Friday, June 22, 2007

Microsoft Will Alter Vista Operating System

The changes are in response to a complaint by Google that a feature of the operating system is anticompetitive.



WASHINGTON, June 19 — Microsoft has agreed to make changes to its Windows Vista operating system in response to a complaint by Google that a feature of Vista is anticompetitive, lawyers involved in the case said on Tuesday.

The settlement, reached in recent days by state prosecutors, the Justice Department and Microsoft, averted the prospect of litigation over a complaint by Google that Vista had been designed to frustrate computer users who want to use software other than Microsoft’s to search through files on their hard drives.




Google had made its complaint confidentially as part of the consent decree proceedings set up to monitor Microsoft for any anticompetitive conduct after it settled a landmark antitrust lawsuit five years ago that had been brought by the states and the Clinton administration.

The federal government and the states were planning to file a joint status report by midnight on Tuesday in the consent decree proceedings that outlined the changes Microsoft would be making to Vista. State and federal lawyers were exchanging drafts of the report Tuesday evening. They said they had reached agreement on a remedy, although there was still some disagreement over the report’s language. The disagreement reflected tensions between the Justice Department, which initially sided with Microsoft in the dispute, and some of the states, which have supported Google and advocated a more aggressive stance.

Richard Blumenthal, the Connecticut attorney general, said Tuesday evening that he had not decided whether Connecticut would sign on to the settlement, although most of the other states were comfortable with the agreement. He said that he was continuing to press the Justice Department to permit Google and other competitors of Microsoft to participate in a hearing on the matter next week. He added that as a result of pressure from the states, the Bush administration had taken a position closer to that of the states that found merit in Google’s complaint.

“The Justice Department has moved and so has Microsoft,” Mr. Blumenthal said.

Executives at Microsoft and Google declined to comment before the report was filed with the court. Google has sought to keep a low profile in the dispute, in part because the Federal Trade Commission has recently opened a preliminary antitrust investigation into Google’s proposed $3.1 billion acquisition of DoubleClick, an online advertising company.

Lawyers involved in the proceeding said the changes to Vista would allow consumers to decide which desktop search program they want to use, and that selecting software from Google or some other company would no longer slow down the computer as it does now. They said that as part of the settlement, Microsoft would let Vista users know how to change their desktop search program. But the settlement would not require Microsoft to make all the changes that Google had sought.

The settlement closes another contentious chapter in the long-running antitrust proceedings involving Microsoft, which have been marked by tension between federal and state prosecutors.

In a letter sent to state prosecutors early last month, Thomas O. Barnett, the Justice Department’s top antitrust lawyer, had urged the rejection of Google’s complaint, state officials said. Google had circulated a white paper outlining its complaint to federal and state prosecutors a few weeks earlier.

But the Justice Department reversed course after state attorneys general reacted angrily to Mr. Barnett’s letter and said they would proceed against Microsoft without the Justice Department. The change in position was a rare recent instance in which the Justice Department’s antitrust division toughened its position in response to pressure from the states.

State officials said they were angered by Mr. Barnett’s letter in large part because before he joined the Justice Department, he had been the vice chairman of the antitrust department at Covington & Burling, a law firm that represented Microsoft and played a central role in settling the antitrust case. While at Covington, Mr. Barnett did not work on the antitrust case, although he did represent Microsoft in other matters.

During his first year at the Justice Department, and for several months as the head of the antitrust division, Mr. Barnett avoided working on any Microsoft matters. Officials said he has worked on the case since he received permission from government ethics officials. But state officials said his letter supporting Microsoft was the first time they knew of his involvement in the case.

Desktop search programs have become popular as the volume of information stored on personal computers has multiplied. The big money in the fight between Google, Microsoft and Yahoo is over advertising revenue from Web search engines. But desktop search programs help to build loyalty toward a particular search company.

Google maintained that its desktop search program, available as a free download, was slowed by an equivalent feature that is built into Vista. When the Google and Microsoft search programs run simultaneously, their indexing programs slow the operating system considerably, Google contends. As a result, Google has said that Vista violated Microsoft’s 2002 antitrust settlement, which prohibits Microsoft from designing operating systems that limit the choices of consumers.

Microsoft has replied that Vista was in compliance with the consent decree and that the company had already made many modifications to the operating system, including some that had been sought by Google. In a recent interview, Bradford L. Smith, the general counsel at Microsoft, said that the new operating system was carefully designed to work well with software products made by other companies, and that an independent technical committee had spent years examining Vista for possible anticompetitive problems before it went on sale.



