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Tag Archives: Windows 8

How mobile video calling is changing communication

Posted on December 11, 2012 by Source: timesofindia.indiatimes.com

The next competition in technology is your face – anywhere, anytime.

How mobile video calling is changing communication
As the cameras and screens of smartphones and tablets improve, and as wireless networks offer higher bandwidth, more companies are getting into the business of enabling mobile video calls.

The details vary from one service to the next, but the experiences are similar: From anywhere in the world with a modern wireless network, a smartphone’s screen fills with the face of a friend or relative.

The quality is about the same jerky-but-functional level as most desktop video. Sound is not always perfectly synced with the image, but it is very close. The calls start and end the same way, by pressing a button on the screen.

Mobile video calling has risen so quickly that industry analysts have not yet compiled exact numbers. But along the way, it is creating new business models, new stresses on mobile networks and even new rules of etiquette.

“All the communications – social messages, calls, texts and video – are merging fast,” said Eric Setton, co-founder and chief technology officer of Tango Mobile, whose free video calling service has 80 million active users. An additional 200,000 join daily, Setton said.

Once an interesting endeavor for a few startups like Tango, mobile video has caught the attention of big companies. Apple created FaceTime and made it a selling point for the iPad. In September, the company made FaceTime available on cellular networks instead of limiting it to Wi-Fi systems, almost certainly in response to increasing consumer demand.

Last week, Yahoo purchased a video chat company called OnTheAir. And in 2011, Microsoft paid $8.5 billion for Skype, a service for both video and audio-only calls. Though most people use Skype on desktop and laptop computers, the software for the service has been downloaded more than 100 million times just by owners of phones running Google’s Android mobile operating system.

Microsoft built a service for its Windows 8 mobile phone that lets people receive calls even when Skype isn’t on.

Google, which has more than 100 million people a month using its Google Plus social networking service, now offers more than 200 apps for its video calling feature. It says it is interested not in making money on the applications, but in learning more about them so it can sell more ads by getting people to use its free video service, called Hangouts.

Hangouts can be used for two-person or group calls, or for a video conference with up to 10 people.

“On a high level, Google works better when we know who you are and what your interests are,” said Nikhyl Singhal, director of product management for Google’s real-time communications group. “Video calling is becoming a basic service across different fronts.” While Singhal is an occasional user, he said, his 4-year-old daughter “is on it every day.”

Don’t expect video calling to improve productivity. Tango uses the same technology that enables video calls to sell games that people can play simultaneously. It sells virtual decorations like balloons to drop around someone’s image during a birthday call (both parties see the festive pixels).

Google says some jokey applications on Hangouts, like a feature that can put a mustache over each caller, seem to encourage people to talk longer.

Currently, popular two-way games like Words With Friends on Facebook work by one player making a move and then passing the game over to the other player, not watching moves as they are made.

Another promising area is avatars, like cartoon dogs and cats, that mouth speech when a user wants to have a video call but doesn’t want to be seen.

The prospect of having to appear on-screen at any given moment might sound like a nonstarter for people who worry about bad hair days. But in fact, using mobile devices for video calls may be less bother than it seems.

“There may be natural inhibitions to being seen, but when I’m on a mobile device I’m out and about, so I’m more likely to be presentable,” said Michael Gartenberg, a consumer technology analyst at Gartner. “How people use this remains to be seen, but they are starting to expect it.”

Yet a new etiquette for mobile video calls is already emerging. People often text each other first to see if it’s OK to appear on camera. Video messages sent in the text box of a phone, like snippets of a party or a child’s first steps, are also useful precursors to video conversations. Singhal said making avatars for users of Hangout would be “an extraordinarily important area” as well.
Read More…

Windows 8 moves to BIOS-based product keys

Posted on November 28, 2012 by Source: news.cnet.com

Product keys for Windows 8 computers aren’t printed on a sticker. They’re encrypted in the BIOS. How might that affect you?
Windows 8 PCs now embed their product keys in the BIOS, a move that offers both pros and cons.

