Jan
24
2009
bk- writes with news that documents from the “Vista Capable” class-action lawsuit against Microsoft indicate the software giant could be on the hook for as much as .52 billion in upgrade costs. “[University of Washington economist Keith] Leffler came up with his total upgrade costs by calculating how much it would cost to upgrade each of the 19.4 million PCs with 1 GB of memory and graphics cards or onboard chipsets able to run Aero, according to Keizer. Leffler put the maximum cost of upgrading the desktops at 5, while positing that the notebooks’ integrated graphics would be more tricky to replace and would cost between 5 and 0 per unit. The total price tag for Microsoft would thus range from .92 billion to .52 billion and in some cases would include complete replacements of notebooks that could not be feasibly upgraded, Leffler testified. Microsoft in its response argued that giving litigants ‘a free upgrade to Premium-ready PCs would provide a windfall to millions.'”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Microsoft ‘Vista Capable’ Settlement Cost Could Be Over $8 Billion | tags: cap, desktop, google, microsoft, news | posted in technical news
Jan
24
2009
The Ubuntu team is proud to announce the release of Ubuntu 8.04.2 LTS, theUbuntu 8.04.2 LTS released second maintenance update to Ubuntu’s 8.04 LTS release. This release includes updated server, desktop, and alternate installation CDs for the i386 and amd64 architectures.
Comments Off on Ubuntu 8.04.2 LTS released | tags: desktop, google, ubuntu | posted in technical news
Jan
23
2009
ffs writes “The next release of Fedora, 11, will default to the ext4 file system unless serious regressions are seen, as reported by heise online. The LWN story has a few comments extolling the virtues of the file system. Some benchmarks have shown ext4 to be much faster than the current default ext3. Some of the new features that matter for desktop users are a faster file system check, extents support (for efficiently storing large files and reducing fragmentation), multiblock allocation (faster writes), delayed block allocation, journal checksumming (saving against power / hardware failures), and others. The KernelNewbies page has more information on each feature. As is the extfs tradition, mounting a current ext3 filesystem as ext4 will work seamlessly; however, most new features will not be available with the same on-disk format, meaning a fresh format with ext4 or converting the disk layout to ext4 will offer the best experience.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Fedora 11 To Default To the Ext4 File System | tags: desktop, google, linux | posted in technical news
Jan
22
2009
Advanced Micro Devices cuts the prices of some of its processors for high-end desktops and gaming PCs.
Comments Off on AMD Phenom II Processor Prices Slashed by 18% | tags: desktop, google | posted in technical news
Jan
22
2009
Ensign Taco writes “I’m sure nearly every one of us has had it happen. All of a sudden your Windows PC slows to a crawl for no apparent reason. Yeah, we all like Linux because it doesn’t do annoying things like this, but the Windows desktop still reigns supreme in most managed LAN work environments. I’m running XP with 4G of RAM and a decent CPU, and everything was fine, until one day — it wasn’t. I’ve run spybot, antivirus, and looked at proc explorer — no luck. There is no one offending, obvious process. It seems every process decides to spike at once at random intervals. So I’m wondering if there’s a few wizards out there that know what to look at. Could this be a very clever virus that doesn’t run as a process? Or could this just be some random application error that’s causing bad behavior? I’ve encountered this a few times with Windows PCs, but the solution has always been to just add more hardware. Has anyone ever successfully diagnosed this kind of issue?” And whether such a problem is related to malware or not, what steps would you take next?
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on How To Diagnose a Suddenly Slow Windows Computer? | tags: desktop, google, linux, malware, virus | posted in technical news
Jan
22
2009
In 2009, it won’t be the “year of the desktop” for any operating system–instead, the coveted trophy seems to be “year of the netbook.”
Comments Off on Netbooks Poised to Be the New OS Battleground? | tags: desktop, google, Netbooks | posted in technical news
Jan
21
2009
Comments Off on Citrix Unveils Vision to Transform Desktop Computing with Project … – WELT ONLINE | tags: desktop, google, Intel, news, tv, web | posted in technical news
Jan
20
2009
Derwent sends along a Computerworld piece which begins: “The Ubuntu Mobile operating system is undergoing its most radical change with a port to the ARM processor for Internet devices and netbooks, and may use Nokia’s LGPL Qt development environment as an alternative to GNOME. During a presentation at this year’s linux.conf.au conference, Canonical’s David Mandala said Ubuntu Mobile has changed a lot over the past year… ‘I worked on ARM devices for many years so a full Linux distribution on ARM is exciting,’ Mandala said, adding one of the biggest challenges is reminding developers to write applications for 800 by 600 screen resolutions found in smaller devices. ‘The standard [resolution] for GNOME [apps] is 800 by 600, but not all apps are. For this reason Ubuntu Mobile uses the GNOME Mobile (Hildon framework) instead of a full GNOME desktop, but since Nokia open sourced Qt under the LGPL it may consider this as an alternative.'”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Ubuntu Mobile Looks At Qt As GNOME Alternative | tags: desktop, developer, google, linux, mobile, Netbooks, open source, ubuntu | posted in technical news
Jan
20
2009
Comments Off on Intel slashes processor prices as AMD looms – Reuters | tags: computers, desktop, google, Intel, news, technology | posted in technical news
Jan
20
2009
Twitter is great for traffic, but just how great it is, well, you’ll never really know. Why not? You’ll ask. Well, the only traffic you’ll see coming from Twitter is traffic that comes through Twitters web interface. And most people I know don’t use the web interface, they use desktop and / or phone clients.
Comments Off on The analytics issue with Twitter – Joost de Valk | tags: desktop, google, Phone, twitter, web | posted in technical news