Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Windows 7 is Vista but Vista isn’t Windows 7

It’s just around the corner, Microsoft’s next latest and greatest operating system will be coming to a new PC near you. Windows 7 is claimed to be everything that Vista wasn’t. A fast booting, sleek operating system which is as reliable as XP came to be.Yeah. So far all that is to be seen are a few minor interface changes but no real under the hood modifications have been spotted, yet. Thinkknext has some spy screenshots of the new interface and here’s a short rundown of what appears to be in store.

Windows 7 will take us back to the simplified Start Menu of yesteryear but items can be added to it if you so desire.

The calculator that has been around basically since Windows 95, if not the early 3.1 days has finally gotten a facelift. It’s about time. Having to use the ugly calculator in Vista can be such a drag sometimes. Some of us don’t keep a desktop calculator around, I’m just saying.

User account control has gotten a leash. It is now the unobtrusive system that we were promised in Windows Vista. Hey, Microsoft how about releasing some of these updates for Vista instead of forcing the masses to pay for yet another upgrade.

The “Ribbon” menu system that is part of Office 2007 is now part of Windows Paint and Wordpad. With a bit of luck, it will become part of Expolerer as well which needs a change.

“Libraries” has replaced documents, there are some new Control Panel settings and the themes and resolution properties have been changed for the better. That’s pretty much it. While it is largely Vista, some minor changes make it Windows 7. Mind you, I’m not saying this is worth a $400 price tag but when Windows 7 starts shipping with new computers get it instead of Vista.

Windows 7 could be hitting retail shelves at any point from the beginning of 2009 to late 2010 or early 2011.

Source : Vista knowledge

Secret Windows 7 screens leaked

Despite Microsoft’s efforts to keep Windows 7 information secret and safe within a close circle of partners and testers until its good and ready, another round of screenshots has found its way to the web.Over the weekend, the ThinkNext.net blog posted a variety of screenshots purportedly from the latest batch of beta code, Windows 7 M3 Build 6780. Unfortunately, the page is now deader than disco. Someone claiming to be a Microsoft suit emailed the author and dropped enough litigious worIt ds of advice to encourage a hasty retreat.

But all is not lost, curious readers. Windows7news.com is presently hosting the images. You may catch them there before they’re gone.

The images include a Windows 7 welcome screen, start menu, administration windows, and updated applications like Windows Media Player, and – YES! - MS Paint and Calculator!

All signs point to things looking pretty Aero-y. That is to say, Microsoft appears to be sticking with the same semi-transparent glass-effect graphic interface used in Windows Vista. You may also know this as the option in Appearance Settings you had to disable because it makes your laptop run like crap. The build does appear to be using the Office 2007 Ribbon interface in Wordpad and Paint. That’s a change at least.

Keep in mind the code is still deep in beta country so nobody is promising you Aero. In fact, Microsoft is doing its best to promise you next to nothing this early into the process, having learned a harsh lesson with Vista.

Back before the ponderously maligned OS made it’s debut, Microsoft made a fine mess out of previewing thrills, chills, and a laundry list of features - along with a thousand elephants that didn’t make the cut when Vista hit retail shelves. Customers couldn’t help but compare the OS against their artificially enhanced expectations – adding to the grief that made Vista the Tito Jackson of Windows releases (Windows ME is Marlon Jackson, by the way).

We haven’t yet received official word whether it was Microsoft that sent the take-down request. We’ll update when the datum rolls around.


Source: theregister

Monday, September 29, 2008

Microsoft is Scoring Big With Gates, Seinfeld Comeback Ad

A few weeks ago, I lambasted Microsoft for an awful advertising campaign for Windows Vista called The Mojave Experiment. The Mojave Experiment demoed a “new” version of Windows dubbed Mojave to a group of off-the-street test subjects. The big revelation was that Mojave wasn’t a new version of Windows but really today’s Windows Vista.
The campaign failed because it started off by reaffirming that there was a negative connotation around Vista and Microsoft and trying to make the customer feel ignorant for thinking that way. Kind of like when you are really eating the Pizza Hut pasta at the fancy Italian joint.

Microsoft is back with a new $300 million ad campaign that stars Jerry Seinfeld and a semiretired Bill Gates. Microsoft lobbed $10 million of that budget to Seinfeld to appear in the ads, and after seeing the first two spots, I think the campaign is brilliant.

The first ad follows Seinfeld and Gates discount shopping at the Shoe Circus. The second ad is a continuation of “Bill & Jerry’s Excellent Adventure” as they live with a family to try to connect with “real people.”

Microsoft never has had a good ad campaign per se. The closest to interesting and engaging was the 1995 “Start Me Up” campaign, but while Apple has been bashing Windows for years with its Mac versus PC spots, Microsoft has offered up “People Powered” and “Your Potential. Our Passion.” Not exactly memorable.

Much like Seinfeld’s television show, the new ads really are about nothing. Unlike previous failed campaigns, these ads are designed to leave an enduring impression of the company with viewers rather than getting them off the couch and into a Best Buy to purchase a new piece of software. Windows is already

on 90 percent of the computers shipping today, so there is no real reason to try to push it to the remaining 10 percent.

Instead, Microsoft is wisely using these ads to try to repair the damaged image of Microsoft as a whole. Between the troubled Vista launch and Apple attacks, Microsoft is developing a set of engaging mini-episodes featuring one of the world’s most popular comics with the public face of Microsoft: Bill Gates.