Windows 8 moves to BIOS-based product keys
In the past, a new Windows PC would display its product key on a sticker, usually on the side of a desktop and on the base or the bottom of the battery compartment on a laptop. But with Windows 8, Microsoft has switched gears and now stores and encrypts the key in the BIOS instead.
A response to a question on Microsoft’s Answers Web site confirmed the details earlier this month:
One of the improvements Microsoft is making to Activation 3.0 for newly built machines that come preloaded with Windows 8, you won’t have a COA (Certificate of Authenticity) sticker attached to the machine anymore. Instead, this will be embedded in the BIOS. This will avoid product keys from being compromised and OEMs will buy what they need.

So if you need to reset or reinstall Windows 8, you don’t need to hunt for the product key. It’s automatically applied and activated. That’s certainly a plus, especially when the numbers on those product key stickers wear out or are just too small to easily read.

Microsoft certainly benefits from this new activation process since a Windows 8 product key embedded on one PC seemingly can’t be used on another.
But therein lies the problem for the user.

Let’s say you own a new PC running the standard version of Windows 8. And you own a standalone (aka a System Builder) edition of Windows 8 Pro with its own product key. You then install Windows 8 Pro on your PC. Will Windows insist on using the embedded product key, or is there a workaround so you can manually enter the key that came with your Windows 8 Pro System Builder software.

Or, let’s say your current Windows 8 PC dies and you need to replace the motherboard or install the OS on a totally different working computer. How can you do that if the product key is locked to the dead PC’s original BIOS?

A couple of people posed those same questions on the Microsoft Answers page but have yet to receive answers.

Further, the product key itself is embedded and encrypted in the BIOS. So even if you boot into the BIOS, you won’t find the key as an entry that you can simply write down. As the Microsoft rep on the Answers page noted, you can view the full Windows product key using a third-party utility, such as Belarc Advisor, Magical Jelly Bean Keyfinder, or ProduKey. But that key is still tied to its original machine.

I tried the process myself, grabbing the product key from a Windows 8 PC using Magical Jelly Bean Keyfinder and applying it to a different computer. And Windows would not accept it.

Microsoft lays out your options

So what can users do? In an e-mail to CNET, a Microsoft spokesperson outlined some options for people who find themselves in one of the scenarios described above.

First, if you buy a PC with the standard version of Windows 8, you can upgrade it to Windows 8 Pro. But for now, Microsoft and other retailers are only selling the physical media for the Windows 8 Pro Pack, which would run you $69.99.

Microsoft does offer an upgrade option to Windows 8 Pro for Windows 7, Vista, and XP users. That upgrade sells for $39.99. It’s available for for $14.99 until the end of January, but only for recent Windows 7 PC buyers. ZDNet’s Ed Bott found that the Windows 8 Pro upgrade key for a PC running an earlier version of Windows will also upgrade a PC running the standard version of Windows 8.

So you can use your Windows 7, Vista, or XP computer to buy the Windows 8 Pro upgrade key and apply that to your standard Windows 8 PC, an option that would cover the first scenario.

It’s also important to note that Microsoft does not currently offer a full retail edition of Windows 8 in the same way that prior versions of Windows were available as full retail packages. The only standalone (non-upgrade) edition of Windows 8 available is the System Builder edition. This edition is designed more for original equipment manufacturers and hobbyists building their own PCs from scratch. So it’s not a product the average user would likely purchase in the first place.

What about the second scenario? Your Windows 8 PC dies, and you need to reinstall Windows or transfer the license to another PC. The Microsoft rep explained the process as follows:
The OEM license is actually non-transferable to another PC. When you buy a PC preinstalled with Windows, that version of Windows is only licensed for that PC and cannot be transferred to a new PC. The transfer of the license must accompany the PC it was licensed for. If the customer were able to get that machine fixed, they would simply need to call customer support to re-activate if there were changes big enough to merit PC reset or system recovery unusable.

So that option would cover a motherboard replacement. But what if the dead PC couldn’t be revived and you wanted to install Windows 8 on another PC? You’d be out of luck.

The version of Windows 8 that comes pre-installed on an OEM machine is not transferrable between PCs, according to the Microsoft rep. “So if your PC was really put out to pasture, under the terms of the license agreement, you could not use backup discs to reinstall that license on another PC,” she explained.

