WinInfo Daily News   |   Windows IT Pro
in

SuperSite Blog

July 2008 - Posts

  • Windows Mobile update

    So I wrote a little news story today noting that Microsoft missed its target of selling 20 million Windows Mobile licenses in its fiscal year 2008, which ended June 30. Here’s the company’s take on this news:

    We are excited to announce that Windows Mobile had yet another year of high growth, closing out the 2008 fiscal year by nearly doubling the overall expansion of the market.

    As we are enter Fiscal Year 2009, we are preparing for an equally exciting year. Through the magic of Windows Mobile software, services and partner relationships, Microsoft is poised to continue with its impressive growth.

    In fact, IDC expects Windows Mobile phones to continue to outsell Apple iPhones in both consumer and enterprise shipments, and by 2012, Windows Mobile is expected to double sales over the iPhone in the consumer space, and have nearly nine times the amount of enterprise deployments.

    Looking ahead, Microsoft’s unique vision and approach will continue to create opportunities for the partners and the entire industry, while connecting people to the information they care about most.

    Below are some key pieces of information.

    • Windows Mobile sold more than 18 million licenses in fiscal year 2008, seeing triple digit gains in France, Latin America, Central and Eastern Europe, Japan and India.
    • Consumers today can enjoy a number of Windows Mobile 6.1 phones, including the HTC Diamond, Touch Pro, and Samsung Omnia, and anticipation is rising for upcoming devices such as the Sony Xperia X1. 
    • We continued strengthening our position in the enterprise evident by 363 lighthouse wins (500 devices or more) which equaled 1.4m total licenses; 91 were competitive (meaning a RIM BES server was decommissioned).
    • We have more than 18,000 Windows Mobile applications, recently adding applications from Bloomberg, Reuters, and SAP, giving people the choice and flexibility they demand.
    • We are continuing to leverage acquisitions including Danger, MobiComp, Musiwave, and aQuantive to deliver the best mobile experience in the market.

    Fair enough. Still, I have a hard time embracing Windows Mobile as an innovative, exciting, or even interesting platform. You never know.

  • Suddenly, 64-bit Windows is mainstream

    Ed Bott is right-on with his latest blog post. As I’ve been discussing lately on the Windows Weekly podcast, the move to Vista x64—I went that route on my main desktop several months ago—is now seamless, with not a single compatibility issue in sight.

    Last year, x64 editions of Windows Vista were hard to come by and seen as mainly for early adopters. This year, with little warning, the tide seems to have shifted dramatically.

    Microsoft noticed the sudden shift as well. According to stats I received yesterday, the installed base of 64-bit Windows Vista machines in the U.S. has more than tripled in the last three months. Using data from its Windows Update servers, Microsoft calculated that 1.45% of all Windows Vista machines were running x64 Vista editions in March of this year. By June, that figure was up to 5.18%. That number is actually more impressive than it sounds: by my back-of-the-envelope calculations, making that shift in total market share means that at least 20% of all Vista PCs sold in the second quarter of this year came with 64-bit editions of Windows Vista preinstalled. By fall, it’s possible, even likely, that we’ll reach a tipping point, with more than 50% of new PCs sold at retail coming with 64-bit editions of Windows Vista preinstalled.

    I guess I shouldn’t be surprised. I’ve been running Vista x64 on my main desktop PC since February, with no issues whatsoever.

    This has been my experience as well.

    Thanks Joe R.

  • Small but important Live Mesh update

    Earlier this month, Microsoft made some changes to Live Mesh, including very low level support for P2P (peer to peer) folder sharing. The problem was (at the time) that you couldn’t configure this explicitly in the UI. So if you wanted to exclude the Live Desktop from a folder share (and not exceed the Web desktop’s 5 GB storage limit) there was no real way to do so. Instead, what you could do was simply share over 5 GB of data, and exceed that limit. Everything over 5 GB would be P2P only (that is, shared only between PCs in your Mesh). It wasn’t elegant but it did work: I was sharing out my 25 GB music library this way, for example.

    As of last night, however, Microsoft has added explicit P2P support to Live Mesh. So you can go into a particular folder (like that music library I’m sharing) and exclude it from the Live Desktop. That’s sweet. Here’s a shot showing how you do it.

    As you can see, removing a huge shared folder from the Live Desktop “fixes” the file storage limit on the Web (where, previously, I was at 100 percent usage of course.)