If the advertisements resonate a positive impression of Microsoft in the viewer’s mind, the campaign can be deemed a success. More than selling extra licenses of Windows, the company needs to elminate the “have to” feeling of purchasing a PC and change it to a “want to.” Buying a new PC shouldn’t evoke the same reaction as purchasing an insurance policy.

I gauge the quality of an advertisement on whether I will stop fast forwarding through them on my TiVo. I almost always stop to watch the Mac versus PC spots, and I am now stopping to watch the Seinfeld-Microsoft ads because they aren’t the typical product- pushing garbage today’s ad agencies are selling. Much as Apple did years ago, Microsoft finally is thinking differently.


Source: redorbit

Developers to get Windows 7 pre beta next month

Microsoft will be showboating Windows Vista, mark two 7 at its forthcoming Professional Developer Conference (PDC) event next month, where developers will be able to get their mitts on a pre-beta build of the operating system.

Meanwhile, the yawnfest surrounding speculation about what the OS will (or won’t) come loaded with continues to mount in the blogosphere. Yep, MS is stripping Windows 7 down to its pants, vest and a Ribbon. So, the upcoming operating system, some early code of which has already been probed by a US anti-trust committee sniffing around Redmond to see if its latest interoperability claims come up smelling of roses or onions, will not include email, photo-editing and movie-making apps that were part of Vista.

Instead those features will be packed into Windows Live as downloadable applications. The only problem for Microsoft is in convincing world+dog to find the enthusiasm to flick Google the finger and use its products online.

Windows senior veep Steven Sinofsky will be bigging up Windows 7 at PDC2008 in Los Angeles on 28 October. Microsoft wants everyone to get incredibly excited about “the next major version of the Windows client operating system.”

Indeed over the past few months the company has mounted a strategic marketing campaign to gently steer customers away from the unloved Vista OS. It’s also started a corporate blog about Windows 7, which is perhaps the best indication that Microsoft wants to draw a line under the Vista mess.

But, as we have noted several times since rumours began swimming around the interweb that hinted at the possibility that Windows 7 could in fact be parachuted in early by Redmond, the next OS is based on the same kernel as Vista.

What does this mean in Microsoft speak?

“With Windows 7 at PDC2008 you will see advances across the full range of Windows – including the kernel, networking, hardware and devices, and user-interface,” said MS wonk Denise Begley yesterday.

“Learn more about opportunities to build on the platform’s commitment to OS fundamentals, while also enabling you to enhance your existing applications and create new applications that use the new technologies and APIs in Windows 7.”

So there you have it: expect “advances”, “enhancement” and even some new tech built into the next platform, and, given that many features in Vista will be absent, it might even come with less bloat.


Source: theregister

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Is Linux the greatest threat to Windows Vista?

There’s a bevy of journalists and users alike that are cocked and ready to fire away at Vista any chance they can get, but there’s one underlying variable that almost everyone seems to agree with. The various distributions of Linux most likely pose the greatest threat to Windows Vista overall- why you ask?

A synopsis by Renu Singh of IT Voir on the subject, pointed out the main reasons Linux has the most fuel to overtake Vista in the long run. Though it seems obvious, he points out issues regarding security, anti-virus, updating and the sheer cost saving benefits to using any kind of Linux. Since the days of only one or two operating systems has come and gone, Microsoft has some undeniable trouble on the horizon- it’s really no secret, even to them. Now that we have such a variety, it really comes down to a few simple aspects- overall cost of deployment in the long-term, and overall security during all aspects of usage.

When it comes to updating, Singh points out the fact that with Vista- it’s a matter of not only updating the OS, but also individual drivers, software, etc. “To update Adobe suite, user have to visit the Adobe web site. To update the drivers, one has to visit hardware vendors. Contrast to this, the update process of Linux is simple- the update package includes everything- the operating system, applications, support libraries, hardware drivers. All new versions are looked for and updated at one time.”

The underlying benefit of Linux is of course the price, or lack of price that is. Not only is the OS completely free-of-charge, but all software is as well. There’s a slew of Open Source software readily available and waiting, with more and more coming everyday. In addition, there’s no need for pirated software and versions of the OS like there is with Vista, it can be replicated and re-distributed as necessary.

I’m a huge Open Source advocate, so of course this all rings true with me. Maybe you have a different opinion- maybe in your eyes Mac presents the greatest threat, but I think it’s hard to deny the future dominance of Linux.


Source: blorge

Web will run out of IP addresses by 2010

The "father" of the internet has warned that the web will run out of IP addresses by 2010, saying the web does not have enough unique codes that allow computers to communicate with each other.

Vint Cerf, the "father" of the web, said when the internet protocol (IP) addresses do run out, the connectivity of the internet will be damaged and many computers will be unable to go online. "This is like the internet running out of telephone numbers and with no new numbers, you can't have more subscribers," Cerf was quoted as saying by the Daily Telegraph newspaper today.

The computer scientists, who helped invent the system, called for early preparations to switch addresses to a new system. He underlined that the web does not have enough unique codes that allow system to communicate with each other.

When the internet was developed in 1977 there were 4.2 billion addresses available under the internet protocol version four (IPv4) system.  According to the report in the British daily, each of the IPv4 addresses has a series of 32 binary numbers, but with the surge of broadband globally, it is estimated that these addresses will run out by 2010.

A new system called IPv6 has been ready for a decade and is already used in Japan to connect thousands of earthquake sensors through a computer system that sends automatic alerts to television programmes and turns traffic lights red, the report said.

IPv6 addresses are 128 bits long and so provide a possible 340 trillion, trillion, trillion address space, it said.

