MS Is Still Ruling The Desktop 42% Of Machines Will Run Windows 7 In 2011

By John Biggs

Windows 7 is now the most prevalent – if not most popular – desktop OS with Gartner estimating that 42% of current PCs will run the OS while 94% of new machines will run Win7.

In comparison, OS X got 4% of the pie while Linux is firmly at 2%. Even IT departments are starting massive roll-outs of Win7 to their desktops, a move that has pushed the fairly new OS into the catbird seat. However, Gartner expects this to be the last time a standalone OS image is installed on business PCs as IT departments move towards hosted computing and virtualization.

(more…)

Share

Google’s Chrome is Britain’s second most popular browser, a sign of the internet giant’s increasing grip on the UK search market. Three years after launch, Chrome last month captured 22% of UK users and marginally overtook Mozilla’s Firefox browser, according to the web metrics firm Statcounter. Microsoft’s Internet Explorer is losing market share to Chrome but remains the most popular browser for UK users with 45% – although it has a head start by being pre-installed on almost all computers sold in Britain. Apple’s Safari is UK number four, with a 9% share.

Google’s rise in the browser market is in part down to nationwide advertising – Chrome is the first Google product advertised on British TV – but is largely attributed to its speed.

(more…)

Share

By Waisybabu

Microsoft is taking concrete steps to unify their themes and services across different platforms. The first efforts for this appeared in the form of the Metro design language which started from Windows Phone 7 and then moved on to Xbox Live, Office and Windows 8.

Today’s news, however, takes the process of unifying a step further: Xbox LIVE, Microsoft’s gaming and entertainment service for WP7 and Xbox 360, is coming to Windows 8 next year!

(more…)

Share

Hot on the heels of all this Google+ madness, Microsoft has “unintentionally” leaked its own social networking platform. Whether this is a grab at all the hype or a genuine mistake on the part of some IT guy, we still have one question: What the heck is a Tulalip? I kid… Fusible, which picked up the story first, discovered that the name Tulalip is also the name of a Native American tribe located near Redmond, Washington, Microsoft’s home turf.

The teaser page pictured below was published to the web today on socl.com, which is apparently owned by Microsoft, reports Fusible. There are rumors that Microsoft is the lucky buyer of Social.com, which would mean they paid $2.6 million for the domain name alone.

(more…)

Share

newsGooglecheatsheet

In its rise to Web dominance, Google has displaced plenty of companies, upended several industries, and made a slew of enemies along the way. Some of the adversaries are industry giants in their own right, such as Microsoft and Apple. Others are little-known start-ups that get publicity for raising concerns about Google but often fade back to obscurity when the news cycle ends.

For some rivals, the enmity runs deep. They accuse Google of poaching employees and infringing on copyrights. And still there are others whose complaints about Google’s dominance seems more strategic, an effort to put a hurdle in the way of the Web giant’s inexorable march on new markets.

 

With the Federal Trade Commission opening a probe into Google’s competitive practices, those enemies will have a new opportunity to raise their concerns to trustbusters. The list of enemies is long. Here are a few:

 

Microsoft: There’s no company that competes more aggressively with Google over a broader swath of products and services than Microsoft. It starts with search and search advertising, where Google continues to trounce Microsoft, despite billions spent by the software giant to displace it. Google is making headway against Microsoft in the productivity applications business, offering online versions of e-mail, spreadsheet, and word processing programs that compete with Microsoft’s Office suite. Its Chrome browser has taken market share from Internet Explorer. Its Android mobile phone operating system emerged as the most viable alternative to the iPhone in the smartphone market, and not Windows Phone. Microsoft’s recent bid to acquire Internet video chat provider Skype is seen by many through the spectrum of competition with Google, which has its own Google Voice service. And Microsoft, which knows better than most the difficult of a prolonged scuffle with trustbusters, has been the most active Google competitor running to regulators to voice its concerns.

