Saturday, October 31, 2009

Notebook Bekas - Laptop Second - Dell Inspiron 9300 Notebook Computer

laptop second

The Dell Inspiron . adalah persembahan terbaru dari produsen yang dimuliakan komputer pribadi. Luas dipuji sebagai sebuah Hiburan pembangkit tenaga listrik . yang menjanjikan keunggulan untuk memberikan performa yang luar biasa bagi penggemar multimedia. Biarkan S melihat apa yang membuat komputer laptop second notebook ini yang menonjol bahwa hal itu.

Anda harus mengagumi Dell. Tidak sebulan pergi dengan di mana Notebook Second suatu model baru yang ditawarkan harga berkurang dan seluruh paket yang Laptop Bekas manis dengan dimasukkannya semacam upgrade gratis. Benar untuk membentuk Dell Inspiron . komputer notebook adalah contoh utama dari semua itu karena merupakan Laptop Second model baru fully loaded dan tersedia bagi Anda pada harga yang menarik.

Beberapa fitur top model khusus ini meliputi

  • A quot layar Sempurna untuk para gamer dan pengamat Notebook Second film.
  • Intel Pentium M Processor . GHz/ MB Notebook Bekas Cache/ MHz FSB laptop second .
  • Sebuah kekalahan GB memori.
  • GB hard drive.
  • Microsoft Windows XP Media Center Edition .
  • x CD / DVD burner DVD /-RW dengan lapisan ganda kemampuan menulis.
  • McAfee Security Center.
  • Tahun Service Plan.
  • . ada yang ringan berat dalam di hanya lebih dari lbs. Tentu saja jika Anda pindah dari unit desktop berat akan tampak tidak penting.

    Tuesday, October 27, 2009

    NaNoWriMo--Getting Ready to Roll


    Yep, I’m doing NaNoWriMo this November.  At first I was just going to tell y’all that this blog was probably going to get quiet next month (not like it hasn’t happened before) but I’m going to try and lay in some posts in the draft box before Nov. 1 so I can pop a few up here and there as I go.  

    This week has been all about getting ready.  Getting my work space ready, clearing a spot on my cluttered home desk (I may be the only person I know with five full pencil cups–anyone else want to fess up?) for the babyDell and the coffee.   

    Honestly, the biggest bribe for this whole thing (besides the prospect of actually getting a draft done) may be that I will allow myself all the coffee I want.  Love the stuff; limit myself to two hearty mugs a day.  Usually.  Not this November.  I suspect it may be the sole thing getting me out of bed at 5:00 am. At first anyway. 

    Lining up all the books I’ve been using to research my subject.  From what I understand, I’ll be writing so fast, I might not be able to do much more than glance at them, maybe touch them if I’m lucky.  But it’s good to know they’ll be there, waiting for me to delve into after it’s all over, when I’m revising.

    What’s in this black box?  Yes, well, wouldn’t you like to know?  It’s related to the novel, but its contents are secret right now.  Another reassuring presence.  Besides, secrets can be very motivating.

    According to NaNoWriMo’s founder, Craig Baty, one should not have a bed visible in one’s writing space–nor a cat (see upper corner) demonstrating its benefits.  Unfortunately, my writing space is also a guest bedroom/daybed I normally purpose for reading and napping.  I should be able to resist it, though.  I know going near it would be a disaster.  If resisting turns out to be a problem, I could always cover it with tacks or something.

    And the picture wouldn’t be complete without Garfield, our older cat, quite bereft these days now that we have acquired a kitten. Normally Garfield isn’t interested in attention from anyone but my husband but he’s become very needy lately, even asking me for some lovin’.

    I feel lucky, I have had plenty of 2008 winner Monda Fason’s advice to shore me up and let me know what’s what.  Nervous but hopeful. That’s me. 

    Bye y’all,
    SV

    4Q = Best Quarter

    This is a GREAT quarter to be a tech geek, or to even be moderately interested in technology.  Let’s start with mobile phones:  the Motorola Droid is coming, you’ve likely seen their terrific commercials playing jokes on the iPhone; “a Storm is blowing in”, actually a Storm2 as RIM and Verizon are finally releasing the follow up to all the original Storm bashers and their complaints; and of course, the greatest Blackberry ever made, the Bold 9700 (they should’ve just stuck with the codename for this device as its market name… the Onyx).  Computers: Apple released a new line of MacBooks and updated the iMac, Windows 7 came to official fruition, and of course the sexiest piece of tech I’ve seen in awhile, the new Dell Adamo XPS which will be half as thin as a MacBook Air will be announced in November.

    And with the holiday deals coming up its going to be hard to resist easing out of that recession without some new gadgets.  It’s a great time to buy and ATLdigitized would love to show you exactly what you need!

