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Category : General

General
Halo 3 Rakes in $300 Million in First Week

Microsoft said Thursday that its hit game Halo 3 had reached $300 million in sales in the first week of availability. Better yet for the company, the game is also driving console sales, which have more than doubled according to initial reports from retailers. The figures make Halo 3 the fastest selling video game ever, and one of the biggest entertainment launches in history.

"'Halo' is truly a cultural phenomenon, and the launch of 'Halo 3' is an important milestone for Xbox 360 and for video games as entertainment and as an art form," said Bill Gates, chairman of Microsoft. The company said 2.7 million, more than a third of the service's customer base, have already played the game through Xbox Live. This amounts to approximately 40 million hours online.

 
Farshad @ 08:12 | 4 October 2007 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft to Offer Free Version of Works

Microsoft said Wednesday that it will test out a version of its Microsoft Works productivity suite with computer manufacturers that would be free and ad-supported.

Works' place in Microsoft's portfolio has been in question as the company focuses more on its Office suite. Additionally, the company is facing increasing pressure from competitors such as Google, who are offering similar Web-based products at no cost.

“Microsoft is initiating a pilot program featuring an ad-funded version of Microsoft Works – Microsoft Works SE 9," the company said in a statement. However, Microsoft has declined to elaborate much further beyond that other than saying that it would still offer the for-pay version.

The Works suite will remain as a desktop application, but ads will be served from within the program. The company has already dabbled in in-application advertising: its Windows Live Desktop Mail client includes banners within the client.

Like Desktop Mail, Works' ads would also be served through its adCenter platform.

Previous versions of Works retailed for $39.95 USD, and in lieu of installing the considerably more expensive Office, many low-budget computer manufacturers opted for Works to keep costs down. Its use has decreased considerably since the early 90s, when Office overtook it as the flagship productivity software out of Microsoft.

 
Farshad @ 23:31 | 2 August 2007 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft: Silverlight Demo Was in Jscript, Not C#

During a presentation to analysts on Tuesday in Seattle, as BetaNews reported yesterday, Microsoft technical product manager Brian Goldfarb, standing beside his boss, Chairman Bill Gates, demonstrated an application produced for Major League Baseball, showing how fans can keep track of multiple games from stand-alone consoles that include graphics of the current diamonds, and can show multiple video clips simultaneously. Gates cited the demo as an example of what could be achieved by Silverlight developers who move beyond AJAX, which he described as "problematic" and "very complex."

But a spokesperson for Microsoft on behalf of Goldfarb told BetaNews today that, as it turned out, the specific MLB demo shown Tuesday was actually "written in Jscript," and was not the same demo that was written "entirely in C#" and described by Microsoft developer Robert Unoki on his personal blog this week. That C# demo was tailored to be portable so that it runs with .NET Compact Framework, which Unoki is helping to produce for Windows Mobile 6.

The problem emerges from the fact that there are two Silverlight versions being tested simultaneously. As a result, we learned, there are two MLB demos whose basic functionality may be identical:

The first supports the Silverlight 1.0 beta, which is the more stable edition that deploys a subset of .NET on Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux machines, and which supports Microsoft's ASP.NET AJAX. This is the version of Silverlight that Goldfarb showed to analysts, the spokesperson confirmed with him. It can also be seen in this video from a MIX '07 session late last month.

Read the entire story at source

 
Farshad @ 16:05 | 11 May 2007 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft Photo Info 1.0

Microsoft Photo Info allows photographers to add, change and delete common "metadata" properties for digital photographs from inside Windows Explorer.

When installed, a new "Photo Info" item appears on the context menu for files selected in Windows Explorer. To use, simply select one or more image fiiles, right-click and choose "Photo Info" to open the Photo Info properties editor. You can edit metadata for files individually, or all together as a batch. Photo Info reads and writes metadata in IPTC and XMP formats (depending on file type). It also provides enhanced "hover tips" and additional sort properties for digital photographs in Windows Explorer.

