Phoenix gets embedded DVD player for HyperSpace

California's Phoenix Technologies, the company most famous for its BIOS, has announced an upgrade to its HyperSpace virtual Linux environment that will allow a system's DVD player to be accessed independently from the core OS.

Phoenix's HyperSpace is essentially an embedded Linux OS that accompanies the system firmware or BIOS that acts as an instant-on platform upon which applications can run, no matter what the status of the main operating system may be.

By Tim Conneally -

PDC 2008: The hard job of moving on after Vista

Remember the good old days when it seemed that a PC on everyone's desktop was a modern miracle? After recent experiences with Vista, the course Ray Ozzie may set for Windows 7 appears intended to recapture some of that magic.

Windows Vista has been described with a wide variety of adjectives, ranging from an ongoing success to, in the words of my friend and colleague at Microsoft Watch, Joe Wilcox, a "flop." The very fact that such a variety of monikers exists is all the indicator one needs that something went wrong during the lifecycle of this product.

By Scott M. Fulton, III -

In-depth with the Windows 7 Media Center

If you're a Windows Media Center user, you don't want to miss an in-depth look at what changes are coming with Windows 7. Microsoft's Charlie Owen, who works on Media Center, goes through every new feature along with screenshots.

The new Media Center is available in the M3 build of Windows 7 that is being distributed at PDC. Some of the additions include: an on-screen keyboard, H.264 playback, bigger video thumbnails, Turbo Scroll for those with large libraries, and revamped photo capabilities.

By Nate Mook -

Wal-Mart revamps DRM-free MP3 music site

With today's re-launch of a DRM-free music site first opened in February, Wal-Mart now offers a bigger catalog of three million MP3-format tracks from all major record labels, along with a lower starting price point for some tracks.

Although standard pricing on the site is 94 cents per track, Wal-Mart is now selling some Top 25 songs for 74 cents per download.

By Jacqueline Emigh -

PDC 2008: Don Box stars as 'M,' the minister of sensibility

During another overflowing demonstration here at PDC, long-time Microsoft developers Don Box and David Langworthy (two of the most popular presenters every year) introduced developers to M, the new modeling language for data.

The term modeling is being introduced here in more than one context, and for the realm of enterprise application developers, it refers to the ability to produce a workable schema that may or may not be populated with explicitly typed data. The need for more direct modeling has been known for long enough, though perhaps not understood; it hasn't occurred to people that the task could be approached through the use of another language.

By Scott M. Fulton, III -

Steve Ballmer's memo about Windows Azure, Live Mesh plans

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer sent the following memo to partners and customers about the Windows Azure platform that was announced at PDC 2008 this week and the company's software plus services vision. It's a long read, but important if you want to stay on top of where Microsoft is headed.

Subject: A Platform for the Next Technology Revolution

By BetaNews Staff -

Windows 7 will be lean, faster, and even embedded

Just two weeks after releasing Windows Embedded Standard 2009 based on Windows XP, Microsoft said Tuesday that the next version -- code-named "Quebec" -- will be built atop the Windows 7 code base.

The news is significant, because it indicates that Microsoft is serious about making Windows 7 capable of running on devices with limited power. During the PDC keynote Tuesday, Microsoft Windows head Steven Sinofsky showed the audience a netbook (or sub-notebook) running Windows 7. Most netbooks currently ship with Windows XP or Linux.

By Nate Mook -

Google settles book search dispute, joins Microsoft and Yahoo on censorship standard

Two long-running disputes involving the Web's most prominent search sites appear to be nearing resolution this week, with wins for both human rights and book lovers.

First, Microsoft, Google and Yahoo have jointly announced the completion of guidelines covering standards of operation in countries with laws that conflict with our own standards of free speech and human rights.

By Angela Gunn -

CenturyTel buys bigger Embarq for a bargain

Taking advantage of current bargain-basement stock prices, rural phone company CenturyTel today purchased another company in the same category , Sprint spin-off Embarq, for $5.8 billion.

With more consumers now using wireless and cable services, rural phone companies are undergoing line losses.

By Jacqueline Emigh -

MTV enters the forgotten realm of music television (online)

Finally delivering in full the product which originally brought it to prominence, MTV Networks has opened MTV Music, a destination site for music videos, delivered in a fashion similar to YouTube.

MTV broke ground as the first channel dedicated strictly to airing music videos in the early '80s, and broke further ground as the first network to air reality television in the early '90s. It may be a little late to the party when it comes to social video, but the Viacom property purports to have more than 16,000 classic videos and exclusive MTV performance footage. By focusing the brand on that for which it's known best, MTV music stands to outpace YouTube in music video content.

By Tim Conneally -

Yahoo launches hosted edition of Zimbra Collaboration Suite

The "cloud" grew a little more crowded today, as Yahoo announced plans to host the open source-enabled Zimbra Collaboration Suite (ZCS) in an offering specifically geared to colleges, universities, and other educational institutions.

Yahoo today introduced Zimbra Hosted for Education (EDU), a new SaaS edition of its open source e-mail and collaboration software which is tailored to partial or whole campus deployment among students, faculty, staff and alumni at educational institutions.

By Jacqueline Emigh -

Google Labs bundles apps into Gmail

Yesterday, Google Labs announced new experimental features that can add other Google apps into the Gmail viewer.

The three new features found under Settings > Labs add new boxes in the left navigation panel in Gmail. One is a dedicated Google Calendar gadget that shows upcoming appointments and gives alerts when a schedule event occurs. Another is a gadget dedicated to Google Docs, which makes all of your documents searchable and accessible from within Gmail.

By Tim Conneally -

PDC 2008: First glimpses at Office apps on the Web

In what will undoubtedly be perceived as Microsoft's response to Google in the Web applications field, the company this morning gave a first peek into Web-based versions of its Office components, which it's presenting as supplemental to the main Office package.

Though the Web-hosted versions of Microsoft Word and Excel bear respectable similarity to their desktop-hosted counterparts, and even though they will probably be fully capable of running on their own, Microsoft representatives this morning at PDC 2008 introduced these components as supplements to Office -- moreover, as features customers get access to by purchasing and using Office 14.

By Scott M. Fulton, III -

What do you want to know about Windows 7?


Update: We have posted the answers to some questions

We're going to be sitting down shortly with Mike Nash, Vice President of Windows Product Management, who heads up Windows 7 development. Now that the news and screenshots are out there, what else do you want to know about Windows 7?

By Nate Mook -

CodeWeavers offers free wares for a day

A one-day offer of free software has servers at CodeWeavers Digg-ing out of a hole not unlike the one the OpenOffice.org project found itself in a couple of weeks ago -- the performance pit of extreme popularity.

Back in July, the CEO of CodeWeavers issued the "Great American Lame Duck Presidential Challenge" to the White House, saying that if President Bush met one of several economic or security goals, the company would offer their wares free for a day. As of October 14, Osama bin Laden was still on the loose and the jobs market is still appalling, but the price of gas has dropped sufficiently for Jeremy White to make good on his promise. (Nothing in the challenge said the price drop couldn't be caused by economic chaos. It really does pay to be specific.)

By Angela Gunn -
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