Monday, August 29, 2011

Microsoft external PR chief to get a blue badge

Microsoft’s newest Corporate Vice President, who picks up his blue employee badge at the end of August, will be someone very familiar with the inner workings of the company.

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Frank Shaw, who currently heads the Microsoft account at PR agency Waggener Edstrom, will become the company’s new Corporate Vice President of Corporate Communications. Shaw noted his new role in a post on July 28 on his personal blog. (As he acknowledged, he buried the lead — it’s down toward the end of his post.) Shaw will report to Mich Matthews, Senior Vice President of the Microsoft Central Marketing Group.

Shaw is replacing Simon Sproule, who became Corporate Vice President of Corporate Communications in March of this year. (Sproule replaced Larry Cohen, who left Microsoft to become Chairman Bill Gates’ Chief of Staff.)

Sproule is joining the Renault-Nissan Aliance in Paris in a new role, according to Microsoft representatives. Shaw’s role will be filled temporarily by Pam Edstrom (yes, that Edstrom, as in Waggener-Edstrom).

Shaw is expected to be doing what the Corporate VP of Corp Communications usually does at Microsoft: handling Microsoft’s communications strategies worldwide, including planning and execution, public affairs, media relations, executive communications, employee communications and global agency management.

Shaw takes on his new job right in time for Microsoft’s big fall 2009 launch season. Microsoft will be rolling out Windows 7, Windows Server 2008 R2, the Zune HD, new Windows Mobile releases and more, in the coming months.

Saturday, August 27, 2011

Quotations from Chairman Steve


A mosaic of Apple leader Steve Jobs' on-the-record opinions and musings

Apple's former CEO, and now chairman, Steve Jobs does not think in sound bites. Reading through the wealth of interviews in his career, one is conscious of a mind working through both questions and answers, and taking little for granted.


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Herewith, a collection of the on-the-record ruminations of now Chairman Steve on Apple's core talents, being fired, the new CEO, music, optimism, technology, death and more. (Links to the sources are at the end.)
On Apple's core talents and future products

Apple has a core set of talents, and those talents are: We do, I think, very good hardware design; we do very good industrial design; and we write very good system and application software. And we're really good at packaging that all together into a product. We're the only people left in the computer industry that do that. And we're really the only people in the consumer-electronics industry that go deep in software in consumer products. So those talents can be used to make personal computers, and they can also be used to make things like iPods. And we're doing both, and we'll find out what the future holds. -- Rolling Stone, 2003
On Tim Cook, now Apple's CEO per Jobs' recommendation

Not everyone knows it, but three months after I came back to Apple, my chief operating guy quit. I couldn't find anyone internally or elsewhere that knew as much as he did, or as I did. So I did that job for nine months before I found someone I saw eye-to-eye with, and that was Tim Cook. And he has been here ever since. -- Businessweek, 2004

BACKGROUND: Steve Jobs: "I hereby resign as CEO of Apple"
On being a Silicon Valley celebrity

I think of it as my well-known twin brother. It's not me. Because otherwise, you go crazy. You read some negative article some idiot writes about you -- you just can't take it too personally. But then that teaches you not to take the really great ones too personally either. People like symbols, and they write about symbols. -- Rolling Stone, 1994
On "design"

Design is a funny word. Some people think design means how it looks. But of course, if you dig deeper, it's really how it works. The design of the Mac wasn't what it looked like, although that was part of it. Primarily, it was how it worked. To design something really well, you have to get it. You have to really grok what it's all about. It takes a passionate commitment to really thoroughly understand something, chew it up, not just quickly swallow it. Most people don't take the time to do that. -- Wired, February 1996
On buying washers and dryers

We spent some time in our family talking about what's the trade-off we want to make. We ended up talking a lot about design, but also about the values of our family. Did we care most about getting our wash done in an hour versus an hour and a half? Or did we care most about our clothes feeling really soft and lasting longer? Did we care about using a quarter of the water? We spent about two weeks talking about this every night at the dinner table. We'd get around to that old washer-dryer discussion. And the talk was about design.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Microsoft Windows Vista Client Configuration Study Guide: Exam 70-620

Offering a full coverage of all exam objectives in a systematic approach, so you can be confident that you’re getting the instruction you need to take Microsoft’s new MCITP exam (70-620), this book is packed with practical guidance and hands-on exercises to reinforce critical skills. Exclusive WinSim Vista Simulator allows you to perform a number of the exercises in a simulated environment, real-world scenarios put what you’ve learned in the context of actual job roles, and challenging review questions in each chapter prepare you for exam day.

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This exam is designed to validate proficieny supporting Windows Vista client. This exam will fulfill the Windows Vista Technology Specialist requirements of Exam 70-620.
The Microsoft Certified Technology Specialist (MCITP) on Windows Vista credential is intended for information technology (IT) professionals who work in the complex computing environment of medium to large companies. The MCTS candidate should have at least one year of experience in Tier 1 or Tier 2 phone support in an upper midsize organization or enterprise environment.
MCTS candidates should have experience resolving issues concerning network connectivity, desktop operating systems, security, and applications. Their experience should also include addressing logon problems, performing password resets, and resolving most issues with desktop applications.
* Designed to help study for and pass this important MCTS exam on the Vista operating system on the way to MCITP status
* Targeted to newcomers to Microsoft certification AND people who wish to upgrade their Windows 2003 MCSE/MCSA
* THE independent source of exam day tips, techniques, and warnings not available from Microsoft
* Comprehensive study guide guarantees 100% coverage of all Microsoft’s exam objectives
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Microsoft hits 30,000 apps twice as fast as Android, same as iOS

Microsoft’s Windows Phone 7 devices may not be flying off the shelf, but developers are building for the platform and the Marketplace is passing 30,000 apps in about the same time period as Apple.

