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Category : Microsoft Windows Vista

Microsoft_Windows_Vista
Microsoft doesn't recommend creating Vista "Lite" with vLite

Some people have been turning to a utility called vLite, which out components of the operating system deemed unessential.

"Microsoft does not recommend using any tool to strip out applications from Windows Vista prior to installing it on your system, as it may affect your ability to download future Windows updates and service packs, and may cause your system to become unstable", the company said in an e-mail to CNET News.com.

 
Farshad @ 05:44 | 2 February 2008 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Windows Vista Ultimate Extras, Less than 3 days and counting

Microsoft has 2 & 1/2 days left until Summer ends and the first day of fall officially starts. and still no word on what or if anything is happening with Ultimate Extras. The Ultimate Extra blog still hasn't been updated since July 2nd when it said it intended to deliver DreamScene and the Language Packs by the end of summer.

"We intend to ship Windows DreamScene and the remaining 20 Language Packs by the end of the summer. We will not ship the last two Extras showcased in January (Windows DreamScene and the remaining 20 Language Packs) until they meet the high quality bar required by our enthusiastic customers—and we believe that we can achieve that bar by the end of this summer".

I don't know about you, but I am beginning to think they won't make it. It's a real shame that a huge corporation fails to keep its Software users up-to-date on whats going on with the development of the extras.

 
Farshad @ 06:36 | 21 September 2007 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Vista attacked by 13-year-old virus

A batch of laptops pre-installed with Windows Vista Home Premium was found to have been infected with a 13-year-old boot sector virus.

Those of you with a long memory will vividly recall the year 1994: Nirvana's lead singer Kurt Cobain died, South Africa held its first multi-racial elections, and Tony Blair became leader of the Labour party. Oh, and Microsoft's operating system was the quaint, pre-NT Windows for Workgroups.

But it was a year that also saw the arrival of a boot sector computer virus known as Stoned.Angelina which moved the original master boot record to cylinder 0, head 0, sector 9.

It would appear that this teenage virus has not yet been consigned to the history books.

According to Virus Bulletin, the consignment of infected Medion laptops – which could number anything up to 100,000 shipments – had been sold in Danish and German branches of retail giant Aldi.

The computers had been loaded with Microsoft's latest operating system Vista and Bullguard's anti-virus software, which failed to detect and remove the malware.

Read the entire story at source

 
Farshad @ 05:59 | 18 September 2007 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

What Windows Vista Does for Me

Yesterday, one Microsoft Watch commenter complained about not seeing enough love here for Microsoft products.

He used my colleague Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols as example of enthusiasm properly placed. "Go to Linux-Watch and SJVN writes about Linux like it does things for him his girlfriend won't," the commenter wrote.

Linux enthusiasts are like that, aren't they? Mac fans are similar. I'm neither, nor am I a Windows hugger. It's just another tool to me, like the toaster or the television. But that's not to say I hate Windows either, as some Microsoft Watch commenters have suggested. I'm indifferent to computer operating systems, the same as I am to the software running my watch, DVD player or printer.

The most used applications on my computer are the Web browser, e-mail client and instant messenger. These program categories don't require any particular operating system. The next most used application is the media player, which right now is usually iTunes since it's available for Mac OS or Windows. I do use Zune software from time to time, and Windows Media Player, but only for Microsoft broadcast events.

Mmmm, maybe it's coincidence, but those are the four applications categories covered by Microsoft's United States antitrust settlement. Is that an endorsement of the consent decree's benefits?

I also use photo editing software—Adobe Photoshop Lightroom or Nikon Capture NX, which are available for Mac OS or Windows, or Apple's Aperture on the Mac. The next most used application is on the Web: Facebook. I test lots of applications, however, for Microsoft Watch.

I can't say that Windows Vista does that much more for me than Windows XP or Mac OS X 10.4. My major application is the Internet, and the functions that matter most are provided by third-party software. Office isn't one of my major applications right now, because most of the writing is done in a Web browser; I use the blogging system's Web interface.

