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Windows 7 Release Candidate now available, with more info on what’s new in the RC, MED-V, and improved SSD support

Windows 7 Release Candidate Takes the StageLots of news today (as noted in the news today) on the availability of the Windows 7 Release Candidate (RC). Remember, only download the Windows 7 RC from a trusted source – via Microsoft – to save yourself the security risk.

As noted on MSDN and TechNet, the RC is an opportunity for enthusiasts, IT professionals, developers and folks like you to take the OS for a spin and test it a real world environment. With the Microsoft Windows 7 Compatibility Center site now live, you can also get more help with devices and applications on Windows 7 as noted here (from my Twitter post).

Stephen Rose – Sr Community Manager – Windows Client IT Pro put together a video for the Springboard site on what some of the new features in the Windows 7 Release Candidate area. You can find it in his post "Want to learn what’s new in the Windows 7 RC?" and view it here, too.

<a href="http://video.msn.com/?mkt=en-US&amp;playlist=videoByUuids:uuids:9bbba6ce-394b-4cdf-9780-aaa52d7d77e1&amp;showPlaylist=true" target="_new" title="What&#39;s New in the Windows 7 RC" rel="noopener noreferrer">Video: What&#39;s New in the Windows 7 RC</a>

You can also read more about Windows 7 Pro & Windows XP Mode in the Q&A with Scott Woodgate as he discusses the new Windows XP Mode with Virtual PC and Microsoft Enterprise Desktop Virtualization (MED-V).

As noted by Microsoft_Gov, Windows 7 RC will have 13-Month Life Span, and PC users can run it until June 1, 2010.

Elinor Mills of CNETNews offers a quick look at some of the security enhancements in Windows 7, with mentions of DirectAccess and BitLocker To Go. 

And a personal favourite story of mine today, from the Engineering Windows 7 blog courtesy of Michael Fortin, is the Support and Q&A for Solid-State Drives (aka SSDs, also as picked up in Tom’s Hardware WRT optimization for Solid State Drives).

Around the office, many of us have been particularly interested in the features in Windows 7 to reduce writes. The article is a good read and be sure to check out the frequently asked questions: I read it with interest as I build a new Windows 7 Media Center PC (details to come) which has a 60GB SSD at its heart coupled with a low power WD Green drive for content storage. Prices are getting quite affordable for good sized SSDs (I’ve looked at 30-128GB drives and settled on a performance 60GB model) and reliability is higher than ever.

"Many of today’s Solid State Drives (SSDs) offer the promise of improved performance, more consistent responsiveness, increased battery life, superior ruggedness, quicker startup times, and noise and vibration reductions. With prices dropping precipitously, most analysts expect more and more PCs to be sold with SSDs in place of traditional rotating hard disk drives (HDDs).

"In Windows 7, we’ve focused a number of our engineering efforts with SSD operating characteristics in mind. As a result, Windows 7’s default behavior is to operate efficiently on SSDs without requiring any customer intervention. Before delving into how Windows 7’s behavior is automatically tuned to work efficiently on SSDs, a brief overview of SSD operating characteristics is warranted.

"… we believe the future of SSDs in mobile and desktop PCs (as well as enterprise servers) looks very bright to us. SSDs can deliver on the promise of improved performance, more consistent responsiveness, increased battery life, superior ruggedness, quicker startup times, and noise and vibration reductions. With prices steadily dropping and quality on the rise, we expect more and more PCs to be sold with SSDs in place of traditional rotating HDDs. With that in mind, we focused an appropriate amount of our engineering efforts towards insuring Windows 7 users have great experiences on SSDs."

Tags: articles, blogs, Windows 7.

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SXSW 2009 in Austin is the place to be, at least virtually via Twitter and the Web for me this year

SXSW '09

This weekend was a busy one for us at home, otherwise I would have found a way to travel to Austin with several of my friends to attend South by Southwest 2009 Conference in Austin, Texas.

For those of you who don’t know, a good summary is offered here on SXSW from the local paper:

"South by Southwest is a music lover’s heaven. But wait — it’s also a film lover’s dream. And, yes, it’s a techie’s delight. What started as a small Austin music festival 22 years ago is now a full-blown music, film and interactive jamboree known worldwide.

Welcome, SXSW. You’re grown up and spectacular but still very much a genuine Austin experience.

Starting Friday, Austin’s downtown will swell with people and events as SXSW kicks off. Bring on traffic and people congestion. Austin is ready and thrilled to host this year’s 10-day happening that is expected to draw 100,000 attendees. This is just the kind of festive event the city needs to shake off the blues of a slumping economy. The Austin Convention and Visitor’s Bureau estimates that the SXSW jamboree will generate about $103 million for the Austin-area economy."

The SXSW conference also offers a music fest offering nearly 2,000 musical acts from around the world on over eighty stages. Although I’ve never been to one in the 23 years it’s been going on, I have always resolved that I would when I made it back to the music business I left so long ago. Now more than ever at is a destination for media, technology, music and art. (I went to my fair share of New Music conferences in New York, which offered dozens and dozens of bands, but that was pre-Internet, and when I had a Compuserve address that ran up a hefty monthly bill that eclipsed even the most precocious teen texter today.)

