Showing posts with label MICROSOFT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MICROSOFT. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Microsoft Launched Office 365 cloud service

Microsoft has announced a new cloud service, called Office 365, which will include various Office desktop software as well Office Web Apps, online at www.office365.com . The service will also include SharePoint, Exchange and Lynch. It will officially go online next year, though beta testing opens now.

The hosted software for business is not free, and is available for small businesses, professionals and small companies with fewer than 25 employees, starting from $6 per user per month. This will include only web-based Office software. Office 365 for enterprises for midsize and large businesses, will start at $2 per user per month for basic e-mail, ranging up to $24 per user per month for the complete deal, including the full Office Professional Plus desktop suite, communications server tools, online versions of the desktop software, voicemail, enterprise social networking, instant messaging, SharePoint, Exchange, Web portals, extra-nets, voice conferencing, Web conferencing, 24x7 phone support, and on-premises licenses.



The platform will apparently work across multiple devices, and will introduce great new collaborative as well as security features. It is expected to include Microsoft Dynamics CRM Online soon. Microsoft is obviously taking on Google Apps, and to be fair, Google offers a free service for consumers and small businesses with Google Docs and Gmail. Google Apps also has a paid business version, for $50 per user per year. Microsoft previously retailed its Business Productivity Online Suite for $120 per user per year, so the varying price points for different sizes of businesses.

According to Microsoft Office president Kurt DelBene:

"Moving to the cloud with Office 365 means people don’t have to change the way they work, because [the suite] works with the most popular browsers, smartphones and desktop applications people use today."



“With Office 365, your local bakery can get enterprise-caliber software and services for the first time, while a multinational pharmaceutical company can reduce costs and more easily stay current with the latest innovations. People can focus on their business, while we and our partners take care of the technology."

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Microsoft Bing associates with Facebook for modified search results



A new option for Bing users will permit the search engine to use the Facebook "like" data to distinguish search results. 
Microsoft brought Facebook and Mark Zuckerberg to the company’s Silicon Valley headquarters for a big announcement about the new integration of Bing and the social network. The goal of the partnership between the social media giant and the search engine underdog is to create a better search familiarity by using the Facebook “like” data of your friends to personalize your search results. This enlarges the Facebook world and gives Microsoft’s Bing a leg-up in its goal of taking bazaar share from Google. 





For example, if you are searching for a restaurant on Bing, the Facebook segment on the left side of the screen will highlight restaurants that your friends have “liked” through Facebook or one of the 2 million sites that use the “like” button. In addition to attempting to personalize your general searches, Bing and Facebook are also looking to improve people search. If a user searches for “Michael Buckley,” the Facebook module is smart enough to put the Facebook profile of the “Michael Buckley” that his or her friends know above the ones they don’t.

Zuckerberg was asked at the gathering whether Facebook would partner with other search engines in a similar way. The Facebook CEO left the option open but hinted that Microsoft was the first because of their willingness to innovate and take risks.

Bing users will see the effect of the Facebook partnership starting Wednesday.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Windows 7 Phone: Great software

Microsoft actually has a chance of besting Android with Windows7 Smart Phone, if it can overcome the amazingly clumsy name.



Next week, Microsoft’s Windows Phone 7 products officially launch, and we’ll know whether they have another Zune or another Xbox on their hands. Microsoft’s luck with consumer products range from the first Zune, which was a well-funded failure, to the Xbox, which was surprisingly successful, and we could toss in Windows Vista and Windows 7 as additional bad-to-good examples. I’ve looked at Windows Phone 7 now at length, and I think it could be a player, if it can just get over its name. Let’s explore that.





Zune

I was very excited about Microsoft’s first Zune, until I saw it. Microsoft had done a lot of things that made music more social that limited the related cost, and made it easier to discover, which Apple had not. The retailers hated Apple because the firm was not only too controlling, but had opened stores that competed with them and got favorable treatment with regard to inventory. Microsoft had a rich accessory line, and for once, a marketing budget.

However, when I saw the device, I was dumbfounded, because it looked like a square turd to me (it was even brown). I asked, hoping to be right, whether it was a hardware mule, and the cool-looking product was still under development. I was horrified to find out they actually planned to try to sell the brown turd, and was told that brown was the new black (how wrong they were).

