder everyone that I'll be participating in a Windows Home Server/HP MediaSmart  Server Webinar next week with HP and Microsoft. Here are the details:

    Do you have multiple PCs with increasingly large amounts of digital photos, music, video and documents? Is managing, accessing and protecting this digital media becoming a seemingly impossible task?

    Join HP and Microsoft for one of these FREE live webcasts as they unveil and demo the long-awaited MediaSmart Server, based on the wildly popular Windows Home Server software from Microsoft.

    The one I'm in is Tuesday November 27th at 10:00 am PST/1:00 pm EST.

     

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