Microsoft Photo Info runs on 32-bit versions of Windows XP (with Service Pack 2 or later) and the Windows Vista operating systems.

Download : Microsoft Photo Info 1.0

 
Farshad @ 04:08 | 22 January 2007 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft Brings Back Train Simulator

Microsoft has announced plans to resurrect its Train Simulator game, utilizing the recently launched Flight Simulator X technology to build a realistic experience for railroad enthusiasts. Details are slim at this point, but Microsoft is expected to make further announcements later this year.

Train Simulator is being developed by the Redmond company's Aces Studio division, which was behind Flight Simulator and Combat Flight Simulator. "I've been constantly amazed at the loyalty and passion people have around this title, and being a railroad enthusiast myself, I understand what it is that makes it so compelling," explained lead developer Rick Selby on his blog. "This is the sort of passion I want to build into the product this time around."

 
Farshad @ 04:05 | 22 January 2007 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft Could Launch Zune in Europe by End 2007

CANNES, France (Reuters)—Microsoft Corp. is happy with the early sales of its Zune music player in the United States and it could launch the service in Europe before the end of 2007, its marketing director said on Saturday.

Jason Reindorp told Reuters that Microsoft was realistic about the challenge it faced in trying to crack into the digital music player market, dominated by Apple Computer Inc.'s iPod.

"You couldn't get a more entrenched competitor," he said at the annual music industry Midem Net conference in France. "But we feel really good about the first steps that we've taken."

Reindorp said Microsoft was not yet ready to officially announce when it would launch the service in Europe but it could possibly be out before the end of the year.

"The industry moves in this sort of Christmas to Christmas cycle. So you can expect that there will be more devices, more features in the market at that point," he said.

"Our next round of introductions will probably be in time for the holiday of this year."

He said Microsoft planned extensive research with focus groups in Europe to see how it could be modified for a European consumer.

He said the Zune had a 10.2 percent market share in the U.S. in the 30 gigabyte category, according to the latest data, and that it was still in line to sell over a million units by June 30, the end of its current fiscal year.

"We're not simply trying to play catch up with Apple," he said. "We are very realistic, we have what is essentially a three-year plan to firmly and solidly get on the radar.

 
Farshad @ 04:14 | 20 January 2007 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Update for Windows Mail Junk E-mail Filter [January 2007] (KB905866)

Install this update for Windows Mail to revise the definition files used to detect e-mail messages that should be considered junk e-mail or that may contain phishing content.

This update is provided to you and licensed under the Windows Vista License Terms.

Download : Update for Windows Mail Junk E-mail Filter [January 2007"> (KB905866)

 
Farshad @ 03:17 | 9 January 2007 | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft Imagine Cup 2006 Image Gallery

Computer-science students representing Microsoft Imagine Cup 2006 winning teams from seven world regional finals -- U.K., U.S., Germany, Brazil, South Korea, India and Japan -- visited Microsoft headquarters in Redmond, Wash., to share their software applications with Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates, Chief Research and Strategy Officer Craig Mundie and Corporate Vice Presidents Sanjay Parthasarathy and S. Somasegar.
The Imagine Cup, a worldwide technology competition for university students, provides opportunities for students to unlock their own genius and define the future of technology, software and computing by designing software with real world applicability. The 2006 Imagine Cup theme is “Imagine a world where technology allows us to live healthier lives.” The winning teams will compete in the Worldwide Imagine Cup Finals in India, August 6-12.



View : More images

 
Farshad @ 08:05 | 30 June 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Windows CardSpace (formerly "InfoCard")

Windows CardSpace (formerly "InfoCard") is a Microsoft .NET Framework version 3.0 (formerly WinFX) component that provides the consistent user experience required by the identity metasystem. It is specifically hardened against tampering and spoofing to protect the end user's digital identities and maintain end-user control.

Read the entire story at source

 
Farshad @ 09:05 | 27 June 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

WinFS Beta 2 to Appear at TechEd

Microsoft has been busy working on its next-generation storage technology known as WinFS and will be showing off new features next month at TechEd 2006 in Boston. WinFS Beta 1 debuted last September and Beta 2 is slated for release later this year.