That said, there are some stand-out improvements on Vista over Windows XP. Nothing on my list is particularly new; Microsoft marketing and a zillion reviews have covered them. These features happen to be what move me most about Windows Vista, having used the operating system for more than 18 months.

1. Search. Vista's integrated search beats the heck out of the hobbled counterpart found in Windows 2000 or XP. Search is transforming, and so good it hurts some other Vista enhancements if really used. Microsoft invested a fair bit of resources into overhauling the file-and-folder system, making the organization of folders easier and more visual. But search is so good, I use it pretty much for everything. Why be a file clerk, when search gets the goods in a few clicks? Microsoft also made the Start Menu much better to use, but, again, search is so good I rarely launch applications from the Start Menu.

2. Windows Media Center. Microsoft's entertainment user interface may not be new, but now it's available pretty much to any consumer with a PC. I don't have much time to watch TV, but I do like the "Online Media" section (as I said, the Internet is my main application). I will sometimes watch MTV Overdrive at night. Oh, by the way, the Britney Spears MTV Video Music Awards performance is worse than what all the music critics claim it to be.

3. Networking. I'm a notebook user. Vista's improved networking detection and security feature, particularly wireless, gives me more confidence to use the Internet on the go. I wouldn't leave home without it.

4. Welcome Center. The concept works. Microsoft has placed important system information and common settings in one place. From Welcome Center, users can easily get to Microsoft or OEM partner offers and to System, the settings of which are smartly organized in Windows Vista.

5. Event Viewer. OK, so maybe most people rarely go here, but I do go fairly often. I like the visual and organizational improvements. Event Viewer is easier to navigate, and information is more easily decipherable by mere human beings.

6. RAW. Windows Photo Gallery supports RAW codecs from camera manufacturers like Canon and Nikon. Unfortunately, RAW codecs were slow coming after Vista's launch and needed several revisions to work right. But now, they smoke, making my personal photography easier. Photo management is perhaps the one area where I do use folders, rather than just search. It's hugely helpful to be able to see and manage RAW files from the operating system.

7. Windows Update. Personally, Windows Update's stealth self-updating doesn't much bother me. I'm a believer in automatic updating. The offering of driver updates and connection to Microsoft Update are among the great enhancements. If I were a network administrator managing a couple hundred custom applications, Windows Update would appeal to me less. All consumers should flip on the switch however.

8. Windows Desktop. I find the new user interface to be more refined than Windows XP, and Aero's overall look makes for a pleasing place for work and play. "Show desktop" works for me, while the cascading windows feature—Flip 3D—is a snore. It was nifty to use once, but redundant for me because of the Windows toolbar. Maybe the feature would matter more if I mucked around more file folders, rather than applications connected to the Internet. What I need to get to fast is usually right there on the Windows toolbar.

9. Windows Sidebar. I don't play as much there as I once expected I would, but the few gadgets I use are important. Live Search is probably the most used. Sidebar is a handy location. I want to use Windows Sidebar more, but there aren't enough compelling gadgets. I really cling to using it out of stubborn belief that some day the selection of gadgets will improve. I would get more mileage out of nixing the Windows Sidebar and placing a few Yahoo Widgets in the same space.

10. Windows Mobility Center. The Vista Control Panel feature feels cobbled together. Still, it's handy to go to one place for wireless, display, audio and synch settings—not that I much use Sync Center. That feature needs to be primed for more devices.

I may never feel as warmly to Windows Vista as Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols does towards Linux. But Windows isn't a religion to me, nor is it a lifestyle choice. It's another tool.

 
Farshad @ 06:03 | 15 September 2007 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft to release service pack for Vista in 2008

SEATTLE (AP) - Microsoft Corp. said Wednesday it will release a major package of updates and fixes for the Windows Vista operating system in the first half of 2008.

