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Netbooks, Live Cashback and rebates: helping the economy one gadget at a time

I have entered the small notebook PC club, ‘though I’m reminded of the infamous quotes by Groucho Marx on club membership.


As I Tweeted, I use a number of different technologies at home and at the office: various types of computers, devices and gadgets. Over the holiday weekend I did some research and decided that the next addition to our computer archive at home should be a small notebook PC, ever since Steven and Jon started talking more and more about them (such as here on arstechnica, along with Win7 references). 


There’s been a bunch written about netbooks and Windows 7, and I thought that finding a small notebook PC today with Windows Vista would likely allow me to migrate to Windows 7 when it’s released.  Given the messaging at WinHEC, where it was noted that “a lite version of Windows 7 will run on 1GB of memory and 16GB of (solid-state drive) storage.” 


Now throw in the momentum around Black Friday shopping and the need to have a small, portable computer at home to handle those nagging chores around the house when you’re not in a home office and a seed was planted.  (Really, I was sold whilst lugging my PC on the plane again: you’d certainly rather take something small and lite on a family trip or when running the kids out and about to their various kid events, but would rather not take your desktop replacement notebook computer.


Answer: a new, small notebook PCs.


So, I began my research which was quickly summarized in a post today from Rob Pegoraro, the Washington Post’s tech guru in his article “Tiny PCs, Full-Size Problems.”


That title didn’t sound promising.


Pegoraro provides some advice for considering an ultralight laptop.



“If you’re buying a netbook as your sole computer, knowing that you’ll only use it on the Web, Acer offers the best bet for now. If, however, you’re buying it as a third or fourth computer and are willing to tweak it to fit your own needs, look at the MSI.



“But it might be better to wait. If these manufacturers have the good sense to steal each other’s best ideas, we should see significantly better choices before long.”


But who wants to wait?  The economy is in trouble, people aren’t spending and inventory is sitting on store shelves.  And with the sales, rebates and promotions (particularly the Live Cashback deals that kicked off last week aside from the press reports), it should be a good time to buy a new computer, particularly with Windows Vista SP1 pre-installed.  (Note: I can attest to the success of Live Cashback, ‘though I did run into one problem which the Live Customer Service team handled quickly via email to my non-Microsoft account… more on that later. Although at a peak of 30% cashback on eBay, it’s now down to 15%.)


I had somewhat decided on the HP 2133 Mini PC, thanks in part to the recommendations of friends and the helpful information of the hp2133guide.com community.


imageThen came the message from my friend, Joel, alerting me to an amazing deal on Tiger Direct that has the HP 2133 with 1.6GHz proc, 2GB of memory and 120GB HDD with Windows Vista Business for $399 after HP rebate (that should be enough of a guarantee that the rebate will be fulfilled)Tiger Direct deal


Then take off another $50 to end up at roughly $350, after a 10% Live Cashback discount I found through Live Search.


Clicking thru the offer takes you to the Tiger Direct site (which shares inventory and systems with the revamped CompUSA as noted here).


After my purchase, I checked my email associated with my Cashback account: I found that I’ll get my cashback in 60 days.  Which comes from Microsoft, so I expect that I’ll get that, too.


More on why I decided on the HP 2133 tomorrow, and a report when it arrives, ETA sometime next week.


Tags: Microsoft, netbook, HP


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PC Magazine: “It’s all another reason why you’re better off with Vista.”

Going though customer and partner feedback today, I was interested to see this appear in my mailbox (thanks to the several people who forwarded this today), an excerpt from an article by Larry Seltzer on PC Magazine’s blog, Why Vista Looks Good After The MS08-067 RPC Bug – Security Watch

One of the lessons of the recent Windows RPC bug, the one that was fixed “out of band” a few weeks ago, didn’t get enough attention. It’s that Vista is so much more resilient than XP to the attack, and why. I believe that, on Vista, this vulnerability is almost impossible to exploit and nobody will try.

“When MS08-067 was released it was a shocker, the kind of vulnerability that, in the past, has led to widespread attacks. This hasn’t happened so far for a number of reasons. But I’ll wager that very few Vista systems anywhere in the world will be successfully attacked through this vulnerability, except maybe in hacker testing. It’s all another reason why you’re better off with Vista.”

Tags: articles, what I read, Microsoft, blogs, security, antivirus.

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It’s two… no, three blogs in one: the new Windows Blog

You can now knock a couple of blogs off your reading list.

No, they weren’t tossed – nor did the blogger go on permanent holiday as some are wont to do – but a couple of our Windows blogs were merged into the new Windows Team blog, with (as Brandon says)…

"… sporting an all-new look and feel reflecting Windows in a broader sense instead of a single Windows release. We figured it was time to give our blog a good facelift (it’s looked the same since we originally launched in October of 2006) – especially as we start talking about Windows 7, Windows Live, and many other interesting Windows topics. Our old design focused strictly on Windows Vista. Our new design is no longer tied to a specific Windows release allowing us to talk about a wider range of topics."

The Windows Team BlogWe’ve had two blogs hosted together on the same site, the Windows Vista Team Blog and Windows Experience Blog.  Now it’s all just one big happy blog family on The Windows Blog.  

You’ll find the above two blogs as well as a new third as of today: the Windows 7 Team Blog. You can sign up for RSS feeds for the individual blogs or just get the main The Windows Blog RSS feed, all from the following links.