Web will run out of IP addresses by 2010

The "father" of the internet has warned that the web will run out of IP addresses by 2010, saying the web does not have enough unique codes that allow computers to communicate with each other.

Vint Cerf, the "father" of the web, said when the internet protocol (IP) addresses do run out, the connectivity of the internet will be damaged and many computers will be unable to go online. "This is like the internet running out of telephone numbers and with no new numbers, you can't have more subscribers," Cerf was quoted as saying by the Daily Telegraph newspaper today.

The computer scientists, who helped invent the system, called for early preparations to switch addresses to a new system. He underlined that the web does not have enough unique codes that allow system to communicate with each other.

When the internet was developed in 1977 there were 4.2 billion addresses available under the internet protocol version four (IPv4) system.  According to the report in the British daily, each of the IPv4 addresses has a series of 32 binary numbers, but with the surge of broadband globally, it is estimated that these addresses will run out by 2010.

A new system called IPv6 has been ready for a decade and is already used in Japan to connect thousands of earthquake sensors through a computer system that sends automatic alerts to television programmes and turns traffic lights red, the report said.

IPv6 addresses are 128 bits long and so provide a possible 340 trillion, trillion, trillion address space, it said.

Learning Windows Vista : Part 5

Internet Explorer 7.0 Catches Up


IE 7 won’t win any awards for innovation, having not quite caught up with features its
free competitor, the Mozilla Firefox browser, came out with two years ago.
But the improved security of IE 7, plus the addition of long-requested features such as
tabbed browser windows, make Microsoft’s new browser a solid component of the OS
rather than the backward stepchild that IE 6 became. (Users of Windows XP can and
should download and install IE 7, if an upgrade to Vista isn’t immediately possible.)
Besides the tabbed windows, IE 7 has (thankfully) copied several other features from
Firefox, Opera, and other non-Microsoft browsers. These include the ability to add
Internet search engines of your choice to IE’s search bar and a default Shink to Fit setting
so Web pages will fit your printer’s paper size.

However, IE 7 has also gained a few new features that other browsers may themselves
need to catch up with.

Pressing Ctrl+Q or clicking the Quick Tabs tab on the IE 7 toolbar tiles all of your
open tabs into a convenient thumbnail view (see Figure 9). When you have a lot
of tabs open, Quick Tabs can save you a substantial amount of time that you
might otherwise spend clicking at random to get back to a particular site

Page Zoom is another handy feature. When you’re viewing a web page that’s
just too small or too large, hold down the Ctrl key and press + to make the page
10 percent larger, – to make it 10 percent smaller, or 0 (zero) to return the page
to its original size.

These special keystroke sequences work exactly the same way as they do in
Firefox, except that IE 7 scales both images and text. (Firefox 1.5 scaled just
text.) The keystrokes work whether you use the symbol keys on the main keyboard
or the numeric keypad.

There’s also a small Page Zoom button on the extreme right of IE 7’s status bar.
You can click it once to scale a Web page to 125 percent, click it again for 150
percent, and click it a third time to go back to 100 percent.

 

image

Quick Tabs. Press Ctrl+Q in IE 7 and all of your tabbed windows are tiled, showing
you a thumbnail to help you switch to a desired Web page

SECRET:

Fit the Full URL on Printouts
Sometimes, you want to print out some Web page you’ve found, so you can recommend
the site to a friend later. But if the Web address (URL) is a long one, it’s
likely to be truncated in the footer of the printed page. That’s because IE, by default,
uses a large font and cuts off any of the URL that doesn’t fit on the same line as
today’s date

You can make URLs print in full almost every time by clicking Tools?Internet Options.
On the General tab, click the Fonts button and then select a Web page font that’s
more compact than Times New Roman, such as Vista’s Cordia New. (This font, which
is similar to Arial, also becomes the default font for Web pages that don’t specify a
font.)
If that doesn’t print the entire Web address, give URLs a separate line. To do so, pull
down the Printer toolbar and select Page Setup. Enter &b&u in the Header field to
devote the full header to the URL (aligned to the right). Then enter &d&b&p in the
Footer field to print the date on the left and the page number on the right at the bottom
of each page. (This procedure eliminates printing each page’s title, represented
by &w. A Web page’s title takes up space that’s best devoted to printing the full URL,
in our view.)

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Friday, September 26, 2008

Learning Windows Vista: Part 4

Instant Search and the Search Pane


An interactive Instant Search bar is now a feature of every Explorer window in Vista as
well as Vista’s Start menu. This may not slow the progress of third-party desktop search
applications that are increasingly being promoted as Windows downloads from the major
search engines. But Microsoft is, in fact, trying to build into Vista advanced search functions
to render such downloads unnecessary. Figure 6 shows the results of .jpg entered in the search bar of the Start menu. Pressing Enter opens the more-capable Search pane. In this pane, you can refine your search or organize the results by file size and other attributes.

image

The search bar and Search pane. Entering a string into the search bar in the Start
menu and pressing Enter opens the Search pane, where you can refine your search

 

image

The Control Panel’s classic view. In this configuration, every Control Panel applet is
shown, which looks quite busy

image

Selecting just options applets. By entering the word options into the Control Panel’s
search bar, only those applets with that word in their titles are displayed, making your choice easier.

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Thursday, September 25, 2008

Learning Windows Vista : Part 3

Programs Explorer Replaces Add/Remove Programs

Legions of Windows users have become accustomed to using the Add or Remove
Programs dialog box in the Control Panel to uninstall applications that they no longer
want taking up space on their hard disks. So, in its frustrating way, Microsoft has renamed
this feature to make it even harder to find than it was before. To reconfigure or completely remove an application, you now use the Programs Explorer (see Figure 4). This applet also enables you to turn on or off many of the built-in features that come with Windows Vista, such as the Indexing Service. Fortunately, the Programs Explorer is still available through the Control Panel. You just
need to know to look for it in the Ps instead of the As.

