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Anti-spyware added to new OneCare beta

As noted on CNet, the new beta version of Windows OneCare Live Windows OneCare now includes anti-spyware technology.



As OneCare hits the homestretch, Microsoft is putting the final touches on the product. The “beta refresh” released Thursday adds anti-spyware functionality to the software, the one main feature that wasn’t yet part of the beta product. The anti-spyware features come from Windows Defender, Microsoft’s anti-spyware application that’s also in beta.


More on the new version can be found in the new entry “Windows Live OneCare – Changes, Changes, Changes” on the Windows Live OneCare Team Blog.


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Report on “The end of TV as we know it”

A few of the good folks from IBM Business Consulting Services released a report earlier this year on “The end of TV as we know it.” It provides their view on what the landscape in 2012 looks like across the industry for television programming, distribution and consumption. The authors interviewed a number of extensive interviews with analysts, pundits and execs from across a worldwide and industry-wide spectrum.



“Our analysis indicates that market evolution hinges on two key market drivers: openness of access channels and levels of consumer involvement with media. For the next 5-7 years, there will be change on both fronts – but not uniformly. The industry instead will be stamped by consumer bimodality, a coexistence of two types of users with disparate channel requirements. While one consumer segment remains passive in the living room, the other will force radical change in business models in a search for anytime, anywhere content through multiple channels.”


Interesting.


No surprise that the report heralds sweeping changes we will see in television and video entertainment consumption due to the growing and near pervasive success of digital video recorder (DVR) technologies (commercialized now in Tivo, ReplayTV, Windows Media Center systems), television programming distributed via the web (as we see today in iTunes, Google, Akimbo and others) and more (like our own Microsoft IPTV solutions).


When I look back to the estimates we made at my previous company in 2000, I remember that we guesstimated at the hockey stick of DVR adoption, with “DVR in every major household” by, well, just about now. I remember projections that pegged North American DVR households at more that 30-40 million units, and possibly as high as 60-70 million by the end of the decade. Now those estimates may be right, when you take into consideration the number of devices that now enable video entertainment (OK, multimedia) in the home, on the go and across a wide spectrum of devices and services. 


IBM called out is that TV viewing will be predominantly passive, with people watching programming when it’s on, and that the younger generation (I guess Generation X — where I fall — and younger) will be more in tune with content that is available anywhere and anytime they want it, whether it’s via a TV, PC, phone or other portable media player.


For me, the concept is incredibly satisfying. But I’ve found that the experience is increasingly frustrating. That is an area where a complete, simple and interconnected experience will benefit consumers the most. At a time when the average consumer spends less than 20 minutes to learn how to use a new consumer gadget, people rarely have the time or patience to configure and connect all of the devices in the chain.


I do enjoy the relatively simple experience I have today with a Media Center PC at the centre of our system, Media Center Extender and portable Media players – but I still spend time managing, sync’ing and archiving. The vast majority of our entertainment viewing comes through our ReplayTV DVRs — the TV equivalent of “point-and-shoot” digital cameras — which allows us to time shift our programming from the networks. Our family straddles that line between the two cultures that IBM called out, with a couple of GenX and a few of the latest generation of consumers driving us to be more demanding about our video entertainment choices. 


Mind you, TV doesn’t rule our lives, but we’re certainly in the mainstream when it comes to the average amount of television we watch at home. (I recall that TV viewers in the US watches an average of 18 hours a week, although this has declined in the last few years with the rise in web surfing.) Nothing beats a beautiful weekend outdoors… but when the weather doesn’t cooperate, it’s great to have a queue of the stuff you want to watch waiting at home for you. 


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New Windows Live updates: Improved Search, Toolbar RSS Support

Announced this week, improvements to the Windows Live service with improvements in Search, a new Windows Live toolbar (which auto-detects RSS feeds and updates your personal Live.com home page)



Debuting in test form Wednesday, Windows Live Search is Microsoft’s latest move in a major strategy shift that has the world’s largest software company focusing more heavily on Internet-based software and services.


For me, one nice feature is the ability to save searches and have them automatically updated on my own Live.com home page. See more at http://ideas.live.com/.



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Staying ahead and Work/Life Balance

A quick entry as this came across my IM while on a conference call: of interest from Fortune, an article on “How I Work” in which “a dozen super-achievers tell how they stay ahead in the fast lane.” (note 20110126: the article also available here as the original link appears to be broken.)

…the following 12 interviews are by no means a litany of complaints. These people, ranging from jazz maestro Wynton Marsalis to jurist Richard Posner to Goldman’s CEO, Hank Paulson, love what they do.