· Windows Vista Team Blog | RSS Feed

· Windows 7 Team Blog | RSS Feed

· Windows Experience Blog | RSS Feed

· Front Page | Main RSS Feed

And a quick quote from Margaret Getchell: Be everywhere, do everything, and never fail to astonish the customer.

Tags: Microsoft, blogs, Windows 7, Windows Vista, PDC 2008.

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Video: CNET’s Ina Fried and Kara Tsuboi on the epicurean appeal of Microsoft Windows 7

In this video from CNET’s Ina Fried and Kara Tsuboi, you’ll learn “why consumers can expect more “dessert” and fewer “vegetables” from the new operating system, and talks about the reasoning behind the number 7 in the name.”

Dessert? Vegetables? 

I can always count on CNET to explain things so simply that even my kids can understand it. ; )

BTW, the boys use Windows Vista SP1 at home.

Here’s the link to CNET’s PDC 2008 coverage:

Tags: Microsoft, performance, Windows 7, Windows Vista, PDC 2008.

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Windows Vista, Windows 7, conferences and other things taking up my time

Generally the lack of posts in October is directly related to the (growing) amount of work on my plate at the office.  It’s been very busy, as we increase efforts in advance of PDC and WinHEC, and the efforts we have currently on track.

It was with interest that I read today in the Seattle Times an article from Times technology reporter Benjamin J. Romano, "With Windows 7, Microsoft faces a future full of challenges."  Romano writes that "when the company divulges details of Windows 7, the successor to much-maligned Vista, it will do so against a backdrop of growing competition from Apple, a battered Windows brand and the global economic crisis."

"Microsoft has made big changes in how it builds Windows since releasing Vista, in part to avoid repeating past mistakes.

"Many executives involved with Vista have moved elsewhere within Microsoft or left the company. Those in charge now include Steven Sinofsky, who earned a reputation for keeping big projects on schedule as the head of development for Microsoft Office, and Jon DeVaan, who also leads a companywide effort to improve engineering."

I’ve seen several articles on how the Windows management team has (as Romano puts it "reduced the Windows bureaucracy and given front-line developers more responsibility." 

Is that a bad thing, distributing responsibility to the people closest to the code?

Windows 7 has been pumped in the press as the "most secretive product ever."  So, is it a bad thing that Microsoft management has "kept a tight lid on details about Windows 7"?  Companies do that every day, and have a devil of a time keeping a lid on new innovation, features and offerings.  I’ve found that Microsoft provides tremendous transparency on technology and applications to our customers and partners.  If there’s one thing I learned, many developers and systems administrators don’t like surprises.  They want the ability and reliability to plan. 

Perhaps the Steve Jobs’ approach of "one more thing" works for consumers and entertainment technology, but for enterprises?  I don’t think so.  Scott Bekker of Redmond Magazine wrote back in 2002 that as Microsoft provided a a roadmap for future software and technologies for enterprises, there were "no surprises…"  and I think that’s the way many IT professionals prefer it.  At least, that’s what I’ve heard often enough.

Of course, all this predictability doesn’t mean one can’t continue to work and provide products with added value.  That’s one of the reasons I’m personally looking forward to PDC, and the disclosures we’ll see around a number of product and services that we’re all very excited about.  As Wolfgang Gruener posted last month in the article on tgdaily.com on PDC 2008, there will be "no surprises" on Windows 7, noting that "22 out of 155 sessions will directly new features in Windows 7 – which makes the software the second-most covered topic (behind cloud services with 26 sessions) during the event…"

Also of note:  hand in hand with the above article in the Times is one on how PC manufacturers (OEMs, ODMs)are rolling out machines that can boot up in no time.

"Hewlett-Packard, Dell and Lenovo are rolling out machines that give people access to basic functions such as e-mail and a Web browser in 30 seconds or less. Asus, a Taiwanese company that is the world’s largest maker of the circuit boards at the center of every PC, has begun building faster-booting software into its entire product line.

"Even Microsoft, whose Windows software is often blamed for sluggish start times, has pledged to do its part in the next version of the operating system, saying on a company blog that "a very good system is one that boots in under 15 seconds."

It’s always good to hear (as we saw during a recent Springboard webcast) how Vista SP1 provides many of the enhancements today that people are looking for, and how PC OEMs are getting smarter about satisfying their customers with faster boot times and reduced "application overhead."  In the webcast, Gabe Aul noted that "driver maturity helps a lot" and Ed Bott offered a specific example. Link to Springboard series with MarkAt 6:20 in the video, Ed relates an hands-on experience with one customer who purchased a notebook PC with Vista in April of 2007, and had a negative experience (with Vista RTM). Ed recalls that he contacted the customer, arranged to get the machine…

"… a year later after SP1 came out, [I] refreshed all the drivers, installed SP1 and sent it back (to the customer) who said that "I don’t even recognize this machine, the experience is so dramatically improved." 

That’s one of the main reasons we’re considering a new computer this fall for home use, to replace an aging notebook. The improved performance with Windows Vista SP1 is a real selling point, along with hardware specs that will likely be more that ready for what’s to come in terms of future applications and services.

Tags: Microsoft, performance, Windows 7, Windows Vista, PDC 2008.

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