IN Media windows 7 tablet Unveiled (video review )
hbailla, Wednesday, December 22, 2010Samsung Gloria Tablet 10-inch With Win-7 OS
hbailla, Saturday, December 11, 2010Quicken and Windows 7 compatibility
hbailla, Wednesday, December 8, 2010Apple Ipad vs Windows 7 tablet
hbailla, Sunday, December 5, 2010Apple Ipad vs Windows 7 tablet: "Computer maker Acer has laid out its first tablet computers. This lineup will include a windows 7 tablet and 2 android devices."
MacBook Air 2010 Vs Windows 7
hbailla, Saturday, December 4, 2010I have been reading through an editorial on pcworld.com’s net site and they historicallyin the past did a comparison between theMacBook Air and some Netbooks. Unsurprisingly the MacBook Air came out on top, I guess that is what happens when you compare a tiny laptop computer with a dual core processor against single core low powered laptops. I mean you have to have a look at the cost difference between them to know which the better laptop computer is. If there is a difference of $500-700 difference, you know the more expensive one is going to come out on top. Following on from this, they are now doing a comparison between the new MacBook Air and laptops that are of a similar cost. This will be a better comparison as generally the laptops jogging Windows 7 will be of a much higher standard than a Netbook. Generally i have found over the years that when it comes to computing you get what you pay for. So what do the results show? Funnily exactly what I thought, the MacBook Air would do ok but there will be some laptops that out perform it. you can see all of the results for graphics, battery life amongst other things by heading over to pcworld.com. If i am honest, I still think it is a pointless study as all of the machines that they looked at have different target audiences. That’s my opinion but let me know yours in the comments below. Taken From http://www.onlinesocialmedia.net
What Will Windows 7 Major Upgrade 2011 Bring
hbailla, Thursday, December 2, 2010How to fix BIOS problems ?
hbailla, Sunday, November 28, 2010When viewing externally, a laptop would usually be a simple rectangular box. However, when you try to take off the sides of the laptop, you would find that there are a lot of different parts which make up the computer. Therefore, you should be careful when you use the computer because if there is any problem with the computer, you could hardly find the source of the problem. Among all the parts of the computer, one of the most important parts would be the laptop motherboard. The motherboard has a lot of dedicate capacitors and circuits which enable the computer to work. All of the parts of the computer have to be connected to the motherboard in order to function. Therefore, many people would say that motherboard is the soul of the computer and when the motherboard has problem, people have to work hard to solve the problem and conduct laptop motherboard repair. Otherwise, they would have to replace the motherboard with a new one. In fact, one of the common problems about the motherboard would be the BIOS setting. Sometimes, some virus or bad programs may try to change the BIOS settings of the computer so that the computer would not be able to function. The corresponding laptop motherboard repair work is simple. In order to fix this problem, people could try to remove the battery on the motherboard. This type of laptop motherboard repair would work in most of the time because the silver battery provides the electricity for the motherboard to keep the BIOS setting and when the battery is taken away, the settings would be restored as the original default settings. However, people should not try to take the battery out of the penal for a long time because it would make the settings of date and time change.