The challenge is to continue to do it well, when the responsibilities and complexities keep increasing. One common answer is to get up early — real early. Note to MBA students: If you can’t rise at dawn, you might just reconsider your goal of making it as a CEO.

At the office, we spend cycles on thinking about how to enable work/life balance, important when you consider we generally spend more waking hours at work and with other employees at the office than with our own familes. There’s a good aggregation article on the work essentials for work/life balance.

For me, I find that Snarf from MS Research is a good way to deal with the flow of emails I get on a daily basis (after rules process out all the mail lists): on a good/bad day (you pick), I see 200+ mails in my in box.

Of note: one manager I know is so serious about work/life balance that he all but forbids his team from sending emails late into the night (sure, there are exceptions to the rule). But he is able to live within the boundaries by responding to mail ofline after the family goes to bed and then sync’ing mail the next morning at the office.

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How we got our groove… but the job’s not done

This week, I noted in my internal blog at the company that the Wall Street Journal ran an article on How Microsoft Rebooted Its Reputation, which mentions a survey of global opinion leaders at the World Economic Forum, and our efforts to focus on improving relationship with our customers, partners and employees.



“In June 2002, Mr. Ballmer sent an email to company employees heralding a change in the corporate mission. The email emphasized values, put a new focus on “trustworthy computing,” and talked about Microsoft’s responsibilities to “customers, partners, shareholders, employees and communities in which we live and serve.” Subsequently, company officials started focusing attention on programs serving “stakeholders” such as the arrangement announced yesterday with the U.S. Department of Labor, that provides computer-skills training in a number of cities.”


This is a great recognition, and at the same time a significant responsibility. It’s so easy for us to look at this and say “hey, great, good job.” 


But the hard work continues every day in the effort to improve the connections with our customers and partners at Microsoft. The on-going challenge is to improve their satisfaction with our service and products. It’s just good business sense to take care of our customers and partners.


In addition,  there’s been a great deal of discussion and press on what employees at Microsoft think about the company: it’s also important to ensure that Microsoft employees are satisfied as well. (Note: There is a large body of work —including this study, “Linking Employee Satisfaction with Productivity, Performance, and Customer Satisfaction,” from the Corporate Leadership Council– that notes there are significant links between employee satisfaction and customer satisfaction, productivity, and financial performance. Happy employees = satisfied customers.)


I read Glenn Ross’ entry today on  “What Must You Do Before You Can Create A Great Customer Service Experience.” He mentions that you have to “treat your employees as if they were your most important customers, as happy employees = happy customers=greater net income.”


Ross also notes that you need to “build in an ongoing feedback mechanism using multiple channels so that your employees, your customers, and even your vendors can provide feedback. Act on that feedback.”


Yes, note to self to spend some time soon (after our next set of meetings that have kept me busy and off the blog this past week) to write about how we listen and respond (“then repeat”) at the company.



Just as much as this blog is a set of things I think and hope will have a positive impact on customers and partners, it’s also a place where I can acknowledge that there are so many people in the company who are super passionate about improving the company. They know that when they make the effort to improve our products, customer services, systems, processes, structure and internal day-to-day stuff, many employees believe it will result in improvements across the board.  


OK, off the soap box.


If you haven’t seen a reference to the mail from Steve Ballmer that the Journal quoted above, I think you can still find a synopsis here. In addition to that mail in 2002, Steve also wrote an email to our customers and partners in which he shared some of the ways we had established better connections with our customers, and a look to how we might implement these listen and respond systems in the future.



We are renewing our commitment to improve our communications with partners and customers. We are dedicated to being a responsible leader in our industry. And we are passionate about bringing the benefits of digital technology to every community in the world. Everything we do supports our mission of becoming a global technology provider that makes great software to help people realize their potential – whether that’s on the PC, the Internet, or a gaming or handheld device.


It’s funny… Steve wrote that almost four years ago, and I so impressed in what the company has achieved over that period.


But as I noted, that doesn’t mean we’re done.


I heard a quote during the Olympics, ‘though I don’t recall who said it: the effort doesn’t end with the end of the race or the closing of the games, it’s the beginning of the next four years of training for the next Olympics. That’s how I look at our efforts at the company to improve the levels of satisfaction with our customers and partners, as well as the internal satisfaction of our employees: four years after Steve’s mail, we still have a lot of work and a lot more ground to cover.


Speaking of satisfied customers, I’m off to read stories to the kids. Work-life balance, you know.


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