    Thursday, October 22, 2009

    Dell Inspiron One 19 Takes Off For Japan Flight

    Dell’s latest all-in-one PC won’t be making any pit stops in the U.S., its a first class trip to Japan for the Inspirion One 19. An upgrade from the Studio One 19, this PC comes in two basic configurations. One option is a 2.6GHz or 2.93GHz Intel processor, Windows 7 Home Premium, 2GB; the other is 4GB of RAM, an 18.5-inch display (1,366 x 768), a 320GB or 500GB SATA hard drive and a DVD burner. Looking to import? All it costs is $770 (¥69,980). No U.S. release date has been confirmed.

    Dell Streak con Android 2.0

    Desde que Michael Dell anuncio que Dell lanzaría un smartphone con Android 2.0 dentro de poco en los Estados Unidos, han empezado a circular varios rumores de como sera el aspecto del equipo, y al parecer el rumor de que sera al mas puro estilo de una Internet Tablet iría ganando.

    Se han filtrado algunas imágenes y un video del presunto móvil. Aunque algunos aseguran que en realidad no es un móvil, sino que un Internet Tablet, otros simplemente creen que este es el terminal del cual hablo Michael.

    El equipo contara con una pantalla capacitiva multitáctil de 5 pulgadas con una resolución de 800 x 480 píxeles, conectividad 3G, Wi-Fi y Bluetooth, una cámara de 5 megapíxeles con doble flash LED y se encontrara corriendo bajo Android 2.0 como sistema operativo.

    Link: Streak

    Fuente: Wayerless

    Tuesday, October 20, 2009

    Brazilian Paint Manufacturer, Tintas Iquine, Migrates from UNIX to Red Hat Enterprise Linux to Increase Performance and Improve Security

    Brazilian Paint Manufacturer, Tintas Iquine, Migrates from UNIX to Red Hat Enterprise Linux to Increase Performance and Improve Security

    FAST FACTS

    Customer: Tintas Iquine

    Industry: Manufacturing: Paint and Tints

    Geography: Brazil

    Business Challenge: Increase the stability and performance of business critical ERP applications

    Software: Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Datasul, Progress Database, Trend Micro Security Solution

    Hardware: Intel Xeon processor based Dell PowerEdge 2950 servers

    Migration Path: UNIX/RISC based servers to Red Hat Enterprise Linux on Intel Xeon processor based Dell PowerEdge servers

    Benefits: Red Hat virtualization enabled increased stability, performances, and increased security on redundancy and backup, and Red Hat Satellite simplified systems management

    Download the case study [PDF]

    BACKGROUND
    Tintas Iquine, a Brazilian paints, coatings, and special resins company, produces more than 1,500 products including; industrial paints, varnish, sealing, resins, pastes, and is known for its rigorous quality control, and its use of new technologies to improve its processes, products and deliver more value to its customers, paint and building material resellers and retailers.

    In operation since 1974, Tintas Iquine’s two factories have the capacity to produce 8 million liters of products per month, guaranteeing to the company 60% to 70% of the entire Brazilian market, operate 24/7 and are fully computerized in order to achieve enhanced production capabilit, security, and in addition, less impactful to the environment. Tintas Iquine achieved the certificate of approval in NBR ISO 9001:2000, which signifies the company’s compliance with the requirements of the standard of Quality Management System in coatings and was the only company to win the certificate of quality of the Brazilian Association of Manufacturers of Paints.

    BUSINESS CHALLENGE
    Tintas Iquine grew significantly in a short amount of time, with sales volume increases of 20-30 percent, the company increased in size from 200 to 500 employees, and needed a operating platform to improve its critical Enterprise Resource Planning applications and increase the IT team’s ability to scale for the company’s growth.

    The existing UNIX based server environment at Tintas Iquine supported the ERP system, database, BI, CRM and security tools, consisted of a disparate, aging infrastructure that resulted in a lower application performance level and required resources devoted to systems management and monitoring, making it increasingly difficult and costly.

    The new operating platform needed to increase the ERP application’s performance, security, and provide a simplified systems management tool.

    SOLUTION
    The Tintas Iquine’ IT team was well versed with open source operating platforms, and especially favored Red Hat Enterprise Linux due to the enterprise support, stability, and performance the platform provides, in addition to Red Hat Satellite systems management, that would solve the company’s systems management issues.

    With the expertise in-house and the enterprise-ready reputation, Tintas Iquine confidently decided not to conduct a lengthy technical evaluation of the Red Hat Enterprise Linux platform. Due to the breadth of third-party applications certified to run on Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Tintas Iquine decided to migrate all of its applications from UNIX, as all of the applications would be running under only one operating system, thus increasing the performance and reducing systems management resources.