WinFS, or Windows File Store, is Microsoft's new SQL-based file system technology that will be released as an add-on shortly after Windows Vista. The idea of WinFS is to create a "sea of data" that abolishes the need for the standard file and folder hierarchy.

For example, no longer would documents need to be stored in My Documents or images in My Pictures; instead, Windows would simply display the files associated with a particular request on demand. In addition, WinFS could store structured data such as contacts, calendars and more.

Asked whether WinFS is an individual file system or simply an extension of NTFS, Microsoft previously explained to BetaNews: "It's both. It's built on NTFS and it is a file system."

Items can be standard file-backed objects such as images and documents, or objects not backed by tangle files including contacts and e-mail. For file-backed items, WinFS leverages NTFS to store the data and ensure compatibility with current Win32 applications. When a file is changed, the system re-syncs the necessary metadata with WinFS.

Read the entire story at source

 
Farshad @ 20:21 | 23 May 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

WinHEC 2006 Brings New Office, Vista

Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates kicked off the Windows Hardware Engineering Conference in Seattle Tuesday, heralding the arrival of the Beta 2 releases of Windows VIsta, Office 2007 and Longhorn Server. Both Office and Vista betas will be available for public download in order to garner more feedback as the products near completion.

The announcement marked the first time Microsoft has simultaneously released test versions of its flagship products. The Redmond company says it has focused on four main areas with the new releases: simplifying how people work together, better content protection and management, improved search and more robust security.

Office 2007 brings to the table the biggest change to Microsoft's ubiquitous productivity suite to date, including a completely revamped task-based user interface. A "Ribbon" replaces the standard Office toolbars with options that change depending on the what the user is doing with a document.

WinHEC also marks the first time the general public, which has counted 5 years since Windows XP made its debut, will get a peek at the next-generation version of Windows. A "Customer Preview Program" will be available in the "coming weeks," providing users with access to Windows Vista Beta 2. Testers and MSDN subscribers can download the build starting today.

Read the entire story at source

 
Farshad @ 20:17 | 23 May 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft Windows Distributed File System Service Management Pack for Microsoft Operations Manager 2005

The Microsoft® Windows® Distributed File Systems (DFS) Management Pack monitors the performance and health of the DFS service running on Windows® 2000 and later operating systems. In addition to monitoring the health of the DFS service the Management Pack can also help monitor the availability of DFS shares to clients through Client Side monitoring.

By detecting, alerting on, and automatically responding to critical events and performance indicators, this Management Pack helps indicate, correct, and prevent possible DFS service and share outages. This Management Pack plays an important role in ensuring that your DFS infrastructure is working correctly and available.

By using embedded expertise, this Management Pack highlights performance, health, and availability conditions that indicate problems. It can in some cases even identify issues before they become critical, thus providing you with a level of customer responsiveness that increases the overall availability and performance of your Windows Operating Systems. As a result, this Management Pack will reduce the cost of ownership by enabling proactive management and reducing resolution times for the issues identified.

Download : Microsoft Windows Distributed File System Service Management Pack for Microsoft Operations Manager 2005

 
Farshad @ 03:23 | 12 May 2006 | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft.com Feeds Directory

The Microsoft.com Communities Team have been busy developing an RSS (and Atom) based Feed Directory.

So what is it?

Well, let's think of this way. Microsoft.com is one HUGE site. For all intents and purposes the site can be considered as a multitude / network of hundreds of sites with common UI(s) and platform(s). I can't remember how many 'pages' of content there are but it's safe to say we're talking millions (the MSDN Library alone is gigantic).

So, with all this content, how can customers locate what is of interest and then get updated as and when that stuff gets updated? RSS right? Well, RSS is good once you've located the content you want to subscribe to, but you need to find the feeds first - and trawling through the millions of pages for the RSS you're looking for isn't really...practical. The search works ok, but it's not feed orientated. So, this is where the Microsoft Feeds Directory comes in.

