Mar
4
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Ars Technica has a very thorough post of some of the technologies that Microsoft researchers showed off at TechFest last week. ‘The exact number of projects that were demonstrated at TechFest 2009 is not clear, but here’s a quick rundown of about 35 research projects that haven’t received much coverage, accompanied by links that will let you further explore if your interest is piqued. Remember that these are concepts and prototypes, not finished products, and they may never end up becoming anything significant.'” While Microsoft has been criticized for squandering a fortune on R&D, there can be no doubt that they are showing off some cool tech here.

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Comments Off on Roundup of Microsoft Research At TechFest 2009 | tags: google, microsoft | posted in technical news
Mar
3
2009
Whether you’ve had a chance to play with the Windows 7 beta or not, you’ll know that it’s pretty darn close to the final article. However, Microsoft has posted news of a slew of updates on its Engineering Windows 7 blog that it’ll fix in Windows 7.
Comments Off on 12 Cool New Windows 7 Features That Aren’t In The Beta | tags: microsoft, news, windows 7 | posted in technical news
Mar
3
2009
Netbooks will pave way for Google to squash Microsoft’s OS dominance in two to three years, thanks to its Linux-based Android platform, according to analyst.
Comments Off on Android to take Linux mainstream | tags: google, linux, microsoft, Netbooks | posted in technical news
Mar
3
2009
Talk of a new name for Microsoft’s Live search engine is gaining fresh momentum, thanks to two messages posted on Twitter and observed by an unofficial Microsoft Live blog. The messages suggest a rebranded Live is already in prebeta testing, and that some form of Live search news will be formally revealed this week.
Comments Off on Will Microsoft Rebrand Live Search? Does It Matter? | tags: microsoft, news, twitter | posted in technical news
Mar
3
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Companies using software other than Microsoft’s are unable to bid at many Portuguese public tenders. This is due to the use of Silverlight 2.0 technology by the company, Vortal, contracted to build the e-procurement portal. This situation has triggered a complaint to the European Commission by the Portuguese Open Source Business Association; the case is unofficially known in Portugal as ‘Vortalgate.'”

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Comments Off on Portugal’s Vortalgate — No Microsoft, No Bidding | tags: google, microsoft, open source, technology | posted in technical news
Mar
3
2009
jonr writes “‘I call it my billion-dollar mistake. It was the invention of the null reference in 1965. At that time, I was designing the first comprehensive type system for references in an object oriented language (ALGOL W). My goal was to ensure that all use of references should be absolutely safe, with checking performed automatically by the compiler. But I couldn’t resist the temptation to put in a null reference, simply because it was so easy to implement. This has led to innumerable errors, vulnerabilities, and system crashes, which have probably caused a billion dollars of pain and damage in the last forty years. In recent years, a number of program analysers like PREfix and PREfast in Microsoft have been used to check references, and give warnings if there is a risk they may be non-null. More recent programming languages like Spec# have introduced declarations for non-null references. This is the solution, which I rejected in 1965.’ This is an abstract from Tony Hoare Presentation on QCon. I’m raised on C-style programming languages, and have always used null pointers/references, but I am having trouble of grokking null-reference free language. Is there a good reading out there that explains this?”

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Comments Off on Null References, the Billion Dollar Mistake | tags: developer, google, microsoft, program, programming | posted in technical news
Mar
3
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Pages at ireport.com and extortionletterinfo.com have been documenting and researching the activities of George P. Riddick III, previously known for his lawsuits against IMSI and Xoom at the turn of the century. In 2007 he issued a largely-ignored press release claiming the majority of clip art online infringes a copyright and has ranted about how Microsoft and Google are stealing from him. In recent months, he’s apparently made a business model of going after web site operators who were using clip art they believed to be legally licensed or public domain, telling them they’re infringing clip art collections he hasn’t offered commercially in years and making outrageous settlement demands. He seems to have tested the waters on this some years back, but emboldened by the passage of the PRO-IP act, he’s gone aggro with it. A few dodgy anonyblogs had popped up to ‘out’ him as a copyright abuser, but these recent ireport.com and extortionletterinfo.com reports go much deeper in documenting and researching Riddick’s recent one-man campaign to be the RIAA of clip art.”

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Comments Off on George Riddick — the One-Man RIAA of Clip Art | tags: google, microsoft, news, web | posted in technical news
Mar
3
2009
As personal computer sales stagnate, Microsoft and its longtime partner, Intel, are looking to diversify into sophisticated artificial intelligence products like Laura, the virtual personal assistant.
Comments Off on Microsoft Mapping Course to a Jetsons-Style Future | tags: Intel, microsoft | posted in technical news
Mar
2
2009
Apologetics Blog writes “Getting bought by one of the biggest companies in the world turns out to be a rather costly thing. Last year when Microsoft was in talks with Yahoo regarding a possible buy-out, in a report recently filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Yahoo announced that it cost them million to fight off Microsoft. Most of that money was spent on advisors who examined Microsoft’s proposals, and the way it would impact on Yahoo’s search agreement with Google. The deal fizzled out when federal antitrust regulators said it would challenge any deal made between the two companies.”

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Comments Off on Yahoo Spent $79 Million To Fend Off Microsoft | tags: google, microsoft | posted in technical news
Mar
2
2009
nk497 writes “The release of the beta for the next version of Apple’s Safari browser last week helped drive Apple’s market share above ten per cent. The Safari beta has gained users at a rate of about 0.5 per cent a day since its release, topping one per cent by day four. For comparison, Microsoft’s beta of IE took six months to hit one percent, Chrome needed almost a month, and Firefox 3 took a week.”

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Comments Off on Safari Beta Takeup Tops Firefox, IE and Chrome | tags: Apple, google, microsoft | posted in technical news