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Sunday, April 30, 2006

Having a best friend

Guess what? Yesterday I realized that I have the best friend I had in my life time (22 years). She is not an ordinary person, she is just typical! yes my best friend is a sadeqa sadooqa not a sadeeq sadooq, hehe

We do allot of stuff together, we went to Safeway Shmesani pretending that we are married couples, filled a cart with supplies for a full month, we went over bread, sugar, and even dippers! Once we went to ChilliHouse and recorded a video of how each of us eats french fries and burgers. Ah and yesterday we bought a large bucket of vanilla and strawberry ice cream from 7/11 and sat down on the side walk and finished it! In addition we were competing on whom will get the largest quantity in his /her spoon.

We used to play chess during my university days on daily basis, we have the same group of friends. We hate the same people and we never disagree on anything, further more we tend to say or comment on stuff together at the same time!

Every minute and second I spend with her is quality time for me, it's even better than reading BizTalk blogs (I know I'm a total geek)

Nothing much to say now beside I have a titanic number of emails to reply on =S

09:45 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this

Saturday, April 29, 2006

Windows Vista sessions and demos

You might be wondering what’s in it for you, when your organization should start evaluating Windows Vista and when you should set up a pilot. This session will give you an introduction and overview of the features that Windows Vista will offer. You will get a clear picture where the big changes are and what direction Windows client operating system is taking.

So you did not find time to install a Beta yet? You are wondering what all the talk about the new User Experience is? How working with Windows Vista will differ from using XP today? Tony Krijnen demonstrates Vista key features from a User perspective.

Windows Vista Demo Part 1, 36 minutes
Windows Vista Demo Part 2, 24 minutes 

08:25 Posted in WinFX | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: microsoft

Friday, April 28, 2006

Computer Geek or Serial Killer?

Can you tell a computer programmer from a serial killer?
It's harder than you think. This quiz shows pictures of 10
different men and your job is to determine if they designed
computer programs or killed people.

http://www.malevole.com/mv/misc/killerquiz

23:49 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this

Final Names for Windows Vista Performance Features

Windows PC Accelerators is the new term that encompasses Windows Vista’s new performance-enhancing technologies. The Windows PC Accelerators are:
  • Windows® SuperFetch™
  • Windows® ReadyBoost™ (formerly code-named “EMD”)
  • Windows® ReadyDrive™ (formerly code-named “Piton”)

Windows SuperFetch™ is a memory management innovation in Windows Vista that helps make your PC consistently responsive by tracking what applications are used most on a given machine and intelligently preloading these applications into memory.

Windows ReadyBoost™ (formerly code-named “EMD”) makes PCs running genuine Windows Vista more responsive by using flash memory on a USB drive, SD Card, Compact Flash, or other memory form factor to boost system performance.

Example: Windows ReadyBoost™ is an easy way to make my computer feel faster. I just put in a USB key and follow the instructions on the screen.

Windows ReadyDrive™ (formerly code-named “Piton”) enables Windows Vista PCs equipped with a hybrid hard drive to boot up faster, resume from hibernate in less time, and preserve battery power. Hybrid hard drives are a new type of hard disk that integrates non-volatile flash memory with a traditional hard drive.

Source: http://www.neowin.net/index.php?act=view&id=32740

04:05 Posted in WinFX | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: microsoft

Thursday, April 27, 2006

Mixed feelings!

You know when people say that sometimes if though you are very good in something, still bad things will happen. Yesterday's Momentom session went bad.. It was not one of my cool funny enjoyable sessions. maybe its the topic, maybe it is the audience, or maybe its just Lebanon! Let's discard the Lebanon thing for the mean time for the fact I delivered 2 sessions in the Office Readiness event and 1 Community Night for Lebdev and they were extra successful. Yesterday's session was boring I totally agree, but with whom? I mean I found it boring but the session got an average 8/10 from attendees feedback.. That is really weird.

Let's go back now to the fact that why I blamed Lebanon in the first place. The night before Momentom I had already washed my clothes at a friends place so I just needed to press them, but life is not easy, it's like when you decide to press your clothes you are willing sin! Guess what?!! the iron was not working properly and I burnt my first shirt! ouch =( hala2 so I told him that we have press them somewhere else, say his parents house for example and he agreed. It was 12:30am by then, we started the car and cruised, tak tak taaaaaaak! they care stopped working, we ran out of gas! yields we parked the car and started walking looking for a gas station, finaly we found one, got some fuel and back to the care and to Sacha's parent's house, now the sarcasim goes, guess where they put the iron, somewhere near there bed. buy the it was almost 2:00am so we won't risk waking them up, 3eeeb sa7? Another factor was bugging us too, hala2 regardless ino kan 3andi event the next day, o ino I don't have clothes to wear, hunger was killing me. So we went to a place called "Breakfast to Breakfast" in Saseeen Yard and got some food and back to his place were I placed a peace of wet cloth on my shirts started pressing, it was 3:00am. finally finished pressing at 3:30am and went back to the hotel at 4:00am. toke a shower and shaved!! now it's 5:00am and I'm dead asleep. and rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrring its my alarm clock, it was 7:00am, now with 2 hours sleep and a lousy night like that I realized ino It cant go anyworse, can it?