Next year.

But this year, I decided to spend time after the family drifted off to sleep this weekend to catch up on the goings-on over the filmmaking, music and technology.

Articles from around the Web

Here’s a collection of articles I queued up to read today from the web.

louisgray.com: The Word on SXSW 2009 is at SXSWerds.com March 10, 2009, By Ken Stewart of ChangeForge (Twitter/FriendFeed) — "Need to get the word on South by Southwest 2009? Get SXSWerds.com, a targeted social media platform, brought to you by BlogWerds Media, dedicated to the niche content vertical of SXSW to deliver what’s happened, what’s happening, and what’s happening next. "Co-founder Eric Berlin, who also writes here on louisgray.com, has positioned the Werds-brand as a highly-targeted content aggregation coupled with social media tools for what’s coming next."

Thrive Selected as Finalist for Microsoft BizSpark Accelerator at SXSW – "Thrive (www.justthrive.com), a free personal financial advisory website, has been named a finalist in the Innovative Web Technology category for the inaugural Microsoft BizSpark Accelerator at SXSW, where early stage technology companies will demo their creations in front of judges and a live audience. Sponsored by Microsoft BizSpark, Moontoast, Mosso | The Rackspace Cloud, and Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, more than 200 companies submitted to present at the Microsoft BizSpark Accelerator at SXSW, and 20 were chosen as finalists in four different categories: online video-related technologies, online music-related technologies, social networking, and innovative web applications."

Navigating SXSW the social way, March 13, 2009, 11:20 AM — ITworld — by Joe Doherty — "If you happen to be perusing any sort of website talking about the South By Southwest Conference (SXSW), you’ll probably see three names you and the popular media have come to know well: Twitter, Flickr and YouTube. Without a doubt, you will be able to view many new video uploads on YouTube documenting the day and night’s events within minutes of the actual event commencing. Flickr images will be posted and shared to those who give a care. Twitter, though, is fascinating."

Now, this is just plain silly, as my grandfather would say: Suicide girls get sizzling bacon ‘bro’ tattoos at SXSW (courtesy of the Los Angeles Times, March 15, 2009) – "Talk about bringing home the bacon. At Saturday night’s Bigg Digg party at Stubb’s BBQ in Austin, Texas, I ran across two young ladies from the tech world who were sporting brand-new, hot-off-the-grill bacon tattoos. Lynn LaVallee, a.k.a. @poshy, and her friend Jessica Zollman, a.k.a. @jayzombie, in town for the South by Southwest music and media conference, consummated their roommate-ship early. The two San Francisco-based women, both Suicide Girls (that’s the Web’s "enlightened" erotic-photo site), are moving in together next month, and they both love bacon. Hence the decision to get their "bro tatts." Bacon is, of course, one of the Web’s silliest memes."

Where to eat in Austin – Entertainment News, SXSW News, Media – Variety – "Full disclosure: It’s been a long time since I lived in Texas and when I did, it wasn’t in Austin. However, over my 23 years in that state, the city became my kinda-Mecca. (Sacred, yes. Holy, no.) "All of which is not a bad way to describe the perspective of the tens of thousands who converge on SXSW every year. If you’re among them, you deserve to eat well. Or to put it another way: You’re a fool if you don’t. The best breakfasts in any city/state/country. Fantastic Tex-Mex. And, of course, the barbecue. With that in mind, I’ve assembled a top-10-plus-five list: Ten places I know, love and can vouch for; five that I don’t know but hope to based on recommendations from Those Who Know. Some, but not all of these places are within or walking distance from Austin’s downtown. For the closest-to-definitive list of SXSW-accessible restaurants, go to SXSW Baby!, the terrific and utterly unofficial SXSW blog. There you’ll find a fairly exhaustive rundown, complete with Google Map."

Interactive revolt at SXSW – Entertainment News, Technology News, Media – Variety by LIZ SHANNON MILLER — "Over the five days of the SXSW Interactive conference, there are some 120 panels that discuss and dissect Web 2.0 with topics ranging from "Pimp My Film’s Website" to "Digital Cinema for Indies." However, the biggest news to come out of the event was, appropriately enough, virtual. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has a reputation for being a poor public speaker, so those attending his Sunday keynote discussion hoped moderator Sarah Lacy would steer the conversation. However, Lacy, a columnist for Business Week and writer of an upcoming book on Zuckerberg and Web 2.0, ended up steering the conversation directly into oncoming traffic."

SXSW: Web Video Isn’t Killing TV by Jessica E. Vascellaro at the WSJ blog notes that "While the popularity of online video skyrockets, a panel of comedians and technology executives cautioned that the content is still a long way a way from destroying traditional TV. "That’s not to say that Web video isn’t changing the way TV actors and writers think about their jobs… The panel — which highlighted the role comedy plays in driving Web hits — quickly expanded to assess the success and influence of online-only content in general. B.J. Novak, a producer of “The Office” who also plays temp worker Ryan Howard, said NBC’s hit show spends reasonably big bucks investing in shorter online-only “webisodes”, in part to experiment with what works and what doesn’t online. “Everyone is still trying to figure them out,” he said, adding that he thinks the term “webisode” will disappear in the future as people watch more TV content online and vice versa."