Microsoft launched the Windows Phone 7 Marketplace in November 2010 and as they revealed on the Windows Phone Developer Blog they are just about ready to pass 30,000 apps. For comparison, it took Android nearly 17 months to reach this 30,000 milestone while Apple did it in just over 8 months, which is about the same time frame as Microsoft.

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Microsoft has put forth major efforts to get developers on board Windows Phone 7 and it is obviously paying off with hundreds of fantastic apps in the Marketplace. I find new apps for my HD7 on a nearly daily basis and haven’t found myself frustrated by a lack of apps. Games are the hottest selling apps on mobile devices and Microsoft’s Xbox LIVE games are outstanding.

Microsoft is now accepting and certifying apps for Mango, which means these updated apps will have support for features like fast app switching, background audio, multiple and double-sided Live Tiles, better Search integration, and more. Since I have Mango on my HTC HD7, I will see these apps start appearing in the Marketplace. There is no word on exactly when Mango will be coming to devices, but with HTC likely announcing new Mango WP7 devices in September I imagine the update should be out next month.




Another Windows 8 tidbit: File management to get an overhaul

Microsoft’s Windows 8 engineering team is continuing to trickle out information on some of the changes coming with the next version of Windows. Today’s tidbit is about how file management/copying will be getting an overhaul.

Bit by bit, the Windows 8 engineering team is revealing some of the under-the-covers changes coming with the next release of Windows.

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In the latest (August 23) posting to the “Building Windows 8″ blog, Program Management Director Alex Simons shared more about what Microsoft has been doing to tweak the copying/moving/renaming and deleting of files in Windows.

(And if you think this is a “who cares” kind of thing, at 8:30 a.m. ET on August 24, there were nearly 150 comments on this post, the vast majority of which are from people with real ideas and opinions on the topic. With Windows, there is no feature too insignificant to merit lots and lots and lots of heated feedback.)

The core file-management commands in Windows 8 that handle so-called “copy jobs” are going to be optimized for high-volume, concurrent simultaneous use, according to the new blog post.

Currently, fewer than .45 percent of Windows 7 PC users (a number brought to you by the infamous telemetry gathering done by the Windows team) are using third-party tools optimized for these kinds of jobs. While Microsoft still sees a place for third-party copy-job add-ons, Simons maintained, the Windows team is going to be adding to Windows 8 new functionality to the Windows Explorer to handle high-volume copy jobs.

“Our focus is on improving the experience of the person who is doing high-volume copying with Explorer today, who would like more control, more insight into what’s going on while copying, and a cleaner, more streamlined experience,” he said.

The post includes a new video of how Windows 8 will tackle file-copying tasks, as well as lots more granular details about the coming copying experience (including new dialog-box options for resolving conflicting file names, etc.).

As a number of commentators on the five “Building Windows 8″ posts that have been published in the past week are quick to note, Microsoft still hasn’t shared information on many key topics of interest about its coming Windows release (especially around the development-tool story beyond HTML5/JavaScript). Microsoft officials are not expected to talk about this information until mid-September at the Build conference.

Today, by the way, is the 16th anniversary of the launch of Windows 95, for all you granular-tidbit-loving Windows watchers…. And it’s also the 10th anniversary of the release to manufacturing of Windows XP, as my ZDNet colleague Zack Whittaker notes.

Microsoft throws support behind USB 3.0 with Windows 8

Microsoft is building a native USB 3.0 software stack for Windows 8, which could aid in competition against Thunderbolt

Microsoft is incorporating a software stack in its upcoming Windows 8 OS to natively support devices based on the USB 3.0 interconnect, which is in a battle for adoption with Intel’s Thunderbolt.


USB 3.0 is the successor to USB 2.0 standard and can transfer data 10 times faster between computers and external peripherals such as cameras and storage devices. Most laptops and desktops today come with USB 2.0 ports and many PC makers are offering USB 3.0 ports as an option. The current Windows 7 OS does not include native support for USB 3.0, but device makers offer drivers to ensure products are compatible with the OS.

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The growing support for USB 3.0 and wide usage of USB 2.0 was a compelling reason to improve the USB software stack, said Dennis Flanagan, Microsoft’s director of program management for the devices and networking group, in an entry on the company’s Building Windows 8 blog.

“By 2015, all new PCs are expected to offer USB 3.0 ports, and over 2 billion new ‘SuperSpeed’ USB devices will be sold in that year alone,” Flanagan wrote.

Microsoft is writing a new software stack and controller for Windows 8 based on the “design principles” of USB 3.0, which will bring plug-and-play support for new devices such as external storage, webcams and keyboards, Flanagan wrote. The company is retaining the existing software stack to support older USB devices.

But there are few USB 3.0 devices available today, so to create the new software stack the company had to simulate and build virtual USB 3.0 hardware, including ports, hubs and devices.

The hardware support for USB 3.0 is also growing. Intel has already said it will integrate USB 3.0 support in chipsets for processors code-named Ivy Bridge, which will reach PCs early next year. AMD has already integrated support for USB 3.0 in its Fusion chipsets, which are already shipping for PCs.

USB 3.0 transfers data at speeds of up to 5 gigabits per second, which is slower than the transfer speed of rival interconnect technology Thunderbolt. Developed by Intel, Thunderbolt can transfer data between host computers and external devices such as displays and storage at up to 10 gigabits per second. Thunderbolt has been viewed as an alternative to USB 3.0, but Intel has the said the technologies are complementary. Apple uses Thunderbolt in its products.

Thunderbolt currently supports the PCI Express and DisplayPort protocols, and the interconnect does not require any OS support beyond existing software stacks for those protocols, an Intel spokesman said in an e-mail.

