Top 10 Windows Server 2008 R2 Features #9: Processor core parking

Microsoft Windows Server 2008 R2 main story banner

When you think of kids on the playground playing Star Trek make-believe, you see the guy who plays Scotty inevitably being shouted at to increase or decrease the power, and then the guy putting on his best (or worst) Scottish accent and complaining back to the captain about how it canna be done, she can't take this abuse much longer or we're all genna bloe! Powering up and powering down is the most common task that amateurs think of when they consider the role of an engineer running a big machine.

And yet up until very recently, servers have existed in a perpetual "on/off" state -- they're either turned on and consuming the energy they've been designed to consume, or they're off and your data center is offline. Only in the last few years, with the introduction of the multicore era coupled with the sudden ubiquity of virtualization, has there been the notion that you can move the entire serving job at any one time to the most efficient processor available. New CPU technologies like Intel SpeedStep have created the opportunity for administrators to eliminate the problem of processor latency by turning off entire cores when they're not in use.

Continue reading

Is the Palm Pre still coming to Verizon?

Palm

A report from an unnamed source published on TheStreet.com last night claimed that the Palm Pre, despite all reports to the contrary, would not be coming to Verizon.

Previous statements from Verizon Wireless President and CEO Lowell McAdam somewhat spoiled Sprint's launch of the Pre, saying that Verizon would be bringing the Pre to Verizon within six months.

Continue reading

Let's start the hundred million Wii countdown!

Nintendo Wii

While the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 have gradually had their prices whittled down, and their product SKUs have shuffled no fewer than eight times each, Nintendo's Wii has remained the exact same price with the exact same specs the whole time.

From November 2006 to this very day, Nintendo's never changed the Wii's $249 pricetag.

Continue reading

EC's evidence shows Intel paid HP for 95% exclusivity

HP

When the European Commission delivered its first evidence against Intel last May, in papers that were only released this week (PDF available here), it argued that Dell Computer's belief that Intel could penalize it for purchasing AMD's CPUs was as good as Intel actually making the threat. But other evidence later in the 517-page document collected from both Intel and Hewlett-Packard suggests that HP was under the clear impression from the very beginning of its agreement with Intel that if it were to purchase more than 5% of its CPUs from AMD, HP would not only disentitle itself to Intel rebates but also possibly forfeit rebates it would have already received.

But the evidence also shows that HP may not have been under any coercion to agree to these terms. In fact, HP may have been instrumental in stipulating the nature of the rebates, in an effort to streamline its purchasing costs following its just-completed merger with Compaq.

Continue reading

Patent logic in Lucent case may benefit Microsoft in its Word appeal

Microsoft Word 2007 / Word 2010 icon

Two weeks ago, the Federal Circuit Appeals court struck down a huge jury verdict against Microsoft, on the basis that the jury didn't appear to use a real-world formula for determining infringement damages. If it had, it might not have come up with $357,693,056.18, the judges there stated. In the same appeals court this morning but in a different case, as reported separately by Reuters and by Bloomberg, Microsoft's lawyers were all prepared to argue that they could not have infringed upon a patent for XML tag storage, as former partner i4i alleged, because no one in the company had actually seen the patent.

But they may as well have come to court stone-cold silent, as the issue Judge Kimberly Moore raised, according to both reports, was whether i4i's experts came up with a real-world formula for calculating damages. Citing the very same case that these same judges would cite in overturning the Alcatel-Lucent ruling, i4i argued that its expert figured that a company that borrows a patented invention generally owes the inventor about one fourth of its profits.
As i4i's citation explicitly read, "When an inventor allows someone else to use [his] invention, [he'll] keep 25 percent of the profits from the sale of that infringing product."

Continue reading

Intel keeps fighting for widget-augmented TV

Intel Atom badge

At the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco this week, Intel has devoted a considerable amount of time to a variety of products -- not just netbooks -- that run on Intel Atom processors. Today, the company officially debuted its first Atom-based system-on-a-chip for consumer electronics products such as TVs, set-top boxes, and optical media players.

The 45nm CE4100 system on a chip (formerly codenamed "Sodaville") is backwards compatible with the Intel Media Processor CE3100 (a.k.a., "Canmore") that debuted at IDF last year. That product found its way into a number of HDTVs this year, including Samsung's "Internet@TV" enhanced models. But Intel has been pushing the widget-enhanced Internet TV experience for nearly six years, and it still hasn't caught on. As with its continued advocacy of the Mobile Internet Device (MID) form factor, Intel keeps pushing but few seem to notice.

Continue reading

Microsoft's Windows 7 House Party prep video is a real party pooper

Windows 7 Party Video

Sometimes buzz is the last thing a company should want.

Microsoft's lame Windows House Party prep video is the rage of the Web right now -- and that's not good. I refrained from blogging yesterday but have been called to action. This morning, Interpret's Michael Gartenberg tweeted: "How have you not weighed in on the House Party videos? Are you just laughing too hard... We need some JW analysis here please." OK. OK. I'll break my silence.

Continue reading

Microsoft takes a second swing at the Web apps 'ecosystem'

Microsoft .NET logo

Download Microsoft Web Platform Installer 2.0 from Fileforum now.

Back in 1990, Microsoft made a genuine attempt to build what is now referred to as an "ecosystem" around applications for Windows, including advising its competitors as to how to write for the system, and even funding smaller groups that needed a leg up to become viable players in the market. As things turned out, however, there ended up being one word processor, one spreadsheet, one presentation manager, and one organizer that each commanded more than 90% of the market, compelling many to wonder aloud why the metaphors comparing Microsoft to something out of a certain old Dutch fairy tale weren't taken more literally.

