Posts Tagged ‘Microsoft’

Microsoft, Google begin war of words over cloud services in India

March 29th, 2012

Google and Microsoft, two of the world’s largest technology firms, are raining blows on each other as they hard sell their so-called cloud services and vie for dominance in a market estimated to grow to $15-18 billion by 2020.

Although these companies used to be thought of as being fundamentally different, similarities are beginning to show more prominently with both offering office productivity software, besides computer operating systems. While it may be too early to gauge business gains, the war of words has begun.

“Google is the largest cloud services company in India,” claimed Rajan Anandan, Google’s India head since January 2011. “We have 2,00,000 businesses that use Google cloud solutions. We have orders of magnitude bigger than Microsoft,” added Anandan, who used to head Microsoft in India before he took up the Google job.

Cloud computing is causing a fundamental shift in the way technology services are delivered. Unlike in the traditional model, software or hardware need not be on-premise but can bought as a service and can be paid for depending on usage, instead of a lumpsum upfront payment earlier.

While Google proudly cites cloud sales successes, including to the Indian Youth Congress, IndiaMart, Indiainfoline, Flipkart and Sterlite Technologies, Microsoft boasts of logos such as Essar, Sporting Mindz, Idhasoft, and Gradatim.

“We’re competing with lots of folks in the cloud space,” said Sanket Akerkar, MD, Microsoft India, who said the Seattle-based firm’s approach to enterprise solutions was different from that of Google.

“They (Google) are largely an advertising company, which is consumer oriented. They have taken their consumer assets and are trying to figure out how they can get into the enterprise business,” said Akerkar.

“It sort of doesn’t work. We have taken our enterprise class and put those on cloud; we think that’s a better approach.” Google recently upped the ante by wooing chief information officers of some of the largest companies in India.

At an exclusive event in Rajasthan, company executives briefed nearly 50 chief information offices, including Amrita Gangotra of Bharti Airtel and Anil Jaggia of HDFC bank, on Google’s cloud offerings for enterprises.

Much like most emerging technologies, Indian enterprises are gingerly experimenting with cloud computing, but analysts expect accelerated pace of adoption in the coming years as the new model offers lower costs and solves the challenge of software and hardware obsolescence.

SBI uses Google’s cloud-based search services to scour through its massive repository of account and customer data. That may be, but Microsoft does not think Google has what it takes to win the enterprise clients. Analysts are not ready to call the game just yet but agree that the competition is definitely getting fierce.

“Microsoft has a strong enterprise software base for its traditional software which can be leveraged for its cloud products,” said Sid Deshpande, senior research analyst at Gartner. “Google is playing catch up now but I wouldn’t put one over the other.”

While Google used to be predominantly known for its search, advertising and its popular e-mail Gmail, Microsoft specialised in operating systems and office productivity applications. But things have changed now.

Source:http://economictimes.indiatimes.com//articleshow/12446723.cms

Microsoft to Launch Windows 8 in October, Report Says

March 21st, 2012

Microsoft will wrap up Windows 8 this summer, according to a report by Bloomberg on Monday.

Computer and tablet makers, called OEMs for “original equipment manufacturers,” will have Windows 8-powered PCs and tablets ready to sell in October, Bloomberg said.

The Windows 8 operating system will come in two flavors: Windows 8 for traditional PCs and business-grade slates and tablets , and Windows on ARM, or WOA, for tablets targeting consumers.

Microsoft declined to comment on the Bloomberg report, which cited what the news organization called “people with knowledge of the schedule,” who asked for anonymity.

Neither a summer wrap-up or an October on-sale would be a surprise: Microsoft finished Windows 7 three years ago this July and launched the OS alongside new PCs on Oct. 22, 2009.

Analysts have expected that Microsoft is shooting for a release of Windows 8 this fall, possibly in October, to follow in Windows 7’s successful footsteps and avoid a repeat of Windows Vista, which missed 2006’s holiday selling season when it fell behind schedule and shipped in January 2007.

Microsoft has not disclosed a release date for Windows 8, but recently hinted that it would be this year.

The release of Windows 8 Consumer Preview at the end of last month was a clue that a fall 2012 debut was in the cards.

Microsoft released the first Windows 7 developer-oriented build at the end of October 2008, offered a public beta in January 2009, and pushed the final version onto shelves the third week of October 2009.