But Microsoft’s backing will aid the fast growth of USB 3.0 and provide higher transfer speeds for consumer devices, said Jim McGregor, research director at In-Stat.

“Thunderbolt will be one of many peripheral options available, just like IEEE1394 and Firewire, but I think USB will be the predominant interface because it is so heavily tied to the largest growth segment of the market, mobile devices, for both interconnectivity and power,” McGregor said.

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Browsing and Privacy: How to Not Get Tracked
All modern browsers have built-in tools and add-ons to protect users from having their Web behavior tracked. But regardless, some sites still find ways to track you. Here are tips for taking matters into your own hands.CIO — If you're old enough to remember the Cold War, you know what an arms race is. One side comes up with a new weapon, the other side matches it, and then the first comes back with something even bigger and so on and so on. That also describes the ongoing battle between computer users who value their privacy and the Web sites and their advertisers that don't.

Clearing the cache is easy: In Firefox, go to "tools," then "clear recent history." In Internet Explorer 9, go to "tools" and "safety," then "delete browsing history." In Chrome, go to settings and then "under the hood." Then click "clear browsing data."







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But remember. We're talking arms race here. The UC Berkeley report also talks about a nasty technique called "respawning," which means just what it sounds like: The cookie recreates itself. These are hard to defeat. One way is to block any caching at all, but as I mentioned, not having a cache will slow your browser down.

There are two Firefox add-ons that are probably helpful, but I haven't had a chance to try them yet. One is called SafeCache, which doesn't yet work with Firefox 6 and RequestPolicy, which does work with Firefox 6.
Similar to this Article

5 Cool Add Ons for Firefox 5
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RequestPolicy blocks what are called "cross-site requests," which means that a site you're visiting requests data about a site you've visited in the past. That's important information for advertisers and for Web sites that want to know where people are coming from.

But you may think that's intrusive, which is why you may want to use RequestPolicy. (Note: This add-on is probably not suitable for you if you're not comfortable digging under the hood of a browser and making changes.) If other browsers have similar add-ons, I haven't heard of them.

Lastly, let's go over the basic defenses you can use against the most common and less sophisticated tracking techniques.

All of the major browsers have some built-in defenses. The first is called private browsing, which stops your browser from making note of where you've been in its history file. That's worth doing if you're visiting sites that you don't want other users of that computer to know you've visited. It's very easy to turn on private browsing; in Firefox for example, simply click the "Firefox" button and select private browsing. IE 9 has an option called "inPrivate" browsing you can find on the tools tab and Chrome has incognito mode.

But private browsing isn't necessarily all that private. MCITP Online TrainingFree MCTS Training – In addition to the super cookie issue, some of the extensions you might add to those browsers can reduce their effectiveness. Still, it's certainly worth using private browsing modes if you're concerned about tracking. You can also check a box that says something like "tell Web sites I don't want to be tracked", and as you'd expect, some Web sites will honor that and others won't.

Finally, drill down. Each of the three major browsers has quite a few settings involving privacy, and it's worth a few extra clicks to check them out.

Monday, August 22, 2011

Whatever Happened to Microsoft Forefront Endpoint Protection?

Will this once promising product go the way of the Zune?

Back in 2007, Microsoft shook the security world when it entered the endpoint security market with what was then called Forefront Client Security (now Microsoft Forefront Endpoint Protection). Forefront was positioned as the endpoint security market for the commercial market while its sister product, OneCare, was aimed at the consumer market. This created a market fire storm, especially at companies like McAfee, Symantec, and Trend Micro that depended on PC security for the bulk of their 2007 revenue. The industry wondered, "would these powerful security companies get Netscaped?




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Microsoft was pretty bullish about its announcement. When Forefront was announced, Bob Muglia, who was VP of Microsoft's server and tools business stated, "we think that this product will provide a level of integration and simplicity that really differentiates it, and really enables a different kind of solution." Microsoft wasn't alone in its expectations. Here at ESG, we had just done some market research revealing that: 1) Most security professionals looked at endpoint as a commodity product, and 2) They were already evaluating Forefront or were willing to do so. In other words, the market was open to Microsoft -- all it had to do was execute and beat the competition on price.

Fast forward to 2011 and Forefront seems like a blip on the endpoint security radar screen. I regularly speak with McAfee, Symantec, Trend and others who rarely if ever mention Microsoft as a primary competitor. From 2007 through 2009, Microsoft briefed me on Forefront progress and plans but then the company re-organized in 2010 and almost all communications stopped. Wondering if it was me, I reached out to some analyst friends to see if Microsoft continues to discuss Forefront with others. I got a consistent response, "not really."

So what happened? Here's a few of my thoughts:

1. Forefront did have momentum out of the gate in 2007 but it faced a few obstacles. First, there is the traditional view that Microsoft products don't hit their stride until Rev 3.0, so customers were willing to wait. More importantly, we are talking about security professionals who are paid to be paranoid. Microsoft would have to work hard to get the benefit of the doubt from this tough crowd.

2. Microsoft tried to make endpoint security an economic rather than an IT issue but putting Forefront on its Enterprise Client Access License (ECAL) which made the product virtually free to companies that bought a bundle of client licenses for Exchange, Sharepoint, etc. It was an "all or nothing deal" whereby you had to buy client licenses for all desktops. From my perspective, Microsoft didn't win many ECAL Forefront deals but did alienate security professionals by pulling the "end around."

3. Forefront management required a number of other pieces of Microsoft infrastructure (Microsoft Operations Manager, SQL Server, ActiveDirectory, etc.). Security professionals were used to more turnkey endpoint security management platforms.

4. Microsoft stopped selling OneCare in the consumer market. Although it replaced OneCare with Microsoft Security Essentials (a free alternative) many people were spooked by this change of plans. With Microsoft out of the consumer market, why would it stick around the commercial market?

