Archive for the ‘Microsoft’ Category

Microsoft Denies Paying Nigerians $400K To Ditch Linux

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

Da Massive writes “Microsoft has denied paying a Nigerian contractor $400,000 in a bid to retard Linux’s movement into the government sector. Media reports alleged that Microsoft had proposed paying that sum to a government contractor under a joint marketing agreement last year, in order to persuade the contractor to replace Linux OS with Windows on thousands of school laptops. Although a joint marketing agreement was drafted to document the best practices for using technology in education, it was never executed, said a Microsoft regional manager for Africa. It became clear, he added, that one customer wanted a Linux OS.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by kdawson

EU Will Not Divulge Microsoft Contracts

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

Elektroschock writes “Marco Cappato, a Liberal member of the European Parliament, wanted to inspect the EU’s contracts with Microsoft. His request was denied. ‘…the [divulging] of [this] information could jeopardize the protection of commercial interest of Microsoft.’ Apparently the European Council sees no clear public interest in the release of such contractual material, and so ‘the Secretariat general concludes that the protection of Microsoft’s commercial interests, being one of the commercial partners of the European institutions, prevails on the [divulging] for the public interest.’”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by kdawson

Windows 7 Benchmarks Show Little Improvement On Vista

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

snydeq writes “InfoWorld’s Randall Kennedy examines Windows 7 from the kernel up, subjecting the ‘pre-beta’ to a battery of benchmarks to find any signs that the OS will be faster, more responsive, and less resource-intensive than the bloated Vista, as Microsoft suggests. Identical thread counts at the kernel level suggest to Kennedy that Windows 7 is a ‘minor point-type of release, as opposed to a major update or rewrite.’ Memory footprint for the kernel proved eerily similar to that of Vista as well. ‘In fact, as I worked my way through the process lists of the two operating systems, I was struck by the extent of the similarities,’ Kennedy writes, before discussing the results of a nine-way workload test scenario he performed on Windows 7 — the same scenario that showed Vista was 40 percent slower than Windows XP. ‘In a nutshell, Windows 7 M3 is a virtual twin of Vista when it comes to performance,’ Kennedy concludes. ‘In other words, Microsoft’s follow-up to its most unpopular OS release since Windows Me threatens to deliver zero measurable performance benefits while introducing new and potentially crippling compatibility issues.’”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by kdawson

Sametime and Microsoft OCS integration

Monday, November 10th, 2008

Rumor has it that Microsoft and/or IBM will announce integration between Office Communications Server 2007 and IBM’s Lotus Sametime “Unified Telephony” platform at this week’s VoiceCon show. If true, this would combine approximately 20 million Sametime users with Microsoft’s fast growing OCS 2007 user base creating the largest unified communications user base.

There are ways of getting OCS and Sametime to integrate via 3rd party gateways, however it is somewhat limiting. I don’t believe you can do video for instance.

If Sametime and OCS can interoperate and offer IM/presence, voice, and video, that would be HUGE.

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Original post by nafiz

NetQoS Unified Communications Monitor 2.0 Launches

Sunday, November 9th, 2008

NetQoS today launched its first unified communications focused management tool called NetQoS Unified Communications (UC) Monitor. NetQoS is broadening the focus of its formerly named VoIP Monitor product to reflect the growing role and functionality of unified communications. NetQoS UC Monitor 2.0 supports voice and video quality metrics in a Microsoft Office Communications Server (OCS) environment as well as enhanced diagnostics and reporting for Cisco IP telephony environments.