Although Windows 8’s Consumer Preview appeared about seven weeks later in the calendar than the Windows 7 beta–at the end of February compared to the latter’s early January–Windows 8’s Developer Preview launched a month earlier, in mid-September 2011, rather than Windows 7’s October 2008, perhaps making the two schedules a wash.

[Go to PCWorld's Windows 8 special section for all the latest news on Microsoft's newest operating system.]

October Release a Mistake?

At least one analyst wasn’t buying the idea that the October release was a done deal.

“No, I don’t think it’s realistic,” said Michael Cherry, an analyst with Kirkland, Wash.-based Directions on Microsoft, a research firm that tracks only Microsoft’s moves, in an email reply to questions Monday. “While the Consumer Preview shows progress from the Developer Preview, it is still extremely rough, and many things are broken.”

Cherry ticked off several problems he’s encountered with the Consumer Preview, including an inability to link a Microsoft Bluetooth keyboard with a Windows 8 PC and the Metro-style Mail app not connecting to an Exchange server.

Although Steven Sinofsky, Microsoft’s top Windows executive, made his reputation by keeping Office releases on schedule, Cherry said a stubbornness to ship Windows 8 on time, come hell or high water, may be the wrong move.

“I think it would be a mistake if they allowed themselves to be date driven,” Cherry said. “One of the worst things that could happen, in my opinion, would be to ship a product for the holidays that disappoints in any way.”

Microsoft’s Big Bet

Microsoft, other analysts have said, is gambling big on Windows 8–”betting the farm,” in the words of one–because the upgrade’s emphasis on touch and tablets risks alienating enterprise customers.

Although Microsoft needs to address its tablet problem–it has nothing to compete with Apple’s popular iPad , which entered its third generation last week amid record-setting sales–analysts have argued that the touch-centric operating system will offer few reasons for businesses to upgrade their desktops and notebooks.

That leaves tablets. If Microsoft gets it wrong with Windows 8 there, it will fall even further behind Apple, and to a lesser extent, Google ’s Android operating system. Perhaps irreversibly behind.

Cherry used a different schedule from Windows 7 to bolster his belief that an October release Windows 8 was overly optimistic.

After looking at the Consumer Preview, and noting that Microsoft has not publicly showed WOA except in heavily scripted demos, Cherry remained leery of an October 2012 ship date for the two editions.

“[These things] only add to the feeling this is still on a RC [release candidate] schedule three months after Consumer Preview, and RTM [release to manufacturing] three months after that,” said Cherry. “And that is an optimistic schedule in my mind.”

In Windows 7’s case, that operating system reached RC–where the code is considered finished, but gets one last preview to trap bugs–in early May 2009, and made RTM in late July.

RTM is a crucial milestone because it’s then that code is offered to OEMs for prepping new PCs, to third-party developers to run final tests on new and existing applications, and to other hardware vendors to ready peripherals that will coexist with the OS.

Windows 7 reached RTM just over 11 weeks after the operating system met RC, which showed up about 16 weeks after the public beta.

If Cherry’s mock beta-to-RC-to-RTM schedule becomes reality, Microsoft would issue a Windows 8 RC at the end of May and the RTM at the end of August. That last milestone would be approximately a month later on the calendar than Windows 7, which could in turn push Windows 8’s on-sale date into late November.

Microsoft Event in April?

According to Bloomberg, the same sources who claimed an October on-sale date also said that Microsoft would host an event early next month, when it would brief industry partners on Windows 8’s release schedule and marketing efforts.

Anti-Windows 8 momentum has been building since the Consumer Preview was released three weeks, with much of the commentary focused on the dual–and dueling–traditional Windows desktop interface and the new “Metro” app-like look and feel.

If Microsoft uses the same week and day to unveil Windows 8 as it did three years for Windows 7, it would host a launch event on Oct. 25.

Source:http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/252202/microsoft_to_launch_windows_8_in_october_report_says.html

Why Microsoft provided Windows 8 tablets, not PCs, to reviewers

March 20th, 2012

Many of the first wave of reviews of the Consumer Preview version of Windows 8 were based on tablets provided to reviewers by Microsoft. Given that Windows 8 will run on many millions of desktops and laptops, and on a relatively small number of tablets, that might seem an odd decision by Microsoft. But there’s a reason for it: Windows 8 works better on tablets than traditional PCs, and Microsoft wanted the best press possible.

