Tuesday, May 29, 2007

The Downsides of 64-bit Windows Vista - Driver and application support

Microsoft delivers Windows Vista in both 32-bit and 64-bit flavors. While a system configuration with a x64 processor certainly recommends one of the 64-bit editions of Windows Vista, these versions of the operating system do come with downsides that customers need to be aware of. Being essentially identical to 32-bit Windows Vista, the 64-bit editions will deliver support for 32-bit applications without any problems.




This aspect is one of the pillars of the transition to 64-bit. Users are encouraged to adopt the next wave in computing technology while still being able to enjoy the same programs they used to on their 32-bit system. However, 64-bit Vista does not offer support for 16-bit applications or components. Old solutions designed for platforms that preceded 32-bit will not function on x64 Vista.

64-bit Windows Vista also features an additional line of defense against buffer overflow attacks. Vista's Data Execution Prevention (DEP) will work in conjunction with the 64-bit processor to prevent exploits, but one major shortcoming is the fact that legitimate applications and processes will be stopped if the operating system detects a buffer overflow condition.



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Adaptec Launches New Release of Its Award-Winning Operating System for Snap Servers

GuardianOS(TM) 4.4 Adds Data Migration Utility to Automate Relocation of Data to Snap Servers

MILPITAS, CA -- (MARKET WIRE) -- May 23, 2007 -- Adaptec, Inc. (NASDAQ: ADPT), a global leader in storage systems, today announced version 4.4 of its award-winning GuardianOS™ operating system, which powers its Snap Server network storage systems. Scaling from 160GB to 66TB, Snap Server by Adaptec enables distributed enterprises to deliver the right amount of storage for applications at headquarters, in branch offices, and in retail outlets. In addition to providing new file and print services, GuardianOS runs enterprise-class data protection software for PCs and servers, and replication software to distribute, protect and collect data between remote Snap Servers.




The enhanced version of GuardianOS features the Data Migration Utility, which allows businesses to easily transfer data from any system supporting the CIFS or NFS protocols to a Snap Server. By ensuring that all file and folder permissions remain intact, and verifying that the transfer was performed correctly, businesses get the assurance that their data has been completely and correctly transferred to the Snap Server.

"Adaptec has made it easy and safe to migrate information from expensive network attached storage (NAS) and dated file servers to new Snap Servers," said Steve Terlizzi, vice president and general manager of the Storage Solutions Group at Adaptec. "Copy utilities are not reliable enough to handle large data transfers and it can take weeks or months to get all the permissions right after data is moved. Our new Data Migration Utility takes all of that pain away."

Powered by GuardianOS v4.4, Snap Servers deliver a comprehensive range of storage systems that run value-added software applications, including distributed management, replication, and backup and restore for desktops, notebooks, and servers, in order to meet the needs of distributed enterprises. From remote locations with Snap Server 110, 210 or 410 systems to the central office with its Snap Server 520 and 650, the product family was designed to provide a flexible and cost-effective solution for a storage strategy that spans multiple sites. With the new Data Migration Utility, businesses can now easily move data to a Snap Server storage infrastructure.

GuardianOS v4.4 Highlights

The GuardianOS v. 4.4 provides several new features and enhancements including:

-- Data Migration Utility: GuardianOS can easily and reliably copy or
move large amounts of data, including security permissions, from any
computer supporting CIFS or NFS to a Snap Server. The GuardianOS Data
Migration Utility ensures that all data and security permissions remain
intact and accessible during transfer and then displays an easy-to-read
report of file and folder names to document that all data was successfully
moved.

-- USB print server and tape drive support: GuardianOS enables Windows,
Linux, UNIX, and Macintosh computers to use shared USB printers connected
to a Snap Server. Businesses can easily perform disk-to-disk-to-tape
(D2D2T) or other archiving strategies with new USB tape drive support and
integrated BakBone NetVault data protection software.

-- Enhanced iSCSI support: GuardianOS takes advantage of extended iSCSI
support, including support for up to 255 LUNs, and spec-compliant IQN
names.

