February 4, 2009

Vista gets a halo effect from Windows 7

February 2nd, 2009

Posted by Ed Bott

Conventional wisdom says corporations have completely rejected Windows Vista. But I’m seeing evidence lately that Vista’s image is improving with age. A new report issued today by Benjamin Gray and his colleagues at Forrester Research confirms that Vista is getting a new lease on life in the enterprise.  Microsoft’s well-executed development of Windows 7 might be a big part of the reason.

Forrester surveyed 962 IT decision-makers at North American and European companies with more than 1000 seats (more than a quarter of the survey respondents represent organizations of 20,000 employees or more) and found that Vista is now installed on just under 10% of all PCs within enterprises. One-third of all respondents have already begun Vista deployments, and another 26% have plans to begin deploying Vista this year or next. Another 15% are going to skip Vista and go straight to Windows 7.

In other words, the supposedly despised Vista is about to do what its predecessors did and begin significant adoption after a few years of apparent snubbing. That’s what happened to XP, which had less than 10% total market share (corporate and consumer) after a year on the market and didn’t hit the 50% mark until four years into its lifecycle. Based on Forrester’s numbers, I would expect Vista to approach 50% share by the end of 2010, with IT pros watching Windows 7 to see whether its performance in the field justifies the great early reviews .

I remember reading surveys of IT pros about their intended adoption rates back in 2006 before Vista shipped. Most of those numbers predicted that Vista would be at least modest success for Microsoft. A year later, after Vista’s troubled launch and a tidal wave of bad publicity and devastating Apple ads, the numbers had swung to extreme pessimism.

And now, two years into Vista’s life, those opinions have swung back to a fairly normal adoption curve. Why? The number one reason is Service Pack 1, which made a big difference for Vista. The overwhelming generic cialis prices consensus among reviewers was that it fixed a long list of bugs, including some deployment blockers, and improved performance noticeably. SP2 is just around the corner, and anyone who’s doing their own testing instead of believing what they read on Slashdot has had plenty of time to decide whether it’s a smooth stable update (it is).

Vista is part of the same family as Windows Server 2008 and Windows 7, both of which have earned almost universal rave reviews. Server 2008 is built on the same code base as Vista SP1, which adds credence to the idea that Vista wasn’t fatally flawed, only badly botched at launch.

Another factor in Vista’s favor is that the same management team that is doing so well with Windows 7 is also in charge of keeping Vista running. By hitting a steady series of public milestones with Windows 7, Windows boss Steven Sinofsky is restoring corporate confidence in Microsoft’s ability to ship software on a reliable schedule with predictable quality. That confidence makes it easier for IT pros to conclude that the early troubles with Vista were a temporary glitch and not a sign of things to come.

Ironically, deploying Vista SP2 is the most conservative option for Windows shops. XP is about to enter the extended support phase (on April 14, 2009). By contrast, Vista has more than three years left in mainstream support, which runs until at least April 10, 2012. The same instincts that make an IT pro conservative enough to stick with XP for more than seven years will also prevent him from adopting Windows 7 too quickly, no matter how glowing its reviews. Caution dictates waiting at least one year or one service pack, whichever comes later. All of which makes the currently supported, well-documented Vista SP2 the surprisingly safe choice.

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XP, Vista, Win 7: The brewing of a perfect storm

February 2nd, 2009

Posted by Mary Jo Foley

Whenever Microsoft releases a new version of Windows, there’s always some period of uncertainty when customers face the choice of moving to the current release or waiting for the new product. This year,  however, that transition period is especially uneasy.

Windows 7 is — by all accounts (except from the Microsoft honchos) — due out later this year and is looking faster, smaller and more stable than any Windows release out there. Windows Vista is here, but not a user favorite (to put it mildly). And eight-year-old Windows XP is still the dominant version of Windows out there.

So what’s a Windows user to do? Follow Microsoft’s corporate guidance and upgrade to Vista now in preparation for 7? Hang on a bit longer with XP? Try mixing and matching the three in your IT shop?

Microsoft’s Windows brass have been reticent to provide a detailed answer to the question “What should my desktop strategy be?” But Mike Fiorina, a Microsoft account tech specialist based in New England, grabbed the Windows-upgrade-confusion bull by the horns in a blog post this past weekend.

Fiorina explained that a perfect storm is brewing: XP SP2 mainstream support is set to end in July, 2010 April 2009 (and all support for it by July 2010).  XP SP3 extended support isn’t retiring until April 2014, which, Fiorina said, “gives XP environments some breathing room, but not necessarily as much as you might think.”