View : http://labs.communities.microsoft.com/rss/default.aspx

Read the entire story at source

 
Farshad @ 07:54 | 22 April 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Windows Defender Beta 2 Refreshed

Microsoft on Thursday released an updated version of Windows Defender Beta 2, the company's anti-spyware and malware application that will be integrated into Windows Vista. The release fixes bugs in signature updating, polishes the user interface and improves the software's SpyNet reporting capabilities.

Responding to feedback from users, Windows Defender can now remain active in the system tray at all times. The SpyNet feature enables users to send reports back to Microsoft and help the company keep ahead of malware authors. "With these upcoming changes to our reporting network and our core technology, we will improve our detection and removal capabilities even more in the upcoming months," said Microsoft's Anti-Malware Engineering Team.

Download : Windows Defender Beta 2

 
Farshad @ 20:36 | 13 April 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft Unveils Speech Server 2007

Microsoft in May will release a beta of Speech Server 2007, the third revision of the company's speech and telephony platform. The software is designed for call centers and businesses that want to automate their customer support infrastructure through the use of VoIP and other technologies.

Speech Server 2007 brings support for VoiceXML, which serves as a standard for linking together voice-centric applications, as well as SIP and RTP to maximize integration with other VoIP gateways. New monitoring and analysis tools are also included in the release. Speech Server 2007 will be officially launched in late 2006.

View : http://www.microsoft.com/speech

 
Farshad @ 11:18 | 5 April 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft MechCommander 2 Shared Source Release

This is the Shared Source release for MechCommander 2. This release contains all of the source code and source assets required to build MechCommander 2. This release can be used with the Microsoft XNA Build March 2006 CTP.

Download : Microsoft MechCommander 2 Shared Source Release

 
Farshad @ 20:24 | 19 March 2006 | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft Building New Free Mail Client

Internet Explorer isn't the only application to enjoy a resurgence in Windows Vista -- Microsoft is readying a new desktop e-mail client that will be integrated into Windows Live and eventually replace Outlook Express. Dubbed Windows Live Mail Desktop, the product is currently in beta testing.

As IE development stagnated following the release of Windows XP, Outlook Express -- Microsoft's free e-mail client -- suffered a similar fate. But the OE team returned to update the product for Vista under the name Windows Mail, and is now expanding that work with a completely separate application.

Windows Mail in Vista brings to the table evolutionary improvements to Outlook Express 6, including an integrated spam and phishing filter, community features for Microsoft newsgroups and built-in spell checking. The client has also been linked up with Vista's contact database and search functionality.

However, much has changed in the Internet landscape since OE6 debuted in 2001. RSS and blogging have begun to spread, and users are spending more time utilizing Web based services now that broadband has reached ubiquity. Microsoft unveiled Windows Live last year to help usher in this new era

Read the entire story at source

 
Farshad @ 20:24 | 11 March 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft® Codename Max

Microsoft® Codename Max is is your opportunity to try a new, exciting and constantly evolving experience from Microsoft. Today Max lets you make beautiful photo slideshows to share with your family and friends. And it recently began showing you the latest news updates from around the world. What will Max do next? Stay tuned!

*Note: This is a Preview release. Therefore, do not install this on machines you depend on. Microsoft Codename Max requires the WinFX December CTP in order to function properly. Max will install this for you. However, if you have a previous version of WinFX Runtime Components, Avalon ("Windows Presentation Foundation"), Indigo ("Windows Communication Foundation"), or Microsoft .NET Framework 2.0 installed, please uninstall before installing Max.

Download : Microsoft® Codename Max

 
Farshad @ 21:57 | 3 March 2006 | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft Flight Simulator X screetshots

From award winning game developer ACES comes Flight Simulator X. The latest installment will include the usual genre leading realism that continues to awe real pilots and will serve as the graphical benchmark for games on Windows Vista. Additionally, Flight Simulator X will deliver for the first time structured game play with more than 55 missions to choose from which will test the skills of players of all levels.