PressHerald.com | NXT: Next Generation: SXSW: Zappos.com – Talking about shoes, saving newspapers? – Justin Ellis over at the Maine Sunday Telegram writes (March 15, 2009) that "I am not much of a shoes guy. I have shoes. I like certain pairs more than others, but they’re more of a utility than a fashion accessory. "So when someone mentions Zappos.com, my brain starts to nod off. This could have meant double jeopardy Saturday afternoon at SXSW Interactive. After traveling for more than six hours and jumping time zones, the first thing I attended was the keynote talk from Zapppos.com CEO Tony Hsieh. "But something odd happened. As Stephen Colbert might say, Hsieh "just blew my mind." "Hsieh didn’t come to SXSW Interactive to talk about shoes or even the selling of shoes. Instead he decided to talk about customer service and how it wins the day for companies. If you’re like me, when you hear the phrase "customer service" you get visions of a dingy desk at back of a department store staffed by a kid who’s filing in for someone on their break."

On the http://sxsw.com/home page you’ll find links to many interesting items, including this one offering a graphic recording of Tony Hsieh opening remarks…

         Tony-Hsieh_SXSW-09_Sunni-Brown-sm.jpg

If you missed yesterday’s Opening Remarks with Tony Hsieh of Zappos, then check out the graphic recordings from Sunni Brown and Marilyn Martin to get some of the main points from his speech. Also, be sure to catch the Keynote Interview today from 2:00-3:00 pm with Nate Silver of fivethirtyeight.com and veteran journalist Stephen Baker. The keynote interview runs from 2:00 to 3:00 in Ballroom A, with simulcasting in Ballroom B, Ballroom C, Room 9 and the Day Stage. We expect a big crowd for Nate Silver, so be sure to get to Ballroom A early if you want to get a seat.

SXSW: Digg’s Party Brings Rude Rock ‘n’ Roll ‘Tude to SXSWi | The Underwire from Wired.com – Who says parties are dead at SXSW? Michael Calore has this article noting how "Diggnation hosts Alex Albrecht, left, and Kevin Rose kick off a live-on-stage version of their podcast with a ceremonial shot at Stubb’s. AUSTIN, Texas — It was an unlikely scene for a dot-com party. Drunken revelers raising their fists to offer a devil’s horns salute to a stage flooded with bright flashing lights, kids shouting and clamoring over one another to get closer to the fray, and guitar solos cranked up a few decibels too many. "The Bigg Digg Shindigg was more like a rock concert than a party at a tech conference. It was hosted by social news website Digg and web video site Revision3 here at the South by Southwest Interactive conference Saturday night."

PR Newser (also tweeting the SXSW conference on twitter) has several posts on SXSW, along with these SXSW Odds and Ends from the PR Newser feed today (March 15):

ZDNet blogger Andrew Mager gives props to Porter Novelli: "As a member of the press I’ve gotten great information, offers to setup interviews, and many VIP party passes. These guys know what they are doing."

Blogger Tim Street catches up with Brian Solis to talk TechSet and how it is "changing what advertisers, marketers and public relations agencies are changing because of social media."

Steve Rubel (who is not at SXSW) points out "A Twitter visualization tool from PepsiCo with tweets about SXSW."

CNET’s own Buzz Out Loud 930: Live from SXSW has a report from Day Two by Jason Howell ‘tho hit with a SNAFU of sorts…

Blasted XP didn’t warn me that my hard drive was full! Therefore, half of the podcast didn’t record. Thankfully, I was able to salvage yesterday’s episode from the Ustream recording, so here it is! Special guests include ZDNet’s Andrew Mager, SXSW Event Director Hugh Forrest and Blogger’s Rick Klau.

As noted on the 2009 SXSW Interactive Cheat Sheet (found here) the full 2009 panel schedule is available online.

"As you contemplate what daytime programming that you want to attend at this year’s event, please remember that we will make audio recordings of all this content. In other words, if you miss the panel during the event, then you can listen to it online after SXSW concludes."

You may also find notes posted to http://jess3.com/SXSW09/categories.php from the various SXSW sessions, ‘though nothing is there as of yet.

Variety has a number of articles (old and new) available on variety.com for the SXSW hot topic, with links to interviews, articles and more.

 

Twitter lets you be there in real time… virtually.

It was a good thing that AT&T boosted their network to support SXSW, which allowed the attendees to tweet their thoughts to the masses not in Austin this weekend, along with more Twitpics and live videos than you can shake a stick at (another Texan saying). As noted here on VentureBeat, "Can’t make SXSW? Visualize it in tweets"

"Me and my fellow VentureBeatnik Eric Eldon are here on the ground in Austin, Texas for this year’s SXSW conference. Right now, nothing too exciting is going on, as we’re sitting alone in a cafe writing, but tomorrow the conference starts. For those not at the conference, there’s an interesting, visual way to follow along.