 

 

Apple: It’s one of the oldest memes in the world–the best of friends can sometimes turn into the worst of enemies. In its early days, Google and Apple worked closely, so much so that Google’s then-CEO Eric Schmidt sat on Apple’s board. Those bonds broke, though, as Google began to develop its Android mobile phone operating system. Schmidt stepped down from Apple’s board, and soon thereafter Jobs reportedly laid into Google at an internal company meeting, saying, “We did not enter the search business. They entered the phone business. Make no mistake, they want to kill the iPhone.” The companies now compete in the browser market, e-mail, voice chat and a host of other services. And with Apple’s new iCloud offering, the companies are certain to butt heads in data storage as well.

 

Facebook: Google’s battle with Facebook is really about the future of the Web. If you believe that Facebook, where more and more computer users are spending their Web time, is becoming something of an alternative Internet, then Google has every right to be worried. While computer users are hanging out on Facebook, they’re not searching the Web using Google. Indeed, Facebook has forged ties with Microsoft, giving the Redmond rival access to its users to add social-networking features to its Bing search engine. Google has tried to match some Facebook features, most recently offering +1, a service that lets users show love for Web sites much in the same was Facebook users can “Like” a site. But at last month’s D9 conference, Schmidt, now Google’s executive chairman, acknowledged that he “screwed up” in watching social networking soar without Google.

 

Groupon:Google has made its mint selling online ads. But one area that’s proven somewhat difficult for the company is the local advertising market. Groupon, which offers daily deals in regional markets in 175 North American markets as well as markets in 42 other countries, has clearly cracked that market. That’s why Google reportedly offered $6 billion to acquire Groupon, a deal Groupon ultimately spurned. Google’s response: start its own rival daily deals service. Earlier this month, it rolled out Google Offers, starting first in Portland, Ore.

 

Psst!
Send us a tip

Do you have a gripe about Google’s business practices or believe you’ve been harmed? CNET wants to hear your stories. Send them to us at tips-ne@cnet.com.

Oracle: Database software leader Oracle isn’t the most obvious enemy for Google. The two companies, who have a common enemy in Microsoft, don’t compete in any meaningful way. But Oracle filed suit last year, accusing Google of infringing on Java patents that Oracle acquired when it bought Sun Microsystems in January 2010. Last week, Oracle added another filing to the case, noting that it’s seeking damages that run “in the billions of dollars.”

 

PayPal: Google Checkout is a certainly a competitor to PayPal as a way to pay for goods and services online. But Google has plenty of competitors. The fight became more interesting when PayPal accused Google of poaching a key employee. Last month, PayPal sued Google, accusing it of misappropriating trade secrets from its mobile-payment business when it hired Osama Bedier, who had been a senior executive at PayPal, working on its mobile-payments platform. The same suit also accused Google VP of Electronic Commerce Stephanie Tilenius, another former PayPal executive, of violating her contract by recruiting her former colleague, Bedier. In response to the suit, Google said it respects trade secrets and intends to defend itself against the claims.

 

Related stories
Full coverage on the Google antitrust investigation
Google versus trustbusters, a history
In D.C., it’s all about beating down Google

Copyright holders: Not all copyright holders, to be sure. But Google, in its quest to organize all the world’s information, often acts first and asks questions later. News organizations, including Agence France Press, once challenged Google for posting headlines, photographs, and news summaries on its Google News aggregation site without permission. And in its most ambitious effort to digitize every book ever written, Google ran afoul of authors, photographers and publishers. Even a settlement struck with key groups was rejected last March by the federal judge overseeing the case.

 

Travel search sites: Google’s push to dominate the most widely searched queries led it to acquire ITA Software, a little-known but powerful provider of technology to the travel industry. Expedia, Kayak and Hotwire, among others, use ITA’s software to fuel their services. So they banded together to raise concerns to regulators that Google’s acquisition of ITA posed a serious competitive threat. The Justice Department approved the acquisition in April, but with the caveat that Google continue licensing ITA’s travel technology to rivals for five years on “reasonable and nondiscriminatory” terms, and that Google forward to regulators any complaints from travel competitors about where they land in Google’s search rankings.