 

 

 

image

 

Put Some Gadgets in Your Windows Sidebar


Apple users have long been able to take advantage of the Mac OS X Dashboard, and
Windows users have been able to download Yahoo Widgets (formerly Konfabulator
Widgets). Those things are still available, but now Vista has its own little tools, known as
gadgets.
Vista gadgets live in the new Windows Sidebar (see Figure 5)—which you can move to
the left or right side of the screen by right-clicking it and selecting Properties. Or you can
put Gadgets on your Desktop by dragging the little context menu that appears when you
hover your mouse over a Gadget.
Using the Properties dialog box, you can configure the Windows Sidebar to start every
time Windows starts or only when you want it to appear. If you configure it to require
manual intervention, get it back by clicking Start?All Programs?Accessories?Windows
Sidebar.

image

 

Windows Sidebar with gadgets. In this view, the Windows Sidebar holds five

gadgets: Calculator, CPU Meter, Currency Converter, Notes, and the Recycle Bin.

The main window shows the data providers you can choose for near-real-time updates

in various gadgets.

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Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Learning Windows Vista : Part 2

Windows Aero

You’ll see a slick new look to objects and applications in Vista—if you have a version of
the operating system that supports it and hardware that’s modern enough to render it.
The new Aero interface gives translucency to the chrome that surrounds most application
windows. This enables you to see what lies beneath a window, whether the foreground
app is stationary or you’re dragging it to a new location.


Perhaps more important than translucency is the new live thumbnail effect that Aero adds
to the taskbar at the bottom of the screen. Hover your mouse over a button that represents
a minimized application, and you’ll see a miniature picture of what’s in the app at that
moment (see Figure 2). This can be helpful in deciding which of several minimized applications
to switch to.


 

image

You can see the Aero interface (formerly code-named Aero Glass) if you have Vista Home
Premium, Business, Enterprise, or Ultimate Edition, and your video board supports the
advanced features of Microsoft’s new Windows Driver Display Model.

 

image

 

Flip 3D


Many Windows users know about Alt+Tab. You can hold down the Alt key and press Tab
repeatedly to switch to any application that’s currently open.
The Aero user interface adds a powerful enhancement to task switching. Alt+Tab still
works—even better, in fact, because now thumbnails of each application are displayed,
not just titles. But you’ll probably abandon Alt+Tab in favor of Windows+Tab, called
Flip3D, which shows you a revolving set of windows at an angle so you can see exactly
what you’re switching to (see Figure 3).
One of the windows that’s shown in the Flip 3D view is always your Windows Desktop.
That makes it easy to minimize all of your applications. Simply hold down the Windows
key (either the left one or the right one), and then press Tab until the miniature window
that looks like your Desktop is uppermost

image

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Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Learn Vista in 15 Minutes :part 1


It’s impossible to cover all the new features of Vista in a single chapter. Many features
warrant their own chapters because there’s a lot to say about them or we found secret
information that isn’t in the Help text you get with Vista. Other new Vista features, although important, may be so straightforward that they don’t have any particular secrets. If not, we haven’t devoted any further space to them in this book. But even features that don’t have hidden features may be important for you to know about when you turn Vista on for the first time. Exposing those features to you is the purpose of the following overview.

 

The New Start Menu
In Vista, the Start button is no longer called Start, and the Start menu looks completely
different from the menu you may be used to in Windows XP. However, it’s still there at the
bottom of the screen, and you may find it a bit better organized. The old Start button has been replaced by a lighted sphere that displays the Windows flag logo. Instead of submenus that fly out to the right of the main menu, Vista displays your most recently used programs in a primary window. If you click All Programs, the Start menu switches to a display of collapsing folders. You can expand each folder to show you all available programs, but the Start menu keeps the list within the primary window

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Monday, September 22, 2008

The Value of Windows Vista

We waited more than five years for Vista. As you may recall, Windows XP was released with much fanfare in October 2001. But instead of the next Windows version shipping in just a couple of years, as originally expected, Microsoft lost its way in the development process. Vista didn’t make it to consumers until early 2007. Was it worth the wait? The short answer is, “Yes.” We believe Vista is a major advance on Microsoft’s previous operating systems. If you’re buying a new PC today, we don’t hesitate to recommend that you get Vista rather than requesting XP or another, older operating system. (If you’re upgrading an older PC to Vista, by contrast, be sure to first read our tips in Chapter 3.) In 2001, Microsoft executives widely claimed that XP was “the most secure operating system we have ever delivered.” In fact, XP and its new Web browser, Internet Explorer 6.0, were full of maddening security holes that previous operating systems didn’t suffer from.
ActiveX exploits, drive-by downloads, and many other kinds of weaknesses were quickly exploited by black-hat hackers. Microsoft has been issuing patches for XP and IE 6.0 ever since. The Vista OS and the new IE 7.0 browser are welcome steps toward changing that. Will they never need patching? We’d hardly say that. But Microsoft has added “hardening” features to Vista that should make remote exploits more difficult for hackers to carry out. Besides improved security, XP users who switch to Vista will also find enhancements in desktop searching, Windows Sidebar access to
applets called gadgets, PC-to-PC content transfers, and even new games—mahjong and (finally!) chess. Unlike the first chapters of most books—which are filled with boilerplate thank-you and personal musings—we really do want you to read this chapter. Instead of filling our first few pages with acknowledgements of names you’ve never heard of, we’ve moved the credits for our valued sources into the chapters they helped us with. In these pages, we aim to give you a crash course on Windows Vista. In other words, read on and you can learn the most important new features of Vista in the time it takes to sip a nice, hot cuppa Joe.