In my conversation with NetQoS I asked them what the upgrade/migration path was for current customers, and they said existing customers would be upgraded to NetQoS UC Monitor 2.0 free of charge. One interesting feature in NetQoS UC Monitor 2.0 is that it can adjust the MOS alerting thresholds based on codec. For instance, Microsoft’s RTAudio FEC codec can have a lower MOS score than other codecs, but sound just as good than other codecs with a higher MOS score. Screenshot of the codec thresholds:

netqos-call-quality-thresholds.jpg

UC Monitor adds support for monitoring both voice and video in a Microsoft OCS environment and it passively monitors call setup flows between IP phones and their call server(s) including ‘call setup’ and end-of-call quality statistics. It also actively queries voice gateways for end of call statistics. Additionally, it passively receives QoE reports from Microsoft’s QoE Monitoring Server, including call setup failures, and audio and video metrics

Here’s some screenshots of the tool in action:

netqos-dashboard.jpg

netqos-audio-video-metrics.jpg

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Original post by nafiz

Microsoft Working On Its Own App Store

Saturday, November 8th, 2008

CWmike writes “Microsoft is working on a software distribution scheme along the lines of Apple’s iPhone App Store, CEO Steve Ballmer said yesterday at a developer’s conference in Sydney, Australia. ‘There’s not much money being made, but the general concept of giving developers a way not only to get their code distributed, but to really get visibility for the code, is a good idea,’ Ballmer said. Ballmer hinted that something similar would be coming soon from Microsoft. While he said Micrsoft was not ready to detail the works in progress, he said ‘… fear not, we’re hard at work, and you′ll see some of the benefits [of that] with some of the concepts, particularly Facebook’s.’”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by timothy

Ballmer “Interested” In Open Source Browser Engine

Thursday, November 6th, 2008

Da Massive writes “‘Why is IE still relevant and why is it worth spending money on rendering engines when there are open source ones available that can respond to changes in Web standards faster?,’ asked a young developer to Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer in Sydney yesterday. ‘That’s cheeky, but a good question, but cheeky,’ Ballmer said. Then came the startling revelation that Microsoft may also adopt an open source browser engine. ‘Open source is interesting,’ he said. ‘Apple has embraced Webkit and we may look at that, but we will continue to build extensions for IE 8.’”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by timothy

Microsoft Begs Hardware Makers To Take Support Seriously

Wednesday, November 5th, 2008

Banana ricotta pancakes writes “Microsoft has confirmed that there will be a widespread public beta of Windows 7 in early 2009, while urging device manufacturers to start immediate testing with its pre-beta release to avoid the widespread hardware compatibility problems that contributed so much to the negative perception of Vista. ‘There is not another WinHEC planned before Windows 7 is released,’ Microsoft has warned them. Better hope that testing goes well.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by samzenpus

Over Half Of All Spam For Pills And Viagra

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

Nigerian 419 scammers fall far behind blue pill shifters for the trouser-dept failed.
When it comes to spam, the most popular topic is pharmaceutical, with 30.6 per cent of spams trying to flog you sexual drugs with 20.9 per cent imploring you to invest in some other medicines.

Original post by Mike Slocombe

Windows Azure Offers Developers Iron-Clad Lock-in

Friday, October 31st, 2008

snydeq writes “Microsoft’s move to the cloud is certain to create a whole new kind of developer partner, Fatal Exception’s Neil McAllister writes. But as much as Microsoft ISVs will likely go along with the shift to Windows Azure to keep revenue streams going, the kind of lock-in they will experience will be worlds away from what they face today. Rather than being able to ignore the new version of a key framework, developers will have no other option than to update their code to suit Microsoft’s latest platform. That kind of lock-in will leave customers in the lurch, subject to their vendors’ bottom lines, as ISVs that can’t afford to rework code to keep up with Microsoft’s latest platform will begin dropping services, and customers will have little choice but to accept the new terms of service their vendors send along.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by Soulskill

Nintendo Gets New DSi Ready

Friday, October 31st, 2008

dsi r.jpegNintendo is reportedly likely to launch a new model of its top-selling handheld player, the DS, in overseas markets by next summer.

Nintendo will start selling the DSi, which can take pictures, play music and is slimmer than the current model, in Japan tomorrow for 18,900 yen ($192) in a move to revive slowing domestic sales ahead of the critical holiday season.

Nintendo previously said it planned an overseas DSi launch in 2009.

DS sales in the April-September fiscal first half grew 3% from a year earlier to 13.73 million units worldwide, beating Sony’s PlayStation Portable by a 2-to-1 margin.