    Nice. It just keeps getting better.

  • VMware Fusion 2.0 Beta 2 now available

    VMWare Fusion is my favorite virtualization solution for the Mac, and if you’re looking for a way to run Windows on such a machine, this is the best way to do so. And it’s getting better:

    The VMware Fusion team is proud to announce VMware Fusion 2.0 Beta 2.

    This latest public beta, a free download, builds on VMware Fusion 2.0 Beta 1, adding the Unity 2.0 suite of Mac-Windows integration features, new ways to protect and manage your virtual machines with multiple snapshots, and a garage full of power tools for technical professionals.

    And as previously announced, VMware Fusion 2.0 will be a free downloadable upgrade for all VMware Fusion 1.x customers.

    Key Features of VMware Fusion 2.0 Beta 2

    As with Beta 1, VMware Fusion 2.0 Beta 2 brings dozens of new features and improvements to the most seamless way to run Windows on your Mac.

    Unity 2.0: Next Generation Mac-Windows Integration

    Beta 2 takes to the next level the Mac-Windows integration first pioneered in VMware Fusion 1.0.

    New in Beta 2, share applications between Windows and Mac. Launch Mac files with Windows applications, and even set web, email, and other links to launch in either your Mac or Windows browser and email clients.

    Use VMware Fusion’s Mirrored Folders to seamlessly map the contents of your Mac’s Desktop, Documents, Music, and Pictures folders to show up in your Windows Desktop, My Documents, My Music, and My Pictures folders.

    Even map your Mac keyboard to send custom keystroke combinations into your virtual machine. Learn more about Unity 2.0

    Windows is even Safer on the Mac

    Building on VMware Fusion 1.x’s ability to take a single virtual machine snapshot, VMware Fusion 2 provides ever better ways to manage and control Windows on your Mac. New in Beta 2, take and manage multiple snapshots for each of your virtual machines, keeping checkpoints before you install new software to protect against potential issues.

    And extending multiple snapshots, VMware Fusion 2 offers an industry-first: AutoProtect, automatic, timed snapshots at half-hourly, hourly, or daily intervals.

    You never know when disaster may strike—AutoProtect keeps you covered. Learn more about safety features

    There’s a lot more.

  • Live Search home page redesign

    I received an email from Microsoft today noting that they had redesigned the Live Search home page, but navigating there, I didn’t see a difference. Ah. I’m in Ireland currently and the changes are US-only at the moment. Here’s the Live Search blog post about the redesign:

    Today we're releasing an update to the Live Search home page that received positive feedback from customers in trials last month. The new design features background images that will change frequently, augmented with what we call "hotspots." These interactive areas highlight parts of the image and help you explore search results related to the highlighted area. Users who have tested this new home page have found it both engaging and a great place to start a search.

    New images and hotspots

    In our release last spring we laid the foundation for this page. In this home page release we've added background home page images that we'll change regularly and hotspots that click through to great search results. Hotspots gleam to the user when the page first loads then fade into the image. Users can discover them again by moving their mouse over them, revealing details about the image and a link to a related search result. To ensure that users can start a search immediately, our base page loads first with the images and hotspots loading quickly afterward. Users on a broadband connection may not notice the two steps. Today we're releasing the new home page in the U.S. only, with more markets to follow in the future.

    A great place to start a search

    Our goal for the home page is to find the best way to enhance users' sense of discovery, surprise, and delight while balancing engineering realities for a great user experience.

    Extensive user research and exploration of many concepts with our customers pointed us in the direction for this design. We want the page to be a great place to start a search and also to intrigue and inform as well. We think hotspots will help users discover parts of Live Search they might not know while not distracting from the core purpose of the page — searching.

    We think the new design is a great start, but there's more to come, with lots of interesting directions that we'll be exploring in our next releases of the home page.

    Chris Rayner, Senior Product Manager, and Zach Gutt, Senior Program Manager
    Live Search User Experience team

    Zach? Zach Gutt! I know Zach, but I had no idea he’d moved over to the Live side. (He at one time worked on ISA Server and Mark Minasi and I did a few road show events with him a few years back.) Anyway...

  • Dell Studio Hybrid Desktops

    Wow. These look really nice, though the base price ($499) can rise very quickly when adding features.