The tablets provided to reviewers was made by Samsung, and was essentially identical to the one that Microsoft provided to developers and reviewers at the Microsoft BUILD conference in September. (Note: I reviewed the Consumer Preview of Windows 8 on my own hardware, a netbook, not on a Microsoft-provided tablet.)

There’s nothing wrong with Microsoft providing the hardware for reviews; it’s common practice in the industry, and as long as reviewers return the devices, there’s no real or apparent conflict of interest. Technology reviewers simply can’t afford to buy all the hardware and software they review, in the same way that those who review automobiles can’t afford to pay for all the cars they review. And the best of the reviewers, such as Ed Bott, clearly say in their reviews that they’re reviewing the operating system on Microsoft-provided hardware.

Microsoft could have provided reviewers with Windows 8 on a desktop, laptop, or netbook. But as I’ve written, Windows 8 has been designed for tablets rather than traditional computers, and on traditional computers it’s somewhat awkward for a number of reasons. One is that switching between the Metro and Desktop interfaces is confusing and at times Rube Goldberg-like. Another is that in Windows 8, the Desktop is less useful than in earlier versions of Windows, because the Start Menu and Start Button have been taken away.

Microsoft wanted to show off the best of the Consumer Preview for Windows 8, so it sent out tablets to select reviewers. The reviewers got the tablets before Windows 8 was made available for download. That meant that those people who had tablets ahead of time would be able to post the first reviews of the Consumer Preview of Windows 8 — and because Windows 8 is a natural fit for tablets, those reviews would likely be positive.

I’ve noticed that to be the case: Generally, people who reviewed Windows 8 on tablets liked it better than those who reviewed it on traditional PCs. (Microsoft also provided reviewers with a docking station, so they could attach a monitor and keyboard to the tablet. But I noticed that most early reviewers focused on tablet use, and made no mention of the docking station.)

Does any of this mean that Microsoft did anything wrong? No, it was a clever bit of smart marketing on the company’s part. But it does show that Microsoft clearly designed Windows 8 for tablets rather than traditional PCs, because otherwise it would have sent out traditional PCs to reviewers.

But designing the operating system primarily for tablets is a mistake; there’s a backlash against Windows 8 because of it. Microsoft needs to fix the way Windows 8 works on traditional computers, or it’s going to have a serious problem when the operating system launches.

Source:http://blogs.computerworld.com/19906/why_microsoft_provided_windows_8_tablets_not_pcs_to_reviewers

First Impressions of Windows 8

March 12th, 2012

A few days ago, I went ahead and installed the Consumer Preview of Windows 8. To say I’m impressed would be understating things a bit. As a Windows Phone 7 user for the last 16 or 17 months, I have become extremely familiar with the metro UI, and am overjoyed to see it coming to the desktop. The whole experience so far has actually inspired me to seriously consider buying a new touch-enabled PC (my current PC is over 5 years old at this point, so it’s probably time to update anyway).
What’s Right About Windows 8?

The new interface is inspired. It’s unique, and it’s easy to use. If you’re a long-time PC user, Windows 8 will require you to entirely rethink how you use your computer; but in a good way. No longer do you have a “Desktop” (well, you do, but it’s an app within Windows 8). Instead, you have a screen full of tiles that you click or tap to open applications. All of your applications (with the exception of apps that have to run inside of the Desktop app) open fullscreen with no chrome around them. Each native app has 3 different formats: Full screen; minimal snapped; and maximum snapped.

When an app is full screen, it takes up the entire screen (duh!). Nothing else appears on the screen at all. You can bring up context menus for various actions by right-clicking (I’m not sure what the multitouch gesture is). You can then “snap” an app to the left or right of your screen. When an app is first “snapped”, it appears in a minimal state. It only takes up about a quarter of your screen’s width, leaving the other three-quarters available for another app. Then, you can open a second app to show up in the larger portion of your screen.

Want to keep an eye on the weather while surfing the Web? Snap your weather app to the left or right, and open IE in the rest of your screen. Want to keep your email visible while you’re playing PinballFX? Snap the Mail app to your screen and open up the game you want to play. If you get an important email while you’re in the middle of your game, you can either handle the email message in it’s minimal state, or you can double click the divider bar to maximize the Mail app (snapping your other active app to the other side of your screen).
It’s a Drag

The Windows 8 interface may not be immediately usable to people that are entrenched in the classic concept of desktop management, but it is extremely simple to pick up once you play with it for a few minutes; and I imagine it is even more simple for people that have never used a computer before.