Even though Vista SP1 has been out for a year (and Vista SP2 is expected some time in the next few months), Vista still is suffering from both real and imagined limitations, Fiorina admitted. From his January 30 post:

“The one recurring theme in discussions with corporate customers is that (Vista) application compatibility is a problem. Applications may not run in Vista, or maybe they can, but it’s not supported by the vendor. Remediation will be costly and time consuming. We get it. Many of the acquisitions and investments we’ve made in the past few years are targeting that problem specifically (Application Virtualization – SoftGrid, Enterprise Desktop Virtualization – Kidaro, etc.)”

Fiorina noted that the generally positive beta reviews of Windows 7 has meant “we’re hearing from a lot of folks ‘Why should I upgrade to Vista when Windows 7 is right around the corner?’” His answer:

“If we look at it from the perspective of an enterprise with fairly unaggressive adoption cycles, then you’ll see that you may be putting yourself in an untenable situation a few years down the road.”

Untenable? Fiorina continued his line of reasoning with the caveat, “for the sake of argument, make these assumptions”:

  • “Company A doesn’t deploy new operating systems or major applications until Service Pack 1 (or a similar bug-fix milestone) has been provided by the vendor
  • Company A probably won’t even begin testing their application footprint against the new OS until said SP1 is available
  • Windows 7 ships in the fourth quarter of 2009
  • Service generic cialis overnight Pack 1 for Windows 7 would likely not be final until the first half of 2011, if not later (going by our historical timelines for SP1 releases)
  • So, Company A would begin testing migration from Windows XP to Windows 7 SP1 in 2011 sometime. How long would it take to perform adequate testing of your application suite to certify\remediate it for Windows 7? For most, this is at least a 6 to 12 month process…so, now we’re in mid-2012.  At that point, you’re ready to start building an image (hopefully using the MDT to make your lives easier).  Maybe the image is ready to go in early 2013. Then you have a little over a year to get it out company-wide until Windows XP hits end-of-life. Is that enough time?  Perhaps…but is it worth backing yourself into a corner?”

Sure, you could argue that Fiorina is a sales guy and is looking for any way possible to chalk up a few more Vista sales while Windows 7 is gaining steam. But, to me, his post highlights what’s likely to be one of the biggest IT questions in 2009: On which version of Windows should I standardize as my corporate desktop?

Corporate users: What’s your thinking here? Has your first taste of Windows 7 led you to change your deployment plans?

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February 3, 2009

Hot Tech Toys – CES 2009 Recap

Tech Tips 203

Hot Tech Toys – CES 2009 Recap

By Eugenia Loli-Queru – Sunday, February 1, 2009

One more year, one more CES trade show in Las Vegas. Except one particular announcement that made the rounds in the tech blogs, this year most announcements were lower key than in the past, possibly mirroring the shoe-string budget in R&D this past year.

The biggest announcement of them all was Palm's Pre smartphone. Based on Linux, this new web-enabled Javascript-based platform is coming to challenge the iPhone and Android. The phone was designed by one of the original designers of the iPhone. Its biggest new feature is Synergy, which allows messaging to work transparently with many services, e.g. Facebook, generic cialis overnight delivery Gmail, IM, SMS, etc. It also supports application multi-tasking, gestures, wireless charging, and it sports a hardware keyboard. Sprint will be the first carrier to sell the phone this Spring.

Speaking of wireless charging, Powerbeam is set to revolutionize "the mode of power transmission by integrating optical technology to produce safe, reliable and abundant wireless power." No more cables everywhere in the house and a computer room that's a walking hazard! FlatWire is another semi-wireless power concept, that allows you to paint a line from your power source to a device rather than use real cables!

Sony announced the Vaio P "pocket" netbook with an ultra-wide high-resolution screen. The laptop is expected to sell at over $1000, making it less competitive than most netbooks on the market. Many other manufacturers, mostly from Asia, have shown off their take on the new trend of netbooks and mini PCs, although few have made innovations. DELL also announced their new laptops, the Mini 10 netbook — a model that sits in the range between their Mini 9 and Mini 12— and their new brand for laptops, the super-secret Adamo. The Adamo brand uses brushed metal and glass and it's one of the few DELL laptops to have keyboard illumination. Dell did not offer many details about these products, as they are not ready yet for consumption. Dell was not shy about its XPS Dragon System though, its first under $1000 gaming PC, and Wasabi, its first portable inkless printer.

