Apr
18
2009
CWmike writes “Microsoft will deliver a release candidate of Windows 7 in about two weeks, the company’s Web site revealed Saturday. According to a page posted on Microsoft’s partner program site, Windows 7 Release Candidate (RC) may be available to paying subscribers to Microsoft’s developer and IT services before May 5. Partners will be allowed to download the release candidate on that date, the first Tuesday of the month. ‘Partners: If you have a subscription to MSDN or TechNet, you can download Windows 7 RC now,’ the page read Saturday afternoon. ‘Otherwise, you can download Windows 7 RC starting May 5, 2009.’ The link to the download, however, shunted users to the TechNet download page, which did not list Windows 7 RC as one of the available files. This is the second time in just over three weeks that Microsoft’s Web site has leaked information about Windows 7 RC. Accidental, or buzz-builder?”
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Comments Off on Microsoft Leaks Windows 7 RC Date — Before May 5 | tags: developer, google, microsoft, program, web, windows 7 | posted in technical news
Apr
18
2009
Kelson writes “The Wall Street Journal profiles Vincent Connare, designer of the web’s most-hated font, Comic Sans. Not surprisingly, the font’s origins go back to Microsoft Bob, where he saw a talking dog speaking in Times New Roman. Connare pulled out Watchmen and The Dark Knight Returns for reference, and created the comic book-style font over the next week. ‘Mr. Connare has looked on, alternately amused and mortified, as Comic Sans has spread from a software project at Microsoft Corp. 15 years ago to grade-school fliers and holiday newsletters, Disney ads and Beanie Baby tags, business emails, street signs, Bibles, porn sites, gravestones and hospital posters about bowel cancer. … The jolly typeface has spawned the Ban Comic Sans movement, nearly a decade old but stronger now than ever, thanks to the Web.”
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Comments Off on Comic Sans, Font of Ill Will | tags: email, emails, google, microsoft, news, web | posted in technical news
Apr
18
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Bill C-61, the previous attempt at a Canadian DMCA, may have failed, but it is clear that the music, movie, and business software industries are engaged in putting massive pressure on the Canadian government to bring it back. Lobbying records show several meetings each week with Government Ministers for CRIA, CMPDA, and Microsoft over the past month. Meanwhile, the CRIA is preparing a grassroots campaign in support of new copyright laws, even claiming that the current rules are costing jobs to truck drivers delivering CDs and DVDs.”
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Comments Off on Lobby Groups Launch Full Assault For Canadian DMCA | tags: google, microsoft | posted in technical news
Apr
17
2009
CWmike writes “Gregg Keizer reports that federal and state regulators have struck a deal with Microsoft under which any version of Windows released after May 2011 will not be subject to the scrutiny mandated by a 2002 antitrust settlement. As previously promised, however, Windows 7 will be put under the microscope. Yesterday, the DOJ filed documents (PDF) with US District Court Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly asking that she extend her oversight by at least 18 months, until May 12, 2011. Although Microsoft has consented to the extension — and acknowledged that the regulators can later ask for another 18 months — Kollar-Kotelly must approve the request.”
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Comments Off on Antitrust Regulators To Monitor Windows 7, But Not Later Releases | tags: google, microsoft, windows 7 | posted in technical news
Apr
17
2009
mike.rimov writes “I saw that part of the brand new Windows Live package is the Family Safety Filter, so I decided to give it a spin. Turned it on, set it to ‘basic filtering’ (their lowest level), and went to Google … oops, it blocks Google! So I logged into the settings and added Google as an exception. Google still wouldn’t come up. Just in case, I turned off the family filter: voila, Google. As we all know, ‘Don’t be evil’ is not part of Microsoft’s motto! Oh yeah — and with the filter on, Microsoft’s own search engine, live.com comes up.” Anomaly?
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Comments Off on Microsoft Family Safety Filter Blocks Google | tags: google, microsoft | posted in technical news
Apr
17
2009
VonGuard writes “On April 9, ECMA International produced the final draft for the first major update to JavaScript since 1999. It’s called ECMAScript 3.1, but will soon be known as ECMAScript, Fifth Edition. You’ll know it as JavaScript, the Next Generation. Mozilla will begin implementing these features after Firefox 3.5, and Microsoft is already showing prototypes behind closed doors. The question, however, is what this will change for JavaScript coders. To get those answers, I tracked down Brendan Eich, Mozilla’s CTO and the creator of JavaScript. I transcribed the interview without any editorial since he explains, perfectly, what’s changing for programmers. Long story short: Json will be safer, getters and setters will be standard, and strict mode will make things easier to debug.”
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Comments Off on Brendan Eich Explains ECMAScript 3.1 To Developers | tags: developer, google, microsoft, program | posted in technical news
Apr
16
2009
A Microsoft blogger says that the Windows operating system has achieved dominance in the netbook market. The statistics, however, are less definitive. Canonical, the company behind the popular Ubuntu Linux distribution, says that Linux still has strong prospects on little laptops.![](http://www.codytaylor.org/wp-content/plugins/wp-o-matic/cache/23921_SwJIrRvUuUc)
Comments Off on Death of Linux on netbooks greatly exaggerated | tags: laptop, linux, microsoft, Netbooks, ubuntu | posted in technical news
Apr
16
2009
Microsoft plans to release its Office 2010 software suite in both 32-bit and 64-bit flavors, making it the first Office suite to support both versions. As its name suggests, both versions will be available sometime next year. In a statement, a Microsoft spokesperson said “Microsoft Office 2010, Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010, Microsoft Visio 2010![](http://www.codytaylor.org/wp-content/plugins/wp-o-matic/cache/343c5_vmRs7Jv0Xjw)
Comments Off on Office 2010 Release Dates Confirmed By Microsoft | tags: microsoft | posted in technical news
Apr
16
2009
snydeq writes “Lawyer Jonathan Moskin has called into question the long-term impact last year’s Java Model Railroad Interface court ruling will have on open source adoption among corporate entities. For many, the case in question, Jacobsen v. Katzer, has represented a boon for open source, laying down a legal foundation for the protection of open source developers. But as Moskin sees it, the ruling ‘enables a set of potentially onerous monetary remedies for failures to comply with even modest license terms, and it subjects a potentially larger community of intellectual property users to liability.’ In other words, in Moskin’s eyes, Jacobsen v. Katzer could make firms wary of using open source software because they fear that someone in the food chain has violated a copyright, thus exposing them to lawsuit. It should be noted that Moskin’s firm has represented Microsoft in anti-trust litigation before the European Union.”
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Comments Off on The Long Term Impact of Jacobsen v. Katzer | tags: developer, google, Intel, microsoft, news, open source | posted in technical news
Apr
16
2009
“This is an important case to ensure that browsers can compete on the merits and that consumers have a true choice in the software they use to access the World-Wide Web,” stated ECIS spokesperson Thomas Vinje this morning![](http://www.codytaylor.org/wp-content/plugins/wp-o-matic/cache/4e93b_MfZxtxP9g5g)
Comments Off on Extra week for Microsoft to defend tying IE to Windows | tags: consumers, microsoft, web | posted in technical news