A few tips can help get you started, though:

1. Putting your mouse (or finger) in any corner of the screen will bring up some options for you.
The bottom left corner of the screen reveals the first of two basic app switchers. Whenever you’re inside of an app, clicking the bottom left corner of the screen will take you back to the Start screen. If you’re on the Start screen, clicking the bottom left corner will bring you back to your most recent app.
The top left corner of the screen will bring up the second of the basic app switchers. Clicking once will take you to the app you were using before your current app. If you don’t move your mouse away, each subsequent click will take you further back in the history of your apps.
If you place your mouse in either left corner of the screen, then slide your pointer up or down, you’ll reveal the new iteration of the “taskbar”. Each app you currently have open will be represented by a thumbnail showing the current state of that app. Clicking on any of those apps in the taskbar will switch to that app. Right-clicking on any of those apps will bring up three options: Snap Left; Snap Right (both of which will set the app in the minimal snapped position on the appropriate side of the screen); or Close (to terminate the app).
The top and bottom right corners of the screen bring up your main context menu. That main context menu contains five icons: Settings; Devices; Start; Share; and Search. When you hover over that bar, you’ll also get a floating bar that contains the current time and your WiFi status (I haven’t seen it display any other icons, but it’s entirely possible that it does). Settings will present you with a few settings you can adjust for the current app. Devices brings up a list of the related hardware items you have installed on your computer (mostly printers, as far as I can tell). Start will take you back to the Start screen (or, if you’re on the Start screen, it will take you back to the previous app you were using). Share brings up a list of apps that might allow you to share something in your current app. For instance, if you’re viewing a blog post, and you want to email it to a friend, you would click “Share”, then choose “Mail” and send it off to someone. I would imagine there will eventually be integration with various social networks, as well; but that’s not really there yet.
2. Dragging apps around can be useful.
If you place your mouse at the top of an active app, the cursor will turn into a little hand. You can then drag the app to the left or right to “snap” that app in place.
If you drag the app all the way to the bottom of the screen, that will terminate the app for you.
If you’re on the start screen, you can drag your tiles around the screen to reposition them.
3. Right-clicking brings up lots of options.
Each app has its own separate context menu that appears when you right-click somewhere inside. Even within the apps, if they’re snapped they’ll have different context menus than they will if you right-click while they’re maximized. Then, in most apps, right-clicking on a specific item within the app will bring up another context menu.
For instance, in IE, if you right-click in a general area, you’ll see thumbnails of your open tabs at the top of the screen, with the option to open a new tab, open a new “In Private” tab or “Clean Up Tabs”. At the bottom of that same screen, you’ll see the address bar with a few extra options. You can click the “Back” or “Forward” button or you can reload the page. You also have an icon that looks like a thumbtack, which allows you to “pin” the current Web page to your Start screen (making it possible to open the Web page as though it’s an app), and you have a wrench icon that currently brings up the options to “Find in Page” or “View on the desktop” (which opens the Desktop version of IE10, allowing you to browse the page in a more traditional manner).
When you’re in the Mail app while it’s “snapped”, you get a few options: Mark Read (if there are any unread messages selected), Mark Unread (if there are any read messages selected) and Sync (to actively re-sync the current account). If the app is maximized (or at full screen), you get a few more options. You then have the option to move selected messages, view your list of folders, switch to a different email account and more.
If you right-click on an app tile in the Start screen, you also get a few options. Which options you see depends entirely on which app is selected. Some apps allow you to expand the tile to double-width (or contract it to standard width if it’s already double-width), some allow you to view where the app (or shortcut) is stored on your hard drive, some allow you to uninstall the app, etc. All apps allow you to “unpin” them, so they no longer show on the Start screen. If you right-click on the Start screen itself (without selecting an app), you’ll get the option to view all of your apps (which then lets you pin the apps).

Lock It Up

Windows 8 implements a really nice lock screen, very similar to the one Windows Phone. When your display turns itself off and the lock screen activates, you get to see whatever photo you’ve set as your lock screen, along with the current time and a bunch of icons for your notifications. If you have new email messages, you’ll see an indicator telling you how many. If you have upcoming appointments on your calendar, you’ll see those. Within Windows 8 (unlike the current version of Windows Phone), you can easily change which apps show indicator icons on your lock screen.