    Introducing the NEW Studio Hybrid

    Dell’s most unique, stylish, and conscientious desktop PC. Designed to fit into your environment while protecting the environment.

    • Personalize with 6 interchangeable color sleeves or bamboo
    • Ultra-compact design with Intel mobile technology performance
    • Features include slot-load DVD, HDMI, and optional Blu-ray
    • Dell’s greenest, most power-efficient consumer desktop

    There are laptops too, though they just appear to be rebranded Inspirons.

    Definitely a contender for the “Attack of the Tiny PCs” series.

  • HP Statement on MediaSmart Server Software Upgrade

    From HP:

    HP released a software update for MediaSmart Server on July 21, following Microsoft’s release of Windows Home Server Power Pack 1. The HP software update provides support for 64-bit operating systems, plus two optional add-ins that a user may choose to install – McAfee Total Protection Service and PacketVideo PVConnect media server. The 64 bit upgrade prepares the MediaSmart Server for support of Vista 64-bit systems. Users do not need to enable this feature. It is an automatic update.

    The PacketVideo Connect add-in provides advanced graphics such as photo thumbnails, in-menu browsing, and album art during remote access, as well as broader support for the more popular video, music and photo formats.  The McAfee anti-virus add-in will provide Server side anti-virus protection with free virus definitions for seven months. Both of these are add-ins will be automatically downloaded to the Add-In folder in the software folder on the HP MediaSmart Server. The user can add them if they choose just like any other add-in.

    The McAfee Total Protection Service must index all of the files stored on the Server in order to provide the protection against a virus attack. The PacketVideo PVConnect will, upon installation, create a database of all the media files such as photos, music and videos on the Server. When these two services are installed together, the combined ‘first run’ indexing by McAfee and database creation by PacketVideo, can use the majority of the resources on the Server. This may result in slow response times from the Server until those activities have been completed. If the user has also installed other add-ins or software packages on the Server there may be an additional lag in response time. It has also been reported that the Windows Home Server Console can become unresponsive during this time.

    As a result, we recommend that users install each update one at a time, independently. Users should first install Windows Home Server Power Pack 1, then PVConnect followed by McAfee.

    Additionally, since the release of the HP MediaSmart Server software update, it has been discovered that PacketVideo no longer supports media streaming to a Sony Playstation 3.  This is an issue with PacketVideo, not with the MediaSmart Server. There are directions for opening the PV database and fixing the problem by inserting a space between “PLAYSTATION” and “3.”

  • MobileMe photo upload finally fixed on Windows

    I check almost every single day to see whether it’s finally possible for Windows users to upload photos to MobileMe using a Web browser. It’s never worked right. But as of today, it actually works.

    To be a bit more clear, it “sort of worked” before in that it would work on only one supported browser (Safari) and only if you logged onto the site with your full email address (i.e. “name@me.com” instead of just “name”). It also worked in this way with, go figure, IE 7. (Which is not supported.)

    However, until very recently, you could not upload photos to MobileMe with Mozilla Firefox 3. At all. Now it works: You click the “Choose” button in the Uploads pop-up window and you actually get a normal Windows File Open dialog, as you’d expect. So over two weeks later, Apple is finally supporting photo uploads in Windows. Wee.

    Now if they could just start supporting free calendars like Google Calendar, Yahoo! Calendar, and Windows Live Calendar, this service might turn into something interesting and—perish the thought—something I could actually recommend. And let’s not forget integration with Windows Live Photo Gallery/Windows Photo Gallery. Throw us Windows users a bone, Apple.

  • Microsoft RTMs Windows XP for OLPC

    From the Microsoft's Unlimited Potential blog:

    Microsoft internally "RTM'ed" (Released to Manufacturing) the Windows XP version we are building for the OLPC XO computer. Windows on the XO looks like it is on track for availability in these types of national educational PC deals in September. We still have no plans to make Windows available for individuals who bought an XO in the Give 1 Get 1 program though.

    Courtesy of Mary Jo Foley.