    The migration to Red Hat Enterprise Linux involved the virtualization of 12 machines to supports the company’s Progress database, Business Intelligence (BI) applications, CRM and Trend Micro Security Solutions.

    BENEFITS
    Tintas Iquine’s implementation of Red Hat Enterprise Linux has allowed the company to scale for growth, increase application performance, reduce costs, and simplify systems management. The satisfaction and gain of performance were immediately realized by the IT staff and throughout the company, as application users began to work more efficiently and more productively.

    The virtualization and the migration to Red Hat Enterprise Linux from UNIX, provided Tintas Iquine increased server utilization, and the management process on the Red Hat Enterprise Linux based servers have shown greater agility and ease of use, when compared to the Windows based servers, due to less interruptions in the maintenance process.

    With Red Hat Enterprise Linux, the performance in the application processing has increased 30 percent, and the costs have fallen about 50 percent, thus confirming the company’s decision to migrate to Red Hat.

    Although Tintas Iquine’s Oracle database is running in a Windows platform, due to the results of the UNIX to Red Hat migration, the company plans to gradually migrate all systems to Red Hat Enterprise Linux.

    10 แบรนด์ดัง สร้างแบรนด์ด้วย Social Media

    จักรพงษ์ คงมาลัย

    Positioning Magazine สิงหาคม 2552

    ฉบับนี้จริงๆ ผมคิดจะเขียนเรื่องของ Social Media และการ Engage ให้คนติดอยู่กับแบรนด์ของเรามากขึ้น แต่พอเจอรายงานฉบับหนึ่งทางอินเทอร์เน็ตที่ชื่อว่า The World’s Most Valuable Brands, Who is the Most Engaged? หรือแปลเป็นไทยว่าชื่อว่า แบรนด์ดังระดับโลก แบรนด์ไหนน่าติดตามที่สุด (Engage คนได้มากที่สุด) ของ Charlene Li อดีตนักวิเคราะห์ชื่อดังจาก Forrester เจ้าของหนังสือ “Groundswell” ที่ว่าด้วยบทวิเคราะห์โลกอินเทอร์เน็ตที่โด่งดังเมื่อปี 2008 ก็อดเอามาแปลให้คุณผู้อ่านก่อนไม่ได้ สำหรับรายงานฉบับนี้ผมอยากให้คุณผู้อ่านดาวน์โหลดไปอ่านกันจากลิงก์น http://www.altimetergroup.com/2009/07/engagementdb.html

    ในรายงานฉบับนี้ Charlene ได้ค้นพบว่า บริษัทที่ทำ Brand Engagement ผ่านทาง Social Media ที่มีประสิทธิภาพ จะมีผลประกอบการที่ดีขึ้นด้วย โดยเธอพบว่า การทำ Brand Engagement นั้นมีความสัมพันธ์กับผลประกอบการทางการเงินขององค์กร และเธอกับทีมงานได้จัดทำ 100 แบรนด์ดังระดับโลกที่ใช้ Social Media ในการดึงให้ คนติดตามแบรนด์ของตัวเอง โดยมี Top 10 เรียงลำดับตามแต้มที่ทีมงานกำหนดไว้ดังนี้ครับ

    1.Starbucks (127)

    2. Dell (123)

    3. eBay (115)

    4. Google (105)

    5. Microsoft (103)

    6. Thomson Reuters (101)

    7. Nike (100)

    8. Amazon (88)

    9. SAP (86)

    10. เสมอกันระหว่าง – Yahoo!/Intel (85)

    บริษัทอันดับต้นๆ จากทั้ง 100 อันดับนี้มีผลประกอบการที่ดีขึ้น เพราะรายได้โดยเฉลี่ยเพิ่มขึ้น 18% ในช่วง 1 ปีที่ผ่านมา เปรียบเทียบกับกลุ่มบริษัท ที่มีคนติดตามทาง Social Media น้อยที่สุดจะมีรายได้ตกลงไป 6% ในช่วงเวลาเดียวกัน ซึ่งแน่นอนว่าอันนี้รวมไปถึง กำไรและรายได้สุทธิด้วย แม้รายงานจะไม่ชี้ชัดว่ามีความสัมพันธ์โดยตรงระหว่างความสามารถทางการเงินกับการทำ Brand Engagement แต่สิ่งที่ทางผู้จัดทำได้ระบุชัดเจนก็คือมันมีความเกี่ยวเนื่องกันอยู่ อาทิ บริษัทที่เปิดให้ผู้บริโภคเข้ามามีส่วนร่วมจะมีผลประกอบการที่ดีกว่าเพราะว่าบริษัทเหล่านั้นโฟกัสในสิ่งที่ตัวเองทำมากกว่าที่จะมุ่งเน้นแข่งขันจนลืมตัวเอง ในรายงานฉบับนี้ได้ยกตัวอย่างแบรนด์ดังอย่าง Starbucks, Dell, SAP, และ Toyota เป็นตัวอย่างในการอธิบายถึงการค้นพบหลักๆ (Key finding) ของทีมงานว่า