I must have appeared to be in shock, because the Microsoft executive laughed and said, “You know, we are Microsoft, and it does take us three times to get something right.” His departure from Microsoft was not voluntary as you can imagine.

Current-generation Zunes are vastly more attractive, but they are no real competition for Apple, and likely just are a hedge for Apple against successful monopoly problems.

Xbox



Xbox was more of a different beast, driven by people who loved gaming. It came to market more loaded, with vastly better marketing. While initially the design was more driven by cost considerations than beauty, that wasn’t unusual for that market. And Apple wasn’t in it.

Here, the offering was much more complete, and the new Xbox is arguably the best-looking gaming system on the planet. Granted, it helped a lot that Sony horribly messed up the PS3 by massively overshooting cost limits and darned near putting itself under. At one point the PS3 was both overpriced, and selling at an estimated $600+ loss per system.

Still, Microsoft got the online side of its product fixed more quickly, and as Sony made its products less attractive to conserve cost, Microsoft made its more attractive, creating a disparity that seems to be favoring Xbox sales now over both PlayStation and Nintendo. While we could argue whether Microsoft is now the leader in this market, there is no doubt the company is a serious player, and that is what it needs to be in the smartphone segment



Windows 7 Phone

Coming into the launch, Microsoft has a number of potential advantages. It has a rumored marketing launch budget that exceeds Apple’s, its user interface is more graphics rich and new than either the iPhone’s or Android’s native interface and it is more consistent across different hardware than Android. The phones will be on more carriers than just AT&T, and they will come in a variety of designs, not just one. However, they need to provide one more thing – and that is status. However, they only need to provide more than the Android platform provided initially, not the iPhone, and that may be doable.

Google does virtually no marketing or real demand generation for its products and relies entirely on the carriers or device manufactures for that, and these folks often have little in the way of budget. Google is under increasing pressure to bring costs in line with revenues, making it very difficult for it to fund a marketing campaign at Microsoft’s or Apple’s level.

Finally, when it comes to product placement in TV and movies , Microsoft has risen to challenge Apple’s efforts in this area. It is hard to find a show on TV that doesn’t have the Windows logo on most, if not all of the PC hardwareon screen. This would have an even bigger impact with smartphones and does with iPhones common in media today.

Could it come down to name?

I actually think Microsoft could surprise Google, and maybe even scare Apple this time, except for one nagging doubt. The name “Windows Phone 7” just doesn’t feel cool to me. I can see people say with pride they own aniPhone, or even an Android phone, but, “Hey, check out my Windows Phone 7 phone!” just sounds lame.

I’ve tried “WP7 phone,” which is better, but I haven’t seen the platform positioned that way. And while you could drop back to the phone name itself, “Check out my HTC Kraken,” it is Microsoft that has the marketing budget, not HTC. As a result, strangely enough, I think the success of this phone will be directly related to whether Microsoft can get around the name of its platform, and make the devices sound cool so buyers can tell others, with pride, about their purchase.

So going back to the Xbox, which wasn’t called “Windows XP Embedded with Gaming,” Microsoft’s success will be directly related to how people talk about the Windows Phone 7 products they buy, and how little they say the words “Windows Phone 7.” Let’s just say I don’t envy the person who owns Windows Phone 7 marketing. We’ll revisit this next week after the launch.

Friday, September 3, 2010

Microsoft warns of evil malware



Software outfit Microsoft is warning about a new piece of malware which snuffles your browser and then imitates the relevant malware warning pages from Internet Explorer, Firefox, or Chrome.
Rogue:MSIL/Zeven creates fake warning pages which are very similar to the real thing.
It is all part of a cunning social engineering scheme, but in this case the malware authors are relying on the user's faith that there browser at least always tells them the truth.
The malware looks real. It allows you to scan files, tells you when you're behind on your updates, and enables you to change your security and privacy settings. In fact it can even find malicious files, but of course it cannot delete them unless you update, which requires paying for the full version.
If you are dumb enough to buy the product it will open a window that provides a useless "Safe Browsing Mode" with super strong encryption.
What seems to have got Microsoft's goat is that the rogue antivirus webpage looks awfully similar to the Microsoft Security Essentials webpage. They even copied the awards received by MSE and a link to the Microsoft Malware Protection Centre.
Of course none of the three browser makers would ask someone to download and install something, shelling out some cash in the process.
The Firefox warning page has a typo where one of the buttons says "Get me our of here".