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The Value of Windows Vista

We waited more than five years for Vista. As you may recall, Windows XP was released with much fanfare in October 2001. But instead of the next Windows version shipping in just a couple of years, as originally expected, Microsoft lost its way in the development process. Vista didn’t make it to consumers until early 2007. Was it worth the wait? The short answer is, “Yes.” We believe Vista is a major advance on Microsoft’s previous operating systems. If you’re buying a new PC today, we don’t hesitate to recommend that you get Vista rather than requesting XP or another, older operating system. (If you’re upgrading an older PC to Vista, by contrast, be sure to first read our tips in Chapter 3.) In 2001, Microsoft executives widely claimed that XP was “the most secure operating system we have ever delivered.” In fact, XP and its new Web browser, Internet Explorer 6.0, were full of maddening security holes that previous operating systems didn’t suffer from.
ActiveX exploits, drive-by downloads, and many other kinds of weaknesses were quickly exploited by black-hat hackers. Microsoft has been issuing patches for XP and IE 6.0 ever since. The Vista OS and the new IE 7.0 browser are welcome steps toward changing that. Will they never need patching? We’d hardly say that. But Microsoft has added “hardening” features to Vista that should make remote exploits more difficult for hackers to carry out. Besides improved security, XP users who switch to Vista will also find enhancements in desktop searching, Windows Sidebar access to
applets called gadgets, PC-to-PC content transfers, and even new games—mahjong and (finally!) chess. Unlike the first chapters of most books—which are filled with boilerplate thank-you and personal musings—we really do want you to read this chapter. Instead of filling our first few pages with acknowledgements of names you’ve never heard of, we’ve moved the credits for our valued sources into the chapters they helped us with. In these pages, we aim to give you a crash course on Windows Vista. In other words, read on and you can learn the most important new features of Vista in the time it takes to sip a nice, hot cuppa Joe.

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Thursday, September 18, 2008

Microsoft set to unveil Vista’s successor, Windows 7

The last Windows upgrade cycle left a long time between drinks. Windows XP hit shelves in October 2001. Then it was more than five years before Windows Vista succeeded it in January 2007. Now, Microsoft seems ready to step back to its former upgrade pace, which saw it release a revision of Windows every couple of years in pre-XP times.

To wit, the company today announced it will unveil new details about Vista’s successor, codenamed Windows 7, at its WinHEC developer conference November 5 to 7 in LA. At the same time, Microsoft will release Windows 7 code to third-party software developers – a key phase in the development of a new OS that shows Windows 7 is strongly in train.

With many large organisations yet to upgrade from XP, the relatively early emergence of Windows 7 raises the possibility that many will simply skip a generation, ignoring Vista altogether while they wait for the new OS.

If so, they should take a look at history. An apparently near-finished version of Vista was first unveiled in July 2005. But endless last minute tweaks, and niggles from US and EU antitrust agencies, meant the final version took more than 18 further months to emerge.

And Vista’s first service pack – a milestone many companies wait for before they upgrade, since it irons out bugs that bedevil early adopters – was only released in February this year.

This time around, some insiders are saying the reverse pattern will hold true. Windows 7 is officially due in 2010, but Microsoft may actually push the date forward to next year, reacting to Google’s move to make its web browser, Chrome, a de facto Windows of the internet, housing its free, ad-supported Google Gears software (like Chrome, still in beta) which will compete against Microsoft’s Office cash cow.

While Vista is famously hardware-hungry, early, sketchy reports say Windows 7 will run on Vista-capable hardware. Support for a multi-touch touch-screen (similar to that used by the iPhone and Microsoft’s own table-top Surface computer, currently only available in the US) is another of the new features.

With compatible PC hardware, the technology will let a user draw onscreen with their fingers, or touch the screen to quickly flip through a slideshow, or push a map around a display.

SOURCE

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Will bookworms get their teeth into the Sony Reader?

 

Outside the British Library the slim volume in my hands could mark the beginning of the end for slim volumes. It is the Sony Reader, the electronic book that hits the British market this week – and the gadget that, if the publicity is to be believed, could kill off the book as we know it.

All this will be of some interest to the British Library, which houses 30 million books and counting (adding an extra 300,000 every year).

If the Sony Reader represents the future of books – slim and sleek and rather beautiful in a geeky, gadgety kind of way – the British Library represents the past and present of books, old and dusty and possibly somewhat dog-eared. They’re not really going to get on.

“Yeuuuch,” said Valeria Cummings, making the sort of face that suggests she’d just eaten something unpleasant. Books are Miss Cummings’s life – she spent 31 years working at the British Library and is an inveterate book buyer, with 5,000 at her home in North London (proper ones, with spines and covers). It is a fair assumption that she won’t be the first in the queue for the £199 Reader when it comes out on Friday.

“I wouldn’t want to read it in bed, because it isn’t comfortable,” Miss Cummings, 70, said. “And I wouldn’t want to read it in the bath because that would be entirely wrong. If you dropped it in the bath it would do terrible damage.”

To the iPod generation, the Sony Reader probably comes across as a technological triumph.

It is roughly the size of a paperback, has a leather cover (or is it fake – and in the digital age, does anyone care?) and comes with 200 megabytes of memory, enough to store 160 books of average length. That may not make much of a dent in the British Library stacks, but it would probably satisfy even the most voracious bookworm for a year or two.

