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A look inside the TV lab… MSTV usability, that is

Microsoft TVOf interest is this article from Mark Sullivan of Light Reading, featuring a look at the Microsoft TV usability lab in Silicon Valley. It’s an interesting read (complete with photos of the facility) that goes into a customer’s digital TV experience, studying not only our own TV products but the other products in the market. David Sloo and his team “spend their time watching people watch TV. They record people’s responses — their joys and their frustrations — to the experience of watching and controlling IPTV.”


More info:



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Articles I’m re-reading this weekend

A cloudy day in Washington and the kids are at a birthday party. So once I’ve cleaned up the kitchen, here’s a couple of articles that I’m re-reading:


BusinessWeek


The Apple Calendar Conundrum –  OCTOBER 12, 2006 By Arik Hesseldahl – There’s no easy way to transfer addresses and other data from Mac to PC to handheld and back—but there should be. “A startup called Sharpcast is building a way to make complicated, geeky tales like mine and that the of the “Holy Grail” author a thing of the past. Sharpcast CEO Gibu Thomas demonstrated for me the company’s photo-sharing service that takes all the guesswork out of keeping your photo collection in sync between computers.”


slideshow thumbnail imageBusinessWeek’s slides on how Technology can Make Fitness More Fun


A Red Flag In The Brain Game – BusinessWeek’s look at “how America’s dismal showing in a contest of college programmers highlights how the tech talent gap is closing in China, India, and Eastern Europe.” By Steve Hamm – May 01, 2006


The Man Who Invented Management – Why Peter Drucker’s ideas still matter. By John A. Byrne, with Lindsey Gerdes in New York – November 28, 2005. Also this podcast from BW’s John Byrne in which he tells why Peter Drucker’s ideas still matter. Download the episode directly or grab the feed for your podcast reader.


PC Magazine


Wire It Yourself – By Eric S. Fellen, 053106 – “In a world of wireless this and wireless that, sometimes we all find ourselves begging for a little bit more—a little more reliability, a little more bandwidth, a little more speed, a little more security, and heck, even a little more free time to enjoy this world that offers so much more. In order to feed this technology crave, we need to go back to the basics and connect our dots with copper.”


Will Digital Access Make the World a Better Place?  “Low-cost machines are neccessary but not sufficient for getting the world online. We also need broadband Net access and education.” By Michael J. Miller, 053106.


Office Problems, Solved!  “Microsoft Office doesn’t always behave the way you want it to.” It’s a helpful article with quick links, menu shortcuts and tips. 
 


Business 2.0 has an article on Pushing Past Post-Its – “By allowing his top scientists to peek over the horizon, 3M’s Larry Wendling helped turn a century-old giant into a nanotech pioneer.” By Daniel Del Re, November 1, 2005


DVDs: They will survive – “Doomsayers say DVDs are dinosaurs, but they’re dead wrong. These discs will not only make it through the digital age – they’ll thrive in it.” By Chris Taylor, Business 2.0 Magazine


Retooling the Entrepreneur – Excite co-founder Joe Kraus says cheap technology makes this the perfect time to start a new company–which gives him an invaluable chance to prove himself again. By John Heilemann, November 1, 2005


The Master of Gadgets – Samsung Electronics CEO Jong-Yong Yun wants to dominate the digital world–inside and out. By Erick Schonfeld

Forbes articles (subscription required): 


Forbes’ Offshoring The Offshorers – April 17, 2006 – “Forget India. For outsourcing, China, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Brazil and Mauritius are open for business.” Also see The Great Offshore Wimp-Out (“The offshoring story has two sides. Guess which one Lou Dobbs wants to talk about?”)


Back Door To Growth – April 24, 2006 – “China has a powerful economy, but its stocks are iffy. So Steven Champion gets a piece of the action there via shares in Taiwanese companies with big stakes on the mainland.” Also see the Forbes 40 China


NotPods – Apr 24, 2006 – “By now Apple’s sainted ipod should be seeing real competition. Some enterprising company should be developing a dandy new device that costs the same as the clickwheeled darling but performs significantly better–or a pure knockoff that looks great and works as well but costs a lot less.”