from http://techknowbits.com
10 Windows 7 Registry tweaks
hbailla, Monday, November 8, 2010It works, and it works well. But that doesn't mean you can't use the Registry to add nifty features or change the settings to your liking. Here are ten things you can do with the Windows 7 Registry. Just type regedit in the usual search box and hit [Enter], then follow our tips. 1. Personalise IE8 Bought your PC from an overzealous manufacturer that's gratuitously branded Internet Explorer with its own na me? Just want to add your own custom touch in place of the default 'Windows Internet Explorer'? It's easy. In the registry editor, navigate to 'HKEY_CURRENT_ USER\Software\Microsoft\ Internet Explorer\Main' and create a new string value. Name it 'Window Title', with the space. Then just double-click it and enter your desired window title in the field. 2. Stop Snap Aero Snap is arguably a very useful feature – we say arguably because, as we're sure you've noticed, it often decides to kick in and glue your windows to screen edges when you don't want it to. If you're not finding the Snap feature useful, then you might as well turn it off . First, navigate to 'HKEY_CURRENT_ USER\Control Panel\Desktop'. There are a number of settings you could customise here, but the one that you're looking for in this case is called 'WindowArrangementActive'. The value should be 1 – change it to 0 to make this feature inactive. Alternatively, just make sure you never venture too close to the edge. 3. Change stacking behaviour This particular tweak is perhaps of questionable usefulness, but we thought you'd like the option to try it anyway. If you don't like the thumbnail display when clicking on taskbar buttons, then you can change the action and force Windows to open the last opened window of the stack instead. To do this, open 'HKEY_ CURRENT_USER\Software\ Microsoft\Windows\Current Version\Explorer\Advanced' and create a new DWORD value. Rename it LastActiveClick and set its value to 1 to switch this mode on. Should you change your mind, you can always go back and delete the key or set it to 0 to revert back later on. 4. Quicker taskbar previews Are you bored of waiting the couple of seconds it takes for the graphical previews to pop up when you hover over icons on the taskbar? Or would you rather they took longer to appear? The choice is yours. Go to 'HKEY_CURRENT_USER\ Software\Microsoft\Windows\ CurrentVersion\Explorer\Advanced' and create a DWORD named 'ExtendedUIHoverTime'. Now double-click to open it, click the 'Decimal' radio button, and then change its value to the number of milliseconds you'd like the process to take. The default is 400ms. 5. Change other delays Stay in the same key (Explorer\Advanced) and you can tweak a couple of other timings. Add a 32-bit DWORD into the mix named 'DesktopLivePreviewHoverTime'. Switch this to decimal in the same manner as before, then change the value data field to alter the number of milliseconds it takes for the Aero Peek function (minimise all windows) to kick in when you hover over the icon on the right of the taskbar. Alternatively, do the same with a DWORD called 'ThumbnailLivePreview HoverTime' to alter how long it takes for the windows that are associated with taskbar thumbnails to come to the front. 6. Speed up menus Make menu items automatically drop down a lot faster with this tweak. Go to 'HKEY_CURRENT_USER\ Control Panel\Desktop', right-click 'MenuShowDelay' and click 'Modify'. Now change the current string value to something like 100 – hey presto, near-instant menu appearance. 7. Stop space checking Free up a tiny shred of system resources. Go to 'HKEY_ CURRENT_USER\Software\ Microsoft\Windows\Current Version\Policies\Explorer', create a new DWORD called 'NoLowDisk SpaceChecks' and set its value to 1 to switch off disk space checking. 8. Move the kernel If the Windows Kernel is in memory, it will run slightly faster than it would if it were on your hard drive. Hunt out 'DisablePagingExecutive' within 'HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\ CurrentControlSet\Control\Session Manager\Memory Management'. Change its value to 1. 9. Change the name Bought a second-hand machine? Then you might want to alter the name of the registered owner. Go to 'HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\ Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\ CurrentVersion\', double-click on the 'RegisteredOwner' key and then change it. 10. Boost speed There's one tweak that will make every hover action much faster, from tooltips to the Start menu. Navigate to 'HKEY_CURRENT_USER\ Control Panel\Mouse' and tweak the 'MouseHoverTime' value. A word of warning, though: never choose 0 – it's completely unworkable.10 Windows 7 Registry hacks and tweaks
Windows 7 needs far less of the sleeves-up shuffling about that its predecessors demanded for smooth operation.
Forget XP and Vista, Windows 7 is your new OS
hbailla, Thursday, November 4, 2010
The Redmond company even has the numbers to prove it, with Rich Reynolds, general manager of Windows Commercial Product Marketing at Microsoft underpinning the fact that 240 million Windows 7 licenses have already been sold to date.
But there are additional statistics coming from third-party sources, all illustrative of a consensus, the most successful operating system in history continues to sell like hot cake.
Net Applications is crediting Windows 7 with a market share of 18.33% at the end of October 2010, with XP having dropped under the 60% mark to 58.92%, and Vista down to 12.93%.
It is clear that end users are dumping XP and Vista and upgrading to Windows 7. And Microsoft expects this trend to continue in 2011, especially considering the increase in the number of PC units for next year.
“There are 1.2 billion PCs in the worldwide ecosystem and PC sales have rebounded with Windows 7 as a key driver. According to IDC, there was 4.15% global PC unit growth in 2009, with nearly 17% growth expected for 2010, and sustained growth continuing at a rate of nearly 13% in 2011,” Reynolds noted.
