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Need DTV transition help? Zenith provides Help Guides for Last Mile of the Digital TV Transition

Clip art from Microsoft Office OnlineOf interest today from The Morning Bridge, a news feed of coverage of what’s happening in multiplatform companies (across cable, satellite, telco and wireless operators), Zenith provides a "DTV Help Guide" for the last mile to the Digital TV Transition in the States…

"With less than two months to go until the final digital television transition cutoff date (we hope), converter box maker Zenith has introduced an online connection guide to help users get their set-top boxes set up correctly in time for the switch.

"The site — accessible at www.ConnectYourBox.com and www.ConecteSuConvertidor.com (guess which one is in Spanish) — features step-by-step set up instructions for connecting a box to a TV, along with troubleshooting information and a FAQ. The site also includes links to other DTV-related resources like AntennaWeb.org for help with signal reception, antenna compatibility and other issues."

As you likely are aware (and as noted on the http://www.dtv2009.gov web site) broadcast television in the United States will move from analog and to a digital broadcast format bo later than June 12, 2009.

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Your questions: I’ve lost my Hotmail password: what should I do?

A couple of similarly themed questions today:

"I’ve lost my password and secret question of my account e-mail. Where do I get help to regain my password as soon as possible?

and

"Today, while I was using Windows Live Messenger, I automatically got logged out of it saying "You messenger has been logged in from another location". When I clicked on Reconnect, my messenger signed back in, but there was an unread email in my inbox. That email was from Microsoft Corporation confirming the change of my password. I tried to change the password via Secret Question and Answer and found that my secret question and answer was changed."

First, you should contact Hotmail support asap. For more info on recovering your account that you think may have been compromised, see this post on the Windows Live Help site: http://windowslivehelp.com/solutions/accounts/archive/2008/10/25/what-to-do-if-you-think-your-accounts-been-stolen.aspx

You may also go to http://windowslivehelp.com/Default.aspx and post a note in http://windowslivehelp.com/community/33.aspx

Hope this helps.

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del.icio.us Tags: privacy, tips, howto, Microsoft, security

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Thinking about preparing for Windows 7? I’m thinking it’s time for a new hard disk

Hard DiskSitting through lunch today between meetings and mail, I thought about what every self-respecting geek waiting for the release of Windows 7: what should I do in order to prep one of my older computers for this new OS? 


Today, I thought I’d start with one upgrade to consider (and a point of failure I’d like to avoid): a new hard disk for my laptop. 


Keeping in mind that as noted here (that the Beta will stop working on August 1, 2009), I intend to rely on my dual boot configuration for Windows 7 to fall back to Vista and then move to the RC… and ultimately to the release version of Win7 from Windows Vista. (I used this strategy for machines at home, as mentioned in my later post from the article “How To Dual Boot Vista and Windows 7″ from NetworkWorld.)


To continue using your PC, please be prepared to reinstall a prior version of Windows or a subsequent release of Windows 7 before the expiration date. You won’t be able to upgrade from the Beta to the final retail version of Windows 7.


Luckily, Jason Cross over at ExtremeTech obliges with his article, How To Upgrade Your Laptop Hard Drive, in which he steps through the how-to of moving the contents of your current hard drive over to a new one, likely larger given the incredible value per GB these days.


Considering the drive in our now out of warranty Dell Inspiron m600 successfully running on Windows Vista SP1 – even more so my so-called revitalized Notebook (Toshiba M200) – I think that I have the perfect candidates for new HDDs. With 1GB of memory on the notebooks already, the major upgrade investment for me is the HDD… and a good value considering a new 250GB drive will run you as little as $60. (I still remember fondly by original 20MB drive that I paid a small fortune for a then-new Mac Plus.)


If I had to consider the work needed to upgrade an old notebook, I’d probably buy a new computer given the cost of PC notebooks these days (never mind small notebook PCs for a moment). As I found in my post Me : “What kind of a computer should I buy?” for $679, I was able to get a new Sony with a 15″ widescreen, Intel Core 2 Duo T5800, 250GB HDD, 4GB of memory, Wireless-N (draft 802.11n). We will upgrade this computer to Windows 7 as soon as it comes out on the market – it’s the one PC at home (my wife’s) we have not installed the Windows 7 beta for obvious reasons to husband/family IT Pros. 😉


In the example below, Lauren found even better in value for money, as noted on the page of the recent Microsoft television commercials.




