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 31 2009

Ubuntu Vs. Windows In OpenOffice.org Benchmark

ahziem writes “Ubuntu’s Intrepid Ibex and Redmond’s Windows XP go head-to-head in an OpenOffice.org 3.0 performance smackdown measuring vanilla OpenOffice.org, StarOffice, Go-oo, and Portable OpenOffice.org 3.0. Each platform and edition does well in different tests. Go-oo is known for its proud slogan “Better, Faster, Freer,” but last time with OpenOffice.org 2.4 on Fedora, Go-oo came in fourth place out of four. Slashdot has previously reported Ubuntu beating Vista and Windows 7 in benchmarks, so either XP is faster or this benchmark carries a different weight.”

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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’).”

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Mar 28 2009

The "Vista-Capable" Debacle Spreads To Acer

N!NJA writes in with a Register story on a lawsuit filed against Acer for selling Windows Vista on an underpowered notebook. Of course anybody can sue for anything; it will be interesting to see if this action goes forward in the courts. “With a lawsuit filed Wednesday in San Francisco, California, two residents of Fostoria, Ohio seek damages and relief from the world’s third-largest computer maker after purchasing a sub-0 Aspire notebook that included Windows Vista Premium and a gigabyte of shared system and graphics memory. In its official “recommended system requirements,” Microsoft recommends that an additional 128MB is required to run the Premium incarnation of its latest desktop operating system. … Microsoft says that the Premium, Business, and Ultimate editions of Vista will run on 512MB systems — with certain OS features disabled. In the beginning, Redmond called these ‘Vista Capable’ machines, and it’s facing a separate lawsuit over this potentially misleading moniker.”

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Mar 27 2009

Windows 7 RC Download Page Points To May Release

An anonymous reader writes “Someone over at Redmond flipped the wrong switch, it would seem. Ars Technica spotted that the Windows 7 download page on TechNet had switched to say Release Candidate instead of Beta. It’s now back to Beta, but not before Ars got all the details off the page: ‘The public RC will apparently be coming in May 2009, and not in April as previously rumored. The RC testing program will be available at least through June 2009, and the actual build will expire June 1, 2010. Both 32-bit and 64-bit versions will be available in English, German, Japanese, French, and Spanish.’ A screenshot and all the text on the RC download page, which was set to be published ‘May 2009’ is saved over at Ars.”

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Mar 1 2009

Analyzing Microsoft’s Linux Lawsuit

jammag writes “Open source advocate Bruce Perens takes a close look at Microsoft’s lawsuit against TomTom (discussed here last week), which involves an implementation of the Linux kernel, and calls it essentially a paper tiger. He notes: ‘the technologies claimed in the 8 patents involved are so old and obvious that it’s fair to say they have a high “Duh!” factor. There’s an anti-trust angle to this suit that could blow up in Microsoft’s face. And there’s a high probability that some or all of the patents involved are invalid, due to recent court decisions.’ Although the legal expense for TomTom to defend itself in court could be astronomical — meaning they may be forced to settle — in Perens’ view Microsoft is aware its case is weak, yet hopes for a PR victory at limited cost.” And reader nerdyH adds speculation from Open Innovation Network CEO Keith Bergelt that Redmond’s action could be retaliation for TomTom’s spurning a Microsoft acquisition bid in 2006.

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Feb 27 2009

Microsoft’s Augmented Reality, Video Photosynth

Al writes “Microsoft demonstrated new augmented-reality software for cell-phones at the 2009 TechFest conference, which was held this week in Redmond. Instead of using GPS or WiFi triangulation, the prototype system relies entirely on scene-recognition to identify its position and add virtual objects to a video picture of the real world. TechFest is a showcase for lots of projects at Microsoft’s various research labs. Other technologies on show included Photosynth for video, an image-tracking system for handwriting, a way of refining image searches using colors, and a 3-D version of Microsoft Surface.”

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Feb 25 2009

* Shows off automated receptionist – guardian.co.uk


New Zealand Herald

* Shows off automated receptionist
guardian.co.uk
By Bill Rigby REDMOND, Wash., Feb 24 (Reuters) – Microsoft Corp will maintain its massive research budget even as it sheds jobs and cuts costs to cope with a worldwide slump in demand for its software, according to the company's long-term research
Mundie shows off Microsoft’s latest gizmos Reuters UK
Research on display at TechFest Seattle Post Intelligencer
CNET News – The Associated Press – Wall Street Journal – ITworld.com
all 105 news articles
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Feb 23 2009

Norwegian Media Against Microsoft's Internet Explorer 6 – DigitalJournal.com


Macworld UK

Norwegian Media Against Microsoft's Internet Explorer 6
DigitalJournal.com
By Bob Ewing. Norwegian media have started a massive campaign against the Web browser Internet Explorer 6 (IE6). Norway’s biggest online market place, FINN.
Norway mobilizes against IE 6 Register
Norway launches IE7 viral ad campaign p2pnet.net
NetworkWorld.com – CMSWire – IT Examiner – Redmondmag.com
all 19 news articles
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Feb 23 2009

Norway mobilizes against IE 6 – Register


Macworld UK

Norway mobilizes against IE 6
Register
Norwegian web sites are campaigning to have users dump Microsoft's Internet Explorer 6 for a modern browser. Two of the country's three largest newspapers as well as local newspapers, search engines and ISPs, the Yellow Pages, and other communities
Norwegian Media Against Microsoft's Internet Explorer 6 DigitalJournal.com
Norway launches IE7 viral ad campaign p2pnet.net
NetworkWorld.com – CMSWire – IT Examiner – Redmondmag.com
all 19 news articles
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