In 2011, hundreds of millions of PCs will all come preinstalled with Windows 7, more than doubling the number of licenses that the software giant will sell in2010.
Microsoft is currently building Service Pack 1 and there’s already some talk of the company’s next moves in the client and server space as far as Windows is concerned, but with little effect on customers, and especially businesses.
83% more IT managers will deploy Windows 7 within a year, according to Forrester. “IDC shows that nearly all enterprise companies (89%) surveyed are moving forward with their Windows 7 plans within the next 24 months. And 64% of them are already deploying Windows 7 or have plans to migrate in the next six months,” Reynolds added.
“SMB growth has also been notable - the number of desktops and laptops running Windows 7 has increased nearly 500% since the beginning of the year.”
Most important, customers are happy with the move they made. The Redmond company underlined the fact that Windows 7 has a 94% customer satisfaction rating, and this percentage pretty much speaks for itself.
Contributing to a high level of satisfaction is also a drop in costs. For businesses this is extremely important as they continue to pay for any new technology. But the Total Cost of Ownership for Windows 7 is down compared to previous versions of Windows, and even with rival operating systems.
“We’ve done extensive internal studies with several companies to get a better idea of actual TCO, including British Airport Authority (BAA), National Instruments (NI), City of Stockholm, Baker Tilly, City of Miami and Getronics,” Reynolds stated.
“The average savings is $140 per PC per year and the average ROI is 131% in just over 12 months. We’ve also seen very specific TCO data related to deployment with an average savings of $12-61 per desktop.”
In addition to low TCO, enterprise customers will also benefit as far as Return on Investment is concerned. “BAA business value analysis expects an ROI of 102%, an IRR of 65%, and a payback period within 15 months. Anticipated benefits include IT cost savings of $268 per PC per year and user productivity increases to 14 hours per user per year,” Reynolds explained.
Windows 7 SP1 is expected in the first quarter of 2011, but there’s really no reason to wait, and as the numbers above clearly indicate, customers aren’t waiting at all.
Windows 7 Printing Performance Compared to Vista – Fix Available
hbailla, Thursday, October 21, 2010
Microsoft is offering help to customers that upgraded from Windows Vista to Windows 7 and then came across poor performance when printing documents from the new platform.
The Redmond company has acknowledged the existence of the issue, revealing that it also affects Windows Server 2008 R2, and not just Windows 7.
While overall, Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 deliver superior performance compared to their predecessors, Vista and Windows Server 2008, printing is one scenario in which customers can run into problems.
“On a computer that is running Windows 7 or Windows Server 2008 R2, the printing performance may be poor compared to the performance on a computer that is running Windows Vista or Windows Server 2008,” Microsoft explained.
“Additionally, a computer that is running Windows 7 or Windows Server 2008 R2 consumes more CPU resources when you print a document.”
One way for users to see whether they are affected by this specific problem is to check what the load on the processor is when they’re printing documents in Windows 7, especially if they feel like the speed has deteriorated after upgrading from Vista.
For example, CPU usage remains at 100 percent for a long time in Task Manager when you print a document on a computer that is running Windows 7 or Windows Server 2008 R2,” the software giant explained.
Microsoft has identified the source of the problem, and noted that it is most likely for customers with single-CPU machines to come across it.
“This issue occurs because of a performance regression in spooler behavior on single-processor systems that are running Windows 7 or Windows Server 2008 R2,” the company said.
For the time being, Microsoft is offering a hotfix designed to help affected customers deal with the problem. However, the company stressed that the fix is only intended for this specific issue and that users not experiencing any problems should not deploy it. .
If you are a student get Windows 7 Os for free
hbailla, Monday, October 18, 2010In case you are a student then you might be eligible to get a free copy of the Windows 7 Operating System from Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) . The only requirement for the offer is that you should be having a valid email address with an accredited educational institute located in select countries. You will then need to enroll in the MSDN Academic Alliance Program. Usually the enrollment has to be done by the academic institute so you will need to ask them to register you on MSDNAA. Note that some of the academic organizations might be enrolled in the MSDN programme but not aware of it, so you will need to check yourself if your educational institute is on the MSDN list or not. But enrolling into the MSDNAA does not only give you access to just Windows 7. You will also be able to download other software that are available from Microsoft including Windows XP, Windows 2000, Windows Vista, Visual Studio and many other office applications that you will end up saving tons of money.
