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Win 98 support thru June: is a Win XP upgrade right for you?

Come June 30, 2006, things start to change in the support for Windows 98 and Windows 98 Second Edition. You can read more on the support changes for Windows 98 & Win 98 Second Edition, as well as Windows Millennium. In short (and from the site)…



  • Paid incident support for Windows 98, Windows 98 Second Edition, and Windows Millennium Edition (Me) is available through June 30, 2006.
  • Critical security updates will be provided on the Windows Update site through June 30, 2006.
  • Customers may request non-critical security fixes for Windows 98, Windows 98 Second Edition, Windows Me, and the most current version of their components until June 30, 2006 through typical assisted-support channels.
  • Windows 98, Windows 98 Second Edition, and Windows Me downloads for existing security issues will continue to be available through regular assisted-support channels at no charge until June 30, 2006.
  • Online self-help support will be available until at least June 30, 2007.

Visit the Windows XP Home Edition Upgrade Center where you can check your PC to see if it’s ready for Windows XP, how to qualify for an Upgrade and ensure that your hardware and software are compatible.


The recommended specs for Windows XP Home is a 233 MHz or faster processor (300 MHz Pentium/Celeron family, AMD K6/Athlon/Duron family, or compatible) with at least 128 MB of RAM (256MB is cheap these days) and 1.5 GB of HDD space (plus details on CD-ROM drive, SVGA video and Internet access). Your situation may be different, mileage may vary. One friend upgraded their old Sony 500MHz Pentium by adding more RAM (to 256 MB) and a hand-me-down 20GB hard disc with their Windows XP Home upgrade. (Sony was super in that they had provided updated drivers on their web site for the PC for Windows XP.) And they haven’t had to buy any new software: they run older software under Windows 95/98 compatibility mode. (This is particularly helpful in support of their library of kid’s games.)


Certainly cheaper than buying a new PC, and great for their kid’s all-purpose PC.


Also of interest: the Top 10 Reasons for Moving to Windows XP Professional.


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Xbox 360 a PC World ’06 Innovation… but it’s an incomplete list

PC World announced their 2006 PC World Innovations Awards yesterday. Happy to see the Xbox 360 there on the list, along with the LifeBook P1510D from Fujitsu, Sling Media Slingbox and the Creative Zen Vision (I love these devices, and the customer support form the companies is top  notch). The LifeBook P1510D uses Windows XP Tablet PC OS and allows both pen and touch-screen input.


I was surprised to see that the Panasonic Toughbooks, with their incredible extended battery life, and the Toshiba Qosmio laptop products with intstant on (for playback of audio and video) weren’t included. Intel announced at IDF last fall that they were working with Matsushita (Panasonic’s parent corp) on the co-development of notebook batteries to provide batteries that will power a laptop up to 12 hours. I also heard that Toshiba has announced new Qosmio notebooks at CES, but I have yet to see them. On a laptop, I have seen batteries that provide power for cross-country flights (at around 4-5 hours): by CES 2007 I imaging that the 7-8 hours will be touted.


And where are the wide screen monitors? Dell and Sony (and others) have incredible offerings, providing more real estate that is perfect for Windows Vista (with the side bar), monitors that are on par or better than the highly acclaimed Apple 23″ Cinema HD Display, but at half the price. The now sub $1000 level for 24″ monitors is an amazing feat, when you consider the rich 1920 x 1200 WUXGA widescreen glass and the added bonuses of built-in memory card readers and audio jacks.


IMHO, there’s more that should be on the list of innovations, but I have to get through the rest of the evening.


Note on HD DVD consumer players: And as has been noted in the press, Toshiba announced that the first HD DVD players will be launched in the States this March. OK, perhaps I will have to consider a new addition to the AV system, depending upon how the movie library shapes up at launch.

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5M+ Xbox 360’s mid ’06? Plus HD DVD support, CES news

>5M Xbox 360 by June? I noted on the newswire tonite that at CES today, Peter Moore (corp VP for interactive entertainment) said that the Xbox 360 is on track to sell between 4.5 and 5.5 million consoles by the end of the MS fiscal year (June 30). He went on to say that “we’re going to have inventory on shelves and then our problem is going to change.”


Mine is still on order. Hello? When will the backlog for consoles be filled? (OK, no whining.)


My guess is in the next 30 days (as I’ve had one on order since September). My boys certainly enjoyed looking at the game case artwork over the holidays… I already have my games, exceeding the already amazingly high attach rate of 4:1, the tie ratio of games to the console. For as long as I can recall (back from my days at 3DO), the industry average of games to new console purchases was a little more than 2:1 (reported as 2.4:1 today in the news).


An HD (DVD) Keynote… While the keynote this evening was offered streaming on the web in highly compressed Windows Video format, Bill Gates provided a look at Vista and touted the HD DVD format on Xbox 360 (more details available on the webcast), with external HD DVD drive support offered as an Xbox peripheral. Which is great as I don’t have any HD DVD discs (yet) but a library full of DVDs, so the Xbox 360 as-is, with the vanilla DVD drive will be just fine. Heck, content companies have a hard time just filling a DVD-9 disc today.


Personally, I’ll be happy to wait to add an HD DVD player, as I am loathe to be a bleeding edge buyer of new gear anymore. By the time I’m ready to add that level of new hardware support, I’ll bet by case of laserdiscs that there is an Xbox with an HD DVD drive built in. As to when, I couldn’t dare to guess; for me there would have to be a stable of titles at Blockbuster and available on Netflix before I take the plunge and get a next generation HD DVD player. (I’m still smarting from my Pioneer Laserdisc player that I eagerly purchased, costing more then than most PCs today… ‘though Blade Runner did look fabulous on it.)