In the meantime, Microsoft announced their first public beta of their next generation operating system, Windows 7. The OS is hailed by some as one of the best OSes Microsoft has ever produced, and it's hoped to quickly take over the failed (for some) Vista. Speed and stability are reportedly better than Vista's. According to testers, the new taskbar of Windows 7 seems to be its best new user-visible feature. The OS is expected to be released before the end of the year.

In the past year LCD TV prices have reached the bottom helping the technology to outsell plasmas in sales, even if its technical aspects are lacking in comparison. Last year at CES, we were led to believe that Quad-HD and OLED technologies are in our near future, but this year we had almost no such TV on display, except a few prototypes. Instead, the TV manufacturers are trying to take the easier way out, by offering TVs that can refresh at 200 or 240 Hz — a feature that is not all that interesting — and super-slim LCDs. Plasma fought back through Panasonic with new models that use less power. NVidia demonstrated a 3D display that brings TV picture to life, but these TVs are still not consumer-ready and are currently best only with games rather than movies. The 3D aspect seems to be the next big step on Hollywood movies, as more and more films are shot using the Real-3D technology.  Even some TV shows are getting on the 3D bandwagon with NBC’S Chuck returning on Feb. 2nd with a 3D episode.

In the camcorder world, JVC, Sony, Panasonic and Canon had new consumer camcorder models announced, with Canon stealing the thunder again with their HF-S series. Their HF-S10 and HF-S100 models out-spec any other consumer camcorder in the market with enough manual controls, brand new 8 megapixel sensor design, 24p support and more. Until now, the Canon HV series were the de facto power in the serious videography circles at consumer prices, but for most, the HF-S series will replace them. The HF-S series are expected to cost between $1300 and $1500. Canon also refreshed their well-sold HV series with the HV40 model that adds native 24p recording on tape.

Other interesting products were ASUS' Eee Keyboard PC (an all-in-one PC inside a keyboard), the ASUS AIRO laptop with its amazing sliding keyboard, LG's cellphone in a wrist watch, the Motorola Aura phone with its unique circular design, USB 3.0 (to be ready in 2010), Samsung's multi-touch TV, the Linux-based Sony Cyber-Shot DSC-G3 digicam with WiFi support, the Wrap 920AV video glasses that are see-through and allow you to both watch video and see in front of you, the Psyko 5.1 headphones that reproduce 3-D surround sound, while everything else fell into the realm of "normal".

Hopefully, next year the world economy rebounds, and produces some more revolutionary products!

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Essential Gear for the Digital Nomad

TechTip 202

Essential Gear for the Digital Nomad

By Scott Nesbitt – Sunday, January 25, 2009

More and more people are working away from the office or home office. And digital nomads are everywhere. They're traveling and hammering their keyboards in an airport or a hotel. Or, they're closer to home at a coffee shop, a coworking space, or a library.

You can lead that kind of roaming, working lifestyle and carry with you just about everything you need to be productive. If you're a seasoned digital nomad or an aspiring one, here are a few of the things that you can use to make your portable computing easier and more complete.

Note
: In case you're wondering, this TechTip was written over two days in one of my favorite coffee shops that offers wireless, and at a local public library.

Laptops

The laptop computer is the preferred tool of the digital nomad. Back in the early 1990s, the average laptop had only a fraction of the grunt of a desktop computer. But not any more. Whether you're using a MacBook, a laptop running Windows, or one powered by Linux, you can do just about anything with a laptop that you can do with a desktop.

Your choice of laptop is a personal one, but one that should be informed by your needs. About half of the people that I know use a MacBook, while the rest use Windows running on hardware from Dell, Lenovo, or Sony. Those folks aren't all artists or graphic/Web designers, either. Many are writers and software developers. You'd be surprised at which ones use a MacBook …

When looking for a notebook, consider getting the most RAM, the biggest hard drive, and the best graphics adapter that you can afford. And check out this TechTip to learn what you should look for what buying a laptop.

One option that's becoming popular with digital nomads who want to travel really light is the netbook. A netbook is a small laptop computer, usually weighing two pounds or less. A popular one is the Asus Eee PC. Besides being ultraportable, netbooks let you get your essential work done quickly and easily. And they don't take up a lot of space – you can use them anywhere.

Wireless

Just about every portable device out there has great wireless support. So, you probably won't need a wireless adapter. But what about detecting a wireless hotspot? The software that comes with a laptop or a wifi-enabled device is usually pretty good at doing the job. Sometimes, though, things get missed. That's where a hotspot detector comes in. It's a little gadget that fits in the palm of your hand which checks for the existence of a signal and its strength. A couple of the more popular devices are the Digital Hotspotter from Canary Wireless and the TRENDnet adapter with hotspot detector.