5. Microsoft Forefront "Stirling," the next-generation product was delayed by several years.

6. Microsoft re-organized and cut back its Forefront marketing.

7. On average, Forefront was a "B" player in most independent security product testing. Most recently, Microsoft Forefront was characterized as a "niche" product in the Gartner Magic Quadrant.

Most likely there was sub-plot to these issues on the sales side of the house. Microsoft reps and channel partners didn't see much ROI on Forefront sales efforts so they simply stopped selling the product to concentrate on others that were easier to sell.

So the supply side (Microsoft corporate, sales, the channel) slowly backed off while the demand side never really caught on.

I know that Microsoft Forefront endpoint protection 2012 is currently in Beta test. I'm sure the product is superior to the current offering but will it really turn the market and channel around? Given the 4-year track record of Forefront, I doubt it.

Ultimately, Microsoft has to ask itself a difficult but necessary question: Given our limited success, is it worth continuing to invest in this market? Microsoft did this with the Zune music player, perhaps its time to make a similar decision with Forefront.

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Inspector Gadgets: Windows 7 Gadgets for Monitoring Your PC

It's been nearly two years since Windows 7 was released, and yet there are still some features that Windows 7 users may not be taking full advantage of -- such as desktop gadgets. Similar to the Mac's Dashboard Widgets, Windows desktop gadgets are mini-applications that reside on your desktop and can display live data, perform simple functions like search or password generation, or give you a sneak peek inside the inner workings of your PC.



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The center of attention, however, is its temperature readings: Core Temp shows how hot it is inside your processor in surprising detail. The gadget displayed not only the temperature in each of my processor's four cores, but graphed them in a line plot. It's excellent information for trying to troubleshoot an intermittent overheating problem.

On top of adjusting the size of the gadget, you can change what information to show, the colors to use and how the graphs are set up. The gadget works with recent AMD and Intel processors, although some Phenom and Phenom II chips have a single temperature sensor and provide only one reading for the entire chip.

In the event that your system does start to overheat, Core Temp has your back. It will display "(!)" next to the temperature reading, open a pop-up warning and even start shutting the system down if you want it to.

Think of it as free insurance for your computer.

Download Core Temp Gadget (389KB)

Process watch

Top Process Monitor

Inside a PC there are thousands of individual software processes running, including those that interact with your computer's CPU, RAM and hard drive. The fabric of a working computer is the sum of these processes.

Top Process Monitor gadget

Use Top Process Monitor to keep an eye on software processes that are using lots of system resources.

The Top Process Monitor gadget acts as your PC's greatest hits chart, showing which processes are using your computer's resources the most. It can show the top processes for various operations including CPU use, memory use, virtual memory use, input-output operations and drive reads and writes.

You can also choose to view any individual process along with its usage data, or have the gadget cycle through any group of them. It's the ultimate snoop to see what's going on inside your computer.

On top of letting you adjust the size of the gadget, Version 2.5 of Top Process Monitor lets you choose which type of operations to display and customize the number of individual processes to show (up to 20) and the colors used.

A nice touch is that Top Process Monitor lets you set a threshold for the amount of system resources any process uses. If it's exceeded, the software gives you a warning. It's a great help if, for example, a sloppy program is using too much virtual memory.

Download Top Process Monitor (139KB)

Connection info

Network Meter

Having connectivity problems? The Network Meter gadget can help you keep an eye on your connections.

Friday, August 19, 2011

IBM: The PC is the new mainframe


PC dead in terms of innovation, but not profit
"The PC is dead!" We've heard that message a lot since the birth of Apple's iPad, but when one of the creators of IBM's first PC added his voice to the chorus, people took notice.




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On last week's 30th anniversary of the IBM PC running Microsoft's MS-DOS, IBM CTO and PC co-designer Mark Dean said PCs are "going the way of the vacuum tube, typewriter, vinyl records, CRT and incandescent light bulbs."

IN PICTURES: Evolution of the PC

While that seems a bit far-fetched, or at least premature, Network World was able to get a second opinion from another IBM luminary during this week's LinuxCon event in Vancouver, British Columbia. Irving Wladawsky-Berger, a 41-year veteran of IBM and one of Linux's biggest champions at Big Blue, said he agrees that the PC is dead -- but only in the same sense that the mainframe is dead.

The mainframe still makes tons of cash for IBM, but it's no longer the center of innovation. IBM sold off its PC business in 2005, but the PC does and will continue to make tons of cash for other companies, even though it will no longer be the center of innovation, Wladawsky-Berger said during an interview.

"I've thought a lot about it, and it depends what you mean by dead," he said. "This is very important. If you ask me, 'Are mainframes dead?' I would say, well we just announced the new z10 last year, and look at IBM's earnings. For a dead product it's making a lot of money. However, if you ask me, 'Are the mainframes the center of innovation for the IT industry?' I would say that would be lovely but we lost that years ago, at least in the late '80s when client-servers came in."

IBM ditched its own PC business -- a move HP is making as well -- in part because it saw that the PC was becoming a legacy platform, Wladawsky-Berger said.

"We saw this coming, that PCs would become more of a legacy platform where you can still make tons of money but the bulk of the innovation will now happen in the mobile platforms, smartphones and tablets and things like that," he said. Luckily, the advances in mobile platforms could apply to PCs and improve them.

"As happened with mainframes, you can integrate those innovations back into the legacy platforms," he said. "Mainframes run Java, mainframes run Linux, mainframes became IP-enabled."

HP said "the tablet effect is real" in explaining its willingness to leave the PC business.

Still, Wladawsky-Berger said there's no reason to feel sorry for Microsoft. "[Microsoft] will continue to be a gigantic cash generation machine for many years to come. It's just not dominant," he said.