The best 10 free softwares for Windows 7
hbailla, Thursday, June 17, 2010
1_AVG Anti-Virus Free Edition 9.0
Anti-Virus is still one of the most important applications you can add to your shiny new Windows 7 installation, and is the very first thing you should do. AVG makes it simple, with a quick, free download and support for both 32-bit and 64-bit versions of Windows 7. So, why not throw in a free anti-virus for your customers, you can always up-sell them to a full featured internet security suite later, when they want more protection than a basic anti-virus can offer.
2_Comodo Firewall
Sure, Windows 7 comes with a built in firewall and it is pretty good. However, the Comodo firewall is a lot better. Comodo’s free firewall has undergone a bit of a transformation recently and now sports integrated anti-virus, perhaps pushing AVG off the list of must have freeware applications. Comodo Firewall + Antivirus comes in versions for both 32-bit and 64-bit versions of Windows 7 and adds some nifty security capabilities to Windows 7, such as intrusion prevention, port blocking and application behavior monitoring.
3_CCleaner
Affectionately called "Crap Cleaner", CCleaner is one of those utilities that purges all of the crap out of your system. CCleaner is basically a registry scanning tool that looks for registry problems, such as abandoned entries, orphaned keys, malware entries and a host of other things you don’t want in your registry. Once identified, you can selectively delete those nasty entries and restore performance to your Windows 7 PC (both 32bit and 64 bit). CCleaner also handles a few other maintenance chores, such as clearing browser history and purging cookies, as well as removing temporary files to free up space.
4_Driveimage-XML (private edition)
Windows 7 comes with some rudimentary backup tools under the "Backup and Restore" banner, but if you want to have a little more control over your backup files and the ability to quickly create image files of drives and partitions, it’s pretty hard to beat Driveimage-XML, which works with all editions of Windows and offers a private edition for free.
5_Microsoft SyncToy 2.1
Let’s face it, most power users have more than one PC and many mobile workers often spend a great deal of time moving files back and forth from their office desktop to their mobile PC. Microsoft offers SyncToy 2.1 to deal with those issues. SyncToy is a small simple application that is part of Microsoft’s free family of "powertoys" and enables users to synchronize files between directories. The product is surprisingly powerful, allowing users to create all sorts of Boolean logic arguments to decide when and what to synchronize.
6_FoxIt Reader 3.2
Need a quick and easy way to read PDF files without using Adobe Acrobat? FoxIt Reader may be the answer you are looking for. Foxit Reader integrates with all the popular browsers, displays PDFs fast, takes up little space and doesn’t add any bloat. Additional features include the ability to copy and paste text from PDFs, annotate PDFs and print.
7_PrimoPDF
Occasionally, users want to create their own PDFs, however the tools to build PDFs can be both complex and expensive. That is where PrimoPDF comes in. The product allows you to make a PDF out of anything you can print. PrimoPDF installs as a printer on the desktop and then functions in much the same manner, except output is turning into a PDF file and not ink on a page.
8_Pidgin
One of the first things a new user does on a PC is to setup their various communications tools, ranging from AIM to Facebook to Google Talk. Pidgin is an open source piece of software that acts like an IM client for some 18 different services. With Pidgin, you only have to install a single client to use IM, regardless of the service — that cuts down on bloat and helps to keep a user better connected to their various contacts.
9_Evernote
PCs are all about ideas and Windows 7’s claim to fame is the enablement of ideas. Extending the idea of ideas is just another way to add value to a Windows 7 desktop and that is where Evernote comes in. Evernote is a software product/service that allows users to create quick notes, capture screen images, annotate web pages, store links and so on — simply put, if you can see it on the screen, you can grab it an annotate it and then share it with others, across multiple PCs.
10_Advanced SystemCare Free V3
Version 3 of Advanced SystemCare Free is all about clutter reduction, it is a utility that cleans registries, defrags hard drives, fixes system errors and optimizes performance — all at a price that anyone can stomach, free. The product is designed for Windows 7, Vista, XP and 2000 (32bit or 64 bit), is simple to install, works automatically and helps to keep that new Windows 7 PC running like it is still new, reducing support calls and keeping users happy.