The lock screen can display notifications from up to 7 different apps. In addition, you can set one app to show “detailed” information on the lock screen (by default, this is your calendar app).

One other major improvement (at least, I’ve not noticed this feature in previous versions of Windows; it’s entirely possible it’s there) is the fact that you can switch between user accounts even when the computer is locked under another account. I have my computer set up now so that my account is tied into my Live account, which requires my Live password in order to unlock the computer. I also have a separate user account set up for my wife, which doesn’t require a password. If I’ve been using the computer and let it lock automatically, she simply has to slide the lock screen up, then click the “Back” button when it asks for my password. She then gets the option to sign into her account or to try signing into my account.

While the computer’s not locked, if you’re on the Start screen, your username appears in the top right corner. You can click on that to logout of your account, or to switch to another account on the computer.
X Marks the Spot

Windows 8 (much like Windows Phone) includes integrated Xbox Live support. There are a handful of Xbox Live games already available (so you can earn achievements in games you play on your desktop), the Xbox Companion app is available, and there is an Xbox app. The Xbox app lets you view your friends’ statuses, view available Xbox games and even purchase downloadable content for your Xbox (Games on Demand, Xbox Arcade, etc.).
The Kitchen Sync

Just about everything in Windows 8 ties into your Windows Live (Hotmail, Zune, Xbox, etc.) account. All of your native settings can be synced with your Live account, allowing you to sync various settings between computers. You can change how items are synced on your computer by moving your pointer to the top or bottom right corner of the screen, clicking “Settings”, then clicking “More PC Settings”. Then, click the “Sync Your Settings” tab and make the changes you want to make.
How Do I…?

I’ve seen a lot of people ask questions about how to perform seemingly simple tasks. Here are the answers to the questions I’ve seen:

1. How do I shut down or restart the computer?
Place your cursor in the top or bottom right corner and click the “Settings” icon. One of the options in that Settings menu is “Power”. Clicking the “Power” option will let you put your computer to “Sleep”, Shut Down your computer or Restart your computer.
2. How do I close an app?
While a lot of people will never find it necessary to close an app, sometimes you just want to clean things up (or, maybe, especially while it’s still in preview mode, you’ll get an app that misbehaves and you need to close it out and try to start it again). There are two ways to close an app. One option is to place your cursor in the top or bottom left corner of the screen and slide your pointer up or down the side of the screen. Right-click on the app you want to close and choose “Close” from the context menu. Your other option is to place your cursor at the top of the app while it’s active, then click and drag it all the way down to the bottom of your screen. When you push it off the bottom of your screen, that will close the app.
3. How do I get rid of the Start screen and go back to a classic Windows interface?
Uninstall Windows 8 and install Windows 7 instead. Seriously, though, I’ve seen articles that claim there was a registry hack you could make to do this; but I have no idea why you would want to. If you want the classic Windows interface, stick with a classic version of Windows. If you want to use Windows 8, use Windows 8. In Windows 8, the classic Windows interface is simply an app inside of the operating system.

If It Works on Windows 7, It Works on Windows 8

The Desktop app within Windows 8 is basically Windows 7. All of the programs you have installed on Windows 7 should work just fine in Windows 8. As a test, I started by installing Office 2010 and Adobe CS4. Both suites installed just fine and work the same as they do on Windows 7.
What’s Missing From Windows 8?

As much as I would love to move to Windows 8 as my primary operating system right now, there are still a few apps and features missing that are keeping me from doing so. Some of these may be incidental to many people, but their absence is frustrating enough to me to stop me from switching.

1. No Twitter
There’s no Twitter integration, yet. There is no Twitter app (official or unofficial). With the way the Windows 8 interface is designed, and with as much as I rely on Twitter, I will need a Twitter app that’s capable of popping up some sort of notifications (or at least one that can be snapped properly).
2. No Zune Support
At the moment, the Music and Videos apps don’t support any DRM’d content, including content you purchased through the Zune marketplace. If this wasn’t bad enough, there is also no support built into Windows 8 to sync your Zune device or your Windows Phone. As far as I can tell, the only way to do this, so far, is to install the Zune client within the Desktop app.
3. My VPN Doesn’t Work
I have no idea where the issue is with this, but the Cisco AnyConnect VPN client doesn’t work for me on Windows 8. It’s entirely possible that this is a result of incorrect settings on my computer, but with Windows 8 still being so new, it’s tough to find support for the issue. I can’t access my servers at work without being on VPN, so this one is absolutely necessary for me to get working.