Facebook investor Roger McNamee recently claimed that Microsoft's share of Internet-connected devices has gone from 95% to less than 50% in the last three years, as reported by Business Insider and others.

LinuxCon speaker Allison Randal, the technical architect of Ubuntu, brought up this claim in her talk and noted that it's not really clear if McNamee's math would survive serious scrutiny. But the proliferation of smartphones and tablets that don't run Windows certainly has lowered Microsoft's share of devices capable of surfing the Web.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Free 70-620 Exams

This is demo only, this pdf do not include the questions and answers pictures
Exam : Microsoft 70-620
Title : TS: Configuring Windows Vista Client
1. Your computer runs Microsoft Windows XP Professional. The computer has the following hardware configuration:
·512 MB of RAM
·1-GHz processor
·60-GB hard disk
·15 GB of free space
·64-MB video adapter.
You perform a clean install of Microsoft Windows Vista.
You need to ensure that Microsoft Windows Aero Experience is supported.
What should you do?
A. Upgrade the memory to 1 GB of RAM.
B. Upgrade the hard disk to 120 GB with 40 GB of free space.
C. Install a video adapter that has 128 MB of RAM, support for Microsoft DirectX 9, and Microsoft Pixel Shader 2.0.
D. Install a video adapter that has 128 MB of RAM, support for Microsoft Scalable Link Interface (SLI) and Microsoft Pixel Shader 2.0.



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Answer: C
2. You install Microsoft Windows Vista on a new computer that is not connected to the Internet.
After you log on, you receive a warning message about an unknown device.
You need to prevent the display of the warning message until you download an available hardware driver.
What are the two possible ways to achieve this goal? (Each correct answer presents a complete solution. Choose two.)
A. Disable the device.
B. Uninstall the device.
C. Select the Ask me again later option from the warning message details.
D. Select the Don't show this message again for this device option from the warning message details.
Answer: AD
3. You have a computer that runs Microsoft Windows XP. The computer has a custom application installed.
You plan to upgrade the Windows XP computer to Windows Vista.
You need to identify whether User Account Control (UAC) will allow the custom application to run without requiring elevated privileges.
What should you do?
A. Insert the Windows Vista installation media and run mighost.exe.
B. Insert the Windows Vista installation media and run setup.exe /unattended:unattend.xml.
C. Install Microsoft Application Compatibility Toolkit 5.0 and run the Setup Analysis Tool.
D. Install Microsoft Application Compatibility Toolkit 5.0 and run the Standard User Analyzer.
Answer: D
4. You set up Really Simple Syndication (RSS) subscription feeds on your computer.
You need to view the RSS subscription feed in XML format.
What should you do?
A. Disable the Turn on feed reading view option.
B. Enable the Always use Clear Type for HTML option.
C. Configure the RSS feed to be sent to your e-mail client.
D. Enable the Automatically download attached files option.
Answer: A
5. You perform a clean installation of Microsoft Windows Vista on the first partition. Then, you install Microsoft Windows XP Professional
on the second partition of the same machine.
You are able to log on to Windows XP Professional but do not have the option to boot to Windows Vista.
You need to be able to dual boot the computer.
What should you do?
A. Run the bootcfg.exe application with the /fastdetect option.
B. Perform a clean installation of Windows Vista on the first partition.
C. Run the msconfig.exe application and change the order of the operating systems in the boot.ini file.
D. Edit the boot.ini file. Add the following line:
Multi(0)Disk(0)Rdisk(0)Partition(1)Microsoft Windows
Answer: B
6. Your computer fails to produce any audio output. The Device Manager management console is as shown in the following exhibit. (Click
the Exhibit button.)
You need to receive audio output from your computer.
What should you do?
A. Enable the audio hardware.
B. Initiate a Microsoft Windows Update scan.
C. Update the driver for the audio hardware.
D. Download and run the latest installation program for the audio hardware from the manufacturer.
Answer: A
7. You have a computer that runs Windows Vista.
You upgrade the network adapter driver on the computer.
After the upgrade, you can no longer access network resources. You open Device Manager and see a warning symbol next to the network
adapter.
You need to restore access to network resources.
What should you do?
A. Roll back the network adapter driver.
B. Assign a static IP address to the network adapter.
C. Disable the network adapter and scan for hardware changes.
D. Uninstall the network adapter and scan for hardware changes.
Answer: A
8. You have a computer that runs Windows Vista Ultimate.
You open the Windows System Performance Rating tool and receive a Windows Experience Index base score of 1.0. The subscores are
as follows:
·Processor: 4.7
·Memory (RAM): 3.6
·Graphics: 1.0
·Gaming Graphics: 1.0
·Primary Hard Disk: 3.0
You upgrade your video adapter card with a new card that meets the minimum requirements for Windows Aero.
You open the System Performance and Rating tool and notice the base score and subscores have not changed.
You need to enable Windows Aero.
What should you do?
A. Install additional RAM.
B. Install the latest version of DirectX.
C. Update your Windows Experience Index score.
D. Install a USB flash drive and enable Windows ReadyBoost.
Answer: C
9. You install Windows Vista on a new computer. You update the video card driver and restart the computer.
When you start the computer, the screen flickers and then goes blank. You restart the computer and receive the same result.
You need to configure the video card driver.
What should you do first?
A. Restart the computer in safe mode.
B. Restart the computer in debugging mode.
C. Restart the computer in low-resolution video mode.
D. Insert the Windows Vista installation media into the computer, restart, and use System Recovery to perform a startup repair.
Answer: A
10. You configure a subscription to a Really Simple Syndication (RSS) feed that often includes large videos.
You need to minimize delay while watching the videos.
What should you do?
A. Configure the RSS feed to download attached files.
B. Configure the RSS feed to retain the most recent items.
C. Enable the Turn on feed reading view option of the RSS feed.
D. Enable the Automatically mark feed as read when reading a feed option of the RSS feed.
Answer: A

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

70-620 Online Exam Training

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Monday, August 15, 2011

The Real MCTS/MCITP Exam 70-620 Prep Kit

This exam is designed to validate proficieny supporting Windows Vista client. This IT Exams will fulfill the Windows Vista Technology Specialist requirements of 70-620 Exam.