Thank god it didn't!

I'll post couple of videos I recorded during Momentum on my blog soon. =)

peace and happiness!

PS: wondering about the above spelling mistakes and crazy language, fact: this is how lebanise speak english!!


 

10:25 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: microsoft

Sunday, April 23, 2006

Windows Live Messenger 8.0.0683.00



This new build, 8.0.0683.00_Branches contains the new UI, new icons, and now uses the Windows Live ID service.

With Windows Live Messenger you can chat online via text, voice or even video conversation - in real time - with your friends, family or colleagues. It's faster than e-mail, a great choice for conversations and the perfect alternative when you can't be there in person.

Updates:
- The welcome interface changes to its first version.
- Main content screen.
- The chat window also is totaly re-designed.


Download!

16:30 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: microsoft

Saturday, April 22, 2006

Will Vista Be the Last Operating System Microsoft Produces?

I don’t think Microsoft will ship another Operating System after Vista launches. I believe that a combination of technical difficulties and changing markets will prevent it from creating a product that is relevant in the market. Consider this, if the latest shipping dates are to be believed, it will have taken Microsoft over six years to get Windows Vista out the door and to its consumers. And based on past events, it is safe to assume that Vista will require at least one service pack before it is truly ready for use. Of course, factoring in the normal Microsoft delays for producing patches, such a comprehensive service pack will probably take another year before it can be released to users. That would mean that it will have taken Microsoft 7+ years to make a usable operating system.

Now consider how long it could take Microsoft to produce Vista’s successor. If the added complexity of this new OS increases the development time by only 25% (not an unreasonable figure) of what it took to make Vista, then it will have been in development for almost 8 years. That means if Vista comes out in 2007, it won’t be replaced until 2015. To put that into perspective, if Apple continues on with its release cycle of OS X (and factoring in increases in development time) they could, counting Leopard, release 4 to 5 new operating systems by the time Microsoft releases one.

But keeping up with Apple won’t be Microsoft’s biggest concern. What will prevent Microsoft from releasing another OS is the changing market. For Vista’s successor to have a hope of selling, the company has to assume that no fundamental shifts in technology will occur for almost a decade! That seems, overly optimistic at best. With Google threatening to release a web-based OS, and Apple potentially using virtualization to run all Windows applications, Microsoft might find that by the time it can cobble something together, it no longer has a market interested in its product.

Microsoft will find itself in this position (or one like it) all too soon, and it has no one but itself to blame. Here are the two biggest factors that are slowly killing Microsoft from within.

Code base
The amount of code that makes up Windows has simply become too large to work with. Now, you can blame this on anything you want (backwards compatibiliy would be high on my list), but ultimately the cause doesn’t matter. What matters is that building new features has become impossible, and debugging this mess has become impossible + 1. This was most clearly witnessed when Bill Gates got up onstage and informed his eager audience that the codebase for Vista had become so large and tangled that they simply had to throw it all away and start over from a point they knew was stable. Guess what? That problem isn’t going to go away by throwing another service pack at it. With each version of Windows released the amount of code grows and the strain gets greater. However, the amount of code isn’t the only problem here. The structure of the OS itself is fundamentally flawed. There are too many antiquated ideas (drive letters, the registry, etc.) and constraining bounds (NTFS) to allow for anymore growth. A drastic rewrite is the only way to solve this problem. The only real question Microsoft needs to ask is how much should we rewrite?

Management
The last few years has seen a flurry of restructuring at Microsoft. Key people have left (most noticably for Google) and even loyal employees who still believe the hype have begun to criticize management and air their grievances on personal blogs. The leadership of Microsoft has failed miserably and Vista is only the beginning in what looks to be an impressive series of embarrassments. It is time for a change. If Microsoft still hopes to be in the OS market a decade from now then those changes can’t come soon enough.

http://www.applematters.com/index.php/section/comments/wi...

 

13:15 Posted in WinFX | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: microsoft

Friday, April 14, 2006

Forcing Glass on Non-WDDM Compatible Cards

WARNING: This tweak may cause a blue screen loop or constant flicker depending on your video card. Use with extreme caution.

  • From the Start menu, click All Programs and then expand Accessories.
    Right click on “Command Prompt” and click “Run as Administrator”.
  • Click on “Allow” from the Windows Security dialog.
  • In the Command Prompt window, type “regedit” (without the quotes) and press Enter.
  • Navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareMicrosoftWindowsDWM (if this key doesn’t exist, create it)
  • Create a new DWORD (32-bit value) of UseMachineCheck, and set its value to 0.

