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You Can Touch, But It'll Cost You


By Dave Methvin | 09:19 PM ET, Dec 7, 2009

Michael Arrington's CrunchPad has become the Fusion Garage JooJoo, and it will launch on Friday. To listen to Arrington's talk of legal action last week, it seemed unlikely this tablet device would ever see the light of day. Yet here it is, real enough to sell, at least unless Arringon's lawyers get an injunction.

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I Survived The Great Bing Outage


By Dave Methvin | 05:00 PM ET, Dec 5, 2009

In case you somehow haven't already heard, Microsoft's Bing search engine disappeared from the Internet for about a half-hour on Thursday. Just like any national tragedy, everyone will remember where they were when they heard the news. I sure will, man, because I was there.

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IBM To Furnish Cloud Computing To Ho Chi Minh City


By Charles Babcock | 04:48 PM ET, Dec 1, 2009

IBM has already established cloud computing centers in the Chinese cities of Dongying and Wuxi. In the former, the cloud will serve as a "smarter city" platform for development of services. In Wuxi, it will serve as a collective platform for software development. Now it's on to Ho Chi Minh City.

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The CrunchPad That Never Was


By Dave Methvin | 08:20 PM ET, Nov 30, 2009

In 2008, TechCrunch's Michael Arrington had a lovely vision for a $200 portable tablet device that would provide wireless web browsing. Sixteen months later, the collaborators on the CrunchPad are going through a messy divorce and it's not likely to see the light of day. Looking at the project's evolution, though, I can't say I'm surprised.

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Murdoch And Microsoft Redefine Search


By Dave Methvin | 07:25 PM ET, Nov 29, 2009

A report in the Financial Times says that Microsoft has approached News Corp to obtain exclusive indexing rights for their sites such as Fox News. In return for some payment from Microsoft, News Corp would change its sites to block Google's indexing (and presumably others as well), leaving Bing as the primary way to find content on their sites.

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Prepare for IE9 -- Or Not


By Dave Methvin | 09:48 PM ET, Nov 23, 2009

Internet Explorer 8 may have just shipped, but last week Dean Hachamovitch who is General Manager for Internet Explorer provided some hints about what is coming with IE9. A release date wasn't one of the hints that was dropped; I think it's far away.

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Who Needs An IT Department?


By Dave Methvin | 09:01 PM ET, Nov 19, 2009

The Wall Street Journal had an interesting opinion piece written by Nick Wingfield, a frustrated "consumer" of big-company IT services. His main question is deceptively simple: "Why can't I use whatever technology I want to get my Wall Street Journal work done?"

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The New Office 2010 Beta: Is Microsoft Winning The Last War?


By Fredric Paul | 09:35 PM ET, Nov 18, 2009

For most modern businesses, Microsoft Office is the standard for productivity applications. So the arrival of Microsoft 2010 -- now going into beta for release next year -- is big news. But after a couple weeks of working with the new release it seems that Microsoft has done a great job -- of winning the last war.

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Microsoft's GPL Gaffe May Be Yours Too


By Dave Methvin | 09:30 PM ET, Nov 15, 2009

Although Microsoft has been known to dabble in Open Source projects when it suits their business goals, the majority of the company's software is still proprietary and closed to public view. This includes the source to Windows and Office, of course, but it also includes most of the utilities and other support software that Microsoft makes.

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Methinks They Doth Protest Too Much


By Dave Methvin | 10:06 PM ET, Nov 12, 2009

Yesterday it appeared that some candidness leaked out from a Microsoft employee who said, "What we’ve tried to do with Windows 7 ... is create a Mac look and feel in terms of graphics." Microsoft blogger Brandon LeBlanc went into PR damage control, saying those comments were "inaccurate and uninformed."

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Amazon Bids For Windows Developers On Eve Of Azure's Launch


By Charles Babcock | 08:35 PM ET, Nov 12, 2009

Four days before Microsoft launches its Azure cloud platform to developers at a conference in L.A., Amazon has come up with a .Net software development kit to help Windows developers produce code that runs in Amazon's EC2. It's probably just coincidence. But let's see what they're getting with AWS SDK for .Net.

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Does Microsoft's 'Sudo Patent' Protect User Account Control?


By Serdar Yegulalp | 02:49 PM ET, Nov 12, 2009

Has Microsoft gone one step closer to patenting the words "May I?" That's been the general sentiment about the granting of Microsoft's "Rights elevator" patent -- which would cover User Account Control ("UAC") in Vista and Windows 7, but possibly also the generic sudo command in Unix.

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Windows 7, U.S.A.