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The Microsoft Certified Technology Specialist (MCTS) on Windows Vista credential is intended for information technology (IT) professionals who work in the complex computing environment of medium to large companies. The MCTS candidate should have at least one year of experience in Tier 1 or Tier 2 phone support in an upper midsize organization or enterprise environment.
MCTS candidates should have experience resolving issues concerning network connectivity, desktop operating systems, security, and applications. Their experience should also include addressing logon problems, performing password resets, and resolving most issues with desktop applications.

* Designed to help study for and pass this important MCTS exam on the Vista operating system on the way to MCITP status
* Targeted to newcomers to Microsoft certification AND people who wish to upgrade their Windows 2003 MCSE/MCSA
* THE independent source of exam day tips, techniques, and warnings not available from Microsoft
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70-620, the required exam for the new Microsoft Certified Technology Specialist (MCTS): Windows Vista Client certification. There are 2-in-1 kit includes the official Microsoft?? study guide, plus practice tests on CD to help you assess your skills. It comes packed with the tools and features that exam candidates want most--including in-depth, self-paced training based on final exam content; rigorous, objective-by-objective review; free certification exam questions, exam-certified authors; and customizable testing options. It also provides real-world scenarios, case study examples, and troubleshooting labs for skills and expertise that you can apply to the job.

To get MCTS: Windows Vista, Configuration certification, you have to take just one mandatory core test (70-620).

Saturday, August 13, 2011

A Brief Glimpse Of The MCTS Certification

I think many people really do not understand MCTS clearly, today, let's take a brief look at MCTS. Career opportunity and advancement in the IT field is often predicated on the amount of experience you have in a given discipline, combined with your breadth of knowledge with regards to specific software applications. And to prove that you have acquired this knowledge, there is no better instrument to use than the certification process. Much like a degree from a college or university acts as a symbol of your overall scholastic accomplishments; a certification is a representation of proficiency in a smaller, more specialized sphere of knowledge.






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Microsoft offers many specific certifications for IT professionals, all of which fall under the umbrella known as the Microsoft Certified Technology Specialist, or MCTS. With MCTS certification you are given the opportunity to demonstrate your proficiency for a specific Microsoft technology, such as a working knowledge of Windows Server 2003 or Visual Basic, or you can earn multiple certifications to validate your skill set across a wide range of Microsoft products. Eventually, you can even build upon your MCTS certification to earn the all-encompassing certification known as the MCITP, or Microsoft Certified IT Professional.

The MCTS certification process is fairly straightforward. Once you feel you have acquired the necessary skills and logged enough experience using a specific product, you can attempt to be certified by taking the requisite exam (or exams) which are used by Microsoft to test for proficiency. When you have passed the required exams, Microsoft will issue your certification.

Possessing MCTS certification makes you significantly more appealing as an employment candidate-more so, for example, than an individual with only dated college coursework as the highlight of his or her resume. This is because MCTS certifications are constantly being updated to reflect current and emerging IT solutions, ensuring that every product and skill you master is 100% relevant to the job you'll be asked to perform.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Microsoft Windows 8: 10 Reasons It Will Shatter Windows 7


Microsoft’s Windows 8 likely won’t be available until next year, but based on what’s known so far, the operating system could very well be better than Windows 7.

Microsoft Windows 8: 10 Reasons It Will Shatter Windows 7 - Reasons Windows 8 Will Best Windows 7




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5. Instant-on is what’s needed.

One of the biggest issues some users have with Windows is that it can take a long time to boot up the operating system. According to recent rumors, the software giant is working on a solution for that that could deliver near-instant-on functionality. It might not seem major, but considering how annoying it can be to wait for Windows to boot up, having much faster startup times sounds awfully nice.

6. It might be more suitable for tablets.

Microsoft has been saying for years now that its operating system is ready for tablets. But as vendors have shown, they’re more likely to invest in an Android-based tablet than try their luck with Windows 7. Thanks to support for ARM-based devices, and the likelihood that Microsoft is working hard on making Windows 8 more tablet-friendly, consumers should expect many more mobile devices running the software giant’s next OS.

7. Better power consumption

One of the issues with Windows 7 is that it doesn’t deliver the kind of efficient functionality that consumers and especially enterprise customers are after. However, leaks surrounding Windows 8 development suggest that Microsoft is working on a vastly improved power-saving feature in its operating system that should drastically improve battery life on mobile devices running the software. If that’s true, there will be many happy customers out there.

8. What’s with History Vault?

Windows 8 might have a new feature, called “History Vault.” According to Winrumors, the feature is similar to Apple’s Time Machine, which provides a simple backup interface to users of Mac OS X. Microsoft’s option will let users restore individual file, edit old documents and much more. Microsoft hasn’t confirmed the feature, but if a robust backup utility like that comes to Windows, it would be quite nice.

9. A better interface

Windows 7 comes with a solid user interface that doesn’t take much time to get used to after coming off Windows XP. And although Microsoft hasn’t said much about its upcoming operating system, it’s becoming clearer that Windows 8 will feature a similar interface. However, this time around, those who follow Microsoft believe the interface will be a bit more streamlined and slightly easier to use. If Microsoft can follow through on that, it might just have a winner on its hands.

