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Apple’s webpage for daylight saving time, Mac OS X 10.3 and 10.4 updates

I noticed that this week Apple updated their web page on daylight saving time (launched at the end of January 2007).


Apple also released Java updates for Macintosh OS X version 10.3 and version 10.4 that accomodates the latest Daylight Saving Time. Apple’s site notes that these updates include time zone information as of January 8, 2007.


Here are the links:


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Article: Recovering files by reinstalling Windows, Mac virus protection

Thsi week in Patrick Marshall’s Q&A column on technology, there are two items that struck home for me:


Reinstalling Windows to recover lost files: The first was Mr. Marchall’s advice on “reinstalling Windows may help retrieve photos.” A reader asked what they should do when their “daughter’s computer wouldn’t boot and displayed a message stating that Windows System 32 was missing. All I wanted was to get her pictures off her hard drive.”


Mr. Marshall suggests reinstalling Windows. The error message you’re getting implies that important system files have been corrupted, whether by a problem with the drive or by a virus. That being the case, you’ll need to boot from your Windows disk and reinstall Windows. Assuming you’re able to reinstall, choose to install over the current version. Above all, do not choose the option to reformat the drive prior to installing.


More info on how to do this is detailed on Nick Peers’ good tutorial on reinstalling Windows, and mentioned in this PC World article.


I also agree with Marshall’s suggestion to use a reputable hard-drive data-retrieval service if the drive is damaged and you’re not able to reinstall Windows.


One more thing: back up your files regularly. If you don’t have a writable CD or DVD drive (or even if you do) a handy and ever more affordable way to back up your files is to a USB 2.0 Flash Drive. I found several brands of flash drives (which I refer to as memory fobs, sometimes getting a blank stare at the office) for less than $20 for 1 GB. I use these at home for archiving our photos and important documents, and keep a small spare flash drive in our emergency kit with copies of important family documents and information.


Note on Mac OS X anti-virus: Also of interest in this week’s column was this on Mac AV:



“I wrote that even users of Apple computers should employ anti-virus software, explaining that while there are fewer viruses reported for Apple computers, especially for those using the newest Mac OS X operating system, there are still viruses.


“I was inundated with responses from Mac users, many of whom claimed there are no viruses that target the Mac OS X. While it is interesting to find that so many users feel so passionately about their choice of operating system, it is dangerous to operate under the assumption that your computer does not need anti-virus software.


“Indeed, there is no operating system in the world that is not vulnerable to viruses.


“There were, in fact, so many e-mails that I cannot respond to them individually. Accordingly, I want to again urge readers with more questions to visit the Web site I mentioned in the article: www.securemac.com. You will find extensive coverage there of existing vulnerabilities and viruses affecting Mac OS X and other Apple operating systems.”


I have a Mac at home (actually, more than one… it’s a long story.) and I wouldn’t think to have them on the Internet or our network without AV. I received a number of mails from Mac users to my blog post on “Mac or PC Security, it doesn’t matter: be prepared” and why I noted that being prepared in this example costs me nothing. I have a choice to purchase additional security if I choose. And that’s what I have done for both my Macs (with Norton AV, but I am considering switching to Intego) and my PCs (OneCare with Etrust).


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Mac or PC Security, it doesn’t matter: be prepared

In a comment I received to a recent blog posting on being careful when it comes to viruses, I wanted to mention something when it comes to computer security: whether you have a PC or a Mac, you will have to be concerned about security and protect yourself.


If you own a computer – PC or Mac (and we have both at home) – you should run AV software, have a firewall on your internet connection and practice “safe computing.”


But we have to be careful to reach broad-based conclusions. It’s better to anticipate an attack and be prepared and protected rather than hope that you won’t be the victim of an attack. As I said in a past post, see our Security at home site for more ideas on how to protect your computer. It has info on avoiding online scams with the Microsoft Phishing Filter, anti-virus, anti-spyware, security updates, Office and Windows update tools… well worth your time. Mac users can look here on Apple’s site for more info on protecting your Mac.