-- Enhanced disaster recovery: GuardianOS now backs up and restores Snap
Enterprise Data Replicator (Snap EDR) Management Console settings, enabling
quicker data recovery in case of disaster.

-- Command-line Interface. Administer Snap Servers with pre-written
scripts, or manually through a command-line interface.


Pricing and Availability

GuardianOS v4.4 is currently available for upgrade on all GuardianOS Snap Server models. Existing Snap Server customers with a previous release of GuardianOS and an Extended Care Plus, Bronze, Silver, or Gold service plan may upgrade to the 4.4 version for free from the Snap Server website at www.snapserver.com/services. Other Snap Server owners may purchase a service contract starting at $199 MSRP per Snap Server by calling 1-888-343-7627 and then upgrade to the new version for free. For more information, go to www.snapserver.com.

About Adaptec

Adaptec, Inc. (NASDAQ: ADPT) provides trusted storage solutions that reliably move, manage, and protect critical data and digital content. Adaptec's software and hardware-based solutions are delivered through leading Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs) and channel partners to provide storage connectivity, data protection, and networked storage to enterprises, government organizations, medium and small businesses worldwide. More information is available at www.adaptec.com.



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Dell Sells Systems with Pre-Installed Linux Operating System

In another move to recapture the top position on the market of personal computers (PCs), Dell Inc. started to sell systems with pre-installed Linux operating system. The move not only emphasizes growing popularity of Linux, but also Dell’s intention to appeal even to minor groups of computer users to regain the No. 1 spot from HP.




Dell will initially sell three systems with pre-installed Ubuntu 7.04 operating system: XPS 410, Dimension E520n desktops and the Inspiron E1505n notebook. The systems feature dual-core Intel Core 2 Duo or Intel Pentium Dual-Core processors that can be configured according to end-users’ needs. The laptop will cost starting from $599, whereas desktops’ prices will start at $599 and $849.

The new systems target the Linux enthusiast community and are a direct result of extensive customer feedback received since February via the company’s Web site for fielding customers’ suggestions to improve products, services and operations. About 30 000 community members advocated that Dell offer systems with Linux pre-installed, and more than 100 000 participated in a follow-up survey to help determine customer preferences, including which Linux distribution to offer initially.

“The interest and enthusiasm from customers who challenged us to deliver a consumer Linux solution have been matched within Dell and Canonical, the sponsor of Ubuntu, by a team of dedicated professionals who made this happen in a phenomenally short period of time,” said Neil Hand, vice president, Dell consumer product group. “It’s fantastic to be able to offer what many Linux enthusiasts want, great Dell products with popular open-source software for work and play.”



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Consumer Electronics: Closing In on Linux

Linux has the remarkable ability to be adapted and scaled to specific purposes. It can run corporate servers, personal computers and even small consumer electronics devices. Open source isn't a CE manufacturer's only choice for a micro OS -- among other options are WinCE and Wind River. Unlike other applications, however, a Linux system demands no royalties.




Chances are that one or more of your consumer products uses the Linux Linux hosting solutions with 24x7x365 support – Visit HostMySite.com operating system. In order to find out, you'll have to look at the fine print. Manufacturers do not openly advertise with labels announcing "Linux Inside."

Linux has steadily become the operating system Manage remotely with one interface -- the HP ProLiant DL360 G5 server. of choice by manufacturers of toys, video and telephone equipment, along with many things that involve hand-held devices and remote controls. The trend for using Linux began around 2002 and is gathering momentum, according to several companies that develop Linux adaptations for product uses.

"Today, we see Linux in products from watches to supercomputers," Oren Teich, product manager for open source Latest News about open source platform developer Monta Vista Technology, told LinuxInsider. "Linux is a great operating system feature-wise. It has a better technical implementation than other operating systems. That's why manufacturers are going to Linux more than any other OS solution."

Linux used to mean the entire set of software and add-ons needed to get a computer up and running, according to Teich. That is what most people still think when they hear that a product is Linux powered.