The company said a "beta" test version of Service Pack 1 will be released "in a few weeks to a moderate sized audience." The SP1 beta includes updates Microsoft has already made to the operating system it started selling to consumers at the end of January.

The service pack fixes some common problems that cause computers to crash or freeze, Microsoft said, including compatibility problems with some newer graphics cards, external monitors and printer drivers. Microsoft said it also fixed some problems users had with putting their PCs to sleep and waking them up again.

The company said SP1 is also expected to improve battery performance, increase the speed of copying files and help Internet Explorer run faster on Vista.

The Redmond, Wash.-based software maker said SP1 also brings several security improvements.

Microsoft said it expects to release Service Pack 3 for Windows XP, Vista's predecessor, in the first half of 2008 as well, but in a statement added that it "should not significantly change the Windows XP experience."

In the past, some of Microsoft's business clients used the release of a service pack as a sign that a new operating system was stable enough to install. Analysts have said Vista seems more reliable out of the box than past versions of Windows, and that businesses need not wait for the service pack.

 
Farshad @ 06:04 | 30 August 2007 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft Discounts Vista in China

Aiming to curb piracy, Microsoft said it had slashed prices on its Windows Vista as much as 67 percent to encourage consumers to purchase genuine copies of its software. As of Wednesday, the price of its Home Basic edition dropped from $201 to $66, and Home Premium was reduced to $118 from $238. The company hopes that the move will continue the downtrend in piracy in the country.

Piracy rates are still high: in 2006, about 82 percent of all software used in China was pirated according to IDC. However, this was down from 86 percent the previous year. Some of the reduction could be due to a new policy in China that requires manufacturers to ensure that legally-obtained operating system software is installed at factories.

 
Farshad @ 23:28 | 3 August 2007 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

New Silverlight DreamScenes for download

The Sliverlight crew has put together a Silverlight DreamScene that they call "Dusk" and are releasing at MIX07 this week, in both standard 4:3 and widescreen 16:9 aspect ratios. The downloads are part of an updated Silverlight-enabled site that the team will be unveiling on Monday 30 April.

But, as Brandon points out in his post, you can get them ahead of everyone else. He has a video of the download as well in case you want to preview it.

View : Silverlight-enabled site

 
Farshad @ 01:19 | 3 May 2007 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft: Vista follow-up likely in 2009

With Vista just out the door, Microsoft is now drawing up plans to deliver its follow-up client operating system by the end of 2009, according to the executive in charge of building the product's core components.

That would be a much faster turn-around than Vista, which shipped more than five years after Windows XP, but Vista was exceptional, said Ben Fathi, corporate vice president of development with Microsoft's Windows Core Operating System Division this week at the RSA Conference in San Francisco.

Microsoft originally planned for its XP follow-up to include a number of radical changes to Windows, including a new file system and a reinvented user interface, but after the company's products were hit by widespread worm outbreaks in 2003, Microsoft redirected almost its entire engineering effort to locking down Windows with the XP Service Pack 2 release.

"We put Longhorn on the back burner for awhile," Fathi said. "Then when we came back to it, we realized that there were incremental things that we wanted to do, and significant improvements that we wanted to make in Vista that we couldn't deliver in one release."

Vista shipped about two-and-a-half years after XP SP 2, and Vista's follow-up is expected to take about the same amount of time, according to Fathi. "You can think roughly two, two-and-a-half years is a reasonable time frame that our partners can depend on and can work with," he said. "That's a good timeframe for refresh."

That time line would put Microsoft's next client operating system out by the end of 2009.

Last year, Microsoft said that the code name for this Vista follow-up is Vienna, but Fathi said he could not disclose the current name. "We've been told not to use it publicly," he said.

So what will be the coolest new feature in Vienna?

According to Fathi, that's still being worked out. "We're going to look at a fundamental piece of enabling technology. Maybe its hypervisors, I don't know what it is," he said. "Maybe it's a new user interface paradigm for consumers."