Download Windows 7 Codec Pack a collection 2.6.0 Free
hbailla, Friday, June 11, 2010Windows 7 Codec Pack is a collection of codecs designed to help you watch videos and listen audio files with Windows 7 OS. This package of codecs will provide you with the exact filters, splitter and codecs so that you will be able to play whatever multimedia file you desire, besides these components you will also find various encoding codes that you can use to encode files to DivX, X264, Xvid etc. Windows 7 Codec Pack installer will use low amount of your resources, so you don’t have to worry about how much space will take of your HDD and also it doesn’t create lots of registry entries and it is very stable as you shouldn’t experience any crashes or other conflicts between codecs. It is develope to work solely with Windows 7 systems. The installer of this codec pack offers you the possibility to install it with easy or you can choose the Expert Installation were you can customize more options. Also, you should that the installer is marked as ad-supported because it tries to change your browser’s homepage and its default search engine, but you can uncheck those boxes and it won’t change anything in your system. After you install Windows 7 Codec Pack you will be able to play any type of video and audio file formats.
Windows 7 SP1 means end of XP downgrade rights
hbailla, Saturday, May 8, 2010
Last year, Microsoft said that customers could downgrade new machines purchased with Windows 7 Professional to the older Windows XP Professional for a limited period. The deal ends 18 months after the introduction of Windows 7 -- in other words, in late April 2011 -- or when Microsoft launches Windows 7 Service Pack 1 (SP1), whichever comes first.
Nearly two months ago, Microsoft acknowledged it's working on Windows 7 SP1. It has not yet set a release timetable, however.
"So the clock is ticking down on that offer, after which time the only option for non-Software Assurance customers to deploy Windows XP is to use Windows XP Mode," said Al Gillen, an analyst with IDC, referring to Windows 7 Professional's built-in virtualized version of Windows XP.
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Corporations that subscribe to Software Assurance (SA) -- MIcrosoft's annuity-like upgrade guarantee program -- or purchase Windows through volume licensing plans have downgrade rights from any edition, including Windows 7, to any previous version going as far back as Windows 95.
Calling SP1 an "important milestone for customers" because of the impending end of downgrade-to-XP rights, Gillen noted that the service pack will have relatively little impact on enterprise plans to deploy the new operating system.
"Historically, classic customer deployment behavior for new Windows client operating systems was to wait for the first service pack to arrive," Gillen said in a research note published yesterday.
That's no longer the case, he said, echoing opinions expressed earlier by other analysts, including Michael Cherry of Directions on Microsoft and Diane Hagglund of Dimensional Research.
"The Windows patching process ... has changed the rules of the game for many customers," Gillen argued. "The continuous stream of patches, over time, delivers a significant portion of service pack content."
Recent surveys conducted by IDC with IT professionals and end users showed that budget limitations and application compatibility were the biggest concerns about migrating to Windows 7, not the lack of a service pack.
Although Microsoft originally wanted to limit Windows 7-to-Windows XP downgrade rights to just six months after the release of the former, it quickly backtracked last June after another analyst, Michael Silver of Gartner Research, called the plan a "real mess." Instead, said Microsoft, it would allow downgrades to Windows XP until 18 months went by, or until it released Windows 7 SP1.
Although consumers may have little reason to want to downgrade Windows 7 -- the operating system has received favorable reviews and by all accounts has been a huge success -- businesses often want to standardize on a single operating system edition to simplify machine management.
Several major computer makers continue to sell new PCs with a factory-installed downgrade to Windows XP from Windows 7. Dell, for example, offers downgrades on some Latitude notebooks as well as its Vostro line of business desktops.
Once Microsoft releases Windows 7 SP1, customers will be able to downgrade only to Vista Business.
Ensure 90% of Windows 7 security by Eliminating admin rights
hbailla, Saturday, April 3, 2010According to BeyondTrust, a provider of Privileged Access Lifecycle Management solutions. The removal of administrator rights from Windows users is a mitigating factor for 90 per cent of Critical Windows 7 Vulnerabilities,
Companies migrating to Windows 7 will have to implement a desktop Privileged Identity Management solution in order to lower the risks from un-patched Microsoft vulnerabilities without affecting their users' ability to operate smoothly.