However, the Linux OS can be used in a scaled-down version in order to run a user interface designed to better accommodate consumer products, he said. The user navigates by pressing buttons on a control panel. Monta Vista offers its own Embedded Linux version for commercial deployment in consumer products.
Unique Offerings

"Linux is a very amorphous OS. It can be a different OS on a different product," Teich claimed. "We spend a lot of time modifying the code for scalability."

Linux has a remarkable ability to be adapted and scaled to specific purposes, he said. Some vendors have their own software developers to do this. Other vendors use Linux specialty companies to develop whatever is needed.

"The ability to do this is extremely unique to Linux," noted Teich. "We can use all custom trappings available in Linux to do anything we want in one product since there is no need for compatibility with other hardware."

Vendors now start with the Linux kernel and, depending on the intended use in the particular product, they modify the kernel to run what they need, he added.
Not the Only Choice

Product developers are quick to point out that Linux is often the best choice available, but not the only choice. Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) Latest News about Microsoft touts its Windows Mobile and WinCE versions as viable portable operating systems for consumer products. The Wind River appliance platform is also available.

Of course, cost factors heavily into consumer product development. Unlike other options, the Linux OS is free. The inherent costs in using it involve fees for user support of a particular distribution or the costs of scaling the Linux kernel to a particular consumer product.

"You can tailor the Linux kernel to do anything that is needed with no royalties payments," said Philip Pokorny, director of field engineering at open source software and hardware firm Penguin Computing.

Most times consumers cannot tell a product is running Linux.

"Other vendors are attracted to the open source software. It levels the playing field," offered Dr. James Bottomley, CTO for SteelEye Technology, a company that develops clustering, data replication and disaster recovery software.

Wind River is both a good example of operating system alternatives for consumer products as well as a good example of Linux's flexibility Get the facts on wireless solutions suited to your industry., according to Bottomley. Wind River specializes in device software optimization (DSO) by enabling companies to develop, run and manage device software. The software developer markets its own Wind River platform and also develops services around Linux.

Bottomley cited TiVo and Cisco Systems (Nasdaq: CSCO) Latest News about Cisco Systems as other examples of the trend toward Emedded Linux operating systems.

"TiVo built its own software system around Linux. Cisco built onto Linux as well," he said.
The Movement

Embedded Linux is an adapted Linux OS using the Linux kernel that requires as little as 2MB of memory to run in a consumer product. Within the computing industry, the Embedded Linux Consortium (ELC) is working to foster the use of Embedded Linux. Consortium membership includes IBM (NYSE: IBM) Latest News about IBM, Intel (Nasdaq: INTC) Latest News about Intel, LynuxWorks, Motorola (NYSE: MOT) Latest News about Motorola, Panasonic Latest News about Panasonic, Samsung Latest News about Samsung, Sharp, Siemens (NYSE: SI) Latest News about Siemens and Sony (NYSE: SNE) Latest News about Sony.

To demonstrate the scalability of the Embedded Linux OS, Bottomley compared the Linux movement in consumer products to the different ways of measuring a piece of string. Each consumer electronics product has its own set of kernel patches, he emphasized.

"What is starting to accelerate is the amount of people working in the embedded market. This trend will continue," said Bottomley.

Monta Vista, like other Linux product makers, contributes to the development of Linux ad-ons that become standard in the industry, noted Teich.

"We try to get everybody in a particular product industry to use the same set of changes. Then these modifications become standard," he explained.
Inside Appliances

When Pokorny recently moved into his new home, he discovered that controls for the house's centralized appliance system ran on Linux. He found that reference in the fine print of the instructional manual to the control panel that the system runs on an ARM (Nasdaq: ARMHY) Latest News about ARM processor with the Linux kernel.

Most wireless gateways have Linux kernels in them as well, he said, adding that they are an easy and low-cost solution.

Pokorny noted that Linux meets the usability standards regardless of the application. For instance, when using Linux in business, it is better to run a standard version like Red Hat (Nasdaq: RHAT) Latest News about Red Hat so everything is working. All of the hardware support is already provided.