Also see Different Tunes – “By now Apple’s iTunes Music Store should be seeing some real competition, too. All some enterprising company would have to do would be to develop a site with much the same content, add the ability to use it on a host of players that don’t happen to be iPods and offer better prices.”


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Article: Seattle PI reports on the Changes in COSD

The Seattle PI reported today that “Microsoft Corp. announced plans Thursday to reshape the internal structure of its Windows engineering division…” known as the Windows Core Operating System Division (aka COSD), which Jon DeVaan leads.



“Microsoft said the changes announced for the Windows Core Operating System Division will take effect after Vista’s release, applying to work on future versions. They’re designed, in part, to streamline the division and make it more flexible. Microsoft said the changes won’t involve layoffs.


“It’s part of a broader revamp of Windows development efforts. Earlier this year, Microsoft brought in Steven Sinofsky, a Microsoft Office executive known for getting teams to meet deadlines, as the senior vice president for the Windows and Windows Live engineering group.


“The latest changes include the creation of a new team inside the Core Operating System Division that will “focus on a single, integrated development plan for Windows,” the company said.


A couple of the changes noted in the article include…



  • the move to combine our Security, Trustworthy Computing (TwC) and Engineering Excellence teams (which operate across the company) into a single group within COSD, led by Scott Charney (he’s led the TwC group),

  • and the venerable Jawad Khaki will manage a new group in COSD that works with hardware makers.

Good moves as these and the rest of Jon’s technical executives are focused on the needs of our customers (end users) and partners (IHVs, OEMs, manufacturers, service providers). Jon DeVaan is one of the best listeners, continually supports our efforts to improve customer and partner satisfaction across the company, and is particularly good at finding ways to bridge the communications gap that sometimes happens (even within the company). I’ll ask if he can make some time for a chat on TechNet.


And Scoble sat down with Jawad this summer and the interview is here on Channel9, and see this community/chat transcript on Technet. Jawad is great with customers and has forged some deep relationships with key manufacturers in the industry.

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Wired’s “Rebuilding Microsoft” article now available

As noted in a previous post on Ray Ozzie on connecting with customers and partners, the article I mentioned is new up on Wired.com: 



Rebuilding Microsoft: Bill Gates is on his way out. Now it’s up to Ray Ozzie to revive the flagging giant — and get it ready for the post-desktop era. By Fred Vogelstein from Wired

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What I’m reading: Misc articles

Here’s a collection of recent articles I’ve read (or re-read) recently. I’ll post additional lists as I go through my reading folder (a plastic envelope that I keep around for articles I tear out for future reference). Some are old and from the archives, articles I’ve kept for future reference.


PCMag’s review of the Optoma MovieTime DV10 


Larry Magid’s DIY: Create Your Own Podcasts, Build It: Be Your Own Broadcaster  


Jim Louderback’s DVD Flambé 

BusinessWeek’s A Search Engine For Every Subject – Google and Yahoo rule, but a flock of upstarts is offering new ways to find info


Rob Preston’s article on Down To Business: The Age Of The Control Freak


InformationWeek’s 5 Ways To Get Vista’s Security Now  Windows Vista is months away, and so is the additional security it’s promising. Or is it? Why wait when you can give Windows XP a taste of Vista’s User Account Control protection now?


BusinessWeek’s Putting A Collar On Investment Risk, By Adrienne Carter – February 20, 2006 – Options-based strategies can keep stock losses from getting out of line


TV, TV Everywhere – InformationWeek , August 25, 2006 – While editing this week’s personal tech story about all the ways you can get video on your mobile device, I was surprised. I knew mobile TV was moving forward by leaps and bounds, but I had no idea there were so many different options available right now.


