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Article: Microsoft, Dell Team on Special Vista PC

Of interest from BetaNews… very cool and not far off of the config I thought about for a wicked new Windows Vista PC…



Vista logo PC from DellMicrosoft recently partnered with Dell to create a special edition PC to commemorate the launch of Windows Vista. Only a few of the computers have been produced, and there are no plans to sell it, the company says. Among the specifications are a Intel Core 2 Duo Processor, a 512MB NVIDIA GeForce 7900 GTX graphics card, 4GB of SDRAM, 1TB of hard drive space, a DVD+/-RW DL disc drive, dual television tuners, a 30″ widescreen monitor, and surround sound capabilities.


The PC has a rating of 5.2 on Vista’s Windows Experience Index. One of the PCs was raffled off at Microsoft’s internal launch party, with another going to charity. The number of PCs produced, or the plans for the other machines was not announced.

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TechNet: 10 Things You Need to Know about Deploying Windows Vista

Another top ten list, this time from Technet on 10 Things You Need to Know about Deploying Windows Vista.




    1. Windows Vista Images Are Bigger: With Windows Vista, image size begins at about 2GB—compressed and often around 5GB or more when deployed.

    2. Security Is Enhanced. My most anticipated has been BitLocker for encrypting the hard disk in Windows Vista Enterprise and Ultimate. With so many laptops going issing each year—by one estimate, more than 600,000 computers are stolen each year—BitLocker is one of the features I’ve heard mentioned most when it comes to securing mobile deployments.

    3. Windows Vista Is Componentized

    4. Text-Mode Installation Is Gone

    5. Boot.ini Is History

    6. Settings Are Configured in XML

    7. No More HAL Complications. In Windows Vista, the operating system is able to detect which HAL is required and automatically install it.

    8. Windows PE Rules. Near and dear to my heart, the new version of WinPE for Vista is a welcome revision to the utility that administrators use to manage enterprise customized OS deployments and recovery volumes. (Now available for download here as part of Business Desktop Deployment.) 

    9. It’s All about Images

    10. Deployment Is Language-Neutral. Windows Vista is language-neutral, and language packs can be added to create a deployment image. Servicing is language-neutral, too.

Related Articles From TechNet Magazine:


From the November 2006 issue of TechNet Magazine.


 

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Of interest: 10 Events That Impacted The IT Landscape

Informationweek has an article this week that gives “a quick scan of recent events, which have roiled the privacy waters at AOL, at the FBI, and in Europe. Here’s a quick collection of some recent reportage on data breaches, customer-data concerns, and privacy surveys you should know about.”



  1. Study: Data Breaches Becoming More Expensive
    The 2006 average was $182 per compromised record, including the cost of detection, escalation, notification, and follow-up help to victims. The Ponemon Institute’s 2005 study cited a figure of $132 per record.

  2. Customer Data + Carelessness = Pink Slips At AOL And Elsewhere
    AOL IT managers are the latest to join the unemployment line after breaches to customer data. They join IT managers at the Veterans Administration and Ohio University, who lost their jobs after data breaches.

  3. Privacy Worries Spur New Search Engine Tool
    The “Lost in the Crowd” tool was built in response to recent furor over AOL spilling search data on the Internet.

  4. Privacy Group Seeks Federal Probe Of AOL
    The Electronic Frontier Foundation says AOL violated its own privacy policy and FTC regulations and should be ordered to notify the people affected and to stop logging search data “except where absolutely necessary.”

  5. FBI Director, Police Chiefs Support Record Retention For Internet
    FBI Director Robert Mueller claims that requiring ISPs to hang on to data records will help strike a “balance between the legitimate need for privacy and law enforcement’s clear need for access.”

  6. Microsoft Offers Privacy Guidelines For Developers
    The company said it would like to see the industry build a common set of privacy best practices to increase customer trust.

  7. EU Seeks Tougher RFID Privacy Rules
    Some Europeans are concerned RFID tags can broadcast an individual’s personal information without their knowledge.

  8. Survey: Corporate Boards Value Info Over Privacy
    Fifty-three percent of those surveyed say it’s OK to follow people outside of the company and to obtain and review phone records if pretexting is legal.