"Pepsi has teamed up with the teams behind two great Twitter apps, Twistori and Twennis, to bring us PepsiCoZeitgeist, a new Twitter visualization tool that showcases tweets about SXSW. For those familiar with Twistori, it looks similar, but rather than focus on the words “love,” “hate,” “think,” “believe,” “feel,” and “wish,” it focuses on more SXSW-appropriate terms: “arriving,” “registering,” “eating,” “connecting,” and perhaps most importantly, “partying” and “drinking.” But those evolve as the conference goes on, Twitter co-founder Biz Stone notes in a post about the feature today."

I thought that this tweet kinda sums it up:

alexinmadison: @nerdist The nerdiest thing going on right now is sxsw – especially since @jonathancoulton and @paulandstorm are playing there tonight.

Here’s a collection of what you can find yourself via Twitter’s search engine for SXSW tweets, this just a sample of favourite tweets over a 30 minute period. I’ll leave it to you to find yourown favourites (and LMK if you have good links to attendee coverage):

shanewilliamson: Pepsi created a Twitter visualiser for the SXSW event – Clever way of watching tweets from the event – http://pepsicozeitgeist.com/

scnn: SXSW, the Conference for Julia Allison and Other People Lacking Real Jobs [Party Report] : What recession? More .. http://tinyurl.com/cm2mpn

arielwaldman: One of my favorite panels the first year I went to SXSW was Sex & Computational Technology w/ @qdot & @violetblue on it (be4 i knew them)

sukhjit: @garyvee says videoblogging success comes from content, transparency and authenticity. #sxsw Do you have a question for gary? I’ll ask it!

SHHHE: Facebook new hompage (+open feeds) is going to replace Twitter @briansolis #SXSW

@kevinmarks "the internet is the largest group of people who care about reading and writing ever assembled in history" @shirky #sxsw

joshua_thomas: At another packed #Sxsw session. McGyver meets design. http://twitpic.com/24y8b

@jmoriarty: In How Social Media is killing the Revolution with @strebler @penguin and @oddboy #sxsw – don’t just follow ppl who agree

Skud: "the amount of privacy that could’ve happened if apache hadn’t shipped with logging enabled by default is enormous" – #sxsw not being evil

MomCentral: PR firms beware: social media simply offers the ability to screw up with a much larger audience in a much shorter time. #pr2 #sxsw

carmenb: This quote from @garyvee is for @lizcobb: Content is king & marketing is queen. And the queen runs the house. #sxsw

epodcaster: "…if you have an amazing product that could change the world and nobody knows about it that’s no doing you any good either." #sxsw

cheeky_geeky: Gary @garyvee has a good product, works his ass off, and knows his stuff. Forget new marketing until you have those three. #sxsw

adamehrheart: http://tiny.cc/css754 CSS3 presenters were full of it. Why on Gods green earth would Marquee updates be a "Hight Priority" item??? #sxsw

CouchSurfingOri: #sxsw #pr2 @skydiver Twitter is like your 7million person focus group.

hober: I encourage everybody at @ToddHuffman‘s #sxsw panel to check out http://www.overcomingbias.com/

@jmacofearth: Unofficial Mac vs “Other” Count at #SXSW Interactive 2009 (UPDATED with PICS) http://ff.im/-1x4Hk UPDATED!

KellyDanielCNN: vaynurchuk: you could have the best marketing campaign in the world, and if your bottled water tastes like ass, you’re not gonna win #sxsw

CouchSurfingOri: #sxsw #pr2 @skydiver PR Press releases will be dead in 24-36 months. It’s all social media now. Any1 can get in touch w/ the press now.

gaeyia: "Here’s where the difference is: do you have the chops? Is your product GOOD?" #garyvee #sxsw

epodcaster: If you have a great marketing campaign and bad product, Social Media isn’t going to do you any good. By the same token… #sxsw

lesliehatfield: loving yourself the key to success,a common theme here at #sxsw, i guess it’s true, as long as you don’t suck, which is what gary’s saying

@pk2004: The http://sxsw2009.sched.org is busy self scaling to cope with a surge in demand. Cool. #sxsw http://twitpic.com/24y20

MegaJustice: More booth zombies from Atozmedia at #sxsw. Yes, I walk the show floors an record what I see for R&D. Zombies can easily be fixed. Just ask.

christine: Lane Becker’s Therapy for the Under-employed at SXSW: What are you going to do with yourself, now that the econo.. http://tinyurl.com/cnb23n

CindyRoyal: Embrace your dna, people lie to themselves. Love yourself. Be who you are, "cause you can monetize that sh*t" @garyvee #sxsw #sxtxstate

jmaver: @ggroovin why not just rss feed as broadcast vs twitter. because 1% of people understand RSS, but follow me on twitter is simple. #sxsw

RT @unmarketing: At SXSW, attendees confront Twitter saturation http://ub0.cc/5c/24

jeffreynolds: Panels today seem like they were awkwardly organized – can’t get into anything because popular topics are in tiny rooms. #sxsw

omarg: Just did a lengthy video interview with @feliciaday, who was an amazingly good sport (delightful!). Video to come on austin360.com #sxsw

hesnow: As PR person, don’t share what ur eating for lunch. U are the brand u represent, but connect as a person. Say something interesting. #sxsw

For those geeks heading home and will miss the SXSW Music festival, you can find a preview of the event from this story on npr.org last week:

All Songs Considered, March 9, 2009 – NPR Music and All Songs Considered will be in Austin, Tex. next week, blogging, broadcasting and webcasting nearly a dozen live concerts from some of the year’s most exciting bands, at this year’s South by Southwest festival. You’ll hear The Decemberists debut their entire new album, The Hazards of Love, along with performances by K’Naan, The Heartless Bastards and many more, all webcast live on NPR.org.

