Showing posts with label Microsoft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Microsoft. Show all posts

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Microsoft Says Windows 7 SP1 will Contain Minor Updates

There is lot of buzz about the release date of Windows 7 Service Pack1(SP1) will be released, wait! Microsoft not jumping to tell about Windows 7 SP1 release date,but confirms that  SP1 will contain only minor updates to current version we are using, Windows 7 build 7600.

According to Microsoft

For Windows 7,SP1 includes minor updates.These minor updates include

  • updates that are delivered through Windows update for Windows 7 users.
  • An updated Remote Desktop client will be delivered which takes the advantage of RemoteFX introduced in the server-side with SP1 for Windows 2008 Server R2.

Microsoft confirms that after release of SP1 of Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2, the SP1 will be delivered through Windows Update and also will be available as download from Microsoft Download Center as well.

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Thursday, February 18, 2010

Microsoft, HP, Dell, Sony, and Acer Ready Tablets

Computer makers are developing strategies and readying devices to compete with Apple's iPad, according to a WSJ report.

In the next few weeks, executives from Hewlett-Packard will meet to tweak prices and features on an upcoming tablet dubbed the Slate. It will be similar to the iPad in size and features but cost less.

After doing consumer research in 2008 that showed customers would buy Web-surfing gadgets with a five-inch screen, Dell began developing the Mini-5 which will go to market this year running Google Android.

Mike Abary, VP of Sony's Vaio PC division said, "For us, the iPad launch is a benchmark." Sony already sells touch-screen e-book readers that have limited Internet access and is considering what new devices to develop to compete with the iPad.

Acer is said to be developing products midway in size between a smart phone and a laptop, including an e-reader expected to release this year. Calling it a "tweener category that we're all trying to figure out", the company plans to introduce more iPad like devices in the future.

Microsoft has a group of designers working in a company incubation laboratory in Seattle called Alchemy Ventures. Recently their work on a two-screen tablet, code-named Courier, was leaked online.

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Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Microsoft, Nokia Team to Put Office Apps on Mobile Phones

http://www.techgadgets.in/images/microsoft-and-nokia-logo.jpg

Microsoft and Nokia are working together to put a version of Microsoft's Office productivity applications on Nokia handsets, the companies said Wednesday.

nokiaMicrosoft Business Division President Stephen Elop and Nokia Executive Vice President for Devices Kai Oistamo unveiled the alliance -- which should give Microsoft leverage against Google and others that are attacking its Office business with free or low-priced, Web-based productivity applications -- in a teleconference.

Under the terms of the agreement, the two companies will begin working together immediately to design, develop and market productivity applications for mobile professionals, bringing an application called Microsoft Office Mobile to Nokia's Symbian devices, they said in a press statement. They will also do the same for other Microsoft communications, collaboration and device-management software.

The applications will be available first on Nokia's Eseries phones, which are optimized for the business market, but eventually will extend to other Nokia handsets. Microsoft and Nokia also will jointly market the applications to business customers and carriers, they said.

Competitors Cooperate

microsoftThe Microsoft-Nokia deal brings two competitors together. Microsoft's Windows Mobile platform for handsets competes with Symbian, the OS for most Nokia phones. However, Windows Mobile has never really found solid footing in the mobile market, while Nokia's Symbian is still the market share leader for midrange handsets, said Directions on Microsoft analyst Matt Rosoff.

Putting Office applications on Nokia handsets is a savvy business move for Microsoft, he said, and will also help both companies compete against their mutual rivals Apple and Research in Motion, which have made life difficult for both companies in the mobile market. Apple's iPhone remains primarily a consumer phenomenon, while Research in Motion's Blackberry OS is extremely popular with business users.

Elop and Oistamo said that the partnership is based on Microsoft's and Nokia's common goal to make mobile workers more effective as mobile devices become more evolved and powerful. "This partnership was founded with the customer in mind and understanding that mobile workers of the future will need to get more out of their mobile phones," Oistamo said.

"This whole relationship is about expanding ... from a business-productivity perspective," Elop said. "We need to take the broad productivity experiences and put them in the hands of as many people as possible."

The deal does not mean that Microsoft is conceding to Nokia's Symbian as the dominant OS for smartphones, Elop said. Oistamo said that Nokia has no plans to offer Windows Mobile on its own handsets.

Both said the two companies will remain fierce mobile competitors even as they collaborate to bring Office to more mobile workers. Microsoft already offers Office Mobile on Windows Mobile handsets and plans to put a new version of the application on mobile phones next year.

"We both believe strongly in our respective strategies but we also believe in our new alliance," Elop said.

App Rollout Plans

The first application to appear on Nokia phones will be Microsoft Office Communicator, the company's instant messaging and Web presence client for business users, Oistamo said. It connects to the enterprise Office Communications Server. This will happen sometime next year, he said, with other applications to follow.

Next to its Windows OS business, Microsoft's Office business is the primary source of the company's revenue. However, its Office consumer business has been declining, showing that pressure from Google and other less expensive productivity applications is beginning to take its toll at the low end.

To counter this slide, Microsoft also has been working on its own Web-based version of Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote called Office Web Apps. That offering will be available on PCs through a browser at the same time it releases the next version of Office 2010 in the first half of next year. Office Web Apps is scheduled to be in a technical preview this month.


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