Wednesday, June 06, 2007
Microsoft Surface, Firefox Extensions, Flickr and the B Society
Check Tim's delicious tag for Surface for more commentary and other information.
Microsoft Surface is a exciting new concept that will change the way people interact with computers. The Surface is touch sensitive, working without a keyboard or mouse, and reacts to brushes. It has has the ability to interact with things places on it whether photos, phones, etc. The possibilities offered by Surface blur the line between virtual and reality.
17 Firefox Extensions That Make Blogging Easy
Here's a list of 17 Firefox extensions that make blogging easy.Here's a great link to the Split Browser
More extensions on delicious
Join the B-society
Link to the B-society, check it out!
Flickr-storm
Link to FlickrStorm which is a better search for Flickr!
More flickr on delicious
Labels: flickr, Hardware, Microsoft, tech, work
Friday, February 23, 2007
Microsoft Virtual PC 2007 - Free
Virtual PC lets you create separate virtual machines on your Windows desktop, each of which virtualizes the hardware of a complete physical computer. Use virtual machines to run operating systems such as MS-DOS, Windows, and OS/2. You can run multiple operating systems at once on a single physical computer and switch between them as easily as switching applications—instantly, with a mouse click. Virtual PC is perfect for any scenario in which you need to support multiple operating systems, whether you use it for tech support, legacy application support, training, or just for consolidating physical computers.
Whether Microsoft virtualization technology is an important component of your existing infrastructure or you're just a Virtual PC enthusiast, you can now download Virtual PC 2007 absolutely free.
Labels: free, Microsoft, virtualPC
Saturday, February 17, 2007
Windows Desktop Search 3 and Enterprise Search
Microsoft's Enterprise Search handled searching across network drives well. However when I upgraded to Office 2007, I was prompted to install WDS 3. Believing this to be an upgrade I did and was dismayed to discover no support for network drive support. Seeing as 90% of our data is contained on network drives this was a severe blow.
Fortunately Micosoft has now release an update to WDS 3 that brings this capability back.
Note: this install will require a PC restart and a Genuine Advantage check.
Download from Microsoft
Windows Vista Action Pack Subscribers - problems in MS Land
I have written already on the new Windows Vista product from a retail perspective.
Now I write from the Microsoft Partern perspective. My business is a Registered Microsoft Partner and an Microsoft Action Pack Subscriber (MAPS).
Here is an extract from an email I wrote to MS today.
I have been reading a lot about the new Vista Licensing included in MAPS.
Nick Mayhew Blog
David Overton Action Pack FAQ
David Overton Windows Vista Clean Install
David Overton Windows Anytime Upgrade
David Overton Clearing up some things re vista and the action pack
Microsoft Windows Anytime Upgrade
MSMAPS wiki
Partner website FAQ
I have a number of concerns that I would like to air, though I am not hopeful of any resolution. Here we go regardless.
First of all I note that the MAPS is targeted at those partners supporting business and as such includes Windows Vista Business edition., not ultimate. Quote "Windows Vista Ultimate—a consumer and small-business edition—is targeted at high-end users, gamers, multimedia professionals, and personal computer enthusiasts." We are a partner who services some businesses, but over 50% of our customers are gamers, high end purchasers (PCS over $4000) and multimedia professionals. As such we need to be able to support this product and by forcing us to effectively pay for an upgrade has marginalised us through the generic demographic assignment so thoughtfully made by MS.
As a follow up to this I note "(Australian Note: Windows Anytime Upgrade is not available in our country at this time - advice coming on what you can do)" So how the heck are we supposed to get Ultimate?
Second I am concerned that MS has not made any provision for the use of VM to make complete installs of Vista (as opposed to upgrades)
Third it is assumed in numerous places in the above websites that partners buy PCS with OEM software. This is not the case. We custom build our PCs for internal business use and demos. We deliberately use specific parts to create PCS that emulate our customers hardware rigs. Most gamers and Multimedia professionals are very particular about the specific hardware requirements and never buy and off the shelf system. Why are we forced to install XP and then upgrade to VISTA, often with poor support by XP for SATA Raid, On board Network adaptors etc. This has just increased our build time for internal PCs.
Fourth, why is there no support for Vista 64 bit. The Beta versions contained 64bit. How are we supposed to trial the full version and demo it to our 64 bit customers?
I realise you are hamstrung by the MS legal eagles on these questions and don’t expect you will change anything because I complain, but can you please continue to pass the message on - maybe if enough of us take the time to register our complaints and ask MS to consider the partners who do not fall into their convenient demographics, they might eventually listen.
Thanks for listening.
Labels: MAPS, Microsoft, Vista