  9. IT Confidential: The Government Giveth And Taketh Away In Terms Of Privacy
    The courts are finally overruling Internet access and getting practical about the obscurity of personal data contained in legal documents.

  10. Six Tips To Protect Online Search Privacy
    Concerns over privacy and the use of online search are at an all-time high. Here’s how to create a strong shield for privacy.

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What I’ve read (111906)

Here’s a brief list of the articles on my PDA this past week for the commute and weekend reading. It’s a slow week as many people are taking holidays: a good opportunity to get a few things done and spend quality time with the kids on holiday… you know, working on Cub Scout projects, cooking for the holidays and Star Trek: Legacy for the Xbox 360. 😉 

 


Is Sony eating hundreds of dollars on each PS3? – CNET News.com  The game console might cost you $499, but it’s got $806 worth of parts and manufacturing behind it, a research firm says. By Michael Kanellos, CNET News.com, November 16, 2006 

 



A yardstick for video-on-demand (NYT/CNET News.com) Nielsen Media Research to announce it will release video-on-demand ratings starting in December. The New York Times 

 



Vista, Antivirus: What If Allchin’s Right? (BetaNews) “Microsoft co-president Jim Allchin… advised Vista users not to use antivirus software. What he did say was that he was so confident in Vista’s new “Defense-in-Depth” architecture and failsafes… 

 



Comparison of New Microsoft Smartphones (Phone Scoop) The Phone Scoop compare page of the Samsung BlackJack (aka SGH-i607) The T-Mobile Dahs (aka HTC Excalibur and S620) and the Motorola Q. 

 



Longhorn Server and Vista SP1 to Ship Together (eWeek) By Peter Galli, Nov 16, 2006 “Microsoft plans to ship Windows Server “Longhorn” and Windows Vista Service Pack 1 at the same time, expected to be in the second half of next year. … (planned is) another Longhorn CTP (Community Technology Preview) 

 



Poll: 20 Percent Will Move to Vista in the Next Year (Application Development Trends)  “Eighty-six percent of IT decision makers say they plan to adopt Windows Vista, and 20 percent say they will move to the new operating system within the next year, according to a new tracking poll sponsored by CDW Corp. 

 


Sony, Microsoft, Nintendo get ready to rumble (Reuters) “The $30 billion video game industry’s own war of the titans reboots this week with the U.S. launch on Friday of Sony Corp.’s PlayStation 3 and Sunday’s debut of Nintendo Co. Ltd.’s Wii. 

 



Gordon Bell: A Head For Detail (Wired) “Gordon Bell feeds every piece of his life into a surrogate brain, and soon the rest of us will be able to do the same. But does perfect memory make you smarter, or just drive you nuts?” By Clive Thompson, Issue 110, November 2006. See also the following related bits:



How To Build Your Own version of Gordon Bell’s “MyLifeBits” (Wired) Wired, Nov 2006. See the complete article “A head for detail.”


Lifehacker, the Productivity and Software Guide  Engadget has a step-by-step tutorial for hacking your Xbox 360’s standard video cable into an HD VGA cable. Naturally, you can buy a VGA cable for your Xbox at about $40 – but if you’re the adventurous sort…

Lifehacker, the Productivity and Software Guide by Gina Trapani. “Web pages change. They disappear. They move to new URLs. They get lost or they’re password-protected or they’re only available on private intranets.


Ken Schutte.com: Slogger Slogger is an Extension for Mozilla Firefox web browser. It is a very flexible tool for creating a complete log of your browsing history (thus the name: Slogger <=> “browse logger”).

Yahoo! Messenger highest in Online Service Customer Satisfaction Study (JD Power) 11 October 2006 —Yahoo! Messenger ranks highest among primary instant messaging (IM) services, and Dogpile ranks highest among search engines in satisfying residential Internet service subscribers, according to the J.D. Power and Associates 2006 report. 

 



Dos and Don’ts for Vista and Office 2007 (eWeek) eWEEK Technology Editor Peter Coffee explains what to do and what not to do when thinking about, evaluating and implementing Vista and Office 2007. Some of this advice will actually surprise you. Nov 15, 2006 

 



D-Link DNS-323: A brand-name NAS worth waiting for. | Tom’s Networking THG reviews this high-performance BYOD dual drive SATA NAS with gigabit Ethernet and many serving options. Pros: High performance, fast Ethernet, supports separate drives, JBOD, RAID 0, RAID 1. Print, FTP, iTunes, UPnP AV servers. Quiet.

