Apr 1 2009

Linux Foundation says it’s time to ditch Microsoft’s FAT

Linux Foundation executive director Jim Zemlin says that Microsoft is hostile to open technologies and that product makers should ditch the company’s patent-encumbered FAT filesystem.

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Apr 1 2009

My painfully poky week with IE 8

There are plenty of good things about the new version of Microsoft’s browser. But I found its interface sluggish.

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Apr 1 2009

Three Reasons Why Microsoft’s App Store Will Thrive

Microsoft’s plans for its mobile application store just may change the way consumers look at apps and the Windows Mobile operating system.

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Mar 31 2009

IE 8.1 Supports Firefox Plugins, Rendering Engine

KermodeBear writes in to note that according to Smashing Magazine, the newest version of Internet Explorer, codenamed “Eagle Eyes,” supports Firefox plugins, the Gecko and Webkit rendering engines, and has scored a 71 / 100 on the Acid3 test. The article is pretty gee-whiz, and I don’t entirely believe the claims that IE’s JavaScript performance will trounce the others. (And note that the current Firefox, 3.0.8, scores 71 on Acid3, and Safari 3.1.2 hits 75.) No definitive date from Microsoft, but “sources” say that an IE 8.1 beta will be released in the summer.

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Mar 31 2009

Mac Tax, Dell Tax, HP Tax

Harry writes “Microsoft’s new Windows ad, with shopper Lauren buying a cheap 17-inch HP laptop instead of a $,2800 MacBook Pro, has unleashed the whole ‘Are Macs Expensive?’ debate again. I’m diving in with a pretty exhaustive comparison of the MacBook Pro against machines from Dell, HP, Lenovo, and Sony that were as comparably configured as I could manage. The conclusion: High-end laptops tend to carry high-end prices, whether their operating system hails from Cupertino or Redmond. And the MacBook Pro wasn’t the priciest of the systems I compared.” We looked at this question, not in as much depth, a couple of years back.

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Mar 30 2009

Microsoft Encarta Officially Succumbs to Wikipedia

o you remember what came in between printed encyclopedias and Wikipedia? For many, the answer is Microsoft Encarta

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Mar 30 2009

MySpace and Microsoft Team Up: Anger the Google Gods?

The world’s second largest social network, MySpace, has found a new partner that may make the relationship between MySpace and Google a little more rocky: Microsoft.

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Mar 30 2009

Huge German Donation Marks Wikipedia’s Evolution

Raul654 writes “In December, we discussed the German Federal Archive’s agreement, at the urging of Wikimedia Deutschland, to donate 100,000 pictures to Wikipedia under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license. At the time that was the largest picture donation ever to Wikipedia, and thought to be largest in the history of the free culture movement. Now Wikimedia Deutschland has reached a similar agreement with the Saxon State and University Library, which will donate 250,000 pictures to Wikipedia under CCA-ShareAlike. On a not-unrelated note: Microsoft has announced that it will discontinue its Encarta encyclopedia.”

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Mar 30 2009

Interview With Google’s V8 Author Lars Bak

Dr Pete writes “Financial Times has an interesting piece about Lars Bak and Kasper Lund the authors of the V8 virtual machine in Google’s Chrome browser. ‘Chrome attracted more than 10 million users in its first 100 days. Although that’s an impressive number, it still only translates into about 1 per cent of browser usage online. It will be a while before it can compete with Firefox, Internet Explorer and others. In December last year, Google announced that Chrome was now out of its development, or Beta, phase and is ready to be shipped as a pre-installed browser on some PCs. This could rapidly increase the number of users. Moreover, the European Commission’s antitrust battle with Microsoft over, among other things, how its own browser, Internet Explorer, is integrated into its Windows operating system may give competitors such as Google a chance to claim ground.'” Interestingly enough Google Chrome is currently fighting it out with Safari as the #3 web browser on Slashdot.

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Mar 30 2009

TomTom Settles With Microsoft

Surrounded writes “It appears TomTom bowed to the pressure and settled with Microsoft over the recent patent infringement claims from the Redmond software giant. In the agreement, TomTom will pay Microsoft for coverage under the eight car navigation and file management systems patents in the Microsoft case. Also as part of the agreement, Microsoft receives coverage under the four patents included in the TomTom counter-suit. TomTom also has to remove functionality related to two file management system patents (the ‘FAT LFN patents’).”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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