Microsoft offering Windows 8 for just Rs 1,999

Posted on November 3, 2012 by Source: timesofindia.indiatimes.com

Offer a sophisticated operating system for the price of a pair of branded jeans. This seems to be Microsoft’s strategy to cajole millions of users running pirated copies of its flagship Windows operating system (OS) to turn a leaf and become legitimate, paying customers.

Microsoft offering Windows 8 for just Rs 1,999

The Redmond, Washington-based software giant is offering a deep discount on Windows 8 for a few months, selling a copy priced at Rs 11,999 for Rs 1,999. From a computer that runs Windows XP, Vista or Windows 7 – pirated or otherwise – users can download a licensed copy of Windows 8 Pro, the version with all the bells and whistles, for an 83% discount. No questions asked.

The offer is valid till January 31, 2013. An upgrade DVD costs Rs 3,499 and if you bought a Windows 7 computer after June 2012, an upgrade is yours for Rs 699.

Microsoft is silent on whether this is a security loophole or a deliberate strategy. Company officials declined comment. Raju PP, editor of tech blog Techpp.com, who installed Windows 8 on a non-activated Windows 7 installation by paying Rs 1,999, said: “I have strong reasons to believe that this was a deliberate move to push up initial sales. Microsoft is big and wise enough to do a basic check for legitimacy of Windows 7 installation. They could have done a background check of the installation or could have asked for the Windows 7 licence key. But they didn’t”.

For years, the hordes of users who used pirated copies of the flagship Windows OS represented a tricky knot for software giant Microsoft. They were potentially robbing the company of billions of dollars in revenue. And yet, cracking down would have made them turn to free, open-source platforms.

This would have diluted the immense network effect that benefits Microsoft and helps preserve its market dominance. So, Microsoft mostly cracked down on piracy among companies and enterprise users and left personal users alone.

That seems to be changing as the company unveiled Windows 8, a touchscreen-optimised OS that marks a radical departure in its user interface to usher in a tile-based system common to personal computers, tablets and mobile devices. With these upgrade offers, within four days of its launch, 4 million licences of Windows 8 have been bought and downloaded globally.
Read More…

Acer delays Windows 8 tablets, shows off Megan Fox

Posted on November 1, 2012 by Source: foxnews.com

If you needed any more convincing that Windows 8 and Windows RT are two separate and distinct operating systems, look no further than Acer.

Acer delays Windows 8 tablets, shows off Megan Fox

The Taiwanese computer maker threw its full weight behind Windows 8 laptops , culminating in a newly announced high-dollar holiday ad campaign starring Hollywood celebrities Megan Fox and Kiefer Sutherland and designed to draw attention to the company’s Aspire S5 and S7 Ultrabooks.

The same day that the company pulled back on the curtain on that awareness-raising endeavor, however, Acer president Jim Wong said that plans to release a Windows RT tablet have been pushed back until at least the second quarter of next year, ostensibly due to concerns raised by Microsoft’s Surface tablet.

“Originally we had a very aggressive plan to come out very early next year but because of Surface, our R&D development doesn’t stop, but we are much more cautious,” Wong told Reuters, citing Microsoft’s decision to launch the Surface for $499 after Lenovo and Asus had already announced $599 price points for their Windows RT tablets. He said the company will carefully watch Microsoft’s moves and gauge consumer interest in the interim.

Acer’s senior management has long been a vocal critic of the Surface tablet, going so far as to warn Microsoft to “think twice” about releasing the slate. The launch delay gives the company time to draw up an attractive competitor to Microsoft’s strongly designed offering, and it also gives the Windows Store’s nascent app ecosystem — a Windows RT tablet’s lifeblood — time to develop and grow.
Read More…

Windows 8: It is wait and watch for India Inc

Posted on October 31, 2012 by Source: timesofindia.indiatimes.com

Microsoft launched Windows 8 last week with much hype and the hope that the latest iteration of its flagship operating system would fend off competition from rivals Google and Apple. Although it might be early days yet, initial indications suggest that Indian enterprises aren’t exactly queuing up for the new product.

 Windows 8: It is wait and watch for India Inc
For enterprises and the executives who make decision about technology, Windows 8 is still too much of an unknown for them to commit themselves despite the hard-sell by Microsoft.