 



Pinnacle HD Pro Stick: Decent Hardware, Terrible Software (DenGuru) Pros: All the hardware you need is included, Can be used with Windows Media Center, Compact, decent remote. Cons: Very poor bundled “media center application.” Doesn’t handle QAM (cable) HD. By Mike Baggaley, Nov 16, 2006 

 



Holiday Buyers’ Guide 2006, Part 3: Components & Peripherals (Tom’s Hardware) The third part of our buyers’ guide deals with cases, power supplies, and storage and consumer devices. By Patrick Schmid, November 9, 2006 

 



Windows Vista on Notebooks: Why and What Hardware? (MobilityGuru) “So it’s really time to start planning your next step. In this article we’ll help motivate you to get going with Vista and guide you through what has become a confusing maze of decisions regarding upgrading your existing hardware or buying new hardware.” 

 


TechNet Summit: Gates on Google, iPod, Zune, bubbles and the future During an interview conducted by Charlie Rose at the TechNet Summit, Bill Gates discussed his philanthropic efforts, his future and Microsoft’s business. Posted by Dan Farber 11.15.06 

 



Microsoft Muscles into Enterprise Management “Microsoft will try to move up from the kids’ table at the enterprise management feast when it launches the private beta of its new Service Desk offering Nov. 14 and announces its participation in the Configuration Management Database Federation Working Group. 

 



Beware The Label Tax: Universal gets $1 per Zune (Forbes.com) “Universal Music (said) that it would share in the hardware revenue from the sale of the new Microsoft Zune and would look to strike similar deals with other hardware manufacturers.

 

Microsoft to link Zune device to Xbox, PCs (Computerworld Singapore) “Microsoft plans to extend the wireless capability of its new Zune devices to PCs and the company’s Xbox 360 game console, (says) Bill Gates…

 

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Seth Godin on lambchops, and I don’t mean food

This week Seth Godin writes about lambchops, specifically “The lambchop theory of success.”


First, his definition:



Lambchop: “A kind, thoughtful person. Someone who keeps her promises. Someone who does great work but doesn’t always brag about it. Someone you’d like to work with again.


“It used to be that a real jerk who got results was exactly what you needed. Today, in a world that’s a lot more connected and a lot more permeable, lambchops win out”


I run into people that fall under these definitions. Today, I ran into a Lambchop. I took my son to get a bunch of new items and uniform pieces for his latest endeavour: Cub Scouts. Traveling to the Scout Shop in downtown Seattle, I realized only when we arrived that I’d left my wallet at home. Knowing that they’d soon close, I told the man behind the counter – smartly dressed in a Scout Master uniform – of my forgetfulness.


“No problem. If you want, get the information from your wife and we’ll send you on your way with everything you need today,” he told me.


Huh? I was surprised.


And then he stepped from behind the counter and proceeded to help us collect all the various items my eight-year-old would need to fit in with his other Bear Cub Scouts at their next meeting, explaining all of the ins and outs, the detailed info on each item. This was Nordstrom’s-class customer service, and coming from a man wearing a kerchif. (OK, maybe he wasn’t… but he had the official uniform on.) A few minutes later we were on our way, my son happy that he had all his gear, and me happy that I didn’t have to drive round trip twice to Seattle.


At Microsoft, we talk a lot about a focus on improving the experiences that our Customers and Partners have with us, corporate citizenship and generally remembering what it was like to be a customer of Microsoft. Talk is cheap, as they say. So as employees, we tend to be our own worst critics and supporters: we not only use our own services, software and hardware products, but we deliver feedback to product teams on the good and the bad (and sometimes the ugly ;).


And when we do this, the people that command the most respect — and frankly get the best feedback from the product teams — tend to be the ones who offer constructive and thoughtful feedback, rather than Seth’s described “real jerks” as noted above. There just seem to be more connected people working on behalf of our customers and partners these days, doing the right things.


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