Continue reading

The smartphone popularity contest: Palm Pre crashes iPhone 3G S' party

iPhone 3GS

Market research firm Interpret, LLC issued a report today that examines the public's mindshare of the market's leading smartphones (iPhone 3G, iPhone 3G S, Palm Pre, Android G1, BlackBerry Storm, BlackBerry Curve). In other words, it gauges the public's perception of particular devices and how "popular" they are outside of actual sales figures.

While observing popularity often just serves to reiterate what many people think they already know about a product, Interpret's report propounds that it is no longer enough for smartphones to just perform advanced tasks, but they must also project certain qualities about their owners. The qualities that people most wanted to say about themselves through their phone were: "hip/cool," "smart," and "productive."

Continue reading

My father's laptop: A humble machine's simple lesson

Carmi Levy: Wide Angle Zoom (200 px)

As laptops go, it's nothing out of the ordinary. An average brand -- Compaq -- running an average operating system -- Vista -- used for the ordinary, average sort of things, like Web browsing and messaging. With its 17-inch screen, built-in webcam, and a hard drive with enough capacity to store everything I've ever written, it's the kind of machine that pretty much defines mainstream computing.

The difference is this was my father's machine. And after getting a middle-of-the-night call yesterday from my mom saying he had passed away, just like that, it was the first thing I saw after I got to their house and walked into the living room.

Continue reading

3G wireless eReader from Irex aims to tackle Amazon's Kindle

The Irex E-reader, here depicted prior to its official production.

Through new partnerships with Verizon Wireless, Barnes & Noble, Best Buy, and other major US firms, the European-based Philips spin-off hopes to at least hobble the Amazon giant in North America. Set for release next month, Irex's 8.1-inch touch screen eReader will be better than the Kindle in almost countless ways, officials contended during a press conference today in New York City.

Unlike the Kindle, which is dedicated to sales from Amazon.com, the Irex DR800SG will support Barnes & Noble's eBookstore and ultimately other e-comm sites, magazines, and newspapers, too, said Hans Brons, CEO and founder of Irex. Based in the Netherlands, Irex has been carefully eying the US e-reader marketplace for more than a year now, according to Brons.

Continue reading

Senate Republicans suspend opposition to FCC net neutrality regulation

Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R - Texas)

As first reported in the Washington Post this afternoon, and as has been independently verified by two other Washington news sources, Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R - Texas) has agreed to withdraw her amendment to an Interior Dept. spending bill that would have cut off funding to any Federal Communications Commission effort to regulate "net neutrality." This as aides to FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski, as reported by Congressional Quarterly, approached Sen. Hutchison seeking her withdrawal, at least until the Chairman can put forth a complete proposal.

On Monday, Chairman Genachowski made a public policy speech outlining a framework for new FCC regulations that would prohibit service providers from disabling certain Internet services on behalf of customers, as well as more transparently specify for customers what allowed measures they are taking to regulate traffic on their networks. The implication of these "Fifth" and "Sixth Principles," as they're being called, is that the FCC would in turn prohibit ISPs from being able to provide better bandwidth to certain classes of content providers willing to pay a premium.

Continue reading

Intel's Moblin platform takes big steps

Moblin Linux 2.0 'm-zone,' the system's desktop counterpart.

While Linux-based operating systems have been well-received for netbook form factors, some of the highest-profile distributions have not yet taken a strong hold there, especially when competing against desktop operating systems like Windows XP. One of those not-yet-a-hits is Moblin, an Intel-endorsed open source platform designed especially for Atom-powered devices.

Today, however, Moblin received a couple of big boosts as a result of the Intel Developer Forum going on this week, helping to grow the project's scope considerably.

Continue reading

Microsoft should dig into the WebKit to stop Google from framing IE

Internet Explorer 8 (IE8) badge

Internet Explorer is in a state of crisis so severe that Microsoft may yet lose most of the browser market territory claimed during the browser wars. Microsoft has no choice but to make a leap of development faith, by abandoning the IE rendering engine and releasing new WebKit-based desktop and mobile browsers. IE is a dead platform. It's long past time for Microsoft to end its "Weekend at Ernie's" behavior.

What a difference a decade makes. Ten years ago, Microsoft won the browser wars with Netscape, only to abandon the territory after Internet Explorer 6 launched. Many end users are still stuck in the IE 6 past, whether it's the browser directly or progeny Internet Explorer 7 or 8. According to Net Applications, IE 6 usage share is higher than either of the newer versions. Perhaps IE's market position would be better had Microsoft not let browser development lay idle until after Mozilla started working on Firefox about six years ago. AOL and Mozilla reignited browser development because of paid search -- that Google box -- as did several other software developers. AOL eventually gave up on Netscape, but Apple, Mozilla and Opera continued developing browsers.

Continue reading

Chrome Frame erodes IE from the inside: Can Google get away with this?

Did Internet Explorer 8 just pass the Acid3 test?  No, it's the Chrome Frame renderer giving IE8 a leg up.

Yesterday's revelation by Google that its open source Chromium lab developers have been testing deploying the Chrome browser engine as an Internet Explorer add-on called Chrome Frame, and its subsequent opening up of that project to the public, is a surprisingly ballsy move from a company typically known for being cool, plain, and innocent-looking. Quite seriously, the complete engine is being offered as a downloadable add-on, with the promise that developers will be able to retool their sites to let IE users render them using standards accepted by developers rather than those deployed by Microsoft.

But that's not exactly what happens -- and in fact, that last phrase could apply in any number of cases to how the browser-within-a-browser actually works. First, for developers to be able to utilize these standards, they're being invited to include tags in their code that target a specific browser, such as <meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="chrome=1">
But as you can plainly see, that browser isn't IE. It's Chrome, which means that Google Frame is actually an incentive to get more developers to target Google's browser specifically.

Continue reading

Load More Articles