"It's too early for me to talk about it," he added. "But over the next few months I think you're going to start hearing more and more."

 
Farshad @ 18:27 | 9 February 2007 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Vista introduction prompts improved PC sales

Windows Vista, the new PC operating system from American software giant Microsoft has been on retails shelves for just over a week now, and while its launch didn’t emulate the recent fevered attentions garnered by the likes of Sony’s PlayStation 3 or Nintendo’s Wii videogame consoles, it’s still (quietly) shifted a considerable share of units since 30 January and made its mark across the computer industry.

More specifically, over the same week recorded through 2006, PC unit sales have risen more than 60%, with related revenue also boosted by some 50%. Any supposed lapse in expansion across the PC industry over the past 12 months – which has only grown by approximately 10% - was assigned to the wait for Vista, with customers apparently opting to wait for the introduction of PC systems equipped with Vista straight out of the box rather than buying an XP-equipped model and then having to upgrade.

Analyst firm Current Analysis outlines that overall PC units sales figures for the week ending 03 February have leapt upward by a significant 173%, which is massive boost when compared to the week before and a 67% increase over figures recorded through the same week in 2006. The analyst firm also estimates that revenue performance related to Vista has also shown sizable increase too, with an increase of 54.4% when compared to the same week in 2006.

It should be noted, however, that these numbers are ‘overemphasized’ following reduced inventory numbers attributed to the week directly leading up to Vista’s official launch on 30 January. For example, American retail chain Best Buy removed all of its XP-imbued systems from sale directly prior to Microsoft’s unveiling of Vista.

In terms of specific Vista editions, it’s seemingly the upper-tier Vista Home Premium which is relieving consumers of the most cash, with the Aero-Glass version raking in around 70% of Vista’s total sales in the week since its official launch – Vista Basic took 22% of the remaining 30%.

 
Farshad @ 18:14 | 9 February 2007 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Analysis: Vista's Ready Boost is no match for RAM

Chicago (IL) - There's a new way to enhance your cache in Vista - simply plug in your Flash memory stick. But how much performance gain can you really expect? TG Daily ran an average PC through a benchmark parcours and discovered that the old rules still apply: There is no substitute for an adequate amount of system memory. Period.

Windows Vista was released almost two weeks ago, and it split users worldwide into two camps. There are those users who simply love the new look and feel and the operating system's broad spectrum of new features; all of these serving the purpose of making Windows Vista the smoothest, most accessible, user-friendly and most communicative Windows ever. For users looking for more performance, Vista includes SuperFetch and ReadyBoost - two features that promise a smooth performance experience.

Read the entire story at source

 
Farshad @ 18:22 | 8 February 2007 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

64-bit Vista is the way to go

MEMORY MAKERS are banking on the 64-bit version of Vista becoming the next big operating system.
Initially, people are going to move to 32-bit Vista, but for any gamer or someone that wants to use more than 2GB of memory, 32 bits won't do any good.

So the memory industry will move from 2x1GB kits to 2x2GB kits and hope that Vista 64 bit takes off. But it won't be easy, as vendors are still struggling to have the 32 drivers ready and the target is January the 30th.

After that, the focus will go strongly on 64 bit. We tried the RC2 Vista 64 bit and learned that you can install everything, including Raid and Sound Blaster X-Fi but, despite 64 graphic drivers from Nvidia and ATI, many games wont even install or run on Vista 64 bit. The industry expects that the big move will take place after Q2 2007, so when Vista starts standing on its feet.

If you use the machine for Photoshop, rendering, video editing or anything else other than gaming only, Vista 64 bit is the way to go. We don’t think you can change your mind and activate 64 bit Vista if you purchased 32 bit which sucks big time, but that is what the big Vole decided.

64 bit means more addressing space and only the sky will be the limit. Even desktops will end up with 8GB memory and that is a lot.

