BLOG FOR HELP! Computer Technology users community. Come and read with us!

Microsoft

Google
 

Feb 10

Register for Tech-Ed by April 4, 2008 and get $200 off registration price.

June 10-13, 2008

Register by Friday, April 4, 2008, to receive the discounted rate of just $1,795—that’s $200 off the regular rate of $1,995.

See website for full details.

Sphere: Related Content

Tags: ,

Feb 07

Save Windows XP Campaign has started and it needs your help.  It seems that in June Microsoft will stop shipping licenses and/or media for Windows XP, unless we do something about it.

I’ve started using Vista because it came on my business PC and within a week I had ordered a Window XP Professional license from Zipzoomfly.com (the only place I buy my gear from).   Now that I’m back on XP, I’ve been wondering if many others have the same issue and or why anyone would use or try to use Vista for anything funcational.  I found drivers that didn’t work correctly and some of my core programs would not run correctly.  Bascially, I’m done trying Vista, anyone want my Vista Ultimate license? just kidding.

Sphere: Related Content

Tags: ,

Feb 06

Based on Market Share by Net Applications, from January 2007 to January 2008, the Mac OS X operating system increased market share from 6.22% to 7.57% respectively which translates to an increase of 1.35%.  During this same range of time, Microsoft moved from 93.33% to 91.46% market share for it’s Windows operating systems, a decrease of 1.87%. 

From observation is seems that Microsoft Windows operating systems have been losing market share faster than Mac OS X increases, and there was a floundering about the April- June 2007 timeframe.  This seems to be a direct correlation to Vista and the dissatisfaction with the end users.  Vista SP1 seems to be on the horizon as it went to manufacturing, but will it really fix all the dissatisfiers?  you decide. 

Didn’t Apple just anounce the Macbook Air? I’m going to look at that right now.  I know this is not an exact science, but I feel that Vista will contribute to the market looking to Mac, if nothing else but curiosity!

Sphere: Related Content

Tags: , ,

Feb 05

Along with this article, another Computerworld article on FAQ: Vista SP1 is ready — or is it?

As Mentioned in a Computerworld article : As expected, Microsoft Corp. today announced that it has finished Windows Vista Service Pack 1 (SP1), but the company threw users a curve when it told them that the update won’t be available for at least another six weeks. (See FAQ.)”We are excited to announce that we have released Service Pack 1 for Windows Vista to manufacturing (RTM) for our first set of languages,” Mike Nash, vice president of Windows product management, said in a post to Microsoft’s official Vista blog Monday morning. Microsoft uses RTM, or “release to manufacturing,” to designate the stage where code has been completed and is moving into duplication and distribution.

But while the long-anticipated service pack — a massive update that will run as large as 550MB in a stand-alone installer that includes all 36 supported languages — was signed off on by the company today, users won’t get a crack at it until mid-March at the earliest, said Nash.

“In mid-March, we will release Windows Vista SP1 to Windows Update and to the download center on Microsoft.com,” Nash said, adding that it will then be an optional download, not an automatic one. Only a month later, in mid-April, will users who have set Vista to automatically download and install high-priority updates will receive the service pack, he said.

And maybe not then.

“Our beta testing identified an issue with a small set of device drivers,” said Nash. “These drivers do not follow our guidelines for driver installation and as a result, some beta participants who were using Windows Vista and updated to Service Pack 1 reported issues with these devices.”

Nash did not identify the balky drivers or the hardware manufacturers responsible for crafting those drivers.

The problem is serious enough that users whose PCs have installed the drivers will not be offered SP1 through Windows Update. The update mechanism, in fact, will sniff out the drivers and then block machines with them from seeing or receiving SP1. “As SP1 gets delivered through Windows Update, we will only offer it to PCs that we detect don’t have any of the affected device drivers installed,” said Nash.

Microsoft is taking the next month to identify as many of the problematic drivers as possible, noted Nash.

Users were confused and frustrated. A thread on Microsoft’s own Channel 9, a marketing site the company uses to communicate with developers, included several messages from bewildered Vista users. “What the hell guys?” asked someone identified as “Bas,” referring to the news that SP1 would not be immediately available.

Another user was more direct. “This is bull crap,” charged another user identified as “Pon.” “The only reason that they’re not offering it right now is because of a bug where you might have to reinstall drivers. Why can’t they just release it on Microsoft Download now, and then push the fixed version on Windows Update later?”

Nash had an answer of sorts in his post. “We want to deliver a better experience for customers as we make the update broadly available,” he said.

Vista SP1, which reports late last week had predicted would go RTM today, has been in testing since August 2007, when Microsoft finally confirmed that it would produce a service pack. For several months after the launch of Vista in January 2007, in fact, Microsoft executives wavered on whether to produce a service pack, with some claiming that the process was made obsolete by the revamped Windows Update mechanism integrated with Vista.

Sphere: Related Content

Tags: ,

Dec 07

On December 11, 2007, Microsoft will send out 7 updates for Microsoft operating systems.  These includes 3 Critical updates of Remote Code execution for Windows, IE, DirectX, DirectShow, and Windows Media Format Runtime.  The full disclosure of the MS Security Bulletin can be seen here.

In addition, Microsoft will release an updated version of the Microsoft Windows Malicious Software Removal Tool on Windows Update, Microsoft Update, Windows Server Update Services, and the Download Center.

I tend to read this now and again just to see what Microsoft is doing for security.   Its seems that even that Vista has been out there for a year and “the most secure operating system yet” Stated by Microsoft, there are still exploits and hacks created for even the Most Secure operating systems.

Sphere: Related Content

Tags: ,