Microsoft has reported disappointing results for the April to June quarter, with profits down by almost a third.BBC NEWS | Business | Microsoft profits down by a third
Friday, 24 July 2009
BBC NEWS | Business | Microsoft profits down by a third


Friday, 29 May 2009
The future of place
A synth of a place
And a multi-Map
Both technologies show that Google is not the only player in this field, and Google has nothign like a Synth yet.
Monday, 25 May 2009
Windows Live SkyDrive team blog - Windows Live
14 AprilWindows Live SkyDrive team blog - Windows Live
SkyDrive adds new features!
We’re releasing a few updates to SkyDrive today! Here’s what’s new:
Arrange your photos
Now you can arrange the photos in your albums in the order you want them to appear by clicking Sort by, and selecting Arrange photos.
Wednesday, 18 February 2009
Work with others the easy way with Office Live Workspace
Goodbye attachments. Hello sharing.
Avoid worrisome attachments and back-and-forth e-mails by posting documents you want to share in your workspace. Anyone you’ve invited to join has easy access anytime.
No more merging.
In a workspace, everyone works off a single online copy of a document. That saves time and eliminates the confusion that often occurs when you merge multiple copies of the same document.
Password-protected sharing.
Not only is your workspace password-protected, but you control who can actively edit in your workspace and who has view-only privileges.
Want to learn more? Check out our three scenarios to see how people like you are using Office Live Workspace – and then watch our how-to video.
Managing a project
Preparing an annual report, building a Web site, or forming a committee? With Office Live Workspace, organizing a project is a snap.
Post a project schedule.
Give everyone on the team an easy way to check progress and provide their own updates.
Share a budget spreadsheet.
When everyone has access to the numbers, you reduce the possibility of budget overruns.
Keep project documents in one place.
No more asking around for a copy of the meeting minutes or latest PowerPoint presentation.
Make it easy to participate.
All anyone needs to access your project’s workspace is a PC, an Internet connection and a password.
Organizing a study group
Working on a group assignment for class? Studying together for midterms? Learning a language with your travel buddies? See how efficient organizing a study group can be with Office Live Workspace.
Post a meeting calendar.
There’s no confusion about when or where the next meeting is when your calendar is available online.
Assign tasks.
Make sure everyone knows exactly what their assignment is and when it’s due.
Work off a single document.
Whether you’re writing a paper or building a reading list, everyone can make changes to a single copy posted online – no need to waste time merging multiple documents.
Control access.
You decide who can view and edit each document.
Planning an event
Got a wedding or family reunion coming up? Is your company hosting a conference or trade show? See how organized event planning can be with Office Live Workspace.
Share your to-do list.
Giving everyone a clear picture of what needs to be done, and when, helps ensure a successful event.
Track your guest list.
Keep a running tally of RSVPs and share it with those responsible for reminders or updates.
Keep event information in one place.
Save time and avoid confusion by keeping all event documents – from your budget to the invitation design – in one place where those with permission can access them.
Make a day-of-event schedule.
Your event will run more smoothly when everyone knows the schedule in advance.


Thursday, 12 February 2009
Malicious insider attacks to rise
Microsoft said so-called "malicious insider" breaches were on the rise and would worsen in the present downturn.
"With 1.5 million predicted job losses in the US alone, there's an increased risk and exposure to these attacks," said Microsoft's Doug Leland.
"This is one of the most significant threats companies face," he said.
As the general manager of the newly formed Identity and Security unit at the company, Mr Leland told BBC News the effects of such attacks could be far reaching.


Malicious insider attacks to rise
Microsoft said so-called "malicious insider" breaches were on the rise and would worsen in the present downturn.
"With 1.5 million predicted job losses in the US alone, there's an increased risk and exposure to these attacks," said Microsoft's Doug Leland.
"This is one of the most significant threats companies face," he said.
As the general manager of the newly formed Identity and Security unit at the company, Mr Leland told BBC News the effects of such attacks could be far reaching.


Wednesday, 11 February 2009
Lets Get Serious!!!!! Out of the Box is the true value of SharePoint
IT is often viewed by companies as a kind of immunization. Firms need to put IT in because anyone who does not purchase IT will soon lose their job. Staff people hate new IT systems, IT people hate talking to staff, and year after year the IT and Internet grows without any clear road maps or logical business justifications.
When I got in to IT 20 years ago it was simply taken for granted that most big IT projects would fail. Over the last 10 years there has been a growing demand for ROI, but this has been actualized in my experience via talk rather than reality. SharePoint projects have been finished but generally sit either unused or even used in ways that actually hurt give no benefit over file shares.
There is a joke about why Microsoft offerings can't go after SAP. Any company that uses SAP has someone who purchased SAP, and anyone who purchase SAP can't be very interested in reality, truth or ROI. I know little about SAP but I think the joke admits something wider about the larger marketplace: a failure to see the truth of the sorry state of Enterprise adoption of IT has created a profession that is more of a religion than a science.
As far as I can tell the conditions around serious SharePoint adoption are pretty obvious. You are buying SharePoint not because its cheap or better than any other product. The reason you have SharePoint over another ECM stack is because its Microsoft. Microsoft is more of a government than a company; by using Microsoft you can engage in modern global network economics.
For example I started working in Microsoft in the early 1990s, when the firm made a big successful play for the Information Worker space. Today the reason firms use Office rather than OpenOffice is because they can find staff who know how to use the product and FEEL COMFORTABLE WITH IT.
I think Microsoft has forgotten this basis of their advantage. Office 2007 and Vista both fail to build on the established space of Microsoft as the system everyone knows and DOES NOT HAVE TO THINK ABOUT. Office 2003 and Windows XP establish a standard set of tools like a standard typewriter or accounting ledger. You know you can get staff globally who know how to use it.
In the 1990s there were 2 ways to do an Office roll-out. One was to give your users Office and spend the money training them. The other was to spend tons of money writing VBA appliations to run in the Office tools to carry out all your special "business logic". Today any Enterprise that went down the VBA is stuck with millions or billions of lines of business logic stuck in silos. The better way to go was to use Office out of the box.
Remember that all generalizations are false, including this one. Still radical standards are good starting points for thinking and here is my radical stand on SharePont out of the box!!!!
Its stupid to NOT deploy as an out of the box. Money spent on styling and custom Web Parts is money almost certainly poorly spent. I would go as far to say that SharePoint should only be customized in cases were you have high accessability requirements (AA or AAA) or massive legacy systems that need integration and portal deployment (in which case you should be looking for a SOA broker). In both cases I doubt MOSS is the best PORTAL tool.
Out of the box SharePoint deployments have the following benefits:
1. You can find staff who have SharePoint experience, gain from collective experience. Just as you don't have to train new staff in Windows or Office you won't have to train staff in 4 years to use OTB MOSS. Think about it!!!!
2. You can connect to other firms who use SharePoint without worrying about customizations. We live in the economy of networks, open standards are good but nothing can beat actually standard tools. The ability to connect to other companies IT systems quickly could give great benefits.
3. SharePoint can be very hard to customize.
I think only very mature SharePoint implementations should be at a point where complex WebParts and Workflows are needed. Deploy SharePoint first as an Out of the Box with solid Information Management rules. BPM and SOA should be long term road maps with SharePoint as a part.