BeyondTrust aids in the elimination of the risk of intentional, accidental and indirect misuse of privileges on desktops and servers. The company offers globally proven solutions that can enhance security and compliance without impacting productivityProtection from exploitation
BeyondTrust research clearly indicates that companies removing administrator rights can protect against the exploitation of 90 per cent of critical Windows 7 vulnerabilities reported to date; 100 per cent of Microsoft Office vulnerabilities reported in 2009; 94 per cent of Internet Explorer and 100 per cent of Internet Explorer 8 vulnerabilities reported in 2009; and about 64 per cent of all Microsoft vulnerabilities reported in 2009.
Steve Kelley, EVP of corporate development, noted the increasing danger faced by enterprises with respect to zero-day attacks. Cyber criminal are always trying to exploit new vulnerabilities and don't give much chance to companies for developing and deploying the patches.
Adequate protection
The report indicates the importance of restricting administrator rights in protecting against all these types of threats. Kelley added that all those companies looking to migrate to Windows 7 should know that despite enhanced security features on the new operating systems, better controls for administrative rights are required to provide adequate protection.
Readers of BeyondTrust 2009 Microsoft Vulnerability Analysis report will get useful insight about all the published vulnerabilities of Microsoft in 2009 and Windows 7 to date.
The report quantifies the effectiveness of removing administrator rights for mitigating Microsoft vulnerabilities and indicates that the vast majority of these share the same best practice advice in the "Mitigating Factors" portion of Microsoft's security bulletins.
According to Microsoft, users whose accounts are configured to have fewer user rights on the system could be less impacted than users who operate with administrative user rights.
5 Free Utilities to Get the best of windows 7
hbailla, Monday, March 1, 2010DOWLOAD These five free utilities will give your Windows XP or Vista machine some Windows 7 pizzazz. AeroSnap: Maximizing a window on today's large monitors is often a waste of screen space. In Windows 7, a feature called Aero Snap lets you automatically resize a window to fill half of your display when you drag the window to the screen's edge. Kick a space out of the feature's name, and you have AeroSnap, an app that brings the same feature to XP and Vista. Seven Remix XP: Windows 7's visual appeal definitely sets it apart from its aging sibling Windows XP. But this transformation pack makes XP's buttons, boxes, icons, and Start menu look remarkably like the new OS's versions. Taskbar Shuffle: The new supercharged Windows 7 taskbar allows you to reorder any of your taskbar items with a drag and drop. XP and Vista users can enjoy the same functionality with this lightweight system-tray utility (also available in a 64-bit version). Windows 7 Shortcuts: Windows 7 introduces gobs of time-saving keyboard shortcuts for moving windows around your desktop, focusing on specific windows, or taking a quick peek at the desktop. This download installs a tiny system-tray utility that adds them to your XP or Vista machine. WinShake: Windows 7's Aero Peek feature turns windows transparent, giving you X-ray vision for determining what lies beneath. Its Aero Shake function lets you minimize every window but the active one via a simple shortcut. This application brings similar capabilities--and then some--to most of Win 7's precursors.
Run Windows 7 on you iPad NOW
hbailla, Saturday, January 30, 2010most Apple users wanted to do was run Microsoft software. Well, maybe Office, but certainly not Windows. That changed as the Mac switched to an Intel architecture and solutions came along from companies like Parallels, VMware and others that let business users and other run Windows on Mac hardware. There's even been some remote "tunneling" solutions that bring access to Windows apps on the iPhone. Now Citrix is first out of the gate to declare it's ready to bring Windows 7 to the iPad, which is set to ship later in March. The Citrix Receiver software is free and already available for Citrix customers with an iPhone, since a Citrix Xen virtualization back-end is required to make this all work. Essentially the iPad becomes a thin client displaying Windows 7 running on a server. Citrix said it has more than 200,000 customers that already use Citrix XenDesktop or Citrix XenApp. Because Windows runs from the server, users will also be able to multitask Windows apps as they would normally on a PC or notebook. The iPad software will not offer multitasking at launch for native software, which has been one of the loudest complaints heard since the iPad announcement earlier this week. Citrix seems to have a ready market for the product based on user comments at the blog post where the Connector for iPad was announced. "This would be great for our C-level Executives and our Field Agents. We are in the Insurance business and this would be great when our agents go out and sell insurance using our Windows Only Application!" wrote Scott Cochran."The iPhone is great, and I have one now, but this would be in another league. The ability to run the iPad as a thin client for XenApp/XenDesktop would make me consider purchasing the iPad. An anonymous poster added: "This would be a great solution for my home theatre PC... it's running windows 7 right now... and I use media center to play all my videos in my database.... so what I see on the screen of the ipad... would also be shown on my 108" HD projector screen... This would in turn become the BEST remote.... I'll b coming back for an update." Aaron Parker, the first user to comment to the blog, was less enthusiastic because like others, he isn't sure why he'd want to get an iPad: "No mouse support may limit its use as a complete desktop replacement; it would be more usable than the iPhone but less portable. So where exactly does it fit?" David Needle is the West Coast bureau chief at InternetNews.com, the news service of Internet.com, the network for technology professionals.