In the embedded space, manufacturers need an operating system to control everything in the box. Embedded Linux does just that. In consumer devices, products need a replacement for a real-time operating system. Linux adapts well to real-time environments.

"We find Linux to be very customizable," concluded Pokorny.
Spotting the Products

According to Teich, WiFi Latest News about WiFi access points all use Linux. For instance, Linksys has a Linux model -- WRT54GL. You can usually spot the Linux product because the model number will have an L as part of its designation, he said.

Other examples of Linux inside consumer products, Teich said, are in every Sony, Hitachi (NYSE: HIT) Latest News about Hitachi and Panasonic HD television and their remote controls. Samsung Electronics uses Linux and a DivX-accelerated MIPS-based SoC (system-on-chip) in its portable digital TVs.

"Linux use in these types of products is widely deployed," stressed Teich.

Linux is also used by video projector companies, especially in those products that have the WiFi computer features. Similarly, desktop speaker phones use Linux, he noted.



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Unix like

Conforming to the basic architecture and principles of the Unix operating system. Unix-like operating systems, such as Linux, may be POSIX compliant, which means that applications communicate with the OS via a standard programming interface (API).




The phrase "Unix-like operating system" is meant to exclude Unix operating systems such as Sun's Solaris and HP's HP-UX because they, as well as others, are compliant with one of the UNIX specifications governed by The Open Group. Any Unix operating system that does not comply is a Unix-like operating system. See Unix, Open Group and Single UNIX Specification.



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Apple Lisa

The first personal computer to include integrated software and use a graphical interface.




Modeled after the Xerox Star and introduced in 1983 by Apple, it was ahead of its time, but never caught on due to its $10,000 price and slow speed. It gave way to the Macintosh, which was developed by a separate group within Apple. In fact, the final production units of the Lisa were modified into a somewhat-compatible version of the Macintosh.



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Apple III

An enhanced version of the Apple II that never caught on.




Type rest of the post here



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Apple II series

The Apple II (sometimes written as Apple ][ or Apple //) was the first popular microcomputer manufactured by Apple. Its direct ancestor was the Apple I, a limited production circuit board computer for electronics hobbyists which pioneered many features that made the Apple II a commercial success. Introduced at the West Coast Computer Faire in 1977, the Apple II was one of the very first and most successful personal computers. A number of different models were sold, and the most popular model was manufactured with relatively minor changes into the 1990s. By the end of its production in 1993, somewhere between five and six million Apple II series computers (including approximately 1.25 million Apple IIgs models) had been produced.




Throughout the 1980s and much of the 1990s, the Apple II was the de facto standard computer in American education; some of them are still operational in classrooms today. The Apple II was popular with business users as well as with families and schools, particularly after the release of the first-ever computer spreadsheet, VisiCalc, which initially ran only on the Apple II.

The Apple II was originally running only the built-in BASIC interpreter contained in ROM. Apple DOS was added to support the diskette drive; the last version was "Apple DOS 3.3". Apple DOS was superseded by ProDOS to support a hierarchical filesystem and larger storage devices. Using a diskette or hard-disk, the Apple II could also load the UCSD Pascal operating system. UCSD binaries are compatible with a large number of other computers, including the IBM-PC. Using a Z80 interface the Apple II could run the popular Wordstar and dBase software under the CP/M operating system.

Apple's Macintosh product line finally eclipsed the Apple II series in the early 1990s. Even after the introduction of the Macintosh, the Apple II had remained Apple's primary source of revenue for years: the Apple II and its associated community of third-party developers and retailers were once a billion-dollar-a-year industry. The IIGS model was sold through to the end of 1992. The IIe model was removed from the product line on October 15, 1993, ending an era.

Design

Unlike any other microcomputer before it, the Apple II looked more like an appliance than a piece of electronic equipment. This was a computer that would not seem out of place in the home, on a manager's desk or in a classroom. The lid popped easily off the beige plastic case, allowing access to the entire internals of the computer, including the motherboard with eight expansion slots and RAM sockets, which could hold up to 48 KiB of memory.