More capacity can be added by using memory cards, and owners can buy more “e-books” by downloading them from the Waterstone’s website – the joy of one-click purchasing, perhaps, or a woeful substitute for the pleasure of wandering into a secondhand bookshop and finding an unexpected gem.

“I’ve just found three marvellous books on Freemasonry and an interesting one on Jews in London,” said Miss Cummings excitedly to her friend and former colleague, Stephen de Winter. “They’re from a very nice little bookshop in Upper Regent Street.”

Even dusty old diehards find it hard not to be seduced by Sony’s glossy little gadget. “It’s very pretty,” Miss Cummings conceded. “Very nice.”

Sony is pleased with it, too – not least for its display technology, called electronic ink or “e-ink”, which means that it uses power only when the reader turns the page. This means that, in theory, a single battery should have enough power to turn 1,680 pages.

Because the Reader is not backlit all you need to read the screen is ambient light, just as with conventional books, so that, unlike a conventional computer screen, it is possible to read it in bright daylight.

Even readers with poor eyesight are accommodated by a button that enlarges the type size.

Waterstone’s bosses, who have managed to beat Amazon to the British market – their rivals have been selling the Kindle device in the US for several months – are feeling pretty pleased with themselves, too.

Toby Bourne, the company’s category manager, said: “We are very impressed with the Reader and think our customers will be, too. We’re working with publishers to develop the best range of e-books we can – classics and new bestsellers.”

Whether it will persuade people to convert from books is a question that remains unanswered.

“There’s nothing that will ever replace reading a real book in an armchair,” Mr de Winter said. His friend looked at him askance: “I lent you a book on travel in Montenegro once,” she said. “You left it on the back of a lorry.”

Not advisable with a £200 Sony Reader, perhaps.

Pay-as-you-go iPhone

— A pay-as-you-go version of 3G Apple iPhone that frees consumers from long-term contracts with O2 will go on sale on September 16

— It will cost £349.99 for the 8-gigabyte version and £399.99 for 16 gigabytes, but does include unlimited data downloads for the first year

— The pay-as-you-go version is available on any of O2’s pre-paid tariffs, from £10 top-up a month, plus the price of the phone

— O2 has exclusive rights to Apple’s handset but when it was introduced last year, some people balked at the 18-month contracts

— This year Apple allowed O2 to offer the iPhone free on contract, from £45 a month over 18 months for the 8-gigabyte version

Source:  TIMES ONLINE

Monday, September 15, 2008

Google search finds seafaring solution

Graphic: how Google's databarges will work

Google may take its battle for global domination to the high seas with the launch of its own “computer navy”.

The company is considering deploying the supercomputers necessary to operate its internet search engines on barges anchored up to seven miles (11km) offshore.

The “water-based data centres” would use wave energy to power and cool their computers, reducing Google’s costs. Their offshore status would also mean the company would no longer have to pay property taxes on its data centres, which are sited across the world, including in Britain.

The increasing number of data centres necessary to cope with the massive information flows generated on popular websites has prompted companies to look at radical ideas to reduce their running costs.

The supercomputers housed in the data centres, which can be the size of football pitches, use massive amounts of electricity to ensure they do not overheat. As a result the internet is not very green.

Data centres consumed 1 per cent of the world’s electricity in 2005. By 2020 the carbon footprint of the computers that run the internet will be larger than that of air travel, a recent study by McKinsey, a consultancy firm, and the Uptime Institute, a think tank, predicted.

In an attempt to address the problem, Microsoft has investigated building a data centre in the cold climes of Siberia, while in Japan the technology firm Sun Microsystems plans to send its computers down an abandoned coal mine, using water from the ground as a coolant. Sun said it could save $9 million (£5 million) of electricity costs a year and use half the power the data centre would have required if it was at ground level.

Technology experts said Google’s “computer navy” was an unexpected but clever solution. Rich Miller, the author of the datacentreknowledge.com blog, said: “It’s really innovative, outside-the-box thinking.”

Google refused to say how soon its barges could set sail. The company said: “We file patent applications on a variety of ideas. Some of those ideas later mature into real products, services or infrastructure, some don’t.”

Concerns have been raised about whether the barges could withstand an event such as a hurricane. Mr Miller said: “The huge question raised by this proposal is how to keep the barges safe.”

Google search finds seafaring solution

Graphic: how Google's databarges will work

Google may take its battle for global domination to the high seas with the launch of its own “computer navy”.

The company is considering deploying the supercomputers necessary to operate its internet search engines on barges anchored up to seven miles (11km) offshore.

The “water-based data centres” would use wave energy to power and cool their computers, reducing Google’s costs. Their offshore status would also mean the company would no longer have to pay property taxes on its data centres, which are sited across the world, including in Britain.

The increasing number of data centres necessary to cope with the massive information flows generated on popular websites has prompted companies to look at radical ideas to reduce their running costs.

The supercomputers housed in the data centres, which can be the size of football pitches, use massive amounts of electricity to ensure they do not overheat. As a result the internet is not very green.

Data centres consumed 1 per cent of the world’s electricity in 2005. By 2020 the carbon footprint of the computers that run the internet will be larger than that of air travel, a recent study by McKinsey, a consultancy firm, and the Uptime Institute, a think tank, predicted.

In an attempt to address the problem, Microsoft has investigated building a data centre in the cold climes of Siberia, while in Japan the technology firm Sun Microsystems plans to send its computers down an abandoned coal mine, using water from the ground as a coolant. Sun said it could save $9 million (£5 million) of electricity costs a year and use half the power the data centre would have required if it was at ground level.