Source: cnet
Share

Microsoft advances natural UI with Kinect SDK

After a few months of development, Microsoft released the Kinect for Windows software development kit, a tool for programmers to create applications for PCs that use the motion-sensing video game controller.

The free SDK is a beta product, and developers can only use it to create noncommercial applications. But there’s little doubt that it moves computing a small step closer to an era of natural user interfaces, where users can tell computers what to do with voices and gestures.

“This SDK really helps people move toward that,” says Anoop Gupta, an executive who holds the title of distinguished scientist in Microsoft Research who is overseeing the project. “We will see a world where computing becomes much more natural and intuitive.”

Oregon State University student Alex Wiggins gestures to Kinect, which in turn makes a remote-control toy helicopter take off while teammates Ruma Paul (left) and Fabio Matsui (right) look on. (Credit: Microsoft)

The SDK works with Windows 7 and lets developers get access to raw data coming from a depth sensor, a color camera sensor, and a four-element microphone array. The SDK can track skeleton images of one or two people, enabling gesture-driven apps. And it offers developers the ability to use noise suppression and echo cancellation, as well as beam formation, to identify sound sources and integrate with the Windows speech recognition programming interface.

Gupta expects those capabilities to unleash developer creativity and gin up a bevy of new apps for PCs. The company invited teams from several universities, including the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the University of Washington, and Oregon State University, to its Redmond campus yesterday for a “code camp” to see what programs they could create in 24 hours.

“They’ve been suitably provided food and caffeine,” Gupta said.

One group created an application in which a user can conduct a virtual orchestra with gestures and voice. Another group produced an application that gives users the ability to manipulate a helicopter drone with gestures and voice.

Eventually, though, the company envisions a host of commercial applications, everything from a “Minority Report”-like technology that lets surgeons swipe through patient records without having to remove surgical gloves to a feature that lets executives move through presentations with hand gestures, instead of a handheld clicker.

Those commercial applications, though, will have to wait. Microsoft intends to release a commercial version of the SDK, but it hasn’t said when that will happen. If developers embrace the technology, the financial potential for Microsoft could be significant. It’s one reason why Microsoft put Gupta, who built and led Microsoft’s Unified Communications Group, on the task.

The ability to create these programs wouldn’t exist had Microsoft not released the Kinect to the gaming world first. Microsoft has sold more than 10 million of the $150 motion-sensing controllers to video gamers since it was release last holiday season. Selling that many Kinects enabled Microsoft to produce the device relatively cheaply, giving it the opportunity to bootstrap the business on PCs.

“Scale matters in terms of how much you bring down costs,” Gupta says. “It’s a $150 sensor. It’s an extremely low-cost way to get to some revolutionary ideas.”

Microsoft announced plans to offer the SDK at its MIX11 conference in Las Vegas in April, highlighting it’s efforts by jury-rigging a lounge chair with wheels, wiring, and a Kinect that lets loungers “drive” the chair with hand gestures. It only did so after the hackers came up with several creative, if unauthorized, programs using the Kinect. Now the company is hoping the vast collection of Windows developers will give it a shot.

Source

 

Share

Web apps get the ultimate endorsement Windows 8

With the Internet’s importance steadily gaining, it’s not as if Web programmers needed an ego boost. But Microsoft has given them a major one anyway with a radical change coming in Windows 8.

The next-gen Windows will come with a new programming foundation, letting developers build native apps with the same techniques they use for Web applications. Microsoft calls this new variety “tailored apps.”

It’s a bold move for the company. Microsoft’s financial fortunes have depended heavily on Windows sales, and Windows’ continued momentum has depended heavily on the wide range of software written to use Windows’ direct interfaces.

Tailored apps, in contrast, use a higher-level interface: a browser engine. Now we know why Microsoft has been so gung-ho on IE9 over the last year.

Why this sharp break from the past? Microsoft isn’t commenting on its rationale beyond speeches earlier this month, but here’s one very good reason: ARM processors.