    Posted Jul 29 2008, 03:31 AM by pthurrott with 2 comment(s)
    Filed under: ,
  • Windows Vista tip of the week: Looking anew at Vista's Disk Defragmenter

    OK, this may not seem like a big deal, but Microsoft has changed the Disk Defragmenter utility in Windows Vista with Service Pack 1 (SP1). In the original shipping version of Windows Vista, the Disk Defragmenter (as described in this Feature Focus article) was completely automatic: It would defrag all of your partitions, every night, starting at 1:00 am. This seemed like a great idea to me, but apparently some users complained that they’d prefer to have the ability to choose which partitions were defragged. That ability was added with SP1. Here’s what it looks like now:

    So, if you haven’t ever looked at Disk Defragmenter in Windows Vista, do so now (Start Search, "defrag") and make sure it’s set up to automatically defrag your disks. If you have looked at, but have installed SP1, make sure you’re defragging only those disks you wan to defrag.

  • The ‘Mohave’ Experiment

    Good stuff:

    The
    "Mohave"
    Experiment

    duration: 3 days in San Francisco, July 2008
    conditions: Partly Cloudy, 57 degrees
    subjects: Over 120 computer users (Mac, Linux, Windows XP and Windows 2000)
    hardware: An HP Pavilion DV 2000 with 2 GB of RAM
    technical assistance: A retail computer salesperson
    description: Subjects get a live 10-minute demo of "the next Microsoft OS" codenamed "Mohave" – but it's actually Windows Vista

    The results?

    See for yourself Tuesday, July 29th

    LOL. I can't wait.

    Posted Jul 28 2008, 06:53 AM by pthurrott with 123 comment(s)
    Filed under:
  • Zimbra Desktop: Web Mail running as a local application

    Now this is interesting, even if you're not a Yahoo! Mail user. Yahoo! has released the Beta 3 version of its Zimbra Desktop, which is essentially Yahoo! Mail (or, amazingly, Gmail or AOL, or any other IMAP/POP mail) running as a local application (with Windows, Mac, and Linux versions), using Mozilla Prism technology. (You can use Prism to make standalone versions of Google Calendar and Gmail, though they're still online-only Web apps at this time.) The Zimbra blog has some details:

    We’ve aimed to blur the line between a Ajax web-client and a conventional desktop application, and this release is a leap towards reaching that goal. If you’re just joining us here’s the best part: It’s an offline capable client so you can take your data with you whenever you don’t have internet access - then sync any type of interaction that you can do in normal webmail access when you get connected again. So many cool new things I don’t know where to begin - the Zimbra Desktop team has been very busy since Beta 2.

    Your tasks, documents, & briefcase items can now follow you wherever you may roam. If you’re already using Zimbra Desktop against a Zimbra Collaboration Suite server these will show up on next edit or item move via delta sync - while a full account sync or reset will pull in prior items. Personally, having briefcase items available offline is a major plus - as offline calendaring using the same AJAX web-client interface has already long since won me over.

    Yahoo! Mail users rejoice - There’s now IMAP access through Zimbra Desktop to all free, plus, and business accounts. You didn’t read that wrong. Normally only Plus accounts have POP access, but as a perk when using Zimbra Desktop the mail is synced via IMAP; which is a much better protocol for keeping your mail organized - and yes it’s available to free accounts as well. Hook-up your @yahoo.com account or go grab one of the new @ymail.com and @rocketmail.com addresses. (Note that some apps don’t sync to Yahoo! servers yet so the data is local.)

    Mailto: link handler - For Mac and Windows protocol handlers allow you to click on a mailto: link in any browser, and it will bring-up Zimbra Desktop’s composer with a javascript call. If Prism is not already running, it will start the web-app as well with a url call, then pop up compose. We don’t want to be accidentally invasive, so to turn this feature on you’ll have to check the box in global preferences to make it the default mail client on your computer.

    There’s also easy setup menus for setting up Zimbra Server, Yahoo! Mail, GMail, AOL, or any other IMAP/POP accounts you want to use. For Beta 3 we’ve thrown out JavaMail and wrote a brand-new robust IMAP/POP client-engine from scratch.

    There's a lot more but this looks really sweet. Google and Microsoft (and Apple, I guess) need to get their act together: This looks like the new standard for cloud computing email solutions.

    And for the record, how weird is it to access Gmail over IMAP via the new Yahoo! Mail interface? Very weird. But very cool.

    Related: Yahoo! Zimbra Desktop

  • Ireland

    So we're going on vacation today, to Ireland. We've been there before, once with the kids, but mostly on the western side of the island. This time we'll be staying in a home near Dublin, so we'll spend most of our time there, plus three days up in Northern Ireland. We've got friends from the US and France coming to visit as well, which is nice. We'll be coming home August 11.