06:15 Posted in WinFX | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: microsoft

Sunday, April 09, 2006

Microsoft continues to build IP licensing portfolio

In a continued effort to derive revenue from licensing patented technology, Microsoft plans to let third parties license intellectual property it developed for its own mouse products.

Microsoft will open up licensing for three technologies - Tilt Wheel, U2 and Magnifier, said David Kaefer, a director of business development for Microsoft. It marks the first time the company is licensing patents for hardware technology, he said.

Tilt Wheel is mouse technology that allows a user to scroll not only up and down but also horizontally with a mouse's flywheel. U2 allows a mouse or other peripheral device be immediately recognized by a computer's port even if the port it is using is not native to the device. For example, if a USB device has to use a PS/2 port by using an adapter, the technology will allow the peripheral to work seamlessly without needing any extra software on the hardware device to which it is attached. Magnifier allows a cursor on a screen controlled by a mouse to immediately magnify parts of the screen with one click.

Tilt Wheel and U2 will be licensed to users for 30 cents and 35 cents a unit, respectively. Microsoft has not decided on the pricing for Magnifier yet, but it will likely be similar to that of Tilt Wheel and U2, Kaefer said.

Microsoft has offered mice that include Tilt Wheel and Magnifier for only about a year, he said. U2 has been around longer than that and already other companies have built similar competing technologies into their products.

Microsoft thought it was the right time to begin licensing all three technologies before other companies build their own to compete with them, he said. In this way, the company can begin making money every time another vendor sells hardware using its patented technology.

Licensing patented technology to third parties is a fairly new practice for Microsoft. In 2003, the company hired Marshall Phelps, the mastermind behind IBM's patent-licensing program, to lead its Intellectual Property Licensing Group, hoping to follow IBM's success in making money from charging third parties to use technology it has patented.

IBM has earned the most patents of any company worldwide for 13 years running. According to its 2005 financial statement, the company that year earned nearly $367 million in royalty-based licensing fees and $236 million in sales and other transfers of intellectual property.

Rob Enderle, principal analyst for the Enderle Group, said Microsoft is interested in seeing its own patent-licensing business grow not only to make more money, but also to have a hand in directing future uses for products that use its intellectual property.

"Microsoft has learned over time that license revenue goes straight to the bottom line and has virtually no risk associated with it," he said. "More importantly, if what you license is broadly used, it gives you substantial say on the direction of future offerings that use your stuff."

13:05 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: microsoft

Thursday, April 06, 2006

Apple puts Windows XP on the Mac

Apple Wednesday announced it has released beta software that lets Mac users run Microsoft's Windows XP operating systems on Intel-based Macintosh computers.

Called Boot Camp, the software creates a hard drive partition for Windows XP and lets users choose between the two operating systems at start-up time. It's available now as a free trial beta that works only for a limited time, and will be included as a feature of the next major Mac OS release, Leopard, Apple said.

The move comes a few months after Apple introduced its first computers based on Intel's x86-type processors. The company has expressed little enthusiasm in the past for running Windows on its Macs -- and even now doesn't sound entirely happy about it.

"Apple has no desire or plan to sell or support Windows, but many customers have expressed their interest to run Windows on Apple's superior hardware now that we use Intel processors," Phil Schiller, Apple's senior vice president of worldwide product marketing, said in a statement.

The company thinks Boot Camp will make its Macs more appealing to Windows PC users who might be considering a switch, he said.

Some Apple users had been keen to run Windows ever since the company said it would switch to Intel processors. Only a few weeks ago some hackers announced they had managed to get Windows XP running on Apple's machines.

The 83M-byte download is available here. To use it customers need the latest Mac OS X Tiger v10.4.6 release, an Intel-based Mac, 10G bytes of free hard disk space, a blank CD and a "bona fide" installation disc for Microsoft Windows XP, Service Pack 2, Home or Professional edition.

Boot Camp burns a CD with all the required Mac-specific drivers for Windows. It also walks users through creating a partition on the hard drive and installs a Startup Disk control panel for Windows. Users then hold down the "option" key at start-up to choose between the two operating systems, and the machine runs Windows "completely natively," Apple said.

The company couldn't resist a few digs at Microsoft on its Boot Camp Web site. "Word to the Wise," it said: "Windows running on a Mac is like Windows running on a PC. That means it?ll be subject to the same attacks that plague the Windows world. So be sure to keep it updated with the latest Microsoft Windows security fixes."

Some Mac features won't work because of hardware incompatibilities, Apple said, including its remote control, wireless keyboard and mouse and the USB modem.

Source: http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,125322-page,1-c,macnote...

14:25 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: microsoft

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