On this edition of All Songs Considered host Bob Boilen chats with NPR Monitor Mix blogger Carrie Brownstein, producer and Second Stage host Robin Hilton, and Song of the Day editor Stephen Thompson about some of the bands they’re most looking forward to seeing at this year’s South by Southwest festival in Austin, Tex. Hear music from some great unknown bands, like Sgt. Dunbar and the Hobo Banned, Passion Pit, and The Weird Weeds, plus Jason Lytle of Grandaddy, Mirah, and Ponytail.

More news on SXSW at Windows Live Search News.

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John Dvorak’s Second Opinion on Microsoft’s business model needs a third opinion: Yours

Today I saw in John Dvorak’s Second Opinion column, John says Microsoft’s business model is done and that "the age of expensive office software may be near its end". (Also the story is available via http://tinyurl.com/cm8fzn.)

"Until now, the average computer user has been ignoring this trend. But the economic conditions and the emergence of powerful inexpensive computing has to make people rethink the Microsoft proposition.

"If Intel can provide users with powerful little systems for $99 and has been pushing prices lower and lower over the years, why can’t Microsoft? Intel makes elaborate hardware in billion-dollar factories. Microsoft stamps out a disk."

That’s like saying Hollywood studios ship out celluloid, HBO fills bandwidth or Amazon ships paper and bubble wrap.

C’mon, John…

Go ahead: leave him your comments on his post, pro or con.

 

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Bill Gates’ pet mosquitoes, Steve Ballmer recalls past depressions, Windows 7 SKUs, UAC, and more of what I’ve read

If you weren’t at the TED conference this week, you might’ve missed Bill Gates’ mosquito stunt as noted in TechFlash by Todd Bishop (February 4, 2009)…

"Yes, they were real. No, they didn’t carry malaria. And they definitely didn’t qualify as a swarm. But they sure did get a lot of attention.

"That’s the word from a reliable source after the Microsoft chairman set the tech world, ahem, abuzz by opening a jar of mosquito at the TED conference today — reportedly telling the crowd that not only poor people should experience the problem. We made a few calls and found out that the jar contained a relatively modest collection of mosquitoes: more than a few, but probably fewer than ten.

"The dramatic move was meant to highlight the issue of malaria, which was one of two subjects of Gates’ talk at the hip conference. (TED stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design.) Gates also spoke about education. For a good rundown, see this detailed blog post by Ethan Zuckerman. A video is also expected…"

If you’re interested, you can find many in person, play-by-play accounts from TED 2009 on Twitter.com.

Now, back to something on everyone’s minds: the economy.

j0145504[1]Microsoft’s Ballmer likens economy to depressions of 1837, 1873, and 1929 | Politics and Law – CNET News — February 6, 2009 6:23 PM PST Microsoft’s Ballmer likens economy to depressions of 1837, 1873, and 1929 Posted by Declan McCullagh — "Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer sketched a dire portrait of the world economy on Friday, likening it to market conditions in 1837, 1873, and 1929, each of which involved bank failures, high unemployment, and a depression."

I recall (not that I was there) that the 1837 depression lasted five years. 1873’s ’til the 1890’s, and after 1929, the market hit bottom in early 1933. My hope for this "economic downturn?" Recovery within two years.

I mean, c’mon… as I noted here, in 1920’s it took nearly 5 days to cross the US by train. Today things move much faster, and I expect that the economy will recover accordingly.

What parent couldn’t use some sage advice on What to do when your kid provokes you into an inhuman rage. – By Alan E. Kazdin and Carlo Rotella – Slate Magazine

"Decreeing an extravagantly harsh punishment may immediately address your sense of justice, but it’s unlikely to make the annoying behavior go away, and once you calm down, you’re unlikely to stick with the punishment, anyway. Grabbing, shaking, hitting, or screaming at your kid may stop the behavior and be cathartic for you, but only for a moment (after which you may well begin to feel bad for losing control of yourself and overreacting), and over time such responses will likely lead to further behavioral problems. Ignoring the unwanted behavior and finding ways to encourage its positive opposite will be most effective in getting rid of the unwanted behavior in the long run, but this approach won’t satisfy your overwhelming short-term urge to do something right now that addresses and fits the crime."

At home, we combine the Mona Lisa approach with the Parking Ticket, which combined make for a most effective way of dealing with tantrums and indignation.  I have found that this same approach also works in other settings, too, but modified appropriately: taking away TV privileges may work on my seven year old, but you have to find the right incentives to match for other ages. 😉

So Many iPhone Apps, So Little Time – Pogue’s Posts Blog – NYTimes.com — "Apple’s rotting retail sales will taint the electronics food chain, Barron’s Plugged In author Mark Veverka says. While foot traffic at Apple’s 250-odd retail stores more or less held up (-1.8% from last year), customers aren’t walking away with all that much – as same-store revenue fell 17.4% in the December quarter vs. a year ago."