    From a technology perspective, traveling can be a nightmare. But I'm hoping that recent advances like Live Mesh, iPods, and so on will make things easier. For example, rather than take a DVD player and a bunch of DVDs, I'm taking a few iPod touches for the kids with their movies on them. Small and compact. (And potentially fragile. I guess we'll see). Plus they can play games on those devices too. (They're bringing a Nintendo DS of course.)

    I'm bringing two notebook PCs. The first is a new Lenovo ThinkPad SL500 which I absolutely love. It's a 15-inch model, Vista Business, 2 GB of RAM, and a 320 GB hard drive. Absolutely sweet, and of course the always-excellent ThinkPad keyboard and large screen will help make up for the fact that I'm not in front of my usual PC. The other is the 13-inch Macbook I bought last month. It's running Vista Ultimate with 4 GB of RAM, a 250 GB hard drive, and most of my media collection on it. Maybe I'll catch a movie on the way out.

    When we went to France last year, I brought a largish USB-based WD MyBook 500 GB drive with us, with my most important work-related data, music, movies, and so-on. This year, I'm bringing a couple of much smaller WD MyPassport drives instead (320 GB and 250 GB), but they're mostly for media library stuff. We've got the home server up and running and backing up to the cloud, so I'll try and access that if I need anything important.

    I'll be working from Ireland daily, but on a reduced schedule. I'm not sure how its going to work with the time change, perhaps like last year (work 3-6 pm local time, or about 9am to noon EST) or maybe not. But I will be writing, blogging, and tweeting (i.e. using Twitter) every day. Probably just not as much.

    BTW...

    We're doing another home swap (our third), so a family from Ireland will be staying at our house while we're gone. I've set up a user account for them on my PC, but because all of my important data is on removable storage and/or the home server, they won't be able to access that stuff (I've taken the removable storage and some other items "off-site," i.e. to my parent's house). This way they can get online and do whatever but our data is safe. Plus there's an Xbox 360 and a Wii for the kids. I'm thinking we might just be the sweetest home swap those kids ever had. :)

    OK, see you on the other side. I'll be poring over the transcripts from the Microsoft annual financial analysts meeting on the plane, by the way. Lots of stuff going on there as usual.

    --Paul

  • FY09 Strategic Update

    Only Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer could send such an important message out and give it a subject line that boring. But you'll want to read this one. I've highlighted some bits I feel are particularly interesting.

    From: Steve Ballmer
    Sent: Wednesday, July 23, 2008 4:30 PM
    To: Microsoft–All Employees
    Subject: FY09 Strategic Update

    With FY08 complete, I want to discuss my priorities for the year ahead and share my thoughts about the key strategic topics that are on everybody’s mind, including Windows, competition with Apple and Google, our software plus services strategy, and Yahoo.

    I also have news about an organizational change and a transition in our Senior Leadership Team.

    First, I want to thank you for your hard work and the dedication you showed during the past 12 months. FY08 was a milestone year. Our revenue jumped $9.3 billion to more than $60 billion. Operating profit grew 21 percent to $22.5 billion.

    These outstanding numbers are the direct result of your commitment to the priorities I outlined last July. A lot has happened since then, but our fundamental strengths, challenges, and strategic goals remain largely the same. Therefore, my priorities are consistent with last year. In FY09 we must continue to:

    1. Invest in the right opportunities;

    2. Expand our presence with Windows, Office, and developers;

    3. Drive end user excitement for our products;

    4. Embrace software plus services; and

    5. Focus on employee excellence.

    By focusing on these five areas, we can continue to grow revenue, increase profit, and expand our market share. These priorities are also critical as we work to address key issues surrounding our business in the coming year:

    · Windows: The success of Windows is our number one job. With SP1 and the work we’ve done with PC manufacturers and our software ecosystem, we’ve addressed device and application compatibility issues in Windows Vista. Now it’s time to tell our story. In the weeks ahead, we’ll launch a campaign to address any lingering doubts our customers may have about Windows Vista. And later this year, you’ll see a more comprehensive effort to redefine the meaning and value of Windows for our customers.

    We also have to drive developers to create rich applications for Windows. With Internet Explorer and Silverlight, we have great tools for creating applications that run everywhere. But we also need to make sure developers have the .NET skills to write unique Windows applications using Windows Presentation Foundation. To keep today’s Windows applications alive, vibrant, and exciting, we need both—applications that run everywhere and rich client applications.