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Microsoft brings Bing app for Android phones



The software giant has released a new Bing search application for those Verizon customers using Android-based smartphones. The Mobile app is quite similar to the Web-based Bing, except it focuses on the kind of information one wants when searching on their cell-phone.
As posted by Andy Chu on the Bing Community blog for Mobile, "Today we are happy to announce the first official Bing for Mobile Android App available to Verizon customers. You can now download the free Bing App from your Verizon Wireless Android phones’ Marketplace. The app homepage features the Bing image of the day, complete with clickable hotspots that you can explore and discover related trivia".
The app allows users to search using text search as well as voice search using the mic option. It also features an Image search which has an attractive UI that lets users swipe through previews and lets them click straight through to the image host site. The app also features a mapping functionality that tries to find the user's current location when loaded, and then helps them discover interesting places around them for food, entertainment, shopping, etc. or get driving directions. Apart from this, the app allows users to view the 'Bing Image of the day' for the last 7 days.
The Bing app for Android is currently available only for Verizon customers and can be downloaded from the Verizon Wireless Android phones’ Marketplace. However, Microsoft has assured their users that the free Mobile app will also be available on other devices, as well as other carriers in the near future.




Thursday, August 26, 2010

How To Install Microsoft Mathematics Add-In For Word And OneNote

Microsoft Mathematics Add-in for Microsoft Word and Microsoft OneNote is a set of tools that enable users to plot graphs in 2D and 3D, calculate numerical results, solve equations or inequalities, and simplify algebraic expressions in Word documents and OneNote notebooks. This add-in is aimed to those professional users, teachers and students who need to perform mathematical calculations and plot graphs in Word documents and OneNote notebooks. The Microsoft Mathematics Add-In has been featured with an extensive collection of mathematical symbols and structures to display clearly formatted mathematical expressions. Besides that, the users also can quickly insert commonly used expressions and math structures by using the Equation gallery.



Tasks can be performed by Microsoft Mathematics Add-in includes:
  • Compute standard mathematical functions such as roots and logarithms.

  • Compute trigonometric functions such as sine and cosine.

  • Find derivatives and integrals, limits, and sums and products of series.

  • Perform matrix operations such as inverses, addition and multiplication.

  • Perform operations on complex numbers.

  • Plot 2-D graphs in Cartesian and polar coordinates.

  • Plot 3-D graphs in Cartesian, cylindrical, and spherical coordinates.

  • Solve equations and inequalities.

  • Calculate statistical functions, such as mode and variance, on lists of numbers.

  • Factor polynomials or integers.

  • Simplify or expand algebraic expressions.

The Microsoft Mathematics add-in works well in Microsoft Word 2010, Microsoft OneNote 2010 and Microsoft Office Word 2007. To grab the free Mathematics Add-in for Microsoft Word and Microsoft OneNote,  just follow the below steps:

  1. Download Microsoft Mathematics Add-in: MASetup.exe

  2. Double-click the MASetup.exe to execute installation, then follow the instructions on the screen to complete the installation.

  3. Once completed installation, start Word or OneNote program and you’ll see the new equation, computation and graphing options on the Mathematics tab.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Yahoo to offer Bing results this week

Finally implementing Yahoo and Microsoft Search Alliance

Yahoo has announced today that it is to begin moving the back-end technology for Yahoo Search over to Microsoft's Bing search engine later this week.

This is the first sign of implementation of the Yahoo and Microsoft Search Alliance, revealed earlier this year with official testing beginning last month. The transition will see Yahoo's search engine list search results from Microsoft's Bing.

Previously it was suggested that it might by the end of the year or early next year before the fruits of the new Alliance would be seen, but evidently both Yahoo and Microsoft are keen to get the ball rolling much sooner than that.


The deal between these companies is clearly aimed at knocking Google from its dominant position in the search market, which Microsoft hoped it could do alone with Bing. However, with slow uptake of Bing it has looked to old rival Yahoo, which was also struggling against the might of Google's growing empire.

Yahoo users should begin to see “Powered by Bing” plastered all over the Yahoo search engine some time this week. Yahoo has assured its users that this will not detract from its current features, such as Search Assist, site flters, and related topic suggestions. 