Laptop Hunters – Behind the Scenes


 


Tags: Windows 7, how to, hard disk.




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Mac vs. a Windows PC, Windows 7 rights to Windows XP, Tiered Billing for Internet Access and more of what I’ve read

A few links of interest today… a quick post as I need to get through my email. Busy week.

You’ve no doubt seen the latest Microsoft Windows commercials. Well, BusinessWeek’s Arik Hesseldahl has a bone to pick with the math in his article, Mac vs. PC: What You Don’t Get for $699 – BusinessWeek (Byte of the Apple April 15, 2009: "A 17-in. PC may cost a lot less than a 17-in. Mac. But you get less, too, including security, multimedia tools, and, some say, satisfaction."

"Now Microsoft is fighting back with its own advertising campaign. I’ve enjoyed some of its elements. The Seinfeld spots were weird. I was intrigued by some of the "I’m a PC" spots that aired last fall, depicting PC users engaged in a variety of jobs—teaching law, protecting endangered species, blogging for Barack Obama. The message: You can use a Windows PC and still do cool and interesting things. Not bad. Then came the adorable little girls: Kylie, age 4, and Alexa, age 7, e-mailing pictures of fish and stitching together pictures of a fort into one. Microsoft, it seemed, had finally found its advertising voice.

"Yes, $699 beats the $2,800 you’d pay for a Mac with a 17-in. screen. But when it comes to PCs, there’s still a great deal more to buy.

"Add it all up and it’s not hard to imagine Lauren’s $699 computer costing something closer to $1,500."

I’m sure that you’ll see plenty of analysis on his analysis and opinions in the nearly 60 pages of comments, as John Byrne Editor-in-Chief of BusinessWeek.com, noted in his Tweet: "A raging Mac vs. PC debate at BW.com today. Perspectives from readers take up 56 pages on our site for a 2-page story. http://is.gd/sJTP"

I’m reminded of Harry McCracken’s earlier post Microsoft’s New Windows Ads: They’re a Trap! Bwahahahahahahah! (April 5, 2009) in which he muses…

"Can we all agree that it’s always a bad idea to mistake advertising for rational discourse? Axe deodorant won’t cause armies of gorgeous women to throw themselves at your feet. I know of no evidence that cows who live in California are any happier than those in other states, nor that their mood impacts the quality of their milk. Cigarette companies would still be claiming that their products were good for your throat if they could get away with it. After thirty years, I’m still unclear about the benefits of being a Pepper. That’s all fine. (Okay, not the part about the cigarette ads.)

"So I haven’t taken Microsoft’s new ads with shoppers spurning Macs for HP laptops too seriously. Mostly I’ve mused about why they seem to ignore Microsoft’s own contribution to the PC and used them as a springboard for PC-Mac price comparisons of my own. (I’m happy to say that these posts have prompted dozens of comments by members of the Technologizer community cogently taking both pro-Windows and pro-Mac stances–they make for great reading.)

DailyTech – Windows 7 Customers Can Still Downgrade to Windows XP – Party like it’s 2001, as Microsoft just won’t let Windows XP die! Windows XP, first released in October 2001, has been a sales hit for years, strengthening Microsoft’s ownership of the OS market. When Windows Vista came along, it faced a tough task building upon Windows XP’s success. Based on critical review and public reception, it fell short of matching this success. Microsoft had planned to retire Windows XP in June 2008, after having already extended its lifespan longer than intended due to customers picking XP over Vista. However, June came and went and only saw a partial retirement of XP. Microsoft still had loopholes retaining support and sales for small systems like netbooks. It also continued to support an option that allowed customers to purchase Windows Vista and downgrade to Windows XP.

Atomic Synchronicity in Fort Collins | FortCollinsNow.com – "Quick — look at your cell phone, or glance your watch. What time is it right now? Oh, really? How can you be so sure? That timepiece has to base its claims on something. When you set it, you told your microwave or your watch what time it was. You got that time from a different clock somewhere else. Meanwhile, a little computer or a piece of quartz has been keeping track for you, but what does it actually track? What is a minute, anyway? What’s a second?"