More on CES: For more info from CES, check out the great resources on the PC World CES Info Center and  CNET’s CES News coverage.

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The Digital Decade gives way to what? See the CES Keynote on Weds

This year (once again) Bill Gates will be giving the keynote on Weds at 6.30pm Pacific (more details available on the website) at this year’s Consumer Electronics Show (CES). I have seen this show grow considerably over the last 10+ years, as I recall visiting the show long before the PC was a staple in the home. Looking at the incredible convergence we have seen over the last few years between various devices in the home and the personal computer (as we’re seeing the Media Center and the Xbox evolve into central entertainment points for the home), tomorrow’s keynote will be a good use of bandwidth for the webcast.


A couple of years ago, Bill touted the Digital Decade as an evolutionary time where the personal computer enabled more personal computing. Now we’re looking at how we move from the convergence of these devices (enabling seamless and pervasive computing experiences) to a true personal experience. It’s not just about computing, it’s about what you do with the content and the entertainment; you don’t want to spend your time working on the convergence and connectivity pieces between your devices – that should just work. You want your content — whether it’s TV, music, books, movies, articles, web media, photos — available when and where you want it, without having to worry about whether you have the right sync cable or if you  deleted the shows you watched and made room for the new ones you wanted to see.


The next few years should be less of being a sysop or network administrator at home (as I still am today for our family, managing the WiFi network, updating drivers, sync’ing content and backing up PCs), and more about being able to consume what you want where and when you want – whether it’s via your laptop on a plane, catching up via your Smartphone at the shuttle stop or on your way to work in your car (via voice navigation and text to speech). Today I interact with devices more naturally than five years ago, issuing commands to my phone to dial and get mail, to dictating to my PC (albeit not as fast as I can type… yet). 


Aside from improvements in voice command technology, one new way of interacting with devices coming sooner than later is via gesture. For Christmas, my son received a rudimentary motion tracking game which works quite well, enabling him (at 4, mind you) to access menu commands and a variety of moves and commands. Very cool, and all for less than $40, including the game, peripherals and video interface which sits atop the TV. It seems to be only a matter of time when I won’t need a green button remote to command my media center PC, navigating through the guide or to watch my recorded shows.


Some people (no pointing fingers at anyone, W.) have said that the “Digital Decade” is already history, a whopping three years or so since Bill’s CES keynote.


That’s rubbish. (With all due respect, of course.)


We’re barely at the halfway mark, still at a point where we need to push the innovation envelope and demand more from the experience, to make it less PC and more appliance and ubiquitous. We’re slowly moving to a point where computers start to disappear, but I’ll be surprised if the form factor and paradigm, of having a PC device, goes away by 2010. The experience is still not as integrated and seamless as it could be on workhorse PCs (like my media center or laptop) as I still spend too much time managing the “seamless experience” for my family (and sometimes, for friends and neighbours).


It’s been 10 years living with Windows, and 10 years before that living with the Macintosh, and before that with an assortment of interfaces. I expect it will take another few years to make the jump to where I can take down up my netop shingle.


I now have an incredible amount of CPU power available to me, almost enough to render and transcode video in real-time without $50K systems, with enough disk space to house my CD collection and favorite TV shows, and adequate networking to move the bits to all the computers (and a few devices) in the home… and when needed, extending the experience on the road. And yes, simple CE devices in my home rival the power of PCs just a few years ago, with these simple machines recording my TV shows, streaming my music and managing my back-ups. (Not to mention handling my phone calls.)


If the next few years of the Decade are as successful as the last few, we will see great improvements in personalization, entertainment management and integrated communications, all with advanced and seamless interfaces. Expand on the improvements seen in Xbox 360, Media Center 2005, MSN, TV, SQL, and in the coming Windows Vista, Office 12 and beyond. We will also need to improve and expand upon the customer support, on-line assistance and feedback systems to help our customers and partners make these jumps, take these dives into new products and technology.


Bringing computers to the masses outside the first world is one of the next big barriers to cross. Perhaps the Digital Decade will not only be about making the experience more seamless, but about bridging the digital divide that exists still in many places in this country as well as abroad. (More on that later.)


At the end of the last decade I was working on time-shifted television and digitizing audio and video, technologies now common place. The innovative trends in 2006 — and through the rest of the decade — never seen before will, I hope, be as astonishing as the rush I felt a little over 20 years ago when I first fired up MacPaint on a 128k Mac, dialing up at 300 baud to Compuserve. I expect we’ll see some of the shape of things to come this next week at CES and over the coming year.


Until then, Happy New Year.

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Of interest: NORAD Santa Tracker

This year, I’ll spend tomorrow nite with my kids on line tracking Satna Claus on the NORAD Santa Tracker. This site gets better every year, and this year we found a bunch of great things for kids to do on line… perfect after-dinner fare. I also expect that the video feeds of Santa traveling across the Earth, taken as he flies around the world, will be clear and crisp.


The NORAD Santa Tracker has become a family tradition, seeing as it’s been a regular Christmas Eve event the past few years. It’s run byu the great folks at NORAD-USNORTHCOM, and this year one of the partners is Windows Live Local. (My son prefers the cool NORAD shoulder patch over any of the other logos.)

Windows

And of course the question of the day: does Santa manage the Naughty/Nice list run on SQL?