Other Frustrations

There are a handful of other issues that bother me about Windows 8, but I’d most likely switch over even if these weren’t fixed right away.

1. The Mail app doesn’t support custom IMAP/POP configurations. You can only set up Google, Hotmail or Exchange accounts.
2. The Mail app doesn’t have a conversation view (this was a really nice feature that was added to the Mango version of the Mail app on Windows Phone).
3. Many apps require a Live ID. My wife has no need for a Live account, so she’s never gotten one. Unfortunately, that means she can’t use the native Mail app, the native Calendar app, the native People app, or a host of other apps.
4. Games could potentially start crowding the Start screen really easily. On Windows Phone 7, all games are housed within the Xbox Live app, keeping them from crowding your list of general apps. Unfortunately, on Windows 8, each game gets its own tile on your Start screen. Sure, I could unpin the games, but then I’d probably never play them. I’d like to see them all organized together like they are on Windows Phone.
5. The Music app is virtually unusable for people with large collections. Right now, there are three different views in the Music app: Albums (a list of all of the albums you have on your computer), Artists (a list of each artist you have in your music collection) and Songs (a list of all of the songs you have in your collection). Ideally, I would click on the Artists tab, then select an artist to see a list of that artist’s albums. However, the way the Music app works now, when you click on an artist, you simply see a list of the 10 most recent songs you’ve played by that artist. In order to view a list of that artist’s albums, you have to click on the artist’s name, then click “Artist Details”, then scroll to the right to see the albums in your collection. If you scroll too far to the right, you’ll see a list of the albums that are available in the Marketplace from that artist.
The Music app also seems to be extremely slow; almost as though it’s downloading all of the information about my collection from the Internet, instead of loading it from some local location. Sometimes it can take minutes to load the list of the music in my collection.

Source:http://www.centernetworks.com/windows-8

Microsoft releases Robotics Developer Studio 4

March 12th, 2012

For all those interested to add 3D motion sensing to their robots, Microsoft has released its Robotics Developer Studio 4 (RDS). The free downloadable framework will help developers in robot programming and management.

“RDS 4, with support from the Kinect sensor, aims to make it easier for developers to build applications, including those directed at personal robotics and consumer scenarios, both in hardware and in simulation.”

“Since the Beta, our number one focus has been on improving the overall quality and stability of RDS 4. With your feedback, we’ve fixed a number of important issues in the product as well as made improvements to existing samples. Additionally, we updated RDS 4 to work with the release version of the Kinect for Windows SDK,” said Habib Heydarian from Microsoft Robotics.

The new software adds support for Microsoft .NET Framework 4.0, XNA 4.0, and Silverlight 4.0. The additional feature in RDS 4 is the availability of Kinect services that support the Kinect for Windows SDK capabilities shipped by Microsoft earlier this summer. Developers will be able to use the CCR/DSS programming model to access all of the Kinect for Windows SDK functionality.

“This unlocks a whole new world around Human Robot Interaction (HRI) with the use of skeleton tracking and speech. But we are also making available the raw sensor stream for your use in building additional capabilities such as navigation algorithms. As a matter of fact, we are shipping an obstacle avoidance service that fuses the Kinect input with the other proximity sensors to demonstrate how the sensor array can be used to intelligently perform directional based navigation,” Stathis Papaefstathiou, general manager, Microsoft Robotics explained in a blog post.

Microsoft has released a Kinect-based hardware reference platform design specification for third-party robotic hardware vendors. Parallax, Inc has already manufactured a hardware kit based on the hardware kit for a robot named ‘Eddie’, which is available for preorder.

In addition, the software also comes with a simulation to allow users to develop applications in the simulator before running them on a physical robot. “With RDS 4 simulation tools, you don’t need physical hardware to develop a Kinect-based robot!”