As USA Today reported earlier this year…



“Windows-based PCs have felt the brunt of attacks for years because those machines command more than 95% of the worldwide market. Macs mostly have escaped the attention of hackers. Until now.


“Unless they consider themselves very savvy, Mac users should run anti-virus software just like Windows users,” says Larry Seltzer, security center editor at news site eWeek.com. “Mac users need to start developing a sense of cynicism about content that comes unsolicited, even if it appears to come from a user they know.”


Of interest is eWeek’s Larry Seltzer’s article on “What Will Apple Do When the Malware Comes?”


As our COO Kevin Turner says, (paraphrased): don’t be a victim… be a participant in your own rescue.

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Apple’s iTV promise is a reality today in Media Center, and others

As a follow up to my , the New York Times has on article on Apple’s Plans to Inhabit Living Room.



Steven P. Jobs, Apple Computer’s chief executive, concluded a much-anticipated company event on Tuesday with his usual tease, noting that he had “one last thing” to introduce.


“Then, in an unusual departure from Apple’s practice of announcing new products when they are ready to ship, he talked about a product due out early next year that will be the company’s first step into the living room. The device, which Apple is calling iTV for now, will plug into a television and wirelessly pull in video and music from a Macintosh computer in the den or from the Internet. The box, which will cost $299, is about the size of a slim paperback novel.


“The iTV device places Apple squarely in the consumer electronics market and gives it a way to compete directly with Microsoft and PC industry giants like Dell and Hewlett-Packard, which are also eagerly looking at markets for entertainment beyond the PC screen.


“He did what he needed to do,” said Michael Gartenberg, vice president and research director for Jupiter Research. “It puts him way ahead of everyone else” in the effort to extend the PC to the living room.”


Really? I’m not sure how the “iTV” announcement “puts him way ahead of everyone else.”


Video downloaded via the Internet is one way to get your content, arguably one that is growing in popularity as people develop better distribution systems and business models. Streaming video is getting better with reasonable quality as I found with . People are changing the way they look at their PCs and their TVs, per my post on “The end of TV as we know it.” 


As I mentioned last month, look what happened when Disney’s opened the gates to content on the Internet: they had “37 million downloads, with an average of 1 million visitors a day, and 1.5 billion page views” over a two month period this summer, when they had Disney Channel shows available on DisneyChannel.com. That sounds like a successful model to me.


When the movie and TV studios open up their catalogues and sell more movies and shows over the entertainment sites like Rhapsody, Urge and through iTunes, then we as consumers may no longer need to record live TV, as we do at home for nearly all our viewing. But that day is still a long time away, IMHO: there are plenty of issues yet to be resolved, around how much to charge for programs, how consumers and studios become more comfortable with the protections (like DRM) around what is sold/rented, and when to make the content available (like we see sometimes with simultaneous theatrical and on-demand releases).


For now, the DVR model works for personal, “on-demand” programming, whether you record the content via a Windows Media Center, ReplayTV or TiVo CE device, or if DVR is offered as a feature with your cable or satellite set-top box. That way, you always have what you want to watch available at your leisure. On-demand consumption via cable is growing, too, especially as more and more popular programming is made available and (in my view) often free. Then comes Blockbuster and Netflix model for renting early release movies and large catalogues of films via mail order still has an appeal: personally, I find that we receive DVDs a day or two within ordering them. These are some competitive distribution and business model points for the studios.


The “revolution” that Jobs talks about is not only being held back by current limitations in Internet download speeds, it’s around comfort in the business models of getting content to the home, and the restrictions around how people are allowed to view or listen to it. As I’ve said previously, Rhapsody has changed the way I listen to music, my ReplayTV changed the way I watch TV, and the Media Center is aggregating all of it on one device — one system — that let’s me almost seamlessly consume (view, listen) to the content I want. For many consumers, the challenge has been the way to get the content to the devices I want that is more automated than the way I sync phones, audio and video players to my Media Center: I look forward to being able to extend my content easily to my portable devices, similar to the way I use the Media Center Extender concept via our home network. (Sling is close, but not as seamless as I’d like.)