Screenshot : Microsoft Flight Simulator X screetshots

 
Farshad @ 19:25 | 22 February 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

"Crossbow" - Windows Forms and Windows Presentation Foundation Interoperability

Mike Henderlight introduces the "Crossbow" technology and describes how you can use it to build hybrid Windows Forms and Windows Presentation Foundation applications.

Video : "Crossbow" - Windows Forms and Windows Presentation Foundation Interoperability

 
Farshad @ 13:05 | 17 February 2006 | Printable version | Email this to a friend

MS Strengthens IP Protection for Mobile Partners

Microsoft on Thursday strengthened its intellectual property protection for its partners developing devices based on the Windows Embedded and Mobile platforms. The expansion now offers these OEMs comparable IP protection to those offered for other Microsoft products.

Under the plan, the company would now provide protection of patent, copyright, trademark and trade secret claims in every country that Microsoft offers the Embedded and Mobile products and removes the monetary cap related to defense costs.

Suzan DelBene, corporate vice president of the Mobile and Embedded Devices Division at Microsoft said this provides more confidence then ever before for those entities who develop upon Windows Mobile and Embedded products.

"We stand behind our software and partners, and this protection is the best assurance for device-makers using Windows Embedded or Windows Mobile to build amazing devices people won't want to live without," she said in prepared remarks.

Microsoft's partners over the years have told the company that they needed to feel secure using its technology, the company says. Thus, the company has stepped up by increasing its legal protection for its partners over the past two years.

Read the entire story at source

 
Farshad @ 08:53 | 10 February 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft Java Virtual Machine Transition Guide for IT Professionals

As a result of the January 2001 settlement of a dispute over Microsoft’s distribution of its Java implementation, Microsoft has been phasing out the Microsoft Virtual Machine for Java (MSJVM) in its products.

This guide outlines how to migrate to alternative environments, including both Microsoft-supported and non-Microsoft options. It provides step-by-step instructions for evaluating, planning, and transitioning existing applications, and describes a number of strategies to achieve independence from MSJVM. The evaluating discussion covers using the Microsoft JVM diagnostic tool to assess the current situation.

This guide supplements another Microsoft guide, Microsoft Java Virtual Machine Transition Guide for Developers, which has low level information on tools and alternative technologies. Topics include:
Assessment and planning
The Microsoft Java VM diagnostic tool
Available transition options
Locking down security
The MSJVM removal tool
Switching to another JRE

Send questions or feedback to us directly at CISfdbk@microsoft.com

Download : Microsoft Java Virtual Machine Transition Guide for IT Professionals

 
Farshad @ 09:08 | 8 February 2006 | Printable version | Email this to a friend

User Profile Hive Cleanup Service

The User Profile Hive Cleanup service helps to ensure user sessions are completely terminated when a user logs off. System processes and applications occasionally maintain connections to registry keys in the user profile after a user logs off. In those cases the user session is prevented from completely ending. This can result in problems when using Roaming User Profiles in a server environment or when using locked profiles as implemented through the Shared Computer Toolkit for Windows XP.

On Windows 2000 you can benefit from this service if the application event log shows event id 1000 where the message text indicates that the profile is not unloading and that the error is "Access is denied". On Windows XP and Windows Server 2003 either event ids 1517 and 1524 indicate the same profile unload problem.

To accomplish this the service monitors for logged off users that still have registry hives loaded. When that happens the service determines which application have handles opened to the hives and releases them. It logs the application name and what registry keys were left open. After this the system finishes unloading the profile.

Download : User Profile Hive Cleanup Service

 
Farshad @ 10:40 | 4 February 2006 | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Russian hackers hawked Windows exploit for $4,000

Competing hacker groups in Russia were peddling the exploit code responsible for the Windows Meta File attacks last December for $4,000, according to security company Kaspersky Lab.

"One of the purchasers of the exploit is involved in the criminal adware/spyware business," read a Kaspersky Lab quarterly report released this week. "It seems likely that this was how the exploit became public."