CableTechTalk » Blog Archive » Consumption Based Billing and The Princess Bride by Kyle McSlarrow :: April 16th, 2009 – "One of my favorite movies is The Princess Bride. Remember when the character Vizzini, played by Wallace Shawn, notes the two classic blunders — one of which is never get involved in a land war in Asia and the other, never go in against a Sicilian when death is on the line? There’s probably a third, which is to never go “blog” vs. “blog” with organizations like Free Press that cut its teeth on this medium. So, it is certainly not a surprise that the Free Press response to my last post smoothly skips over some fundamental points. On the Free Press homepage, the first thing you see is a technicolor box blaring “Tell Congress: Investigate the Unfair Internet Penalty.” In the Free Press response, this has now turned into a mere “inquiry.” Who could be against that? Especially when these plans are rolling out “under the radar.”

Tax-free Internet shopping may be at an end | Politics and Law – CNET News, April 15, 2009 by Declan McCullagh — "If a little-known but influential alliance of state politicians, large retailers, and tax collectors have their way, the days of tax-free Internet shopping may be nearly over. A bill expected to be introduced in the U.S. Congress as early as Monday would rewrite the ground rules for mail order and Internet sales by eliminating what its supporters view as a "loophole" that, in many cases, allows Americans to shop over the Internet without paying sales taxes."

Microsoft’s search must begin in Redmond | Beyond Binary – CNET News April 13, 2009 by Ina Fried — "Microsoft’s challenge to grow its share of the search business isn’t just a global issue. It’s also a challenge within its own walls. Despite investing five years and hundreds of millions of dollars on its search product, Microsoft has struggled to get people to use its service, even those whom it employs. Microsoft Senior Vice President Yusuf Mehdi said the company’s share of the search market–even internally–has been disappointing. "That’s true," Mehdi said in an interview last week."

Satisfy Me : Announcement: Microsoft Windows update available for unconfirmed Pakistan daylight saving time change in April 2009

Satisfy Me : Your questions: what do I like about Windows 7? The Taskbar, saving me time (and money 😉 – Yesterday I noted that there were a few things I like about Windows 7. I saw a tweet about the post today from microsoftsubnet on the Seven things to love, hate about Windows 7 by Tom Henderson and Brendan Allen in Network World (01/15/09, See http://tinyurl.com/9ropqp). The next area of Windows 7 to mention that I find that I use and enjoy is the new and improved Taskbar, as covered here on MSDN.

Satisfy Me : Thinking about the Windows 7 upgrade experience, have you backed up your files lately? – This week the Windows 7 team posted on delivering a quality upgrade experience for Windows 7, noting that many people are running the Windows 7 Beta full time just as many of us do daily at Microsoft. And the team is encouraging users to revert to an earlier Windows Vista image on their PCs and perform an upgrade to the next publicly available pre-release build…

Kiev and Kumo: The long and winding road to Live Search’s rebrand | All about Microsoft | ZDNet.com Posted by Mary Jo Foley @ 7:56 am — "As Microsoft inches closer to the expected June rebranding and launch of the latest iteration of its search engine, company officials are sharing selective bits and pieces of what the Redmondians are planning. In an April 8 Wall Street Journal story about Microsoft’s search-branding challenges , Yusuf Mehdi, the Senior Vice President of Microsoft’s Online Audience Business Group, mentioned “Kiev.” Kiev, a codename I first heard about via LiveSide, seems to be the uber-brand for Microsoft’s upcoming search release. Kumo, the codename for the search-engine component, is one piece of Kiev, Mehdi confirmed with the Journal."

Microsoft will allow Windows 7 users to downgrade to XP | All about Microsoft | ZDNet.com Posted by Mary Jo Foley @ 10:04 am — "Microsoft and its PC partners are going to allow Windows 7 users to downgrade not just to Windows Vista, but also to Windows XP, Microsoft officials are confirming. Some company watchers have been wondering about the downgrade rights that Microsoft will offer when Windows 7 ships. When AppleInsider reported this weekend that HP was going to offer Windows 7 users the ability to downgrade to XP, I asked Microsoft about the story. Here’s what a spokesperson representing the company’s Windows client division told me via e-mail on April 5…"

Microsoft promises to reduce prices for cloud WS2008 licenses: Is Microsoft (NSDQ: MSFT) a competitor to Amazon .. http://tr.im/iKYa

From Guy Kawasaki: Twips for Twork: 10 Twitter tips for the workplace http://adjix.com/arnj (also http://twitter.alltop.com) AC Please RT