Technology experts said Google’s “computer navy” was an unexpected but clever solution. Rich Miller, the author of the datacentreknowledge.com blog, said: “It’s really innovative, outside-the-box thinking.”

Google refused to say how soon its barges could set sail. The company said: “We file patent applications on a variety of ideas. Some of those ideas later mature into real products, services or infrastructure, some don’t.”

Concerns have been raised about whether the barges could withstand an event such as a hurricane. Mr Miller said: “The huge question raised by this proposal is how to keep the barges safe.”

Beautiful Hamd

PLEASE COMMENT HOW MUCH YOU LIKE IT

 

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Bizarre but true facts about the Earth

In 1783 an Icelandic eruption threw up enough dust to temporarily block out the sun over Europe.
About 20 to 30 volcanoes erupt each year, mostly under the sea.
A huge underground river runs underneath the Nile, with six times more water than the river above.
Lake Bosumtwi in Ghana formed in a hollow made by a meteorite.
Beaver Lake, in Yellowstone Park, USA, was artificially created by beaver damming.
Off the coast of Florida there is an underwater hotel. Guests have to dive to the entrance.
Venice in Italy is built on 118 sea islets joined by 400 bridges. It is gradually sinking into the water.
The Ancient Egyptians worshipped a sky goddess called Nut.
The world's windiest place is Commonwealth Bay, Antartica.
In 1934, a gust of wind reached 371 km/h on Mount Washington in New Hampshire, USA.
American Roy Sullivan has been struck by lighting a record seven times.
The desert baobab tree can store up to 1000 litres of water in its trunk.
The oldest living tree is a California bristlecone pine name 'Methuselah'. It is about 4600 years old. The largest tree in the world is a giant sequoia growing in California. It is 84 meters tall and measures 29 meters round the trunk. The fastest growing tree is the eucalyptus. It can grow 10 meters a year.
The Antartic notothenia fish has a protein in its blood that acts like antifreeze and stops the fish freezing in icy sea.
The USA uses 29% of the world's petrol and 33% of the world's electricity.
The industrial complex of Cubatao in Brazil is known as the Valley of Death because its pollution has destroyed the trees and rivers nearby.
Tibet is the highest country in the world. Its average height above sea level is 4500 meters.
Some of the oldest mountains in the world are the Highlands in Scotland. They are estimated to be about 400 million years old.
Fresh water from the River Amazon can be found up to 180 km out to sea.
The White Sea, in Russia, has the lowest temperature, only -2 degrees centigrade. The Persian Gulf is the warmest sea. In the summer its temperature reaches 35.6 degrees centigrade.
There is no land at all at the North Pole, only ice on top of sea. The Arctic Ocean has about 12 million sq km of floating ice and has the coldest winter temperature of -34 degrees centigrade.
The Antarctic ice sheet is 3-4 km thick, covers 13 million sq km and has temperatures as low as -70 degrees centigrade.
Over 4 million cars in Brazil are now running on gasohol instead of petrol. Gasohol is a fuel made from sugar cane.

Friday, September 12, 2008

Keyboard shortcuts


Are you a hardcore computer user?? then you must know how to fully use your keyboard

here are some shortcuts…..

bookmark this site for further updates.

 