 
Farshad @ 23:57 | 1 December 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Vista day looms tomorrow

ANALYSTS ARE are being invited to the release of Microsoft's long awaited Vista operating system and Office 2007 tomorrow.
There will be a bit of shin-dig somewhere swanky in New York and London tomorrow. It will be for businesses only and the rest of the unwashed riff-raff - including the INQ - will be kept outside.

Vista will be available for ordinary consumers on January 30, 2007, according to Microsoft co-president of platforms Jim Allchin. Then the marketing machine will switch into gear.

Allchin said the latest version was "rock solid" after the outfit began shipping it to computer programmers and manufacturers so they could tailor their gear to the system.

Microsoft has been criticised and its stock battered like a North Sea cod for delaying the release of Vista several times to further refine the system. It has also knocked out so much of the sexy stuff that critics consider it a bit too close to Windows XP to be worth a five-year wait.

 
Farshad @ 00:03 | 29 November 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

It's Time: Windows Vista Goes Gold

"It's time!" And with that simple blog post, Windows head Jim Allchin has heralded the arrival of Windows Vista. Microsoft said Wednesday that it has released the next-generation operating system to manufacturing, capping a more than five-year development effort.

Volume license customers will get their hands on the final release -- build number 6000 -- this month, while the public launch of Vista is scheduled for January 30, 2007. The release to manufacturing of Vista will allow PC and device makers as well as developers finalize work on hardware and software in preparation for its formal debut.

The release of Vista will initially come in five languages including French, Spanish and Japanese that have already received final approval. The English version was signed off Wednesday morning, Jim Allchin said in an afternoon conference call.

Read the entire story at source

 
Farshad @ 17:23 | 9 November 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Final Windows Vista Build Gets Closer

Microsoft on Friday made available the first post-RC1 build of Windows Vista to technical beta testers, which is numbered 5728. The interim update includes a number of bug fixes and interface polishing, but is most notable because the 5700 range has been allocated for the final Vista build, indicating RTM could arrive as scheduled next month.

"Sven’s team has set aside a specific range of build numbers to incrementally build toward Windows Vista's Release Candidate 1 (RC1) milestone; in this case, build numbers ranging from 5400 through 5699. Likewise, numbers beginning with 57XX have been set aside for the RTM (Release-to-Manufacturing) release," Windows Vista product manager Nick White explained in a blog post last month. Vista beta testers can download Build 5728 from Connect. It will also be available to select CPP participants, as well as MSDN and TechNet subscribers.

 
Farshad @ 05:51 | 22 September 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft Windows Vista Step-by-Step Guides for IT Professionals 2.9

These step-by-step guides will assist IT Professionals in deploying or migrating to Windows Vista. These guides will also provide step-by-step information on how to control device installation using Device Management and Installation (DMI) and manage ADMX files. There are also step-by-step guides to help you protect data using BitLocker Drive Encryption, to administer the TPM Security Hardware in a computer using Trusted Platform Module (TPM) Services, and to help deploy better-managed desktops and mitigate the impact of malware using User Account Control (UAC).

Download : Microsoft Windows Vista Step-by-Step Guides for IT Professionals 2.9

 
Farshad @ 09:02 | 29 June 2006 | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Update for Windows Vista Beta 2 and Windows Codename Longhorn Server Beta 2 (KB919946)

Install this update to fix an issue where in the presence of Internet Protocol security (IPsec) or Windows Firewall, a race condition can be hit on multi-processor (or hyper-threaded) systems causing memory corruption, leading to a system crash. After you install this item, you may have to restart your computer.

Download : Update for Windows Vista Beta 2 and Windows Codename Longhorn Server Beta 2 (KB919946)

 
Farshad @ 09:00 | 27 June 2006 | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft: Please Don't Disable UAC

At Windows Vista lab in Redmond before the release of Beta 2, Microsoft developers showed off the new OS to a room full of MVPs and enthusiasts. But even the company's most loyal fan base turned ugly when User Account Control took the stage. Now, Microsoft is begging users not to disable the controversial feature.