The WMF flaw unsettled security experts after they found that the virus-writing community discovered the vulnerability before they did. A slew of Trojan programs were written to try and take advantage of the exploit. The British Parliament was attacked by hackers who tried to exploit the WMF flaw.

MessageLabs, an e-mail filtering provider for the U.K. government, said last month that targeted e-mails were sent to various individuals within government departments in an attempt to take control of their computers. The e-mails contained the exploit code.

Read the entire story at source

 
Farshad @ 10:37 | 3 February 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft's OneCare firewall draws fire

The firewall component in Microsoft's Windows OneCare security bundle has holes, experts have warned.

The security software, available in a public beta version, by default allows applications that use the Java Virtual Machine or have a digital signature to connect to the Internet.

Like any blanket security-bypass rule, these default settings are a bad idea, said Mark Curphey, vice president at vulnerability management specialist Foundstone, a part of McAfee.

"Any firewall, any security device should have a default deny," Curphey said in an interview Tuesday. "Any door should always be closed."

Curphey discovered the issue when running software on his wife's computer, on which he had installed OneCare. He informed Foundstone security consultant Roger Grimes, who subsequently blogged about it on the InfoWorld Web site. Grimes also blasted the default bypass settings.

Read the entire story at source

 
Farshad @ 00:49 | 1 February 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft iSCSI Software Initiator Version 2.01 (build 1748)

Microsoft iSCSI Software Initiator Version 2.01 (build 1748)

The previous version of the Microsoft iSCSI Software Initiator, version 2.0 is still available at http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?FamilyId=A6515FB0-2B6F-4A1F-A10B-0B8FE88D256D&displaylang=en Please do not use previous versions of the Microsoft iSCSI Software Initiator unless specifically required by your storage hardware vendor. Checked builds of the MS iSCSI 2.0 initiator are available, but should be used for troubleshooting only, not in production environments. Checked builds of the Microsoft iSCSI software initiator can be installed on fre (retail - non-checked) versions of Windows. Checked build links
http://download.microsoft.com/download/D/6/7/D674AD49-A0C3-474C-93DF-EDDD4412EFD9/Initiator-2.01-QFE-908935-amd64chk.exe http://download.microsoft.com/download/D/6/7/D674AD49-A0C3-474C-93DF-EDDD4412EFD9/Initiator-2.01-QFE-908935-ia64chk.exe
http://download.microsoft.com/download/D/6/7/D674AD49-A0C3-474C-93DF-EDDD4412EFD9/Initiator-2.01-QFE-908935-x86chk.exe


Download : Microsoft iSCSI Software Initiator Version 2.01 (build 1748)

 
Farshad @ 05:51 | 27 January 2006 | Printable version | Email this to a friend

Microsoft Goes Beyond EU Decision by Offering Windows Source Code

Microsoft General Counsel Brad Smith announced Microsoft’s decision to license all the Windows Server source code for the technologies covered by the European Commission’s Decision of March 2004. The company is making this voluntary move in order to address categorically all of the issues raised by the Commission’s December 22, 2005 Statement of Objections. That document asserted that Microsoft’s prior technical documentation provided insufficient information to enable licensees to implement successfully certain Windows Server communications protocols.

“Today we are putting our most valuable intellectual property on the table so we can put technical compliance issues to rest and move forward with a serious discussion about the substance of this case,” said Brad Smith, Microsoft Senior Vice President and General Counsel. “The Windows source code is the ultimate documentation of Windows Server technologies. With this step our goal is to resolve all questions about the sufficiency of our technical documentation.”

With today’s announcement, Microsoft is going far beyond the European Commission’s March 2004 decision and its legal obligations to provide companies with the technical specifications of its proprietary communications protocols. A reference license to the Windows Server source code will provide software developers the most precise and authoritative description possible of the Windows protocol technologies. With it, software developers will be entitled to view the Windows source code in order to better understand how to develop products that interoperate with Windows, but not to copy Microsoft’s source code.

Read the entire story at source

 
Farshad @ 05:49 | 27 January 2006 | Source | Printable version | Email this to a friend


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