May 9 2009

Why Game Exclusivity Deals Are Feeding the Hate

Parz writes “The recent announcement that the upcoming Ghostbusters game will be a timed PlayStation exclusive in the PAL territories — revealed a mere month before release — has set a nasty precedent which could have long-term repercussions for the industry. This Gameplayer article explores how this generation of gaming has spiraled into a tit-for-tat war on third-party exclusivity deals instigated by Sony and Microsoft, and the effect it is having on the psychology of the consumers. The Ghostbusters developers aren’t pleased by Sony’s deal, and the Guardian questions whether the game will be big enough to really affect console sales.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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May 8 2009

Microsoft CEO: "We’re Like a Startup in the Search Market"

“The number one player is a lot bigger than us… Google is a very big company in search, and therefore, we’re more like a startup… We can’t invest in everything the market leader can. We’re not gonna be able to out-do, and out-spend somebody who’s revenue is many times bigger than us.”


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May 8 2009

Windows 7 Anti-Piracy Plans

Slatterz writes “Microsoft has announced that the forthcoming Windows 7 operating system will contain a number of piracy ‘tweaks’ it says are designed to protect the interests of customers. Under the new regime users will be expected to validate their software in a much more precise way than before. Other Microsoft operating systems and anti-piracy measures, including Windows Genuine Advantage, allowed users to delay ‘activation,’ but Windows 7 will make it harder to ignore repeated messages. According to Joe Williams, general manager for Worldwide Genuine Windows at Microsoft, counterfeit software ‘delivers a poor experience and impacts customer satisfaction with our products, particularly if users do not know that their software is non-genuine.’ Williams gave the example of one piracy exploit that caused more than a million reported system crashes on machines running non-genuine Windows Vista before Microsoft was able to resolve it.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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May 8 2009

MS, Intel "Goofed Up" Win 7 XP Virtualization

clang_jangle writes “Arstechnica has a short article up describing how Microsoft and Intel have ‘goofed up’ Windows 7’s XP Mode, by ensuring many PCs will not be able to use it. (And it won’t be easy to figure out in advance if your PC is one of them.) Meanwhile, over at Infoworld, Redmond is criticized for having the ‘right idea, wrong technology’ with their latest compatibility scheme, and PC World says ‘great idea, on paper.’ With Windows 7 due to be released in 2010, and Redmond apparently eager to move on from XP, perhaps this is not really a ‘goof’ at all?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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May 8 2009

When Hacked PCs Self-Destruct

An anonymous reader writes “From The Washington Post’s Security Fix blog comes a tale that should make any Windows home user or system admin cringe. It seems the latest version of the Zeus Trojan ships with a command that will tell all infected systems to self-destruct. From the piece: ‘Most security experts will tell you that while this so-called “nuclear option” is an available feature in some malware, it is hardly ever used. Disabling infected systems is counterproductive for attackers, who generally focus on hoovering as much personal and financial data as they can from the PCs they control. But try telling that to Roman Hüssy, a 21-year-old Swiss information technology expert, who last month witnessed a collection of more than 100,000 hacked Microsoft Windows systems tearing themselves apart at the command of their cyber criminal overlords.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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May 8 2009

Microsoft search to be powered by open source

The software giant’s long-held and deeply rooted enmity toward open-source software appears to be crumbling, if its new Kumo search technology is any indication. In other words, open-source software appears to be the default choice for the Kumo team, not proprietary software. It looks like Microsoft’s anti-open-source bubble really has burst.


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May 7 2009

60GHz Uber-WiFi Proposed By New WiGig Group

judgecorp writes “A new vendor group has promised a Gigabit wireless specification by the end of this year. The Wireless Gigabit (WiGig) spec is apparently 80 percent done and, since it is aimed at high-definition TV, it has to go at more than 3Gbps. There’s around 7GHz of spectrum freely available in the 60GHz band, so it’s technically feasible, and with all the major Wi-Fi silicon vendors on board (as well as Microsoft, Dell, Nokia and others) WiGig looks to have the political muscle too. They should be aware of the Sibeam-led WirelessHD group, though, already in the 60GHz space, and Ultrawideband (UWB) is not dead, as there are actual, real UWB products.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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May 7 2009

What Data Center Designers Can Learn From Legos

1sockchuck writes “It take most companies at least a year to build a new data center. Digital Realty Trust says it can build a new data center in just 20 weeks using standard designs and modular components that can be assembled on site. The company equates its “building blocks” approach to data centers to building with Legos — albeit with customized parts (i.e. the Millennium Falcon Lego kit). Microsoft is taking a similar approach, packaging generators, switchgear and UPS units into pre-assembled components for rapid assembly. Is this the future of data center design?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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May 7 2009

Windows 7 RC1 – Fixing Blank Screen / Desktop At Startup

There is nothing wrong with XP (cough) but I do like trying new shiny things and Windows 7 defiantly seems to be one of them. I could never run windows Vista on my PC because of the totally awesome ” Display driver nvlddmkm stopped responding, but has successfully recovered.” error. Thanks Microsoft / Nvidia – your cool!


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May 7 2009

Microsoft: Space is the New Frontier in Computing

We’re now moving into a client-cloud era where “space is indeed the new frontier.” That’s the verdict of the head of Microsoft’s Research lab in Cambridge. “Computing, on about a 10-15 year cycle completely reinvents itself,” said Dr Andrew Herbert, Managing Director of Microsoft Research Cambridge.


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