By John Foley | 03:45 PM ET, Nov 9, 2009

Having made its case for Windows 7 in the business and consumer markets, Microsoft is taking its pitch to the nation's capital. Which raises a question: Would the U.S. government do a better job of running the country using Microsoft's new operating system?

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The Klondike Bar Problem


By Dave Methvin | 09:40 PM ET, Nov 8, 2009

During the 19th century, P. T. Barnum supposedly said, "There's a sucker born every minute." In the 21st century, those suckers now fall for PC-based scams. In the process, they hurt more than just themselves or their PCs.

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Windows 7 Is Broken, So What?


By Dave Methvin | 09:35 PM ET, Nov 5, 2009

Anyone who's used computers knows that Windows 7 has problems. Not as many problems as Vista, perhaps, but if you are betting that Windows 7 will work perfectly you are making a sucker bet. Microsoft has never made a bug-free operating system in its entire history. That isn't going to change any time soon.

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Google Kinks Microsoft's Air Supply


By Dave Methvin | 08:01 PM ET, Nov 1, 2009

Last week's announcement that the city of Los Angeles was moving to Google Apps was quite a blow to Microsoft. The $7.2 million contract would have given Microsoft legitimacy in the "cloud computing" arena. Instead, Microsoft will find itself essentially paying L.A. to switch to Google.

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Forget Windows 7 Service Pack 1


By Dave Methvin | 10:08 PM ET, Oct 28, 2009

If you have ever seen a survey about when consumers and companies plan to move to Windows 7, there's one choice you can count on being there: "After the first service pack." I suspect that many of the people who make that choice are simply saying they are really busy and just don't want to think about the whole disruptive OS migration thing right now.

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Ten Useful Windows 7 Downloads


By Dave Methvin | 09:40 PM ET, Oct 25, 2009

If your company is staying with Windows then it's going to move to Windows 7 eventually. That means you need to be prepared to make the decision about when and how to migrate. Here are a few useful files and utilities on the Microsoft site to make you the Windows 7 expert in your company.

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Why Was The Open Source Guy At The Windows 7 Party?


By Serdar Yegulalp | 10:31 AM ET, Oct 23, 2009

It does sound like a setup for a joke, doesn't it? What was I, the Open Source Guy, doing at Microsoft's gala Windows 7 launch party in New York City yesterday? A colleague of mine pointed this out, and I joshed back that I felt like the only guy in a corduroy suit at a black-tie ball. Actually, my first jolt of perspective came before I even stood on line for my badge.

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The Day That XP Died


By Dave Methvin | 09:50 PM ET, Oct 21, 2009

Bye, bye, to the XP supply
And Vista, what a nightmare, it was quite a black eye
Windows 7 now will be the rallying cry
Thinking this will make my new PC fly
This will make my new PC fly

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Ballmer Bullish on New Directions for SharePoint


By Andrew Conry-Murray | 05:27 PM ET, Oct 19, 2009

Microsoft's CEO talks up the collaboration software as a platform for customer-facing Web sites in an interview with InformationWeek.

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Microsoft and Mozilla Agree On Browser Risks


By Dave Methvin | 11:12 PM ET, Oct 17, 2009

Usually the PC press spends a lot of time pitting the number 1 and number 2 browser makers against each other. I think that's just mean, and would prefer to focus on the important issues where they agree. Wouldn't you know, Microsoft and Mozilla have found common ground on the issue of browser plugins: both companies agree they can be dangerous.

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Microsoft, That's No Way To Treat A Partner


By Dave Methvin | 10:59 PM ET, Oct 14, 2009

The news today from T-Mobile is that the servers are back and Sidekick users can start picking up the pieces of their mobile lives. The T-Mobile message isn't completely clear, but it seems Microsoft's Danger group has managed to totally destroy most of the data on the servers. The Sidekick product line may be dead.

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Microsoft Danger: Living Up To Its Name


By Dave Methvin | 10:30 PM ET, Oct 11, 2009

Every computer user learns that it's vital to back up important files. They usually learn this lesson the moment after they lose a bunch of important files that they haven't backed up. That's just silly users though. Most large enterprises not only back up files, but have disaster recovery plans that allow them to continue business if their primary data centers are taken out. The key word there is most.

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Microsoft's Ad Network Quality Problem


By Dave Methvin | 08:48 PM ET, Oct 8, 2009

Microsoft's deal with Yahoo shows that the company isn't ready to roll over and surrender the lucrative Internet advertising arena to Google. Still, the MicroHoo ad network is far behind Google when it comes to the size of its ad network. The result is that Microsoft ad inventory is sparse and ads are not of the best quality, as the Sunbelt Blog discovered.