Source:http://www.eetindia.co.in/ART_8800662935_1800007_NT_73634d44.HTM

Microsoft in dispute with OnLive over Windows desktop-on-iPad licensing

March 9th, 2012

Now we know why Microsoft officials refused to discuss whether OnLive — the company offering iPad and Android tablet users a hosted Windows desktop app — was in violation of Microsoft licensing terms.

It seems Microsoft believes they are.

“We are actively engaged with OnLive with the hope of bringing them into a properly licensed scenario, and we are committed to seeing this issue is resolved,” said Joe Matz, Corporate Vice President of Worldwide Licensing and Pricing at Microsoft, in a March 8 blog post.

From today’s post, it seems it took a note from Gartner regarding licensing of OnLive Desktop for Microsoft to finally go public on the question of whether or not what OnLive is doing is legal.

OnLive offers an app called OnLive Desktop, which allows iPad and Android tablet users to run full Office and Windows 7 on their tablets, even if they haven’t purchased either product.

In today’s post, Microsoft’s Matz noted that Microsoft’s licensing agreements allow the following:

“* Customers that want to work with partners to have them host Windows 7 in a Virtual Desktop Infrastructure solution on their behalf, can do so when the customer provides the partner licenses through the customer’s own agreements with Microsoft. The hosting hardware must be dedicated to, and for the benefit of the customer, and may not be shared by or with any other customers of that partner.

“* Microsoft partners who host under the Services Provider License Agreement (“SPLA”) may bring some desktop-like functionality as a service by using Windows Server and Remote Desktop Services. Under this solution, the partner is free to offer this service to any customer they choose, whether or not they have a direct licensing agreement with Microsoft. However, it is important to note that SPLA does not support delivery of Windows 7 as a hosted client or provide the ability to access Office as a service through Windows 7. Office may only be provided as a service if it is hosted on Windows Server and Remote Desktop Services.”

Virtualization expert Brian Madden recently questioned via his blog why Microsoft wouldn’t disclose how OnLive was legally able to provide hosted Windows, given Microsoft’s licensing terms and conditions. In a March 1 post, Madden said:

“For those who haven’t seen it, OnLive offers a full remote Windows 7 VDI desktop direct to end user consumers, and the users don’t have to buy VDA licenses. Based on everything we know about Microsoft licensing, this should be in clear violation of Microsoft’s policies. (And many of the other DaaS (Desktop as a Service) providers are crying foul, noting that it’s hard for them to compete against a company who apparently doesn’t have to license Microsoft products like the rest of the world does.)”

I’ve put an inquiry in with OnLive for their side of the story. If and when they respond, I will update this post.

Source:http://www.zdnet.com/blog/microsoft/microsoft-in-dispute-with-onlive-over-windows-desktop-on-ipad-licensing/12144

Microsoft loosens Windows Phone hardware requirements, cheaper phones coming

March 9th, 2012

Microsoft recently announced that it’s easing its hardware restrictions for Windows Phone devices, allowing phone makers to load Windows Phone 7 software on devices with slower processors and less memory.

That could get Windows Phone software into more people’s hands… but some apps designed for more powerful phones may not run properly on the new cheaper handsets such as the upcoming Nokia Lumia 610 and ZTE Orbit.

Nokia Lumia 610

These new phones may have as little as 256MB of RAM and use Qualcomm 7×27 processors.

This week Microsoft released some guidelines for app developers to make sure that their software works well on these devices.

In a nutshell, you don’t want your app to use more than 90MB of memory on a device that has just 256MB. Microsoft also recommends adding a splash screen which will display when an app is loading, as it offsets some of the work to the core operating system and doesn’t require the app to draw anything on the screen until it’s already up and running.

While Microsoft is letting app developers know what they can do to optimize software to run on phones with less memory, there’s always a chance that some developers may not make any changes at all — which means that some apps that run well on current phones won’t run properly (or possibly at all) on the Lumia 610 and similar devices.

The folks at LiveSide also spotted some changes at the Windows Phone How-to website which shows some of the other features that will be missing from the new, cheaper phones, including:

Support for video podcasts
Ability to manage podcast subscriptions
Local Scout
Fast App Switching
Automatic photo uploads to SkyDrive
HD video playback
Background agents

In other words, if you really want a Windows Phone device you should probably spend a few bucks on a more capable device. On the other hand, if you’re just looking for a cheap smartphone, there are some older Android handsets that are practically free when you sign up for a new contract.

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