My big TED idea? Have breakfast with Jeff Sandquist of Microsoft. He gets stuff done. What’s your big TED idea? – FriendFeed

Ominous Drop in Sales Bodes Ill for More than Just Apple – Barron’s — Feb 1, 2009 — "Apple’s rotting retail sales will taint the electronics food chain, Barron’s Plugged In author Mark Veverka says."

Microsoft’s first environmental chief engages company critics – TechFlash: Seattle’s Technology News Source By Todd Bishop on February 6, 2009 at 6:20 PST — "Rob Bernard developed a love for the outdoors while hiking New England’s White Mountains in his youth. Nowadays, he’s so attuned to the environment that he installed a device in his Microsoft office to monitor, in real time, his precise energy usage. And his vehicle? A 2001 Volvo. No, it’s definitely not the latest hybrid. But the story behind Bernard’s choice of car demonstrates the analytical approach he applies to the environment — and to his role as the Redmond software company’s first chief environmental strategist."

Roger’s Security Blog : Both Sides of the Windows 7 UAC Problem — "I have to come back to the UAC problem again. I just read a good article from Larry Seltzer on eWeek.com: "Now, let me get it straight (after all the pretty emotional comments I got on my last post): I definitely understand your view and your argumentation. What we need – however – is a balanced discussion about what makes sense and what does not."

Ask Engadget: Best flash / HDD-based camcorder under $400? – Engadget — by Darren Murph, posted Feb 5th 2009 at 11:04PM — "With CES over and done with, there’s really just one thing left to do: wait for all those wares that were announced to actually ship. To that end, we reckon this question is particularly timely being that a whole slew of camcorders were introduced in Vegas. Feel free to suggest an oldie-but-goodie, though."

A closer look at the Windows 7 SKUs – Windows 7 Team Blog — Posted by: Brandon LeBlanc 10:09 PM Wednesday, Feb 04, 2009 — "Today, I wanted to take a closer look at the Windows 7 SKUs since there has been some discussion about them for the last couple of days. By the end of this post, I want you to know exactly which edition of Windows 7 is right for you and help you understand how we approached addressing the large amount of feedback we received. Our SKU line-up is based on listening to feedback from customers and partners and here is what they have told us and how we are addressing their feedback in Windows 7:"

Ballmer: Stay on Windows XP and You Will Face a Backlash – PC World — Shane O’Neill, Computerworld UK, Feb 5, 2009 10:17 am — "Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer is warning IT organisations that they risk provoking an end user backlash if they don’t move off the XP operating system. "If you deploy a four or five-year old operating system today, most people will ask their boss why the heck they don’t have the stuff they have at home," the Microsoft CEO said."

War Of The Words: Sony Responds To Microsoft’s Netflix Numbers, Regrettably, by Michael McWhertor, 7:30 PM on Thu Feb 5 2009 — "Microsoft’s public bragging about its success with Netflix adoption among Xbox Live subscribers did not go unnoticed by the press release maestros at Sony. Which is unfortunate, really. So how does Sony respond?"

Diary of a Self-Help Dropout: Flirting With the 4-Hour Workweek — http://tinyurl.com/8vr4rv

Mac sales outlook sags under weight of recession By Gregg Keizer, February 4, 2009 (Computerworld) "The short-term outlook for sales of Apple Inc.’s Macintosh computers has significantly slipped in the past month, indicating that the company isn’t immune to the recession, a market research company said today. "

Windows Mobile: What’s coming when | All about Microsoft | ZDNet.com — Posted by Mary Jo Foley @ 11:49 am — "Much was made of this week’s slip-up by Motorola’s CEO that Windows Mobile 7 is due in 2010 (something that’s actually been expected for a few months now). "I’ve been curious about how Microsoft plans to try to catch up with its mobile-phone competitors given the slow, plodding pace at which it has been rolling out new versions of its Windows Mobile platform. After asking around, it sounds like the Softies are definitely aiming to speed up development. "While Windows Mobile officials won’t talk about ship-date targets (hmmm… sounds like Windows client)…"

25 Stretch Goals for Management – Gary Hamel – HarvardBusiness.org — 5:00 PM Tuesday February 3, 2009 — "In May 2008, a group of renowned scholars and business leaders gathered in Half Moon Bay, California, with a simple goal: to lay out an agenda for reinventing management in the 21st century. The two-day event, organized by the Management Lab with support from McKinsey & Company, brought together veteran management experts such as CK Prahalad, Henry Mintzberg, and Peter Senge; distinguished social commentators including Kevin Kelly, James Surowiecki and Shoshana Zuboff;"

How to link to specific piece of content on web Marketplace – Xbox Live’s Major Nelson — "The Xbox.com team has rolled out a tiny new feature that I wanted to point out. Now when you are browsing the Marketplace on Xbox.com, you can click the SEND A LINK tab for a link to a specific piece of content. No more scrolling page after page looking for something when someone tells you about it. Want to tell someone about a free piece of DLC? You can now copy a direct link or hit the‘Click to create and send a link using your email application’ link to fire up your default mail application and open a new mail with the link. It’s a little thing…but I wanted to point it out in case you missed it."