The Apple II had color and high-resolution graphics modes, sound capabilities and two built-in BASIC programming languages, Applesoft and Integer. Compared with earlier microcomputers, these features were well-documented and easy to learn. The Apple II sparked the beginning of the personal computer revolution, as it was targeted for the masses rather than just hobbyists and engineers; its introduction and subsequent popularity also greatly influenced most of the microcomputers that followed it. "VanLOVEs Apple Handbook" and "The Apple Educators Guide" by Gerald VanDiver and Rolland Love reviewed more than 1500 software programs that the Apple II series could use.. The Apple dealer network used this book to emphasize the growing software developer base in education and personal use.The books became part of the Apple program and became the first book on database.

Models

See also the Timeline of computing article.

Apple II

The first Apple II computers went on sale on June 5, 1977 with a MOS Technology 6502 microprocessor running at 1 MHz, 4 KiB of RAM, an audio cassette interface for loading programs and storing data, and the Integer BASIC programming language built into the ROMs. The video controller displayed 24 lines by 40 columns of upper-case-only text on the screen, with NTSC composite video output suitable for display on a monitor, or on a TV set by way of an RF modulator. The original retail price of the computer was US$1298 (with 4 KiB of RAM) and US$2638 (with the maximum 48 KiB of RAM). To reflect the computer's color graphics capability, the Apple logo on the casing was represented using rainbow stripes,[1] which remained a part of Apple's corporate logo until early 1998. The earliest Apple IIs were assembled in Silicon Valley, and later in Texas [2]; printed circuit boards were manufactured in Ireland and Singapore.

In 1978, an external 5¼-inch floppy disk drive, the Disk II, attached via a controller card that plugged into one of the computer's expansion slots (usually slot 6), was used for data storage and retrieval to replace cassettes. The Disk II interface, created by Steve Wozniak, was regarded as an engineering masterpiece at the time for its economy of components. [3] [4] While other controllers had dozens of chips for synchronizing data I/O with disk rotation, seeking the head to the appropriate track, and encoding the data into magnetic pulses, Wozniak's controller card had few chips; instead, the Apple DOS used software to perform these functions. The Group Code Recording used by the controller was simpler and easier to implement in software than the more common MFM. In the end, the low chip count of the controller contributed to making Apple's Disk II the first affordable floppy drive system for personal computers. As a side effect, Woz's scheme made it easy for proprietary software developers to copy-protect the media on which their software shipped by changing the low-level sector format or stepping the drive's head between the tracks; inevitably, other companies eventually sold software to foil this protection. Another Wozniak optimization allowed him to omit Shugart's Track-0 sensor. When the Operating System wants to go to track 0, the controller simply moves toward the next-lower-numbered track, and keeps doing it until it can't go any further: this is presumed to be track 0. This process, called "recallibration", made a loud buzzing (rapid mechanical chattering) sound that often frightened Apple novices.

The approach taken in the Disk II controller was typical of Wozniak's design sensibility. The Apple II was full of clever engineering tricks to save hardware and reduce costs. For example, taking advantage of the way that 6502 instructions only access memory every other clock cycle, the video generation circuitry's memory access on the otherwise unused cycles avoided memory contention issues and also eliminated the need for a separate refresh circuit for the DRAM chips.

Rather than using a complex analog-to-digital circuit to read the outputs of the game controller, Wozniak used a simple timer circuit whose period was proportional to the resistance of the game controller, and used a software loop to measure the timer.

The text and graphics screens had a somewhat outdated arrangement (the scanlines were not stored in sequential areas of memory) which was reputedly due to Woz's realization that doing it that way would save a chip; it was less expensive to have software calculate or look up the address of the required scanline than to include the extra hardware. Similarly, in the high-resolution graphics mode, color was determined by pixel position and could thus be implemented in software, saving Woz the chips needed to convert bit patterns to colors.