The DS and Wii console, which has outstripped both Sony’s PlayStation 3 and Microsoft’s Xbox 360 in global sales, have been Nintendo’s twin growth engines in recent years.

Nintendo said it has shipped 200,000 units of the DSi for sales this weekend and plans to ship an additional 100,000 units starting November 4. 

Get more at Reuters.

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Original post by nafiz

What’s New in Administration and Management with Office Communications Server 2007 R2

Friday, October 31st, 2008

With Microsoft OCS R2’s pending release, I thought you’d be interested in seeing a video interview of Microsoft’s Ananad Lakshminarayanan about some of the new features in Office Communications Server R2, which is Microsoft’s popular unified communications platform. In the video you’ll see some of the IT Admin specific features in OCS R2, which includes an OCS architecture planner to make OCS much easier to deploy. Essentially, it includes a wizard that you provide with your locations, users, and feature requirements and it spits out a detailed Visio style architecture for you, including recommendations for number of servers and locations, as well as bandwidth requirements. The wizard will even list out all the ports & IPs that you need to open.

They’ve added load balancing for Edge Servers for scalability. Another change is they’ve reduced the number of ports you need to keep open. They’ve changed the archiving feature so that it stores instant messages archives separately from CDRs or voice call records. This assists with compliance using 3rd party compliance utilities.

To Virtualize or not to Virtualize, that is the question…
A hot topic in the Office Communication Server community is virtualization for some of the OCS server roles. In the video, Ananad mentions they are looking at supporting some virtualization for some of the OCS roles. Specifically the roles that don’t support real-time media (audio, video, conferencing, etc.). Although the video doesn’t mention it, Microsoft told me that the voice &amp video quality and performance in virtualized environments just isn’t up to business-grade quality. Nevertheless, I′d still like to see support for virtualization of all the roles for testing in a lab or pre-deployment testing environment. in any event, excluding those roles that require real-time media they will be able to be virtualized very soon. In fact, in the video Ananand says support for virtualization will be likely be post RTM, which is basically plus 90 days from when OCS R2 RTMs.

Click to go watch the in-depth video including a demo of OCS R2:
microsoft-ocs-edge-planning-tool.jpg

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Original post by nafiz

So Hypocritical Apple!

Thursday, October 30th, 2008

So you come out with a new ad, in response to your competitor’s attempts to change perceptions over a much-maligned product. Do you concentrate on your strengths, re-highlight your competitor’s weaknesses, or simply go with a cleverly-worded lie?

Reportedly, Apple decided to go for the latter. In a recent ad, they implied that Microsoft spent more money on marketing their products, rather than improving them. According to WinGeek: “…since Apple brought it up, they spend only .7 cents less per sales $1 on Advertising than Microsoft and spend a fraction of what Microsoft spends on improving its products.” For every dollar Microsoft makes, it spends 13.9% on R&D, compared to Apple’s 3.3%.

The full dirt—as well as the sources of WinGeek’s research—are available here.

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Original post by Rico

Secondlight, Microsoft’s New Surface Prototype

Wednesday, October 29th, 2008

Barence writes “Microsoft has literally added another dimension to its touchscreen table technology Surface. The new table projects an image through the table itself, so that any translucent material (such as tracing paper or perspex) held above the Surface screen displays a different image to what you see on the table’s display. This means you can have a satellite image of a town on the table, and have the street names projected on to a piece of paper that the user holds above the map. Or you could have a photo of a car, with the tracing paper displaying images of its innards.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by samzenpus

Microsoft Joins the OpenID Foundation

Wednesday, October 29th, 2008

wertigon writes “Windows Live ID just became yet another OpenID-provider. While the cynical me wonders how long it’ll be before Microsoft transforms OpenID to something proprietary, they have undoubtedly put even more weight behind the OpenID initiative. So, how long before I can use my OpenID to post on Slashdot?” Patches are always welcome wertigon ;)

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by CmdrTaco


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