Apple placed chip order for 32GB iPhones (Dawn Kawamoto/CNET News): Dawn Kawamoto / CNET News: Analys.. http://tinyurl.com/c63fgh

LinkedIn Tips and Tricks http://tinyurl.com/dkndxc

What the world will look like by 2050 http://twurl.nl/5xj7a8

EverythingMS One Microsoft Way: Microsoft rep faces tough questions at Linux Summit http://tr.im/iKI3

TechRSSTime Warner faces backlash on broadband caps: Consumers and lawmakers have expressed anger and concern over Time.. http://tinyurl.com/c8gcf6

Walk-thru of new HP MediaSmart Server features with New Update coming from We Got Served: http://tinyurl.com/ckytqd

Tags: articles, what I read, twitter.

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Announcement: Microsoft Windows update available for unconfirmed Pakistan daylight saving time change on April 15, 2009

Ever see the movie Groundhog Day? Well, I feel like I’m re-living a past event.

We have reports that Pakistan is changing their daylight saving time… but unfortunately all we have are news reports at this time (as noted here on the dailytimes.com.pk site). We still don’t have government confirmation that this is happening, but will provide information based on what we have assembled from news reports thus far.

And once again, this fast-tracked change came with little advance notice and little reason for a fast implementation.  Many customers, enterprises may not have enough time to make any changes or deploy any updates to their networks or systems. You should be aware of these changes and verify any meetings that occur in the country.  One challenge (as I have said a few times on this blog) is that when you install either DST hotfixes or cumulative updates, and governments make late-breaking changes to DST and TZ rules, appointments on your Office Outlook calendar and other systems could end up being be off by an hour until the problem is addressed.

As noted in several news reports, Pakistan will begin to observe to daylight saving time on Wednesday, April 15, 2009. The country will move one hour forward between April 14 and April 15 at midnight (00:00h). The offset will be UTC +6:00 hours (six hours ahead of Greenwich Mean Time, or GMT) instead of the current +5:00h.

As noted on timeanddate.com, the story has been less than clear…

"Pakistan will observe daylight saving time on Wednesday, April 15, 2009, to alleviate the nation’s power shortages. Pakistan’s Ministry of Water and Power originally proposed for the country’s 2009 daylight saving schedule to start on April 1. However, the daylight saving schedule was delayed due to weather conditions. Early in April, May 1 was proposed as another date to start DST."

It appears that the information of this change has not yet been posted to any government sites in Pakistan.

Important information to note at the moment on these changes: a hotfix is available to update Windows Operating Systems, as these new DST settings for Pakistan are not included in current DST settings. The following announcement has been posted to the DST blog:

Notice:  Optional Hotfix Available for Pakistan 2009 Daylight Saving Time

As reported in various publications, including Daily Times, Pakistan has announced the start of DST for 2009 on April 15th at midnight.  This information is subject to change as it has not been officially confirmed by a Pakistani government source. 

Microsoft has produced a hotfix to implement this change for Windows Vista and Windows Server 2008.  If interested in downloading this hotfix, please refer to KB 970084 titled: "A hotfix is available to update the Daylight Saving Time for the "(GMT +5:00) Islamabad, Karachi" time zone for the year 2009 for Windows Vista-based and Windows Server 2008-based computers".

For other Windows versions, please refer to KB 914387 "How to configure daylight saving time for Microsoft Windows operating systems" on how to update the time zone registry key.

Public service announcement: As noted in a prior post, our product teams are moving to a regular rhythm to update their products and services to reflect these time changes. (For each update release, Microsoft accepts change requests up to a few months prior to the release date.) But changes such as these – and without official notification – are difficult for sysadmins and IT professionals around the world to manage.

And here’s my regular advice for governments: in support of these types of changes, we provide guidance and Microsoft’s Policy in Response to DST/TZ Requests. It’s important for countries and territories to work towards seamless transitions to new DST and time zones policies, providing ample advance notice (of a year or more) with published confirmation of planned changes.

In addition – and this is important – we suggest that entities considering the changes implement changes at the next clock tick after 01:59:59 rather than at 00:00:00. Making the change at midnight can impact daily systems, such as back ups, data pulls or other automated tasks.

Tags: Microsoft, Daylight Saving Time, Daylight Savings Time, RSS, DST, Pakistan; 17,90,000 (up from 3.4M a year ago); 18,000,000 (up from 900K a year ago)

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