The epitome of the Apple II design philosophy was the Apple II sound circuitry. Rather than having a dedicated sound-synthesis chip, the Apple II had a toggle circuit that could only emit a click through a built-in speaker; all other sounds (including two, three and, eventually, four-voice music and playback of audio samples and speech synthesis) were generated entirely by clever software that clicked the speaker at just the right times. Not for nearly a decade would an Apple II be released with a dedicated sound chip. Similar techniques were used for cassette storage: the cassette output worked the same as the speaker, and the input was a simple zero-crossing detector that served as a relatively crude (1-bit) audio digitizer. Routines in the ROM were used to encode and decode data in frequency shift keying for the cassette.

Wozniak's open design and the Apple II's multiple expansion slots permitted a wide variety of third-party devices to expand the capabilities of the machine. Apple II peripheral cards such as Serial controllers, improved display controllers, memory boards, hard disks, and networking components were available for this system in its day. There were emulator cards, such as the Z80 card that permitted the Apple to switch to the Z80 processor and run a multitude of programs developed under the CP/M operating system, including the dBase II database and the WordStar word processor. (At one point in the mid-1980's, more than half the machines running CP/M were Apple II's with Z80 cards.)There was also a third-party 6809 card that would allow OS-9 Level One to be run. The Mockingboard sound card greatly improved the audio capabilities of the Apple, with simple music synthesis and text-to-speech functions. Eventually, Apple II accelerator cards were created to double or quadruple the computer's speed.



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Amiga Unix

Commodore-Amiga, Inc., in 1990, did a full port of AT&T Unix System V Release 4 for the Amiga computer family (in addition to the proprietary AmigaOS shipping with these systems by default), informally known as Amix. Bundled with the Amiga 3000UX, Commodore's UNIX was one of the first ports of SVR4 to the 68k architecture.




Contrary to the popular belief that Amigas were primarily gaming machines, this port was considered one of the finest Unices of its time by Amiga enthusiasts. The Amiga A3000UX model even got the attention of Sun Microsystems, though ultimately nothing came of it.

Unlike Apple's A/UX, Amiga UNIX contained no compatibility layer to allow AmigaOS applications to run under Unix. With few native applications available to take advantage of the Amiga's significant multimedia capabilities, it failed to find a niche in the quite-competitive Unix workstation market of the early 1990s. The A3000UX's price tag of approximately $7000 was also not very attractive compared to other low-end UNIX systems at the time, such as the NeXTstation ($5000 for a base system, with many times the number of applications available), the SGI Indigo (starting at $8000), or the DECstation 5000/25 (starting at $5000). Sun, HP, and IBM had similarly priced systems. The A3000UX's 68030 was noticibly underpowered compared to most of its RISC-based competitors.

Like many other Unix variants with small market shares, Amiga Unix vanished into the mists of computer history when its vendor, Commodore, went out of business. Today, Unix-like operating systems such as Minix, NetBSD, and Linux are available for the Amiga platform, but the commercial and AT&T-licensed Amiga Unix has not been revived.



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Friday, May 25, 2007

Is Vista helping boost PC sales?

Speaking to a crowd of hardware engineers last week, Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates trumpeted the fact that the company has sold 40 million copies of Vista since the operating system hit the market.




But does that milestone mean the operating system is causing more PCs to be sold?

It's a natural question to ask, but a difficult one to answer. One reason it's hard to suss out Vista's impact on PC sales is that consumers don't really decide whether they prefer a new operating system. When Microsoft releases a new operating system, it becomes the default on nearly all machines sold at retail stores. So if consumers want a new PC, they basically get Vista.

That makes it tough to gauge whether Microsoft's latest creation is actually spurring people to buy new PCs. Market researcher In-Stat issued a report on Wednesday saying Vista is not having a major impact on the PC market. The firm said some people delayed purchases last year to wait for the new operating system, a move that added some sales to this year, but that the software is not leading others to speed up their new PC purchases.

"My view is that, as a motivating factor to go buy a PC, Vista is not enough," said Ian Lao, the In-Stat analyst who wrote the new report.

But there hasn't been a groundswell of grumbling over the new operating system either. "It's not the scenario like (new) Coke and Coke Classic," Lao said. "There isn't a big revolt going on."


Dell did see enough demand for XP that it has brought back the older operating system as an option on some consumer machines. Dell, HP and others still offer XP for small- and medium-business customers as well.