Among them are retailer Future Group and India’s second-largest private sector lender HDFC Bank, which will adopt the new platform only if it offers significant advantages over the previous versions-Windows XP and Windows 7.

“There is no plan to upgrade overnight,” said Parakh Dave, Future Group’s chief information officer. “We will assess the platform to find out if it can offer any significant business benefits. We will have to wait and see.”

Windows 8 is Microsoft’s big push to regain lost ground from Google’s Android-a runaway success among smartphones users-and Apple’s iOS operating system, which fuels the iPad and iPhone. It is also the first time that Microsoft has incorporated mobility and touch capability into its Windows operating system.

Although India is not a large market for Microsoft, it still contributes about a billion dollars (Rs 5,400 crore) to the company’s annual revenues, possibly a reason why the Redmond, Washington-based firm has been offering promotional pricing to induce users to switch to its new product.

Microsoft India’s Managing Director Sanket Akerkar said corporations, including Essar Group and Bangalore International Airport, are testing the new platform and feedback was positive.

“The response has been encouraging as they have found Windows 8 to be great for their businesses due to compatibility of their existing Windows 7 applications that work seamlessly with Windows 8,” he said. “However, as is the case with any large-scale technology roll-out, full-scale deployment across organisations will be a phased process.” Microsoft expects the pace of adoption to be rapid over the next several weeks.

Globally, Microsoft enjoys a 70% market share in operating systems used in desktops. But its presence in the smartphone and tablet space has been minimal. Almost 85% of all smartphones sold globally have the Android or iOS, according to latest data from research firm IDC.

“There is a bit of fatigue. While Windows 7 was a great, Vista was a clear failure. Users would want to observe before they decide,” said Akhilesh Tuteja, executive director and head of IT advisory at consultancy firm KPMG, referring to the earlier iterations of Windows.

TVS Motor said it will adopt Windows 8 only if it is “mission critical.”

“We will test it, but may actually use it only if it is unavoidable,” said TG Dhandapani, CIO of TVS Motor.

Kiran Kumar, senior market analyst at IDC India, said he expects migration to Windows 8 to be slower. “However, moving forward, Windows XP is expected to be officially discontinued in 2014, which could possibly trigger the chances of migration to the new platform.”

Lender HDFC Bank said it would look at the cost of adoption. “In the end, our decision would depend on pricing,” said Anil Jaggia, its CIO.

While Manish Choksi, CIO at Asian Paints, counted himself among the fence-sitters, India’s second-ranked information technology services firm Infosys said its clients in India were intrigued by the product.
Read More…

Microsoft’s picture-password ad: Intriguing or confusing?

Posted on October 29, 2012 by Source: news.cnet.com

Microsoft uses the World Series to pump Windows 8 and its picture-password feature. But will real human beings find it fascinating or just plain odd?

Microsoft's picture-password ad: Intriguing or confusing?
I was watching the San Francisco Giants bring art and joy to Detroit’s huddled masses last night, when Microsoft ran an ad before my eyes.

It showed, well, people touching the screens of their laptops and drawing strange circles and lines all over what seemed like family pictures.

Why were they doing this? Was this some code? Was Microsoft declaring its artistic credentials? Was that cat being targeted by a sniper?

But no. For a caption informed me that this was Windows 8′s picture password.

And yet, because I am less than attentive when waiting for the Giants to daintily mow down another cold-weather pretender, I wondered whether anyone might think these people were taking chunks of their pictures and somehow turning them into passwords.

I also wondered whether someone might think these shapes being drawn would cause the pieces of image to be dragged to another place.

Yes, we circle these ears here. We draw a line from this diver there. And no one can hack that, right?

The reality, naturally, is that the picture password works by getting you to perform touching gestures over an image — which is far more amusing than trying to remember the word-number combination that involved some old lover and her birth date or head size.

I found myself, not for the first time, confronting two opposing impulses.

For a real human being, would this be fascinating or deeply confusing?

Would people want to find out more about this revolutionary method of checking in to your machine? Or would they screw up their eyes, reach for the gin and tonic and wish for a Xmas to remember?
Read More…

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