It also said that developers and publishers need not fear about the update negatively affecting tools like SearchMonkey and Site Explorer, as updates for these have been developed by Yahoo and Microsoft and are available immediately.

It remains to be seen if this will have any real effect on Yahoo and Microsoft's positions in the search market, but it certainly cannot hurt to team up to take down Google.

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Microsoft Issues Record Number of Patches

Microsoft has issued 14 security bulletins to address 34 vulnerabilities, 14 of which have been judged as critical.

It has been a record-setting day for Microsoft. Whether that is a good thing or not depends on your point of view. Today, Symantec issued a press release stating that Microsoft would be setting a record for the number of patches sent out in a single month, and it would tie the record for the total number of vulnerabilities since it began its “Patch Tuesday” program of 







Good news for Microsoft, which managed to catch the security holes. Not so good news for people affected by the myriad of problems.
Some of the patches directly affect security holes in Internet Explorer 8, which would allow hackers to take control of your computer. Other patches are to prevent “drive-by download”-style attacks, which can infect users just by visiting maliciously designed or compromised websites.
Two of the patches addressed critical issues with Microsoft Word, a program that most users do not typically associate with being unsafe. The patches closes a vulnerability that can allow malware to attack the user’s computer when the file in question is opened.
All security updates are available to download now.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Microsoft Begins Yahoo Search Integration

As it looks to narrow the gap with market leader Google, Microsoft has begun testing its search engine technology on Yahoo's sites and plans to begin transitioning advertisers later this summer.



Microsoft has not been shy about its ambitions to compete in the search market. After a failed bid to acquire Yahoo, the company reached an agreement with the Web pioneer to merge the two search engines, with Microsoft powering the engineering platform.
Now, Microsoft has begun testing its Bing search technology on Yahoo's sites, and hopes to begin transitioning advertisers to its adCenter platform later this summer. E-Commerce Guide takes a look.
Microsoft has begun testing delivery of search results to Yahoo's search sites through its Bing technology, according to a blog post Tuesday. If the tests don't cause any serious hiccups for the two systems, then the search partners may begin transitioning U.S. and Canadian advertisers to Microsoft's (NADSAQ: MSFT) adCenter later this summer.
"As we continue to make progress implementing various aspects of the Yahoo (NASDAQ: YHOO) and Microsoft Search Alliance, our two companies continue to work together towards the goal of providing a quality transition experience for advertisers in the U.S. and Canada in 2010, while being mindful of the holiday season," Microsoft spokesperson Carolyn Miller said in a post to the adCenter Blog


Monday, July 12, 2010

Microsoft and Facebook open Docs.com to the general public, unveil new features

As of last week, Docs.com, a collaborative effort between Facebook and Microsoft, was opened to the general public. This is what Microsoft has written about the service on the site:
Meant to allow users to create and share Microsoft Office documents over Facebook, Microsoft has unveiled a new feature soon after its full release: support for Facebook fan pages.
This will allow administrators of Facebook fan pages to use and emplace Office documents, as supplements to their content. This feature seems unusual, and Microsoft admits that it wasn’t initially envisioned as a function of the service: “When we built the service, we didn't anticipate this as a core scenario. We were focused on individuals sharing documents at any point in time.”
During the closed user group stages however, there were innumerable requests for exactly this feature, the ability to share documents via fan pages. It seemed that some publishers thought of sharing documents as a type of Web publishing, and it would also serve as a way to bypass the friend limit.
Commenting about Docs.com as a platform, Pat Kinsel, Product Manager of Docs.com at Microsoft's FUSE Labs, went on to say that the site has a long way to go before it catches up with Google Docs, which additionally gives users the ability to share and collaborate on non Microsoft Office documents. Other Google Docs advantages according to Kinsel include searchable docs, and the tight integration of Gmail and Google Docs.
But, Kinsel pointed out that revisions are coming out on a weekly basis, and that for now, “growth isn’t the priority; the experience is.” Microsoft is also looking for better integration between mail and document sharing, and Kinsel shared that it’s a definite milestone on their “roadmap.”
As for the unusual and niche space that the new Docs.com service will occupy on Facebook, Kinsel was of the opinion that they’d have to wait and see the true potential in the social networking sphere. “The big open question is whether Facebook users can be leveraged and steered to productivity scenarios, or is this a site where people want to goof off. I think we're at the forefront of finding that out.” Check it out here.