In the previous paragraph, I wrote that you probably won't need a wireless adapter. But the geek in many a digital nomad likes to be on the cutting edge. With wireless, that's wireless-N. Wireless N is an enhancement to the 802.11 wireless standard that improves the rate at which data flows through the network. While wireless N is still a draft (it's expected to be released in 2010), several networking gear manufacturers have put hardware on the market using the draft specification. Three of the biggest of these names are Linksys, Belkin, and D-Link.


There are a lot of wireless hotspots out there. Some of them are free; many aren't. As you move around, chances are you're jumping between hotspots. Using for-pay hotspots can quite expensive – $5 to $10 an hour. And juggling several accounts with those hotspots is a headache. Boingo Wireless makes using multiple hotspots easy. With Boingo, you have access to over 100,000 hotspots worldwide. You just log in using your Boingo account and you're ready to go. The price isn't too bad – $21.95 per month for use within North America. It's definitely worth it if you're a frequent user of wireless.

Hip hop bagBags

While working on the road, you'll be carrying more than just a little gear with you. A good bag or case is essential. What makes a good bag or case? One that will hold all of your gear, of course, while keeping it safe and well organized. The average notebook case, though, just doesn't cut it. You need something a little bigger and a lot more versatile.

Like what? Most of the road warriors I know swear by a good messenger bag. Among them are two favorites: the ID from Tom Bihn and the Ogio Hip Hop. Both are large enough to comfortably hold a laptop, a few gadgets, some accessories, a water bottle, and a snack or two. But they're not so bulky as to inconvenience you (or anyone else) while moving through a crowded area or riding on public transit during peak hours.

If you're a digital nomad who frequently flies, then you might want to check out a laptop bag that's approved by the TSA. Those are the kind that (theoretically, anyway) don't require you to remove your laptop or anything else from the bag while moving through an airport security checkpoint. To be honest, neither I nor my digital nomad pals have any experience with these bags. But this article looks at eight of them.

Power

Laptop batteries, as we all know, don't hold power forever. And they tend to run down at crucial moments – like when you're in the middle of typing an important email or saving that spreadsheet. On top of that, you never really know if you're going to be near an electrical outlet to plug in. Having worked in a few libraries, coffee shops, and airport departure lounges, I can tell you that outlets are often at a premium. Anyone who gets the outlet jealously guards it.

Carrying an extra laptop battery can be essential. It's a bit of an inconvenience – one more item in your bag, and a little extra weight – but well worth it when your main battery runs down.

Other Gear

Is there anything else a digital nomad should consider carrying? Here are a few things that I like to have with me whenever I'm working away from home.

First off, a wireless mouse. It's one less cord to deal with, which is a boon at a cramped coffee shop table.

Also, I like to have at least two USB generic cialis forum flash drives with me at all times. One is for storage, backup, and quickly passing files to someone else. The second one is loaded with PortableApps (an Open Source productivity suite).

Since I often spend time aboard public transit, an MP3 player is a must. The music blocks out a lot of the noise, and gives me a chance to rest my brain by listening to something pleasant.

Finally, a paper notebook and pen. Sometimes, you'll find that you can't avoid going the analog route. This is especially true if you need to jot down a note or a phone number and your notebook computer is packed tightly in its case.

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Windows Defender

Just For Vista?

I received a phone call yesterday morning from a fellow newsletter reader who was wondering if the Windows Defender security package only works with Windows Vista. At first, I told him yes, because from what I understood from articles I've read in the past, that's how it's set up. He then asked me to double check on it and I gladly said I would. Well, let me tell you, I'm really glad I did! I have been wrong this whole time and I'm not too proud to admit it. Here's the scoop!

After doing some more research, I found out that Windows Defender automatically comes along with Vista, but you can also download a free version of it for earlier Windows operating systems. Wow, who knew?! The free version of Windows Defender is available for Windows XP SP2, as well as, Windows 2000 and Windows Server 2003. (It will only work with the last two if you validate it through the Windows Genuine Advantage program first though).

Now, I know you're probably wondering how the free version stacks up next to the Vista version, right? Well, as far as I can see, it seems to work just as well. If you download Windows Defender to an earlier operating system, it will run through all the same scans, etc. that it does for Vista. generic cialis fast delivery It's obviously going to work a little better for Vista, because it's the security program that was made specifically for it, but if you're looking for something new for an older Windows computer, the free download will do the trick! So, if you're not using Vista and would like to download the free version of Windows Defender, you can do so right here. I hope you enjoy it!

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