    · Apple: In the competition between PCs and Macs, we outsell Apple 30-to-1. But there is no doubt that Apple is thriving. Why? Because they are good at providing an experience that is narrow but complete, while our commitment to choice often comes with some compromises to the end-to-end experience. Today, we’re changing the way we work with hardware vendors to ensure that we can provide complete experiences with absolutely no compromises. We’ll do the same with phones—providing choice as we work to create great end-to-end experiences.

    · Business and enterprise: Our enterprise and server business has never been stronger—today we are on the verge of becoming the number one enterprise software company. We need to continue to push on all fronts—mail with Exchange, business intelligence with PerformancePoint, virtualization with Hyper-V, and databases with SQL Server. We have to drive our enterprise search capabilities, our unified communications solutions, and our collaboration technologies. And we must continue to compete against Linux in key workloads such as Web servers and high performance computing.

    · Software plus services: Some people think software plus services is all about search. But it’s really about changing the way software is written and deployed. The future is about having a platform in the cloud and delivering applications across PCs, phones, TVs, and other devices, at work and in the home. It’s also about driving change in business models through advertising, subscriptions, and online transactions. Software plus services is a huge opportunity for us to deliver new value on the desktop and the server to all of our customers. This year at PDC, you’ll hear more about our cloud platform initiatives and the next versions of our Live and Online technologies.

    · Google: We continue to compete with Google on two fronts—in the enterprise, where we lead; and in search, where we trail. In search, our technology has come a long way in a very short time and it’s an area where we’ll continue to invest to be a market leader. Why? Because search is the key to unlocking the enormous market opportunities in advertising, and it is an area that is ripe for innovation. In the coming years, we’ll make progress against Google in search first by upping the ante in R&D through organic innovation and strategic acquisitions. Second, we will out-innovate Google in key areas—we’re already seeing this in our maps and news search. Third, we are going to reinvent the search category through user experience and business model innovation. We’ll introduce new approaches that move beyond a white page with 10 blue links to provide customers with a customized view of their world. This is a long-term battle for our company—and it’s one we’ll continue to fight with persistence and tenacity.

    · Yahoo: Related to Google and our search strategy are the discussions we had with Yahoo. I want to emphasize the point I’ve been making all along—Yahoo was a tactic, not a strategy. We want to accelerate our share of search queries and create a bigger pool of advertisers, and Yahoo would have helped us get there faster. But we will get there with or without Yahoo. We have the right people, we’ve made incredible progress in our technology, and we’ll continue to make smart investments that will enable us to build an industry-leading business.

    As I mentioned earlier, I have important organizational news. Today we are announcing that the Platforms and Services Division will be split into two businesses: Windows/Windows Live and Online Services. We are also announcing that Kevin Johnson will leave the company. He will work to ensure a smooth transition.

    Since 1992, Kevin has been a key contributor to many of this company’s most important achievements. As president of the Platforms and Services Division, Kevin has built an incredibly talented organization and laid the foundation for the future success of Windows and our Online Services Business. Over the last 16 years, through everything from his work as head of the company’s worldwide sales, marketing, and services efforts, to his leadership in transforming our field operations and repositioning the company to focus on opportunities in emerging markets, Kevin has played a vital role in this company’s success. There is no doubt that his passion and dedication will be missed.

    Effective immediately, Steven Sinofsky, Jon DeVaan, and Bill Veghte will report directly to me to lead Windows/Windows Live. In the Online Services Business, we will create a new senior leadership position and conduct a search that will span internal and external candidates. In the meantime, Satya Nadella will continue to lead Microsoft’s search, ad platform, and MSN engineering efforts, and Brian McAndrews will continue to lead the Advertiser and Publisher Solutions Group. Both Windows/Windows Live and the Online Services Business are led by a strong group of executives on the technical and business side who have the talent and experience to address the challenges we face and drive the next generation of growth and success.

    Looking ahead, I see an incredibly bright future for our company. As I said at the June 27th Town Hall for Bill, we are the best in the world at doing software and nobody should be confused about this. It doesn’t mean that we can’t improve, but nobody is better than we are. Nobody works harder than we do. Nobody is more tenacious than we are. We’re investing more broadly and more seriously than anybody else. Our opportunities to change the world have never been greater.