10. Microsoft’s lesson learned

Aside from the operating system itself, Windows 8 will likely be better than Windows 7 for one main reason: Microsoft doesn’t want to repeat the embarrassment of Windows Vista. Microsoft’s last operating system before Windows 7 was a nightmare for the company. The software giant became complacent and thought it could coast, but instead failed miserably. The result was a loss of trust from vendors, customers, and investors. It was a bad time for Microsoft, and the company doesn’t want to relive it. So expect the company to do something special with Windows 8. At this point, it has no other choice but to deliver an even better operating system.

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

4 reasons Windows Phone 7 will beat iPhone and Android


And three reasons it won't

Microsoft has a relatively long history with mobile operating systems, stretching back to the mid-1990s and Windows CE. Developed originally for "embedded systems," Windows CE quickly found its way into PDAs and eventually phones, and while consumers never warmed to the platform, it did achieve a level of success in the enterprise.



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4. Will: Moving beyond tablets and smartphones

Tablets and smartphones are all the rage today, but neither became popular overnight. Who knows what devices will catch fire in coming years?

Chris Fleck of Citrix believes that Microsoft should do its best to bring new classes of mobile devices to market. "The Windows Phone hardware today is good enough to use but not innovative enough to prompt users to change," he says. "A smartphone was a phone plus a PDA. Now, there's an opportunity to develop 'Nirvana phones.' Take the phone and do more with it. Dock it. Connect it to virtual desktops. Connect it to high-resolution video displays."

Of course, such devices exist today — the Android-based Motorola Atrix being the best example — but they're not really capturing consumers' attention yet. As prices come down, that should change, perhaps giving Microsoft just enough time to work on its vision for the so-called "Nirvana phone" before competitors beat them to the mobile punch yet again.

1. Won't: Apple and Android's head start

Windows Phone 7 just came out last fall, meaning that iPhone and Android are generations ahead of Microsoft. Making matters worse, Microsoft has been lollygagging when it comes to updates, which are crucial as Microsoft plays catch-up.

"I would prefer to see much more frequent updates, rather than one big dump. As opposed to 500 updates per year, all coming at once, how about 40 each month?" says Philippe Winthrop, managing director of The Enterprise Mobility Foundation.

The second-generation of the Windows Phone 7 OS, Mango, was released to developers in May, but Mango-based phones won't be out until the end of this year. Meanwhile, iOS 5 phones are due out in the fall, meaning that Apple will have gone from the original iPhone to iOS 5 in less than four years.

Google hasn't been sitting on its hands either. The first Android phone came out in the fall of 2008, and Android Ice Cream Sandwich is due out at the end of this year. Moreover, Ice Cream Sandwich is intended to assuage one of Android's biggest drawbacks, OS fragmentation. Ice Cream Sandwich combines features from Gingerbread (for smartphones) and Honeycomb (for tablets) and will standardize updates across devices from various manufacturers, leading to a more consistent user experience.

2. Won't: The rate of change in the mobile market

Microsoft is accustomed to the slower rate of change of the PC market. Wait a few years between major OS upgrades? With PCs, it made sense.

With handsets, consumers expect a major OS upgrade or two during the short life cycle of the device, and many gadget hounds don't even wait for the carrier contracts to expire before they get a new mobile phone.

Even those who wait tend to replace phones around the time they sign a new contract, cashing in on handset subsidies. According to Recon Analytics, the average replacement cycle in the U.S. is just less than 22 months.

Not all of those users simply replace the handset with another from the same vendor, nor do they always stay loyal to carriers. According to MetaFacts, the churn rate for smartphone users is higher than it was for feature phones, with 21% of consumers planning to shop around when their contracts are up.

Of course, this means that Microsoft has more opportunities to entice users to change platforms. Compelling device subsidies, product tie-ins with, say, Xbox or Kinect, or even being the first vendor to add some new feature that no one is thinking about today could shift things in Windows Phone's favor quickly.

But once users switch over to Windows Phone, will Microsoft be able to keep them? Other platforms, including the PC and even game consoles, require enough upfront investment that people stick with them for a reasonable amount of time. Will Microsoft adapt to how consumers make choices and develop loyalty, especially when a critical partner - the carriers - tends to rank low on customer-satisfaction surveys?

3. Won't: Apps and marketplace

The iPhone App Store currently offers over 500,000 apps: double the number available in the Android Market. Windows Phone lags far, far behind with about 20,000 available apps. Even BlackBerry, often left out of any discussions about the future of smartphones, provides 25,000 apps.

Of course, size isn't everything in an app store. Certain demographics will favor Android simply because it delivers a larger percentage of free apps.

According to Chris Fleck, vice president of mobility solutions at Citrix Systems, it's also important to remember that apps are a secondary, often even tertiary, activity on smartphones. "What's the No.1 thing people spend time on with smartphones? Email," he says.

Despite the popularity of apps, there are three or four common activities that capture the bulk of our attention. Email, texting, Web search, and of course, let's not forget that these things are phones, or something people are buying to actually talk on.

Windows Phone has a long way to go to compete with apps, but simply offering good voice, email and search goes a long way towards leveling the playing field.

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Hackers Break Into 70 Law Enforcement Websites

Those hackers calling themselves Anonymous are at it again, this time breaking into 70 law enforcement websites and spreading 10GB of email addresses and confidential credit card data.

Members of the group said they were hacking into the law enforcement websites, most located in the Southern and Central portions of the U.S., in retaliation for arrests of its members in the U.S. and Europe last month. According to the Associated Press, the group said in a statement:





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“We are releasing a massive amount of confidential information that is sure to (embarrass), discredit and incriminate police officers across the US,” adding that it hoped the leak would “demonstrate the inherently corrupt nature of law enforcement using their own words” and “disrupt and sabotage their ability to communicate and terrorize communities.”