It’s not just the Internet or the speed of the network. It’s not the last mile or the last 100 feet to the home, as we’re getting speeds to households that are capable of getting VHS and (close to or at) DVD quality. The challenge is in the last 10 feet: as a content company or distributor, how do you get consumers to pay for something, making it easy for them to buy and consume at the point of purchase? In this case, that point is the TV (or the DVR/PC connected to a TV). It’s also the PC, mobile phone, the portable and eventually wireless media players (Zune can’t come fast enough).


This is where I think Jobs’ value proposition of an end-to-end system works… that is if you have a Mac, and iTunes, and an iPod and an iTV adapter. For those who manage their content in iTunes, I see the elegance. With Apple’s vision of a holistic system, there is the promise of being able to provide a compelling home entertainment experience, just like the cable and satellite companies offer in so many packages today. But I have that experience at home today with a Media Center PC at the center of our entertainment universe, and it’s by no means the sole way we enjoy entertainment, and that’s the real goal: enjoying the programming.


One challenge is that cable and satellite offer this at a fairly attractive monthly price, one that has a low barrier to entry and is arguably easier to use for mainstream consumers. For some, the Media Center makes sense; for many more, a as a simpler alternative in cable and satellite all-in-one set-top boxes make more sense as does the promise of video over IP as outlined in our Microsoft IPTV solutions. And look at another example: as Major Nelson blogged, “Xbox Live users in the U.S. can now download the full length TV show ‘Battlestar Galactica: The Story So Far’ in standard def from the Xbox Live Marketplace. Just in case you are wondering, this marks one of the first times that a complete TV episode has been digitally delivered to your Xbox 360 over Xbox Live.”


To the industry and even our own teams in MSN, Live, Xbox and Zune: make it easier to get the programming in a form that I can enjoy it and wrap it in a business model I can grok. For my family, that simplicity is in a set monthly fee for services that we pay for our mobile phones, music service, cable/ satellite TV and DVDs by mail. 


In short, many people would rather not have to be an IT Professional debugging our internet connection or home network in order to watch the latest episode of Project Runway. It should just work. And it shouldn’t cost $1.99 an episode.


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“Does that new Vista computer come in eggplant?”

Today in the Seattle Times, an article on Vista PC design, highlighting that “Microsoft has offered computer manufacturers guidelines on color, shape and other design elements for PCs that will run Windows Vista.”


(Also of interest is the graphic the paper includes on the evolution of personal-computer design, much too large to include here.)



The Vista design kit suggests “accelerated curves” and high-contrast colors, including “obsidian” black and “ice” white, according to the BusinessWeek article.


“We want people to fall in love with their PCs, not to simply use them to be productive and successful,” BusinessWeek reported on the kit. “We want PCs to be objects of pure desire.”


Do I want a big box under my desk? Not likely. Do I want form and function in a new machine? Absolutely. Competition also drives the need to innovate, both on features and design. But designs should inspire: this was the premise we shared at WinHEC a few years ago when we showed off the Athens concept desktop PC for business communications. (right)


Funny how News.com reported (at WinHEC 2004) that “the Media Center PC of the future has a remote control with a built-in LCD screen for programming recordings.” I have seen very few of these on the market, save the all-in-one Media Center products from Gateway (no longer produced) and Sony’s VA series. I do like the all-in-one approach for streamlined home office designs and kitchens, and I do like the simplicity of the new Apple iMacs.


Will new Vista help jumpstart a new design trend? I hope so. You hear a lot of people talking about the influence that companies like Apple has on PC designs, and how a firm foundation in consumer electronics helps companies like Sony capture people’s attention over the plain black box (the old beige). So “obsidian” and “ice” I get… probably not anything in eggplant or Bondi Blue. 😉


From what I have seen so far, Vista sets a high bar. Given that sales of notebooks have surpassed desktop sales in U.S. retail, I would not be surprised if desktop sales stabilize or slightly slow the decline vs. laptops, as the price/performance benefit is greater in a desktop machine (not to mention easier upgrades).


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