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Explorer In Slump Without Help From Brussels Sprouts


By Paul McDougall | 01:23 PM ET, Oct 8, 2009

Microsoft's share of the browser market is off sharply as new rivals emerge and a bevy of gadgets that provide access to the Web from beyond the PC flourishes. That raises big questions about what's really behind the EU's move to force Redmond to make room for Explorer alternatives on Windows under threat of seven-figure fines.

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Think You Have Swine Flu? Take A New Online Test


By Marianne Kolbasuk McGee | 03:58 PM ET, Oct 7, 2009

You've got a cough and a fever--and haven't had your flu shot yet. Could you possibly have H1N1? Microsoft has launched a new website to help you assess whether you've got swine flu.

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LotusLive iNotes: A Necessary Move For IBM


By Mary Hayes Weier | 12:31 PM ET, Oct 7, 2009

IBM released a $3-a-month, online subscription email service this week, called LotusLive iNotes, and really, it had no choice but to get very aggressive on the SaaS front. I know of at least two big company CIOs that recently left Notes and migrated to Google Gmail or Microsoft Exchange online, after considering upgrades to both on-premises Notes and the existing Notes subscription service that starts at $8 a month.

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IBM Launches iNotes In The Cloud, More To Come?


By Charles Babcock | 04:48 PM ET, Oct 6, 2009

IBM is wading into online email service, a space where Google, Yahoo and Microsoft already have big presences. Is IBM staging a kamikaze run, giving itself one more place where Lotus Notes will show it's got difficulty competing? Is there a method to this madness? Why does IBM have its head in the clouds?

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Ballmer: Windows 7 Adoption A Matter Of When, Not If


By John Foley | 02:12 PM ET, Oct 5, 2009

Steve Ballmer seems confident that businesses will adopt Windows 7. Of course, three years ago, Microsoft's CEO was sure that companies would deploy Vista, and look how that played out. Will he be right this time?

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Finally, Some Well-Deserved Pay Cuts


By Dave Methvin | 07:59 PM ET, Oct 2, 2009

This week's public filings from Microsoft showed that in addition to cutting people, the company has cut executive pay in reaction to their revenue downturn. It's good to see that some companies are still willing to hold their executives responsible for poor performance.

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Microsoft's Must-Have Software Release


By Dave Methvin | 08:15 PM ET, Sep 29, 2009

While all the focus has been on Windows 7 lately, there's another piece of Microsoft software coming out this week that could make an even bigger difference to the Windows world: Microsoft Security Essentials (MSE). Athough I think MSE will be a great solution for most people, not everyone will be happy about this software.

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Microsoft's Courier: It Could Happen


By Dave Methvin | 10:29 PM ET, Sep 27, 2009

There was a lot of buzz last week about a new folding-tablet-style PC that Microsoft is supposedly developing. All of the reports seem to stem from a single Gizmodo rumor that includes a video demonstrating the interface. Whatever "Courier" is, there must be something to it because nobody makes a slick video like that for no reason.

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You Got Chrome In My Internet Explorer


By Dave Methvin | 08:55 PM ET, Sep 23, 2009

Hmmm, this is interesting. Google's had spotty luck trying to push its Chrome browser to users, but now it's come out with Google Chrome Frame to embed Chrome's functionality inside Internet Explorer. What a sweet Peanut Butter Cup of an idea.

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Why Microsoft Should Make Windows 7 A Free Upgrade


By Fredric Paul | 07:51 PM ET, Sep 22, 2009

It's time to set Windows 7 free -- at least for Vista users. Anyone who is using Vista should be able to upgrade to the corresponding version of Windows 7. For nothing. No questions asked.

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Security Just Got A Lot More Complicated


By Dave Methvin | 09:20 PM ET, Sep 20, 2009

Last month, security investigators stumbled across a new an innovative variety of malicious software. Named Induc, it's been hiding out there -- undiscovered -- for more than a year. Now that researchers can find Induc, they believe it's one of the top 100 most common viruses.

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Oracle Vs. IBM,: Desperate Measures, Desperate Times


By Charles Babcock | 06:57 PM ET, Sep 18, 2009

In the Sept. 11 story, "Oracle Fights IBM Poaching With Ad," I wrote that Sun used to lead the Unix server market, now IBM does, with HP second. That was once true but the reality is more complicated. HP has slipped to number three, and Sun is number two; therein lies a tale.

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Steep Climb For Microsoft's Next Open Source Advocate


By Charles Babcock | 02:19 PM ET, Sep 16, 2009

Sam Ramji, Microsoft's credible open source spokesman, is leaving to join a startup and return with his family to the San Francisco Bay area. All Microsoft has to do is find a replacement. Ramji tried to push a mighty boulder up the mountain and got it at least to the first ledge. How will his successor fare?