User Account Control, or UAC, is a fundamental security change coming in Windows Vista and one of the most important additions to protect users from threats, Microsoft says. But the company is struggling to find a balance between security and usability.

UAC designed to limit the damage malicious software can do to a machine by requiring that all users run in standard user mode and restricting administrator privileges to authorized processes. If a user wishes to install new software or change systems settings, they will need to enter credentials and verify the process.

However, the result has been less than smooth in Windows Vista builds released thus far. Users have encountered a seemingly endless stream of verification prompts when performing tasks as simple as deleting a shortcut. Vista Beta 2 also added a "Secure Desktop" mode which prevents any system interaction until the UAC prompt has been answered, adding to customer frustration.

Read the entire story at source

 
Farshad @ 08:54 | 27 June 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft® Windows® Software Development Kit (SDK) for Beta 2 of Windows Vista and WinFX Runtime Components

The Windows SDK contains pre-release documentation, samples, and tools designed to help you develop Windows applications and libraries using both Win32® and WinFX® technologies targeting Windows Vista.

Download : Microsoft® Windows® Software Development Kit (SDK) for Beta 2 of Windows Vista and WinFX Runtime Components

 
Farshad @ 20:32 | 24 May 2006 | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft Adds More Watchwords to Its Vista Feature List

In the three-hour-long, back-to-back series of keynotes kicking off the Windows Hardware Engineering Conference (WinHEC) on Tuesday morning (UGH!!!), Microsoft execs highlighted in passing a few Vista features that they haven't really talked up much until now. Among these are Transient MultiMon, designed to help mobile users better manage their display connectivity, as well as network projection, a feature designed to detect a nearby projector and connect to it via a wired or wireless network. Microsoft execs also are mentioning "Hot Start," which we're assuming, will be the faster on/off capability that will be built into Vista.

 
Farshad @ 20:36 | 23 May 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft launches Vista 'certified' partner plan

Microsoft unveiled new programs and technologies Tuesday to allow partners to prepare products to run on Windows Vista once it is available.
During his keynote at Microsoft's Windows Hardware Engineering Conference (WinHEC) in Seattle, Microsoft Senior Vice President Will Poole unveiled a new Certified for Windows Vista logo program so hardware and software companies can label their products "certified" to work with Vista.

Poole also announced a new networking standard called Microsoft Windows Rally, which hardware vendors can build into devices such as digital cameras, wireless access points and other PC peripherals so Vista will immediately recognize them and configure them to work with a PC.

Read the entire story at source

 
Farshad @ 20:34 | 23 May 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Report: Vista Security Not Enterprise Ready

Microsoft's attempts to bolster security may hurt it in the enterprise sector, an analyst report said Monday. Behind the Boston analyst firm Yankee Group's reasoning is the general user-unfriendliness of those security features.

As such, Yankee Group has recommended users stick with Windows XP Service Pack 2 until 2008 if they believe such issues may present a problem. It even suggested looking at Apple's dual-boot Macs as a "hedging strategy."
The firm gathered feedback from developers, who complained that Microsoft had went too far in its implementation. They also said that some of the security measures were too repetitive, and even seemed to talk down to the user.

Read the entire story at source

 
Mohsen @ 21:21 | 8 May 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Vista Delay a Minor Factor in PC Sales

The delayed launch of Windows Vista will have a limited effect on PC shipments in 2006, and may actually help to boost sales slightly in 2007, research firm IDC said Monday. Overall, PC shipments should grow at a ten percent or higher rate through 2008, the firm said.

IDC's comments came as part of its Quarterly PC Tracker forecast of the industry. The firm is now more optimistic about sales through 2008, saying growth should remain above 10.5 percent. Previously, IDC had expected growth to fall below 10 percent beginning in 2007.
Read the entire story at source

 
Mohsen @ 11:45 | 27 March 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft: No Vista Code Changes

Microsoft slammed an article by Australian technology publication Smart House on Friday, calling it "speculation." The retort came as a result of a story that cited sources within the company saying as much as 60 percent of Vista code needs to be rewritten.

