How Vista Mistakes Changed Windows 7 Development
snydeq writes “For the past several months, Microsoft has engaged in an extended public mea culpa about Vista, holding a series of press interviews to explain how the company’s Vista mistakes changed the development process of Windows 7. Chief among these changes was the determination to ‘define a feature set early on’ and only share that feature set with partners and customers when the company is confident they will be incorporated into the final OS. And to solve PC-compatibility issues, Microsoft has said all versions of Windows 7 will run even on low-cost netbooks. Moreover, Microsoft reiterated that the beta of Windows 7 that is now available is already feature-complete, although its final release to business customers isn’t expected until November.” As a data point for how well this has all worked out in practice, reader The other A.N.Other recommends a ZDNet article describing rough benchmarks for three versions of Windows 7 against Vista and XP. In particular, Win-7 build 7048 (64-bit) vs. Win-7 build 7000 (32-bit and 64-bit) vs. Vista SP1 vs. XP SP3 were tested on both high-end and low-end hardware. The conclusions: Windows 7 is, overall, faster than both Vista and XP. As Windows 7 progresses, it’s getting faster (or at least the 64-bit editions are). On a higher-spec system, 64-bit is best. On a lower-spec system, 32-bit is best.
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A New Twist to the Adobe Vulnerability (PDF)
If you think it is safe to download PDF documents and view them once Adobe finally releases its patch next week, think again. Didier Stevens, an IT security consultant last week demonstrated that simply viewing the folder containing compromised PDF documents within Microsoft’s Windows Explorer is enough to launch the exploit. It appears that this
IE8 May Be End of the Line For Internet Explorer
snydeq writes “InfoWorld’s Randall Kennedy reports on rumors that IE8 may be Internet Explorer’s swan song: ‘IE8 is the last version of the Internet Explorer Web browser,’ Kennedy writes. ‘It seems that Microsoft is preparing to throw in the towel on its Internet Explorer engine once and for all.’ And what will replace it? Some are still claiming that Microsoft will go with WebKit, which is used by Safari and Chrome. The WebKit story, Kennedy contends, could be a feint and that Microsoft will instead adopt Gazelle, Microsoft Research’s brand-new engine that thinks like an OS. ‘This new engine will supposedly be more secure than Firefox or even Chrome, making copious use of sandboxing to keep its myriad plug-ins isolated and the overall browser process model protected.'” The sticking point will be what Microsoft does about compatibility for ActiveX apps.
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Linux : How Linux Can Finally Rise Above Microsoft.
The conclusion? The Desktop. Why the desktop? Linux has already conquered the server market. All it needs to do for that portion of its audience is to continue to scale upwards and keep creating incredible, usable servers. What Linux has failed to do yet is to show the world exactly what a desktop can do for the user.
Microsoft Shoots Own Foot In Iceland
David Gerard writes “The Microsoft Certified Partner model is: an MCP buys contracts from Microsoft and sells them to businesses as a three-year timed contract, payable in annual installments. Iceland’s economy has collapsed, so 1500 businesses have gone bankrupt and aren’t paying the fees any more. But Microsoft has told the MCPs: ‘Our deal was with you, not them. Pay up.’ The MCPs that don’t go bankrupt in turn are moving headlong to Free Software, taking most of the country with them. (Warning: link contains strong language and vivid imagery.)”
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Vista to XP ‘downgrade’ lawsuit revised
Judge OKs Settlement In Yahoo Shareholder Suit
narramissic writes “On Friday, Judge William Chandler III of the Delaware Court of Chancery approved a settlement that will roll back a Yahoo employee severance that was implemented by Yahoo’s former leaders. Some investors, including the vocal Carl Icahn, described the plan as a poison pill, arguing that the severance payouts would be so expensive that no company would want to acquire Yahoo. The settlement narrows the reasons why employees can quit and receive the severance, removing some of the incentives for them to leave the company in the event of a Yahoo acquisition, whether by Microsoft or some other suitor.”
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