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Welcome to Reality, New York Times


By Dave Methvin | 09:09 PM ET, Sep 15, 2009

Last weekend, some users were unpleasantly surprised to find that the New York Times was serving up malware ads of the type you might expect to find on a sleazy blog site. The ads showed a fake virus scan and tried to force the user to install a fake virus cleaner.

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jQuery Conference 2009


By Dave Methvin | 10:10 PM ET, Sep 14, 2009

This year's jQuery conference was held over the weekend, hosted at Microsoft's offices in Cambridge Massachusetts. If the tweets are any indication, the conference was a great sucess.

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Might As Well Face It, You're Addicted


By Dave Methvin | 05:21 PM ET, Sep 12, 2009

The human brain constantly seeks rewards. Sometimes that reward-seeking gets out of hand in the form of addiction. We're all familiar with addiction to cigarettes, alcohol or drugs, but some people now believe there's an new addiction: The Internet. Now there's a rehab for it.

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Is Windows 7 Software, Or Tupperware?


By Dave Methvin | 11:09 PM ET, Sep 4, 2009

Yesterday I got an interesting email from Microsoft, inviting me to host a Windows 7 launch party to help Microsoft celebrate in late October. Party hosts get a free copy of Windows 7 Ultimate and an opportunity to win a PC.

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VMware's Hidden Ally, The Economic Downturn


By Charles Babcock | 05:13 PM ET, Sep 4, 2009

It's no secret enterprises are making heavy use of virtualization in the data center. Market research shows their leading provider is VMware. With Microsoft offering virtualization in Windows Server 2008 and other free alternatives available, it's hard to see how VMware's grip will last. But VMworld offered a glimpse of why it may.

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Happy Birthday, Chrome; Now Get To Work!


By Dave Methvin | 09:22 PM ET, Sep 2, 2009

A year ago, Google surprised the industry with its Chrome browser. Even the announcement was innovative, using a comic book to have the Chrome crew describe the design and goals of the new browser. Some recent news seems to indicate that Google is ready to put Chrome to work in an area that's critical to the company's future.

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Office Upgrades Are Not Summer Fun


By Dave Methvin | 08:59 PM ET, Aug 29, 2009

A friend of mine returned from vacation last week to find that her work PC had been upgraded from Office 2003 to Office 2007. Perhaps I should say that the IT department had attempted to upgrade it, because things weren't working right. All it took was a day of wasted time for her to get things limping along again.

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No Surprise In Bing's Coming Rise


By Dave Methvin | 10:59 PM ET, Aug 25, 2009

Microsoft has to be encouraged by the modest gains that their new Bing search engine has made over the past couple of months. I would not be surprised to see Bing make gains against Google during the fall. The key to those gains will be the Windows 7 launch and other search deals.

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Apple Clock-Blocks Google Voice


By Dave Methvin | 02:51 PM ET, Aug 22, 2009

Politicians learned long ago to release unfavorable information on Friday afternoon. Apple decided to do the same with its response to the FCC regarding the company's policies on the App Store approval process. It's a self-promotional tldr of a document, but it provide an interesting perspective about Apple's treatment of Google Voice.

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Politics Trumps Programming Every Time


By Dave Methvin | 08:40 PM ET, Aug 19, 2009

This week, a Reddit post pointed out an interesting Sharepoint feature that demonstrates what happens when politics and programming collide: the SPUtility.HideTaiwan method is born.

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Windows 7: What A Lovely Hidden Interface


By Dave Methvin | 11:25 AM ET, Aug 15, 2009

Each time a new version of Windows comes out, Microsoft takes an opportunity to change user interface items that seemed to be working fine already. I call it "rearranging the furniture" because it often results in metaphorical stubbed toes. One example of this was renaming a Control Panel item from "Add/Remove Programs" in XP to "Programs and Features" in Vista. Well, they're at it again with Windows 7.

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VMware Got What It Paid For: A Vision Of The Future


By Charles Babcock | 09:30 PM ET, Aug 13, 2009

VMware's acquisition of SpringSource is not a match made in heaven. It's going to take an effort by both parties to make this marriage work. Still, it looks like one of the few responses VMware could make to counter Microsoft's dangerous invasion of its turf.

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Go on to the weblog archives...

 

  1. HPC Joins the Dummy Revolution?
  2. Detecting Scalability Problems With Intel Parallel Universe Portal
  3. Just Say No To SFAQL Parallelism


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