As for the PC market as a whole, Lao said it's shaping up largely as expected, something he said he foresees continuing.

"I see the rest of the year panning out, for the most part as it would have originally," he said. Consumers "will purchase a PC if they were already planning to."

NPD analyst Stephen Baker said that the market has shifted somewhat during the early part of this year. While the trend toward notebook computers has continued, desktop sales and pricing have finally stabilised some, although Baker said he doesn't attribute either those changes or overall consumer sales patterns to Vista's release.

"That would require you to believe that on the consumer side, people actually buy their PC based on what operating system is inside, and I really don't believe that is the case," Baker said.

Microsoft, for its part, says Vista has helped the overall PC market as well as the company's own business, noting that the operating system was a key part of its strong quarterly earnings report and contributed to a PC market that grew 10.9 percent worldwide in the first quarter, according to IDC.

"Though it's very early in the product lifecycle, we're pleased with the market response to date for Windows Vista," Microsoft said in an e-mailed statement. "We're looking forward to continued growth and broad adoption of Windows Vista around the world."

The corporate factor
An influential factor in the PC market is businesses upgrading their machines, and there has been little indication that corporations are buying large numbers of PCs as part of a rush to Vista. Microsoft has maintained that the corporate move to Vista will outpace prior transitions, most notably when it claimed in September that business adoption of Vista in its first 12 months would be twice that of Windows XP

An HP representative said on Wednesday that the company is starting to see increased interest from some corporate customers in Vista, perhaps a sign that some businesses have completed the testing needed to qualify the new operating system. "There is now growing evidence that transitions are under way in large corporate accounts," the HP representative said.

But others are predicting a far slower pace of Vista adoption, looking to next year as the time when most businesses will start to consider buying Vista. Even in the PC business, some of Microsoft's closest partners, notably chipmaker Intel, have yet to push Vista out to their own employees.

Lao said many businesses upgraded large numbers of PCs in 2005 and 2006, making them unlikely to move to Vista this year or even next year.

"I'm seeing this more like a 2009, 2010 thing, where corporations will start to make wholesale conversions," Lao said.

Another reason Vista may not be having much of an impact on PC sales is a lack of software and hardware targeted specifically for the new system.

While Microsoft has put a lot of effort into ensuring compatibility with existing software, it will take time before there are any killer apps specific to Vista. While some of Vista's benefits, such as built-in desktop search, are available out of the box, many of its advances, such its new presentation engine or its peer-to-peer sharing technology really only come alive once developers write programs that take advantage of those features.

On the hardware side, there have been a few showcase Vista-optimised PCs, most notably HP's TouchSmart all-in-one and a sleek white Toshiba Portege with a secondary "SideShow" display. But many of the computers on the market largely resemble their XP predecessors both inside and out.

"There are certainly things you can do with Vista," Baker said. "The computer makers certainly have not pushed the envelope on any of those things quite yet."

Some additional PCs that harness Vista features are expected in the second half of this year, as computer makers gear up for the back-to-school and holiday buying seasons.

"We're going to see new industrial designs from almost all the major computer makers," said Samir Bhavnani, research director at Current Analysis West. "I think you are going to see Vista spur growth in the back half of this year."


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Operating System For Free On Dell PCs

Now, enjoy the experience of free and open source software. Something that will change the way you used to look at life!


It's official. Dell has launched three PCs -- the XPS 410n, Dimension E520n desktops and the Inspiron E1505n notebook -- with the Ubuntu 7.04 Linux distribution factory installed. And since the PCs are preloaded with free and open source software, these PCs are comparatively less expensive.




''The interest and enthusiasm from customers who challenged us to deliver a consumer Linux solution have been matched within Dell and Canonical, the sponsor of Ubuntu, by a team of dedicated professionals who made this happen in a phenomenally short period of time,'' said Neil Hand, vice president, consumer product group, Dell. ''It's fantastic to be able to offer what many Linux enthusiasts want, great Dell products with popular open-source software for work and play.''


Full Story is here

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