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Surface computing — the wave of the future?

I closed out this week speaking with Nigel Keam, Architect, and Mark Bolger, Director of Marketing for Microsoft Surface. Both are very proud of their product and have every reason to be. Microsoft Surface is a 30-inch display in a table-like form factor Read More......(read more)

Written by Windows Vista Team Blog on September 16th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on surface computing and Featured News and Windows Vista.

Surface computing — the wave of the future?

I closed out this week speaking with Nigel Keam, Architect, and Mark Bolger, Director of Marketing for Microsoft Surface. Both are very proud of their product and have every reason to be.

Microsoft Surface is a 30-inch display in a table-like form factor designed to bring friends and family together through the sharing of technology. Users can share photos, play games and complete everyday tasks by using hand gestures, touch or other physical objects with Microsoft Surface. This new custom software platform runs atop Windows Vista and is a good way to highlight the flexibility of the new OS in conjunction with new hardware and applications designed specifically for Windows Vista. Although it's maybe hard to imagine all that Surface will be able to do in the future, I have to say that today, even in its infancy, it's astonishing!

It all started with the idea of blending the physical and the virtual worlds through technology, because although technology might bring us closer together in some ways, it can isolate us in others. Family members often use computers in separate rooms and email or instant message each other to communicate (how many of you can relate?). One main goal of Surface is to bring people together at a point where the technology can be shared amongst users of a single unit -- for example, allowing family members to interact with each other face-to-face instead of in isolation.

Surface is the brainchild of Stevie Bathiche from the Microsoft Hardware Group and

...
Click to continue reading "Surface computing -- the wave of the future?"

Written by Nick White on September 16th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on surface computing and Featured News and Windows Vista.

12 Tweaks - Performance of the Windows Vista

Windows Vista is a resource hog. Microsoft¡¯s latest operating system will swallow every last bit of hardware resources you throw at it in the race for a top user experience, a concept synonymous with high performance. And yet, there are scenarios in which Vista will eat away CPU cycles, huge amounts of random access memory, completely hug a ReadyBoost USB device and still underperform. The operating system will choke even on the most common of tasks, abandoning the user to slowdowns in system performance and to unresponsive processes catalyzed by nothing more than routine and mundane actions. No doubt, Vista has a few rough corners in terms of reliability and performance, but there are a few solutions available, until Microsoft delivers the first Service Pack in 2008. (more¡¦)

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Written by Jason on September 16th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on tweak and tweaking and tweaks and Performance and computer and Computer and Windows and Hardware and vista and Windows Vista.

An explanation of Windows Update automatic updating

The Microsoft Update team has posted a statement addressing the current community discussion on Windows Update's self-updating behavior. The upshot is that a longstanding procedure in Windows Update requires it to self-update before it is able to recognize that new updates are available (note: WU does not conduct a self-update event each and every time it checks for updates). This self-updating is done regardless of whether the user has enabled automatic checking, download and/or installation of updates. It does so in an effort to avoid WU misleading the user to think s/he is up-to-date simply because s/he was not receiving notification that updates are available. Put another way, WU cannot alert the user that there are security updates available if it is not in the necessary updated state that will allow it to recognize those updates (see "chicken and egg" dilemma).

However, we do recognize that we should have been clearer in our explanation of this process earlier in the game; the MU team's blog post is an effort to rectify that oversight.

In short, this is a poorly understood process, so I invite you to take a look at the details in the MU blog post to learn more.

Questions on this behavior are best addressed directly to the team via the MU blog.

Written by Nick White on September 13th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on Windows Update and Featured News and Windows Vista.

An explanation of Windows Update automatic updating

The Microsoft Update team has posted a statement addressing the current community discussion on Windows Update's self-updating behavior. The upshot is that a longstanding procedure in Windows Update requires it to self-update before it is able to recognize Read More......(read more)

Written by Windows Vista Team Blog on September 13th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on Windows Update and Featured News and Windows Vista.

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