"We've been working on this since the iPhone SDK became available and gone through a number of revs to produce a good user experience," he added. "We think it's going to be even better on the iPad because screen size won't be an impediment."IT managers will be able to control who can access the Windows 7 desktop or even specific applications. "It's up to them, a lot of companies don't give the full Windows experience, they can just identify individual applications like Excel or SAP or Oracle, their employees need," Chris Fleck, vice president of Community Solutions Development at Citrix, toldInternetNews.com.Go ahead and multitask
Gaming Community using Windows 7 Massively
hbailla, Tuesday, January 26, 2010steam, the world’s largest PC gaming platform, has reported in its December 2009 report that the latest iteration of its operating system by Microsoft, Windows 7, has become immensely popular with the PC gaming community.
The report, which was released as a part of Steam’s December 2009 hardware survey, revealed that almost 23 percent of Steam users are now running the Windows 7 operating system.
It also revealed that 30 per cent of users were on Windows Vista whereas around 45 per cent users were hooked on to Windows XP.
However, considering the fact that Windows 7 was launched only in October 2009, it is quite impressive that the software has managed to garner a respectable market share in the operating systems market.
Since its launch in October, Windows 7 has seen meteoric sales figures with Amazon.com reporting that the software ha become the website’s highest-grossing pre-order product of all time.
The software is still forging ahead even after a quarter since it was launched and it has now surpassed the combined market share of all the versions of Mac OS X operating systems from Apple.
Many analysts believe that the real challenge before Windows 7 is to wean away customers from its hugely popular predecessor Windows XP than from any other rival OS.
Our Comments
Windows 7 64-bit rather than Windows 7 32-bit is the most popular Windows 7 version. Even more impressive is the fact that Windows 7 64-bit grew by a staggering 2.45 percent while Windows XP 32-bit decreased by 3.20 percent. This means that Windows XP users are upgrading their system to 64-bit Windows 7.
25 January, 2010, by Desire Athow
Windows 7 Service Pack 1 first look
hbailla, Monday, January 18, 2010Looks like Microsoft is planning for a rollout of Windows 7 Service Pack 1 (SP1) a few months into the official release of the best ever operating system from MS. The build numbers for the SP1 is rumored to be somewhere between 7600.20500 and .20700. A beta release is expected in July 2010, so you can except a lot of changes to happen in between now and then. Apparently this build fixes over 150 issues. However, users should not be troubled about the late release of the SP1, since Microsoft usually releases regular patches through Windows update. The SP1 contains most of the released patches and new ones in a single bundle.
Both Softpedia and Neowin have confirmed that the SP1 for Windows 7 is scheduled for somewhere in July. A set of leaked screenshots is doing the rounds of the internet, courtesy Muy Windows (translated to English). Here are few of the screenshots from a non-English version of the SP1.
Apparently the Windows 7 SP1 is less than 150MB in size, which is good considering that service packs for Windows Vista have been much larger than this.
Download Google Chrome 4.0.295.0 with Windows 7 Fixes
hbailla, Friday, January 15, 2010
Google has refreshed the bits available to developers. At the start of this week, users were able to download and start test-driving Chrome Beta 4.0.249.64 for Windows. As of January 14th, 2010, the Dev channel release of Google Chrome was updated to Build 4.0.295.0. But unlike the Beta flavor of the open source browser, Build 4.0.295.0 is also available for users of Linux and Mac OS X.
