Apr 6 2009

Firefox Hits 35% Market Share In Europe, 22% Globally

Microsoft’s Internet Explorer 8 has been available for 18 days and remains the company’s weakest web browser at launch since version 3. While the software now seems to be close to 4% market share, it appears to be unable to stop the bleeding of other IE versions. Since the beginning of the year, Mozilla’s Firefox has picked up more than half of the

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Apr 6 2009

Microsoft Delays Stirling Security Suite

An anonymous reader writes “Microsoft’s long-awaited integrated security suite, codenamed Stirling, has been delayed by months and will now not be available until the fourth quarter 2009. According to Microsoft, the delay is due to the further development of the firm’s behaviour based technology, the Dynamic Signature Service “to help deliver more comprehensive endpoint protection for zero day attacks”, and efforts to add interoperability with third party solutions, as per customer requests. When completed, the suite will combine a number of tools such as the ISA Serever and multiple Forefront products.”

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Apr 4 2009

Windows 95 Almost Autodetected Floppy Disks

bonch writes “Windows 95 almost shipped with a technique for detecting whether a floppy disk was inserted without spinning up the drive. Microsoft’s floppy driver developer discovered a sequence of commands that detected a disk without spinup–unfortunately, unspecified behavior in the floppy hardware specification meant that half the drives worked one way and half the other, each giving opposite results for the detection routine. Microsoft considered a dialog prompting the user to insert a disk to ‘train’ the routine, but the idea was scrapped.”

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Apr 2 2009

CSIRO Wins Wi-Fi Settlement From HP

suolumark writes “The CSIRO has won what could be a landmark settlement from Hewlett Packard over the use of patented wireless technology. The settlement ended HP’s involvement in a four-year lawsuit brought by the CSIRO on a group of technology companies, in which the organisation was seeking royalties for wi-fi technology that is used extensively on laptops and computers worldwide. CSIRO spokesman Luw Morgan earlier said legal action was continuing against 13 companies: Intel, Dell, Toshiba, Asus, Netgear, D-Link, Belkin, SMC, Accton, 3-Com, Buffalo, Microsoft and Nintendo.”

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Apr 2 2009

Texas Senate Proposes a Budget With a No-Vista-Upgrades Rider

CWmike writes “The Texas state Senate yesterday gave preliminary approval to a state budget that includes a provision forbidding government agencies from upgrading to Windows Vista without written consent of the legislature. Sen. Juan Hinojosa, vice chairman of the Finance Committee, proposed the rider because ‘of the many reports of problems with Vista … We are not in any way, shape or form trying to pick on Microsoft, but the problems with this particular [operating] system are known nationwide,’ Hinojosa said during a Senate session debating the rider (starting at 4:42 of this RealMedia video stream). ‘And the XP operating system is working very well.’ A Microsoft spokeswoman said in response, ‘We’re surprised that the Texas Senate Finance Committee adopted a rider which, in effect, singles out a specific corporation and product for unequal treatment. We hope as the budget continues to go through the process, this language will be removed.'”

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Apr 2 2009

Microsoft Open Sources ASP.NET MVC

Jimmy Zimms writes “Microsoft’s ASP.NET MVC is an extension built on the core of ASP.NET that brings some of the popular practices and ease of development that were popularized by Ruby on Rails and Django to the .NET developers. Scott Guthrie, the inventor of ASP.NET, just announced that Microsoft is open sourcing the ASP.NET MVC stack under the MS-PL license. ‘I’m excited today to announce that we are also releasing the ASP.NET MVC source code under the Microsoft Public License (MS-PL). MS-PL is an OSI-approved open source license. The MS-PL contains no platform restrictions and provides broad rights to modify and redistribute the source code.’ Here’s the text of the MS-PL.

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Apr 2 2009

Diagnose Conficker With Web-Based Eye Chart

thomsomc writes “Joe Stewart from the Conficker Working Group has created an eye chart that allows for online identification of Conficker B and C infections. Using basic knowledge of the blacklisting that Conficker employs to avoid attempting to infect IPs that belong to popular Anti-Virus and security firms (including Microsoft), the group whipped up this very simple test to see if you can load content from the various pages. If you can see all of the images, you’re more than likely Conficker-free. According to Honeynet, ‘This detection method should be more reliable than network scanning based tests. Happy scanning!'” Related: Tech Fragments notes in passing that nothing much seems to have come of conficker’s dreaded April 1 deadline.

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Apr 1 2009

Microsoft’s Negative Brand Image Gets Worse

Would you like the iPhone as much as you do if it came from Redmond instead of Cupertino?

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Apr 1 2009

Microsoft announces single-version Windows 7

Microsoft today announced that the forthcoming Windows 7 would come in just one single version, despite rumors that there would be five versions of the software. The operating system will simply be called “Windows 7.” The decision was reached after customer surveys revealed that Vista’s multiple versions confused customers.

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Apr 1 2009

Microsoft Asks Fed For Bailout

snydeq writes “Microsoft requested on Tuesday some billion in bailout funds from the federal government, claiming that as the company controls an overwhelming share of the OS market, it is too big to fail. Low adoption rates for Vista, the ensuing ad campaign trying to convince people that they really do like Vista, and the increased need for development resources to rush Windows 7 to market to make people forget about Vista have necessitated the bailout, the company said. “We want to make it absolutely clear that this is not a crisis of mismanagement,” said Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer in a prepared statement. “This is simply a crisis of dollars — a crisis of not having enough dollars coming our way.””

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