Nine-year old whiz-kid writes iPhone application — Wed Feb 4, 2009 9:46pm EST, SINGAPORE (Reuters) – While most children his age sketch on paper with crayons, nine-year old Lim Ding Wen from Singapore, has a very different canvas — his iPhone. Lim, who is in fourth grade, writes applications for Apple’s popular iPhone."  More after the jump.

Bill Gates’ mosquito stunt: What really happened at TED today – TechFlash: Seattle’s Technology News Source — By Todd Bishop on February 4, 2009 at 4:49 PST "Yes, they were real. No, they didn’t carry malaria. And they definitely didn’t qualify as a swarm. But they sure did get a lot of attention. "That’s the word from a reliable source after the Microsoft chairman set the tech world, ahem, abuzz by opening a jar of mosquitos at the TED conference today — reportedly telling the crowd that not only poor people should experience the problem. We made a few calls and found out that the jar contained a relatively modest collection of mosquitoes: more than a few, but probably fewer than ten. "The dramatic move was meant to highlight the issue of malaria, which was one of two subjects of Gates’ talk at the hip conference. (TED stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design.) Gates also spoke about education. For a good rundown, see this detailed blog post by Ethan Zuckerman. A video is also expected…"

HTPC Cases With LCD Screens: Bringing Bling – Review Tom’s Hardware, February 3, 2009 by Don Woligroski — "Like many computer enthusiasts, I’m an early adopter. At the turn of the millennium, I decided to construct a home theater PC (HTPC)–before Windows Media Center Edition was readily available as a standalone product. Armed with AMD’s Remote Wonder, a Radeon 7500 with an S-video output, some game controllers, and a DVD-ROM drive, my HTPC was tasked to play DVDs, music, and PC games on the 27" TV in my living room. Let’s find out by taking a hard look at three HTPC cases with integrated LCD touch screens: the Moneual 972, the SilverStone CW03, and the Thermaltake DH102. All three offer full ATX compatibility, iMedian HD media player software, a handy IR remote, and a 7" LCD touch screen."

WebMetricsGuru: Ultra Light Startups written up in BusinessWeek — Posted by Marshall on February 04, 2009 — "Here’s the presentation I prepared for Ultra Light Web Analytics, which I had help with from my friends. The fact is – I can imagine, in the era of Social Media and Transparency – that knowledge is not anything but Collaborative. I am fortunate to have so many great people to draw up to help me with the ideas and challenges we face. "Defining Web Analytics for Startups, btw, isn’t an easy subject, little is written on it, up to this point."

Charlie Rose: The MySpace Interview with Chris DeWolfe and Tom Anderson by Leena Rao on February 4, 2009 — "MySpace founders Tom Anderson and Chris DeWolfe got the Charlie Rose treatment on Tuesday night in a wide-ranging interview that lasted about a half hour. Rose starts with a few general questions, but he does get a few tidbits of new information. For instance, DeWolfe reveals that 18 million people a month get MySpace on their mobile phones. To put that into perspective, that is about the same size as the worldwide audience for the NYTimes.com (comScore). DeWolfe also claims: "We have the biggest library of professional videos in the world."

Families Changed Microsoft’s View of Autism — SmartMoney Magazine by Amanda Spake – "Brian Rosenberg suffers from autism. And while that term can describe a wide range of developmental problems, says Jon Rosenberg, Brian’s father, "My son is at the severe end of the spectrum." "Brian has learned these skills by working one on one with a behavioral therapist, day in and day out, since his diagnosis. Behavioral therapy for autism can cost as much as $60,000 per year, a serious financial challenge for a family whose insurance won’t cover it. Indeed, many families have no coverage for the services that autistic children need most. The Rosenbergs are lucky: Jon’s employer, the software giant Microsoft, covers behavioral therapy as part of its health-benefits package. But that wasn’t always the case — and the story of how the policies changed at the Redmond Empire is instructive for any family facing a costly medical problem." http://tinyurl.com/bqsd7f 

Twitter Optimization Part 4: 10 Tools You Need for Business — by Tad Chef on February 2, 2009 "Last time I promised a post about the 10 Twitter tools you need for using Twitter for business and in a professional manner. I used Twitter just for fun, testing and finding out what it is about for a while and decided to professionalize it myself. You can’t even follow tweets about you right unless you use some special tools. You will miss opportunities due to overlooking important tweets in a mess of info overload. In the Twitter optimization series overview post I wrote about 5 tools you’ll need, this time I’ll add another 5…"

Netflix May Be Considering HBO Downloads — Online Video – InformationWeek — "In addition to the HBO content, subscribers would still have access to the 12,000 movies and TV episodes Netflix currently offers online at no additional charge. By Antone Gonsalves InformationWeek February 3, 2009 03:00 AM Netflix (NSDQ: NFLX) has reportedly sent a survey to customers asking if they would be willing to pay an additional $10 a month to watch HBO movies and shows online. In the survey, posted on the blog Hacking Netflix, the movie rental service asks subscribers if they would be willing to pay to have HBO content streamed to their computers or to an Internet-connected device attached to their digital TVs. Such devices could include the Netflix Player built by Roku, Microsoft’s Xbox 360 video-game console, a TiVo digital video recorder, or select Blu-ray disk player from LG Electronics and Samsung."