    I look forward to working with all of you as we focus on our five priorities in FY09.

    Steve

    The cloud computing bit is particularly interesting to me: "The future is about having a platform in the cloud and delivering applications across PCs, phones, TVs, and other devices, at work and in the home." Thank you, Steve. I couldn't have said that better myself.

  • Microsoft looks to 'Mojave' to revive Vista's image

    I've gotten a lot of email about this article, and while I discussed it on the podcast this week (which you like haven't heard yet) and have a note about it in today's Short Takes (which isn't online yet), it bears mentioning because, well, I told you so:

    After months of searching for ways to defend its oft-maligned Windows operating system, Microsoft may just have found its best weapon: Vista's skeptics.

    Spurred by an e-mail from someone deep in the marketing ranks, Microsoft last week traveled to San Francisco, rounding up Windows XP users who had negative impressions of Vista. The subjects were put on video, asked about their Vista impressions, and then shown a "new" operating system, code-named Mojave. More than 90 percent gave positive feedback on what they saw. Then they were told that "Mojave" was actually Windows Vista.

    Microsoft is still trying to figure out just how it will use the Mojave footage in its marketing, though it will clearly have a place.

    In an interview Wednesday, Windows unit business chief Bill Veghte told CNET News that he wants to see his unit try new things to get the message across.

    "We have a huge perception opportunity," he said, offering a glass half-full assessment of things. "We are going to try a bunch of stuff."

    Much of that perception, Microsoft belatedly acknowledges, stems from Apple's successful and unchallenged anti-Vista campaign. But, after stewing over the ads on many of his morning runs, Veghte decided that it was time to strike back, even without a new version of Windows to tout. Apple, he said, has "crossed a line" from fact into fiction.

    Exactly. I have no problem with Apple (or any other company) competing aggressively with Microsoft. But the Apple ads lapse into outright lying.

    Bravo to this.

    I'll add a related anecdote. While up in Sonoma a few weeks ago, I was finishing off something on my laptop and our friends came into the hotel room. One of them, looking at the laptop said, "that's beautiful. Is that Mac OS X?" (Qualifier: She is a graphic designer. What can you do?) I said, "no, that's Windows Vista." And she replied," Wow. It's really nice looking. I heard it was awful."

    It's time to set the record straight.

More Posts Next page »
SPONSORED LINKS FEATURED LINKS

Order Your SQL Fundamentals CD Today! Learn how to use SQL Server, understand Office integration techniques and dive into the essentials of SQL Express and Visual Basic with this free SQL Fundamentals CD. Email Recovery and eDiscovery for Microsoft Exchange!Discover, Recover, and Export mailboxes, folders and individual items direct from offline EDB’s or online production Exchange Servers. Free 30 Day Demo. Microsoft Exchange & Windows Connections event returns to Las Vegas Nov 10 - 13Connections returns to Las Vegas for this exciting event where each attendee will receive SQL Server 2008 standard with 1 CAL. Co-located with Microsoft ASP.NET, SQL Server, and SharePoint Connections with over 250 in-depth sessions. Free Online Event! Virtualization:Get the Facts!Register now and attend this free, live in-depth online conference on November 13 and 20, 2008, produced by Windows IT Pro. All registrants are eligible to receive a complimentary one-year digital subscription to Windows IT Pro (a $49.95 value)! Ease Your Scripting Pains with the Flexibility of PowerShell!Join MVP Paul Robichaux on December 11, 2008 at 11:00 AM EDT as he equips you with PowerShell basics in 3 introductory lessons, each followed by a live Q&A session—all on your own computer! PASS Community Summit 2008 in Seattle on Nov 18-21The don’t-miss event for Microsoft SQL Server Professionals. Register now and you’ll enjoy top-notch Microsoft and Community speakers and more.
Windows IT Pro |  Subscribe |  Register |  Windows FAQ |  Media Kit |  WinInfo News |  Europe Edition |  About Us |  Contact Us/Customer Service |  Affiliates/Licensing
SQL Server Magazine |  Office & SharePoint Pro |  Windows Dev Pro |  IT Library |  Technical Resources Directory |  Windows Excavator |  ITTV |  IT Job Hound

Copyright © 2008 Penton Media, Inc., All rights reserved.  Terms and Use | Privacy Statement | Reprints and Licensing