CTRL+C (Copy)
CTRL+X (Cut)
CTRL+V (Paste)
DELETE (Delete)
CTRL+Z (Undo)
CTRL while dragging an item (Copy the selected item)
SHIFT+DELETE (Delete the selected item permanently without placing the item in the Recycle Bin)
CTRL+SHIFT while dragging an item (Create a shortcut to the selected item)
F2 key (Rename the selected item)
CTRL+DOWN ARROW (Move the insertion point to the beginning of the next paragraph)
CTRL+UP ARROW (Move the insertion point to the beginning of the previous paragraph)
CTRL+RIGHT ARROW (Move the insertion point to the beginning of the next
word)
CTRL+LEFT ARROW (Move the insertion point to the beginning of the previous word)
CTRL+SHIFT with any of the arrow keys (Highlight a block of text)
SHIFT with any of the arrow keys (Select more than one item in a window or on the desktop, or select text in a document)
CTRL+A (Select all)
F3 key (Search for a file or a folder)
ALT+ENTER (View the properties for the selected item)
ALT+F4 (Close the active item, or quit the active program)
ALT+ENTER (Display the properties of the selected object)
ALT+SPACEBAR (Open the shortcut menu for the active window)
CTRL+F4 (Close the active document in programs that enable you to have
multiple documents open simultaneously)
ALT+TAB (Switch between the open items)
ALT+ESC (Cycle through items in the order that they had been opened)
F4 key (Display the Address bar list in My Computer or Windows Explorer)
F6 key (Cycle through the screen elements in a window or on the desktop)
SHIFT+F10 (Display the shortcut menu for the selected item)
ALT+SPACEBAR (Display the System menu for the active window)
CTRL+ESC (Display the Start menu)
ALT+Underlined letter in a menu name (Display the corresponding menu)
Underlined letter in a command name on an open menu (Perform the corresponding command)
F10 key (Activate the menu bar in the active program)
RIGHT ARROW (Open the next menu to the right, or open a submenu)
LEFT ARROW (Open the next menu to the left, or close a submenu)
F5 key (Update the active window)
BACKSPACE (View the folder one level up in My Computer or Windows Explorer)
ESC (Cancel the current task)
SHIFT when you insert a CD-ROM into the CD-ROM drive (Prevent the CD-ROM from automatically playing)
Microsoft Natural Keyboard Shortcuts
Windows Logo (Display or hide the Start menu)
Windows Logo+BREAK (Display the System Properties dialog box)
Windows Logo+D (Display the desktop)
Windows Logo+M (Minimize all of the windows)
Windows Logo+SHIFT+M (Restore the minimized windows)
Windows Logo+E (Open My Computer)
Windows Logo+F (Search for a file or a folder)
CTRL+Windows Logo+F (Search for computers)
Windows Logo+F1 (Display Windows Help)
Windows Logo+ L (Lock the keyboard)
Windows Logo+R (Open the Run dialog box)
Windows Logo+U (Open Utility Manager)
Dialog Box Keyboard Shortcuts
CTRL+TAB (Move forward through the tabs)
CTRL+SHIFT+TAB (Move backward through the tabs)
TAB (Move forward through the options)
SHIFT+TAB (Move backward through the options)
ALT+Underlined letter (Perform the corresponding command or select the
corresponding option)
ENTER (Perform the command for the active option or button)
SPACEBAR (Select or clear the check box if the active option is a check box)
Arrow keys (Select a button if the active option is a group of option buttons)
F1 key (Display Help)
F4 key (Display the items in the active list)
BACKSPACE (Open a folder one level up if a folder is selected in the Save As
or Open dialog box)
Right SHIFT for eight seconds (Switch FilterKeys either on or off)
Left ALT+left SHIFT+PRINT SCREEN (Switch High Contrast either on or off)
Left ALT+left SHIFT+NUM LOCK (Switch the MouseKeys either on or off)
SHIFT five times (Switch the StickyKeys either on or off)
NUM LOCK for five seconds (Switch the ToggleKeys either on or off)
Windows Logo +U (Open Utility Manager)
Windows Explorer Keyboard Shortcuts
END (Display the bottom of the active window)
HOME (Display the top of the active window)
NUM LOCK+Asterisk sign (*) (Display all of the subfolders that are under the
selected folder)
NUM LOCK+Plus sign (+) (Display the contents of the selected folder)
NUM LOCK+Minus sign (-) (Collapse the selected folder)
LEFT ARROW (Collapse the current selection if it is expanded, or select the
parent folder)
RIGHT ARROW (Display the current selection if it is collapsed, or select the
first subfolder)
Microsoft Management Console (MMC) Main Window Keyboard Shortcuts
CTRL+O (Open a saved console)
CTRL+N (Open a new console)
CTRL+S (Save the open console)
CTRL+M (Add or remove a console item)
CTRL+W (Open a new window)
F5 key (Update the content of all console windows)
ALT+SPACEBAR (Display the MMC window menu)
ALT+F4 (Close the console)
ALT+A (Display the Action menu)
ALT+V (Display the View menu)
ALT+F (Display the File menu)
ALT+O (Display the Favorites menu)
Shortcut Keys for Character Map
After you double-click a character on the grid of characters, you can move through the grid by using the keyboard shortcuts:
RIGHT ARROW (Move to the right or to the beginning of the next line)
LEFT ARROW (Move to the left or to the end of the previous line)
UP ARROW (Move up one row)
DOWN ARROW (Move down one row)
PAGE UP (Move up one screen at a time)
PAGE DOWN (Move down one screen at a time)
HOME (Move to the beginning of the line)
END (Move to the end of the line)
CTRL+HOME (Move to the first character)
CTRL+END (Move to the last character)
SPACEBAR (Switch between Enlarged and Normal mode when a character is
selected)
MMC Console Window Keyboard Shortcuts
CTRL+P (Print the current page or active pane)
ALT+Minus sign (-) (Display the window menu for the active console window)
SHIFT+F10 (Display the Action shortcut menu for the selected item)
F1 key (Open the Help topic, if any, for the selected item)
F5 key (Update the content of all console windows)
CTRL+F10 (Maximize the active console window)
CTRL+F5 (Restore the active console window)
ALT+ENTER (Display the Properties dialog box, if any, for the selected item)
F2 key (Rename the selected item)
CTRL+F4 (Close the active console window. When a console has only one
console window, this shortcut closes the console)
Remote Desktop Connection Navigation
CTRL+ALT+END (Open the Microsoft Windows NT Security dialog box)
ALT+PAGE UP (Switch between programs from left to right)
ALT+PAGE DOWN (Switch between programs from right to left)
ALT+INSERT (Cycle through the programs in most recently used order)
ALT+HOME (Display the Start menu)
CTRL+ALT+BREAK (Switch the client computer between a window and a full
screen)
ALT+DELETE (Display the Windows menu)
CTRL+ALT+Minus sign (-) (Place a snapshot of the active window in the
client on the Terminal server clipboard and provide the same functionality as pressing PRINT SCREEN on a local computer.)
CTRL+ALT+Plus sign (+) (Place a snapshot of the entire client window area on the Terminal server clipboard and provide the same functionality as pressing ALT+PRINT SCREEN on a local computer.)
Microsoft Internet Explorer Navigation
CTRL+B (Open the Organize Favorites dialog box)
CTRL+E (Open the Search bar)
CTRL+F (Start the Find utility)
CTRL+H (Open the History bar)
CTRL+I (Open the Favorites bar)
CTRL+L (Open the Open dialog box)
CTRL+N (Start another instance of the browser with the same Web address)
CTRL+O (Open the Open dialog box, the same as CTRL+L)
CTRL+P (Open the Print dialog box)
CTRL+R (Update the current Web page)
CTRL+W (Close the current window)