Today’s ARM processors, from companies including Qualcomm, Texas Instruments, Nvidia, Samsung, Apple, and Freescale, are usually used in mobile devices. But they’re growing up fast, and Microsoft is designing Windows 8 to run on ARM chips, too.

Windows has run on other processors besides x86 chips from Intel and AMD–Itanium, MIPS, Alpha, and PowerPC. Although each of those versions has been abandoned over the years, Microsoft clearly has adapted the Windows code base for processor independence.

Getting programmers to come along is another challenge altogether, though.

It’s a chicken-and-egg problem. Why should a Windows programmer create, say, an Itanium version of some product when there are so few Itanium computers shipping? And why should a person buy an Itanium-based computer if there is so little software shipping?

Web programming, though, is inherently cross-platform, as illustrated by the wide range of computers and operating systems that can be used to browse the Web. Windows 8’s tailored apps will call upon browser interfaces: HTML (Hypertext Markup Language, for describing Web pages), CSS (Cascading Style Sheets for formatting), and JavaScript (for executing programs).

Once Microsoft issues its ARM version of Internet Explorer–Windows 8 will come with IE10–the tailored apps should become cross-platform. In contrast, ordinary native apps such as Adobe Systems’ Photoshop or Microsoft Office that are written to Windows’ lower-level interfaces would have to be created separately.

Mike Angiulo, vice president of Windows planning, demonstrated the approach in a Computex speech, playing a touch-screen piano app on two machines. “These are the same apps. This is running on x86, this is running on ARM,” he said. “It’s the same app, completely cross-platform, based on the new Windows 8 app developer model.”

Microsoft already has a cross-platform programming foundation, .Net and Silverlight, and there has been fretting among its fans about Microsoft’s Web-tech move.

But ultimately, Microsoft’s position makes some sense. Windows remains a powerful force in the industry, but almost all the hot consumer-level programming action today is taking place either with Web apps or with mobile apps running on iOS and Android. Every now and again a new native app arrives for Windows–Angry Birds, say, or any number of other video games–but the hot platforms of the moment are mobile and the Web.

 

Windows 8 has a very different interface. These dynamically updated tiles represent apps. (Credit: Screenshot by CNET from Microsoft video)

“Over 60 percent of people’s time is spent in a browser when they’re using virtually any system,” said Angiulo said.

There’s already an army of Web-savvy programmers, a fact that helps ease with the chicken-and-egg problem of spinning up a new programming foundation. It’s not clear how closely tailored apps will resemble Web apps, but it’s likely that something like Facebook’s interface could be repackaged without major difficulties. That could help flesh out the Windows 8 app store faster.

“This application platform is based on HTML5, JavaScript, and CSS–the most widely understood programming languages of all time,” Angiulo said. “These languages form the backbone of the Web, so that on day one when Windows 8 ships, hundreds of millions of developers will already know how to build great apps for Windows 8.”

In addition, Web programming is expanding beyond the Web already: Hewlett-Packard’s WebOS uses Web technology, as do browser extensions written for Google’s Chrome, Apple’s Safari, Opera, and the imminent Jetpack framework for Mozilla’s Firefox. Note that Chrome extensions can be sold as full-on Web apps through the Chrome Web Store already, and that Web apps are what Google’s Chrome OS runs.

Thus, in a way, Windows 8’s tailored apps are close cousins to Google’s Chrome OS apps.

With the fevered rush of standards development, the Web is getting more powerful. One of the hot areas today is in CSS, It’s growing more advanced not just as a way to put drop shadows behind boxes with rounded corners, but also as a way to animate changes such as boxes popping up and even provide 3D effects such as windows flipping over.

 

Two Windows 8 apps can share the screen, but the usual approach is to devote the entire area to a single app. (Credit: Microsoft)

Other work is improving CSS Web typography and layouts. With Scalable Vector Graphics, more complex graphics are possible. HTML5’s Canvas element provides a two-dimensional housing for such graphics.