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Sunday, June 3, 2007

Operating Systems - Linux or Windows? Long Live UBUNTU!

As I'm writing these words, DELL has decided to ship some of its new models with Linux Operating System. They have selected UBUNTU's 7.04 "Feisty Fawn" distribution of Linux. (Windows has OS releases or versions like XP or Vista; Linux has "distributions" like Fedora, Redhat, Ubuntu and many others.)

Go DELL!

A perfect choice because I've been using UBUNTU on one of my machines for over a year now and I have nothing but qualified praise for it.

Qualified? Yes. Because I cannot run any of my Windows application (like Photoshop, Illustrator, FrameMaker, GoLive) on Ubuntu.

GIMP comes close to doing what Photoshop can do (at least at my level of graphic competence) but other Windows applications do not have their fully-developed Linux-counterparts yet. There is nothing over the horizon, for example, to match the reliability and power of FrameMaker in a Linux environment.




So why do I still like my Ubuntu? Let me count the ways:

1) It's FREE.

2) OpenOffice that comes with it is also FREE and it can match MS Office in every category, except in mail management. (NOTE: You can download and use OpenOffice on Windows and Mac machines as well.)

3) No viruses. Period. I have not used any anti-virus programs or firewalls with my Ubuntu system yet. Knock on wood.

4) No system crashes. And when I crash my system (a rare event) while trying to open 10 different applications or files at the same time, Ubuntu recovers beautifully, restoring each crashed file one by one when you restart the system.

5) Auto updates... when you click this great little "you have updates" orange star on your icon bar, UBUNTU automatically downloads (after your approval of each item) whatever updates are developed by hard-working Linux volunteers around the globe.

6) An ever-growing collection of free, new and interesting software available for instant downloads through Synaptic Package Manager. (For example, it's free CHESS program - one of the hundreds of Linux games available online for free - is one of the best I've ever played against.)

I do all my writing, for example, on my Linux machine. Since OpenOffice also has a free PDF conversion utility built right into its word processor, I'm writing my new book (Copyright-Free Content for Your Web Site and Newsletters) also on my Linux machine. (YES - you don't need to buy Adobe Acrobat Pro to generate PDFs!)

One shortcoming of Feisty Fawn distribution - it's energy-saving screen- and machine-sleep modes are not perfect and don't work well. When the machine goes to sleep after a certain configurable duration of time, it shuts itself off as it revives itself. If you get Ubuntu 7.04, do not use that energy-saving option. I hope they'll fix that pesky problem as well in a future release. Other than that, UBUNTU is a solution that makes sense and works very well for me.



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Free Operating System Fedora 7 Released!

Friday, June 01, 2007: Tired of the 'old' Windows operating system which ends up making a hole in your pocket, every time they release a new version? Or worried about the viruses that plague your PC compelling you to stay updated with your anti-virus tools? Here is a breath of relief.




The Fedora Project, a Red Hat, Inc. sponsored and community-supported open source collaboration, has made available the latest version of its distribution, Fedora 7. The Fedora Project provides the best of next-generation open source technologies and, in its latest version, features a new build capacity that allows for the creation of custom distributions. Fedora 7 now offers a completely open source build process that greatly simplifies the creation of appliances that can be targeted to meet individual needs.

Fedora 7 development has focussed on improving the manner in which all Fedora releases will be made, said Max Spevack, Fedora Project leader, Red Hat. Beyond the usual set of upstream changes and improvements, our latest release is by far the most exciting and flexible to date. With our new open source build process, our community of contributors will enjoy much greater influence and authority in advancing Fedora. The ability to create appliances to suit very particular user needs is incredibly powerful.

Fedora 7 provides the first appliance development platform that is 100 per cent open source with an entirely free distribution build toolchain. The Fedora 7 source code is hosted in a public version control system, the RPMs are built on an external build system and the distributions are built with an external, open source compose tool that allows access by the entire Fedora community.

Through Fedora 7, the community is given an enhanced role that encourages greater openness and collaboration. As a result of its flexible, public build environment, Fedora 7 provides users with the ability to customise like never before. With these capabilities, combined with live CD, DVD and USB technology, the possibilities for appliance creation are endless. After customisation, Fedora can be loaded onto various forms of bootable media, allowing users to run their operating system without a hard disk installation.