The group was apparently following through on a joint statement it issued last month along with members of another hacking group known as LulzSec:

“These governments and corporations are our enemy,” the statement said. “And we will continue to fight them, with all methods we have at our disposal, and that certainly includes breaking into their websites and exposing their lies.”

Anonymous and others have become significantly more successful at breaking into websites in the past few months, targeting such sites as PayPal, the CIA, the U.S. Senate’s site, Sony’s PlayStation Network and Rupert Murdoch’s Sun newspaper.

What is it going to take to stop these criminals?

Friday, August 5, 2011

Oracle Launches Java 7 as Innovation Sprouts From the Community, Others

Oracle will release Java 7 on July 28 with a host of incremental enhancements to make life easier for developers. Meanwhile, Java innovation continues outside Oracle.

Oracle Launches Java 7 as Innovation Sprouts From the Community, Others
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With the theme of moving Java forward, Oracle will launch the latest version of Java—Java 7—on July 28.





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Ironically, although Java 7 is the first major Java revision in about five years, the changes in the language and platform are more evolutionary than revolutionary, Java experts say—including Mark Reinhold, chief architect of the Java Platform group at Oracle.

Yet the new moves are welcome by Java developers the world over, as Oracle demonstrated in a Webcast that ran more than four hours. “Java 7 is the most anticipated release ever,” said Bruno Souza, president of SOUJava, a Brazilian Java User Group.

In essence, Java is movin’ on up, but perhaps more in the mode of The Jeffersons’ George and Weezie as opposed to the more revolutionary moving up Curtis Mayfield & the Impressions touted in “We’re a Winner.”

Progressing the language became difficult as Java was plagued by political and market unrest, first at Sun and then at Oracle after its acquisition of Sun. The Java Community Process, which governs the progress of Java, was rife with infighting and accusations of favoritism by Sun and then Oracle. And “Moving Java Forward” became a mantra at Oracle, as if to say, "It’s ours now and we’re going to take it forward no matter what."

“Java 7 is the release everybody has been waiting for, for quite a long time,” said Ben Evans of the London Java Community. Evans, who also is the LJC’s representative on the Java SE/EE (Java Standard Edition/Enterprise Edition) Executive Committee, added that Java 7 is “an enabler” that will give developers more options for building better Java applications—particularly in London’s financial sector, which relies heavily on Java apps, he said.

“The most significant thing is the fact that we’re shipping,” Reinhold said. “It’s been almost five years.”

Meanwhile, Adam Messinger, vice president of product development at Oracle, said Java has been at Oracle for 18 months since the company acquired Sun and Java is in good hands. Acknowledging that Oracle is “standing on the shoulders of giants” with Java, Messinger noted that Oracle is investing heavily in Java by putting together “the largest team ever” to work on the language and platform by combining the HotSpot and JRockit teams. Messinger also said Oracle is working to continue to build out the Java community and has moved to make the JCP (Java Community Process) more open.

“Java is strategic to Oracle; we’ve got skin in the game just like all of you do,” Messinger said to an audience of Java developers during Oracle’s Webcast.

Java 7 brings several new features to the platform, including Project Coin, also known as Java Specification Request 334: Small language enhancements. The project consists of a set of small language changes intended to simplify common, day-to-day programming tasks. The Project Coin language changes enhance developer productivity and reduce the amount of code needed to do certain tasks. Key Project Coin features include the diamond operator, try-with-resources and strings in switch.

With the new InvokeDynamic feature, Oracle has enhanced support for dynamic languages such as Ruby, Python and JavaScript to run on the JVM (Java Virtual Machine). InvokeDynamic enables these languages to run with greater performance on the JVM.

Alex Buckley of the Java Platform Group at Oracle said Java 7 represents “the first time we see the JVM set its own course.”

The JVM was obviously designed for Java, and “all the invocation modes are organized around Java semantics,” said John Rose, an Oracle engineer who headed up the InvokeDynamic effort. “But we add one more mode for other languages,” he said. InvokeDynamic adds “low-level support and a stronger undergirding for other language features” on the JVM.

JDK (Java Development Kit) 7 also features a new API for parallel programming or building applications for multicore systems. The new Fork/Join Framework enables developers to break down problems into subtasks that can be executed in parallel across a number of processors. And Java 7 also adds a new I/O for working with different file systems, new networking and security features, and backward compatibility with other versions of the platform.

Meanwhile, from an industry observer’s perspective, Al Hilwa, an analyst with IDC, said:

“The three big things from a feature perspective here is the multicore support with Fork/Join, the support for dynamic languages and the new file-system API. All these have been on the drawing board for some time, so it is great for Java developers to finally see them happen. One important message that comes through from all that has transpired around Java over the last year and a half is that Oracle appreciates the value of Java and will move it forward through solid investment. This has to be a great relief for the community.”

Support for dynamic languages also resonated with Mik Kersten, CEO of Tasktop Technologies and creator of the open-source Mylyn project. However, Kersten said he believes the bulk of the updates coming in Java 7 are too incremental for most developers to get excited about. Yet, this is a positive indicator of Java’s dominance in the enterprise, which demands slow and steady change, he said.

However, “What is noteworthy is the changes in Java 7 that embrace innovations beyond the Java language,” Kersten said. “The ‘invokedynamic’ instruction promises dramatic performance improvements for dynamic languages like Groovy and JRuby. The new Fork/Join framework will help the implementation of functional languages including Clojure and Scala. Where a decade ago we had to jump through major hoops to create AspectJ on top of the JVM, these new Java 7 features will help the JVM continue to establish itself as the leading runtime for programming language innovation.”