Browsers haven’t been known for their performance compared to native apps, but Microsoft is pushing as hard as it can to use hardware acceleration. It does so for Canvas, SVG, CSS, and even text rendering. It also is working on faster JavaScript, in part by spreading work across multiple processor cores.

Another Microsoft effort makes more sense in light of tailored apps: pinning. IE9 Web pages can be pinned to Windows 7’s task bar the way native apps can. With Windows 8, this behavior makes perfect sense since the Web-style tailored apps will be full peers to native apps.

One big unknown is how closely Microsoft will adhere to Web standards and how broadly it will support them. After years in the wilderness, Microsoft has caught Web standards religion, participating in their development, promoting them, offering test cases to iron out compatibility problems, and most notably, building them into IE9. So it seems likely Microsoft will toe the line here, but given how fast the Web is changing, it’s probably safe to expect compatibility problems between, say, Chrome OS apps and Windows 8 tailored apps.

But it’s not clear just how far Microsoft will go in its support. Much of the development of Web standards takes place in browsers, not just in conference rooms at standards meetings, and browser makers are keen to move forward as fast as possible. Windows itself hardly moves at a breakneck pace.

One uncertainty is whether Microsoft will support IndexedDB, a database technology that a browser can use to store complicated data and could be helpful for applications that have to work when there’s no Net connection. And it looks all but impossible that Microsoft would support WebGL, a new standard enabling 3D graphics on the Web that also can improve 2D apps such as games.

 

Windows 8 tailored apps resemble those using Windows Phone 7's Metro user interface. They're touch-enabled and use a lot of rectangles that slide and swing around. (Credit: Rafe Needleman/CNET)

Don’t expect existing Windows interfaces to go away: Microsoft has a huge collection of existing software to support, and you can bet programmers who don’t want to be confined to tailored apps’ limits will keep demand high.

What’s not clear, and won’t be until Microsoft’s Build conference in September, is when Microsoft thinks programmers should use the different programming foundations.

Here’s one big difference between Web apps and native apps, though: state. It’s an arcane technical subject, but in short, it refers to who’s in charge. With Web applications in a browser, state is maintained on a server. That lets multiple people simultaneously edit a Google Docs spreadsheet, for example; the server handles connections to all the browsers. With native apps, though, it’s the local machine that typically maintains state.

For a good illustration of state, think of what cloud computing means to Apple vs. Google. Apple’s iCloud synchronizes data among different devices, but when you play a music track, it’s playing from the local device’s storage system. Google streams it from a server, and the browser is at its beck and call.

HTML is getting more powerful abilities to store information locally, though, so that a server isn’t required. The browser increasingly is able to maintain its own state.

Here’s another difference: programming tools. Microsoft has kept the loyalty of many programmers through highly regarded tools used to build software. Web programming is comparatively primitive.

It seems very likely, therefore, that part of Microsoft’s news at Build will concern how programmers can quickly make tailored apps.

After all, while Microsoft has had trouble matching Apple and Google in mobile devices, it’s stayed competitive with programming tools. Don’t expect the company to throw that asset away any time soon.

 

Source

 

Share

by Jordan Crook

Rumors have been flying around the web lately about when we’ll get a chance to check out Microsoft’s forthcoming tablet software, and according to Bloomberg sources and Business Insider, Windows chief Steve Sinofsky will unveil the latest Windows tablet OS at the AllThingsDigital D:9 conference next week.

Microsoft has yet to make a formal announcement about the highly anticipated preview, but Bloomberg confirmed the demo with three separate sources, so as far as rumors go, this one seems pretty true. According to the report, Sinofsky’s exhibition will show Windows 8 tablets using an Nvidia Tegra chip, and Microsoft OEM chief Steve Guggenheimer will give a similar demo in Taiwan next week.

We’ve seen some leaked photos of Windows tablets and a potentially new touch interface, but this will be the first time we get an official glimpse of Microsoft’s tablet plans. Hopefully these demos won’t include any false information, like that given earlier this week when Steve Ballmer promised a Windows 8 arrival next year. Microsoft retracted the statement on his behalf shortly thereafter.

Share