Fedora 7 features Kernel-based Virtual Machine (KVM) and Qemu virtualisation technologies in addition to Xen. All implementations can be managed using the Fedora graphical virtualisation manager.

The Fedora 7 release also marks a significant milestone in Fedora's emergence as a leading community-driven project. Formerly, the packages in Fedora Core were maintained only by Red Hat employees, while the packages in Fedora Extras were maintained by community members. Fedora 7 does away with this distinction; the new single Fedora repository is accessible to Red Hat employees and community members alike, giving the community more influence over Fedora than ever before.

For more information on Fedora, to download or to join this community effort, visit http://fedoraproject.org.



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AMDs Operating System Research Center in Dresden Celebrates First Year Anniversary

One year after opening, AMD’s Dresden-based Operating System Research Center (OSRC) has become a successful member of the worldwide AMD research and development (R&D) network, and currently employees more than 20 engineers and support staff.

By acting as the bridge between the operating system (OS) development community and the worldwide AMD processor design community, the OSRC plays an increasing role in ensuring next-generation AMD products and solutions enable the most advanced OS and application features.




The research center specializes in OS virtualization, memory management, multi-core scheduling and performance measuring to make better use of future multi-core architectures. One of the first opportunities for the Dresden team has been the optimization of operating systems for the upcoming quad-core AMD Opteron™ Processor ‘Barcelona’.

“Barcelona will enhance virtualization performance with a technology called Nested Paging,” said Chris Schlaeger, director of Operating System Research Center at AMD. “Nested Paging moves the process of virtual to physical address translation from software directly into the hardware. Virtualization software, which enables the simultaneous use of multiple operating systems on a single server or client, will get substantial performance acceleration as a result.”

Along with virtualization, software-enabled energy efficiency continues to be a top priority for AMD. Barcelona brings new, highly-advanced capabilities enabled by the latest generation of AMD PowerNow!™. Because AMD PowerNow! is a combination of both hardware and software technologies, key innovations are being co-developed by the OSRC.

With AMD PowerNow! and Barcelona, OSs will -- for the first time -- be able to throttle the performance of each core within the processor individually, allowing the system to use only the amount of energy necessary for the specific workload. This is expected to dramatically reduce the average power requirements of each Barcelona-powered system, allowing data center managers to reduce their facility’s total energy requirements and cooling costs, even as they increase rack server density.

While the OSRC is officially based in Dresden, it relies upon a distributed global staffing structure to achieve greater success. In addition to the core team based in Dresden, OSRC employees are located in various locations worldwide, including the USA. Further, AMD currently has plans to hire additional specialists in other key regions. This structure allows AMD to more effectively and rapidly serve the needs of customers and partners, by placing the right engineering resources within closer proximity.

“The OSRC has been located in Dresden due to the excellent universities, research centers, and world-class workforce in Saxony, but we are consistently looking for new talent all over Europe and worldwide,” said Earl Stahl, vice president of software development at AMD. “Our goal is to find the best software engineers with a great passion for hardware tuning, or the strongest electrical engineers with a love for software development. Our organization is where hardware and software comes together to form the ultimate end-solution.”

About AMD Dresden

AMD has been one of the largest international investors in Germany during the previous decade. Total investment in the Dresden site, including Fab 30, Fab 36, and the Dresden Design Center, was approximately $ 5 billion by the end of 2006.

In its semiconductor facilities Fab 30 and Fab 36, AMD manufactures its successful processor families for desktop and mobile applications, servers and workstations: AMD Opteron™, AMD Athlon™64, AMD Turion™64 and AMD Sempron™.

AMDs newest fabrication facility will come online through a major transformation of the company’s existing Fab 30, which will be named Fab 38. The transition from 200 mm to 300 mm wafers allows for more than twice as many processors on a wafer.

At present, AMD employs approximately 3,000 highly qualified engineers, technicians and specialists in Fab 30, Fab 36, Operating System Research Center, and the Dresden Design Center which is currently helping create AMD’s next-generation “Fusion” Accelerated Processing Units (APUs) and ultra-low power embedded processors. The Dresden Engineering Laboratory focuses on the design, testing and qualification of next-generation AMD platforms, as well as the support of key European customers.

About AMD

Advanced Micro Devices (NYSE: AMD) is a leading global provider of innovative processing solutions in the computing, graphics and consumer electronics markets. AMD is dedicated to driving open innovation, choice and industry growth by delivering superior customer-centric solutions that empower consumers and businesses worldwide. For more information, visit www.amd.com.



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