“The Dev channel has been updated to 4.0.295.0 for all platforms,” said Orit Mazor, from the Google Chrome team, noting changes specific for Chrome running on the latest iteration of the Windows client, namely Windows 7. “Win7 - Add profile info to app id associated with shortcuts and window; append profile info to win7 app id; "Don't show "Did you mean" infobars on single-word searches for users whose ISP or DNS provider displays custom error pages for nonexistent hostnames".”
There are additional fixes introduced for the Chrome versions designed for Linux and Mac OS X. At the same time there are a number of issues that have survived past this release and that Google made public. Most affected will be users running Mac OS X, which are bound to stumble across problems involving the Bookmark manager for Mac, the close button and crashes within the Inspector. “You can find out about getting on the Dev channel here,” Mazor added.
In tandem with boosting the Dev channel release of Chrome to 4.0.295.0, the mountain View based search giant also refreshed the Google Chrome Frame. “Google Chrome Frame has been updated to version 4.0.295.0. All users should be updated automatically. This release fixes several of the most common crashes and (…) issues,” Mazor said.
The latest release of Google Chrome is available for download here.
Form Softpedia
How to Activate Windows 7?
hbailla, Thursday, January 7, 2010How to Activate Windows 7?
To activate your Windows 7 copy, use the following steps:
1. In Windows 7 Product Activation, choose the ‘Activate Now’ link and you’ll be offered two options – namely, activating over the phone or online. The simplest way is by activating online. (It’s also preferred by Microsoft.)
2. When asked, type in the unique 25-character key that’s shown on the Windows 7 CD case. If you choose to activate by phone (if your unique situation requires some jawboning or you don’t have Internet connection), you should punch the installation ID by phone. During online activation, after you type the activation key, Windows 7 will do the following:
a. Windows 7 scans all serial numbers inside the computer – the processor, disk drives, and network card, among others. Using a secret algorithm the numbers are mixed, producing another unique 25-character key that identifies your computer. Both keys (50 characters, in all) are taken together to form an installation ID.
b. Your machine sends Microsoft its 50-character installation ID.
c. Microsoft verifies if the installation ID is valid.
If the first 25-character code (activation key) has never been used before or if similar installation ID is received by Microsoft (which means that you have activated this Windows 7 copy in the same computer twice), Microsoft gives a confirmation ID (42 characters). Both the confirmation ID and the installation ID are stored on your machine.
However, if the 25-character code has been used in other PC, though, a polite notification informs you that your Windows 7 copy cannot be activated. You are asked to enter another valid key. You are given further information for contacting Microsoft, in case you need it. Microsoft reps are often understanding, fair, and courteous. If you have a valid reason for reactivating your Windows 7 – for example, after your hard drive or motherboard died – don’t hesitate to contact a Microsoft rep by phone.
Chrome Overtakes Safari, and Becomes Number 3 Browser
hbailla, Sunday, January 3, 2010
NetApplications has released its latest browser market share figures, and these figures show that Chrome has overtaken Safari as the number three browser worldwide, behind Internet Explorer and Firefox. IE, by the way, continues to lose popularity rather fast.
Chrome was introduced almost 18 months ago, but yet it has already become the third most popular browser in the world. NetApplications' figures cover the entire month of December 2009, and they show that Google Chrome has gained 0.7 of a percentage point, putting it at 4.63%, ahead of Safari's 4.46%. Internet Explorer lost almost a full percentage point, dropping to 62.69%. Firefox remained more or less flat at 24.61%, while both Safari and Opera gained slightly.
Chrome's steep rise in December can probably be attributed to the release of the betas for Linux and Mac OS X, so we may see a slight decline again in January, as some people will most certainly fall back upon their established choice of browser.
As for operating systems, Windows 7 is, unsurprisingly, doing rather well. Microsoft's latest baby already broke the 5% mark, and in December its share amounted to 5.17%, up from November's 4%. Windows 7's popularity seems to have little effect on Mac and Linux users, as both platforms remained more or less flat at 5.11% and 1.02% respectively. Since both Windows XP and Vista lost share, the logical conclusion is that Windows 7 is competing with previous versions of Windows. That really shouldn't surprise anyone.
Of course, the usual disclaimers apply. These are statistics, and therefore, are troublesome. However, even though you shouldn't take them at face value, they can be used to indicate trends. In this case, the two important trends are that Windows 7 is eating away quite well at the base of previous Windows versions, and that Chrome's star continues to rise.