The Experts’ Guide to Google, Yahoo!, MSN and AOL – 2005-09-14 – some of the gems each has to offer, by Sarah Pike


Webcam Home Surveillance  – By Warren Ernst 
Video conferencing, video chat, and video mail could take off for real one day, but the most practical application for inexpensive webcams may be to turn them into surveillance systems that let you monitor your home or office when you can’t be there yourself. Also see Home Surveillance from Your Office Chair 


Upsample Your Images – By Galen Fott (2005-09-14) Here’s how to get better prints from low-resolution images.


PivotTable Magic – By Ben Z. Gottesman – Exploring complex Excel data is easier with a PivotTable. PCMag’s tips show you how.


Tempted by the Apple By Bill Howard. “The dark side lured me in. At Apple.com, I clicked Buy Now, and a week after the product was announced, an iPod nano in Darth Vader black arrived. The decision wasn’t so much a previously unmanifested love for all things Apple as it was my recognition that the Windows side of the digital music player business continues to mess up so badly.”


Where I.T. Matters – In Baseline‘s fifth-anniversary issue, we look back over the last five or so years and examine 10 major industries to see how leading companies in each sector used information technology to boost not only themselves, but the entire market in which they do business. Also see 5 Most Important Technologies: Yesterday and Tomorrow, a look at the five technologies that had the biggest impact over the last five years, and the five that might have the biggest impact over the next five.


Can MTV Stay Cool? BusinessWeek’s By Tom Lowry looks at How CEO Judy McGrath must remake her TV empire for a digital world (February 20, 2006)


How we work  (09.07.2006) FORTUNE’s Corey Hajim visited entertainer Tony Bennett and his son, Danny, to find out how father and son work in harmony. Also see how BillG works in Bill Gates reboots  (07.13.2006).


The Real Reasons You’re Working So Hard… from BusinessWeek (subscription may be required) October 3, 2005. Also see Who’s Afraid Of Steve Jobs Now?, Less Could Be More At Microsoft, Managing Google’s Idea Factory (with Google’s Search for Simplicity as an online extra), Just How Innovative Is Google?


MySpace cowboys  (08.29.2006) Fortune looks at MySpace.com.


Texas Instruments’ lunatic fringe (09.01.2006) Fortune’s look at how TI searches for and encourages all manner of lunatics and visionaries.


Baseline Mag’s The Smartest 100 Companies of 2006 (2006-04-07). Also see Baseline’s 50 Fastest-Growing Software Companies, ranking the business software companies with the biggest year-to-year growth finds that eight of the top 10 offer software as a service.


BusinessWeek on Counting Every Last Eyeball – (JULY 31, 2006) Jon Fine on how Nielsen’s new ad ratings will change the feel of television as we know it


Businessweek on Tech Toys for Today’s Kids – Christopher Palmeri reports on how toy companies can’t rely on old standbys anymore. Most children want playtime gadgets that light up, play music, and connect to the Web 


Forbes on Attack of the Blogs (subscription required, November 14, 2005) – FORTUNE Magazine reports on how blogs “destroy brands and wreck lives. Is there any way to fight back?


Fast Company on Six Sigma Stigma By Martin Kihn (2005-09-01). Ask Japanese carmaker about Six Sigma, and you’ll be speaking Greek to them.


Forbes on The Centenarian Diet (November 14, 2005). Also see Want To Live Forever on how researchers are unlocking the mysteries of aging, and 15 Ways To Live Longer


Twenty Years of Windows (2005-10-12) – Michael Miller from PCMag visited Microsoft’s headquarters “to talk with the team behind Windows—to get reflections on the key moments in its evolution, its position in the market today, and what lies in store for its future.” Also see the q&a with Bill Gates on Windows Past, Present, and Future 


Toyota’s Driving Force – Baseline reports on how Toyota has used business process management—powered by information technology—to eliminate waste, limit inventory buildup and continually improve production. The bottom line: Toyota is on track to become the world’s No. 1 automaker.


Keeping a Safe Distance from Microsoft by Lee Pender. ISVs need to stay close to Microsoft — but not too close. Here’s RCP’s article on how to be an effective partner without giving away too much.


Redmond Channel Partner Online | Feature: Strike It Rich: How Partners Can Tap Microsoft’s Upcoming Releases Now (2006/08/01)