Issa invokes Clearwire conflict, wants to halt DTV delay bill – Ars Technica, By Julian Sanchez | Last updated February 4, 2009 11:45 — "A Republican Congressman is seeking to postpone a vote on a DTV transition delay, and seeking an inquiry into the role of telecom executive and former lobbyist R. Gerard Salemme in shaping the Obama team’s DTV policy, a troubling conflict of interest Ars uncovered last month."

MAKE: Blog: Web designer sketch book — Posted by Phillip Torrone | Feb 4, 2009 08:53 AM — "I really like this Web designer sketch book via BBG. Paranaiv writes – "I’m glad to announce that the Norwegian design store, Hunting Lodge, are now selling the Web Design sketchbook. Their online store is currently down, but if you send them an e-mail I’m sure they’ll help you out. I will also be selling the book from my own upcoming Merchline store, but it might take a few weeks before that is up and running. The book contains 60 pages. 45 with normal browser windows and 15 of web ad formats. I often use it in client meetings for sketching and mock-ups and the clients love it."

FOXNews.com – India’s ‘$10 Laptop’ Revealed as Nearly Useless Brick, February 04, 2009 — "When is a laptop not a laptop? When it’s introduced by Indian education officials, apparently. "The buzz and hype surrounding the Indian Education Ministry’s breathless announcement last week that it would be unveiling a $10 laptop aimed at the poor fizzled out like a wet firecracker Tuesday evening when officials finally debuted the device. "A photo displayed at the press conference in the southern city of Tirupati showed it to be nothing more than an external storage brick, the sort of thing you’d plug into a real laptop to hold your MP3 files. "There are a lot of things you can do for $10," said PCMag.com Editor-in-Chief Lance Ulanoff. "Buy 10 cups of coffee. … Get a cheap T-shirt or two. What you can’t do, however, is build a PC."

Removing admin rights stymies 92% of Microsoft’s bugs (Gregg Keizer, Computerworld) — BeyondTrust CEO says nine of out 10 critical bugs easily could have been less dangerous By Gregg Keizer, Computerworld, February 04, 2009 — "Nine of out 10 critical bugs reported by Microsoft last year could have been made moot, or at least made less dangerous, if people ran Windows without administrative rights, a developer of enterprise rights management software claimed Tuesday. "The vast majority of critical Microsoft vulnerabilities — 92% of them — could have been mitigated by stripping users of administrative rights, said John Moyer, the CEO of BeyondTrust. "This speaks to what enterprises should be doing," Moyer said. "Clearly, eliminating administrative rights can close the window of opportunity of attack."

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Hello, World: Visualization is Child’s Play

Over lunch today and before I head off to my afternoon meetings, I read a good post today, Visualization is Child’s Play, from Joshua Allen in Microsoft DPE (whom I had the pleasure of meeting in person this past weekend) on the http://visitmix.com/ site…

"A recurring topic of conversation among parents here at Microsoft is, "how do I teach my children to program?" This desire is motivated in part by the belief that programming ability was important to our own career success, as this funny comic from xkcd.com illustrates. Confirming this diagnosis is the fact that parents often tend to look back to their own introductions to programming for clues to motivating their kids — whether you started with Logo, GW-Basic, HyperCard, or Perl; chances are that is one of the first places you’re tempted to look when predicting what would be useful in teaching your children.

"Children are naturally drawn to other creative pursuits on the computer; kids will spend hours with painting programs, 3D modeling tools like SketchUp, and creating stories or slide shows. But they tend to be less drawn to writing code. Unspoken in many parents’ desire to "get my children interested in programming" is an implicit assumption that these other creative pursuits are less valuable than coding. This assumption is, in my opinion, fundamentally incorrect.

"Children have higher standards, and far more powerful machines to crunch data than we had. Communicating difficult data visually will be a valuable skill, and will require creativity and craftsmanship."

I think that Joshua is right on target.

As I noted, there’s every reason to expose your kids to engineering and in some cases programming. It all depends on interest and aptitude. These are critical skills that are needed to help spur critical thinking, help build imaginations… and as Bill Gates said, "to maintain a competitive edge in technology innovation."

Kids are surrounded by an incredible culture built and supported by new technology. Growing up in such a culture, the ones who will be successful in the future are the ones with a working knowledge of the technology and engineering behind it. But many schools don’t challenge children: Gates said in a 2007 senate education hearing that our children are "digital natives" caught up in an industrial-age learning model," which does not prepare them for future challenges… challenges that many other countries realize are the underpinnings of future success.

Kids should experience many different skills, including good trades. They should be comfortable with a hammer just as they are able to read and draft the plans that map out future innovations.  My kids eagerly await the project from Microsoft Research called Kodu. Having attended Gamemaker and other engineering camps, this will be another tool in their arsenal that provides them a broad education that will hopefully give them the skills they need to be successful. (OK, they’ve got some of my geeky genes, but they also rock.)

 

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