Ubuntu desktop apparently scares Microsoft
How Do I Start a University Transition To Open Source?
exmoron writes “I work at a small university (5,500 students) and am in a position to potentially influence future software purchasing decisions. I use a number of FOSS solutions at home (OpenOffice.org, Zotero, GIMP, VirtualBox). My university, on the other hand, is a Microsoft and proprietary software groupie (Vista boxes running MS Office 2007, Exchange email server, Endnote, Photoshop, Blackboard, etc.). I’d like to make an argument that going open source would save the university money and think through a gradual transition process to open source software (starting small, with something like replacing Endnote with Zotero, then MS Office with OpenOffice.org, and so on). Unfortunately, I can’t find very good information online on site licenses for proprietary software. How much does a site-license for Endnote cost? What about a site license for MS Office for 2,000 computers? In short, what’s the skinny on moving to open source? How much money could a university like mine save? Additionally, what other benefits are there to moving to open source that I could try to sell the university on? And what are the drawbacks (other than people whining about change)?”
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Microsoft Surface To Coordinate SuperBowl Security
suraj.sun writes to tell us that in preparation for nearly a quarter of a million people descending on Tampa for the Super Bowl, the Tampa authorities are deploying new tech for security communications and response. All of the incidents and communications will be plotted and tracked on a new implementation of Microsoft’s Surface. Hopefully it wont have to reboot after every new incident report. “The Microsoft Surface device will display a Microsoft Virtual Earth map of the entire region tracking events, incidents, resources and tasks in real-time using its unique large display, multi-user, multi-touch and interactive capabilities, also allowing it to communicate with remote devices and PCs. With a quick hand-gesture, the map can zoom in and display a 3D image of the city, including detailed views of buildings and streets and real time resource tracking.”
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If Windows 7 Fails, Citrix (Not Linux) Wins
Julie188 writes “Microsoft blogger Mitchell Ashley, who has been using Windows 7 full-time, predicts that Windows 7 will fail to lure XP users away from their beloved, aging operating system — after all, Windows 7 is little more than what Vista should have been, when it shipped two years ago. But eventually old PCs must be replaced and then we’ll see corporations, desperate to get out of the expense of managing Windows machines, get wise. Instead of buying new Windows 7 PCs, they could deliver virtualized XP desktops to a worker’s own PC and/or mobile device. Ashley believes that Citrix’s Project Independence has the right idea.”
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How Gmail Destroyed Outlook
As of this week, Gmail has reached perfection: You no longer have to be online to read or write messages. Desktop programs like Microsoft Outlook have always been able to access your old mail. There is a certain bliss to this if you’ve got a pile of letters that demand well-composed, unplugging the Internet can be the fastest way to get things done
Mitel and IBM cross-license tech – Ottawa Business Journal
![]() Ottawa Business Journal |
Mitel and IBM cross-license tech
Ottawa Business Journal – 28 Jan 2009 By Ottawa Business Journal Staff Mitel has signed a cross-licensing agreement with IBM (NYSE:IBM) that will allow both companies to use patents covering unified communications technology. Mitel Announces Patent Cross License Agreement with IBM MSNBC BMS Tops List of Patent Approvals PharmExec.com Xconomy – MacNewsWorld all 9 news articles |
Too Zune to pass judgement: a review of the Zune Marketplace
When Microsoft announced that its flagship digital media player had posted a stunning 54 percent year-over-year drop in holiday sales, Zune-bashing officially became an Olympic sport. But, unlike us, most of the bashers haven’t spent any real time with Zune Marketplace, Microsoft’s online answer to iTunes Music Store.
Mitel and IBM cross-license tech – Ottawa Business Journal
![]() Ottawa Business Journal |
Mitel and IBM cross-license tech
Ottawa Business Journal – 28 Jan 2009 By Ottawa Business Journal Staff Mitel has signed a cross-licensing agreement with IBM (NYSE:IBM) that will allow both companies to use patents covering unified communications technology. Mitel Announces Patent Cross License Agreement with IBM MSNBC BMS Tops List of Patent Approvals PharmExec.com Xconomy – MacNewsWorld all 9 news articles |