The article claimed that the Redmond company had to transfer developers from the Xbox team to the Windows division in order to ensure the Vista makes it to a CES 2007 release. Much of the article centered on issues with the Media Center and multimedia functionality, and claimed Intel was assisting Microsoft in rushing out the new code.

Read the entire story at source

 
Mohsen @ 14:58 | 24 March 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Intel : Vista not to support EFI

On Thursday, at the Intel Developer Forum in San Fransisco, Microsoft development manager Andrew Ritz revealed that Windows Vista, the successor to the aging Windows XP expected to be released later this year, will not support EFI booting. Ritz admitted that EFI support will not be seen until Longhorn Server is released in early 2007, and on top of that it will never support a 32-bit processor.

Extensible Firmware Interface (EFI) is the modern and flexible successor to the 20-year-old PC BIOS. It is responsible for initialising hardware in the PC, and importantly, device drivers are stored in the EFI flash memory rather than being loaded by the operating system.

This is terrible news for Intel Mac users who have been hoping that they could dual-boot Windows and Mac OS X on their new Macs: not only are their processors not 64-bit (and thus will never be supported by Windows EFI booting) but Windows Vista won't boot on EFI anyway.

"A combination of factors changed our plans. The big one, in my opinion was platform availability. With this huge move to 64-bit based platforms and for us to support it, we needed to see a large heterogeneous sample of 64 bit implementations out there for us to feel comfortable in supporting it." said Ritz.


 
Farshad @ 15:16 | 10 March 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft(R) Windows Server(TM) Code Name "Longhorn" and Microsoft Windows Vista(TM) Release Notes – February CTP Release

These Release Notes provide important information you should know prior to deploying and using Microsoft(R) Windows Server(TM) Code Name "Longhorn" operating system and the Microsoft Windows Vista(TM) operating system, including known issues. You should familiarize yourself with all of the known issues listed here prior to installing the software.

Download : Microsoft(R) Windows Server(TM) Code Name "Longhorn" and Microsoft Windows Vista(TM) Release Notes

 
Farshad @ 15:33 | 9 March 2006 | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft: No Backdoor In Vista, Ever

Microsoft late last week began to publicly deny reports that it was building a backdoor into Windows Vista in order for governments to gain access to private files. Calling it "simply not acceptable," Microsoft System Integrity Team developer and cryptographer Niels Ferguson said the official line is that the company does not, and would not, create backdoors.

Reports of such an issue within the next generation Windows release surfaced in mid-February following a report by BBC News. The story claimed the British government feared that new encryption technologies, specifically BitLocker in Vista, could set back terrorism investigations.

The report claimed that British authorities were talking with Microsoft about the issue, however it did not specify what the two parties were discussing.

Read the entire story at source

 
Farshad @ 17:03 | 6 March 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Vista versions not so confusing after all

Yesterday Microsoft released information about how Windows Vista will be packaged when it’s ready for retail delivery later this year. (The press release, unfortunately, is written in very broad strokes. I hope Microsoft publishes a detailed feature matrix soon.)

When the rumors of Vista versions first began flying several months ago, I read many complaints about the potential for mass confusion among Windows consumers. Now that the official announcement is out, those fears seem overblown.

Set aside the Starter version, which is designed for use on cheap PCs in emerging markets (Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, Russia, Brazil, India, and many more) and won’t be sold in the U.S., Europe, and other major markets. Forget about the N versions, too - those are the Media Player-free versions the European Commission required Microsoft to make available to OEMs as part of its antitrust decree, and they’ve been a spectacular flop in the marketplace.

Read the entire story at source

 
Farshad @ 21:56 | 1 March 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend


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