    เน้นคุณภาพ ไม่ใช่แค่ปริมาณ

    การสร้างความน่าติดตาม หรือการสร้าง Engagement เป็นอะไรที่มากกว่าเพียงแค่สร้าง Blog ขึ้นมาแล้วเปิดให้คนโพสต์อะไรก็ได้ มันเป็นอะไรที่มากกว่าจะเปิดโปรไฟล์ใน Facebook แล้วให้คนมาเขียนอะไรก็ได้ใน Wall ของเรา แต่มันเป็นเรื่องที่ว่าเราจะรักษาให้เนื้อหาใน Blog ของเราสดใหม่อยู่ตลอดเวลาได้อย่างไร และแน่ใจได้ว่าเราตอบความเห็นของผู้บริโภค ที่เข้ามาออกความเห็นกับแบรนด์ของเรา มันเป็นเรื่องของการสร้างความสัมพันธ์กับลูกค้านั่นเอง

    กำหนดให้การทำ Brand Engagement เป็นงานของทุกคนในบริษัท

    Social Media ไม่ได้เป็นงานของใครคนใดคนหนึ่งอีกต่อไป หากแต่ว่าทางบริษัทนั้นๆ ได้ให้ความสำคัญกับ Social Media ชนิดว่ามันเป็นงานของทุกคนที่จะต้องช่วยกันทำความเข้าใจ สื่อสารภาพลักษณ์ของบริษัท สร้างความสัมพันธ์กับลูกค้าด้วยช่องทางต่างๆ ที่เหมาะสม ทำกันคนละนิดคนละหน่อยไม่กี่นาทีในแต่ละวัน ถ้าพนักงานในบริษัทช่วยกัน มันจะกลายเป็นพลังที่ส่งผลถึงผู้บริโภคแน่นอนไม่ทางใดก็ทางหนึ่ง

    ทำอะไรสักอย่างเกี่ยวกับ Social Media ได้แล้ว

    กลยุทธ์ในการทำการตลาดผ่าน Social Media อย่างคุ้มค่านั้นขึ้นอยู่กับหลายๆ ปัจจัยซึ่งรวมไปถึง อุตสาหกรรมที่คุณทำงานอยู่ด้วย ถ้าหากว่าลูกค้ารายใหญ่ของคุณไม่เชื่อเรื่อง Social Media ว่ามันเป็นช่องทางการสื่อสาร หรือถ้าองค์กรของคุณต่อต้านที่จะสร้างความน่าติดตามในทางใดทางหนึ่ง คุณคงต้องเริ่มต้นจากสิ่งที่ง่ายๆ และเล็กๆ ก่อน ค่อยเป็นค่อยไป แต่คุณจำเป็นจะต้องเริ่มทำอะไรสักอย่าง ได้แล้ว ไม่เช่นนั้นคุณก็จะรับความเสี่ยงที่จะแพ้แบรนด์อื่นๆ ไม่ใช่เพียงแค่แบรนด์ในอุตสาหกรรมของคุณ แต่ยังรวมไปถึงการเข้าถึงจิตใจลูกค้าด้วย

    ทำอย่างมุ่งมั่นและจริงจัง ไม่ใช่เรื่องเล่นๆ

    การสร้างความน่าติดตามนั้นจะทำแบบผิวเผินไม่ได้ หากแต่เราจำเป็นต้องทำอย่างสม่ำเสมอ และจำเป็นต้องลงทุนในการหาคนที่มีความรู้ความเข้าใจเรื่อง Social Media เข้ามาเป็นหูเป็นตาของแบรนด์ โดยจัดจ้างคนอย่างเป็นทางการ แต่ถ้าบริษัทคุณมีข้อจำกัด เรื่องบุคลากร ก็ให้พยายามมีส่วนร่วมกับผู้บริโภคอย่างสม่ำเสมอเท่าที่จะทำได้

    ในตัวรายงานยังมีการอธิบายกรณีศึกษาอื่นๆ แบบละเอียดยิบของ Starbucks, Dell, Toyota, SAP ไว้ได้อย่างน่าสนใจมาก ถึงขนาดว่าจัดวางคนกี่คน ทำกันอย่างไรบ้าง แต่น่าเสียดายว่าพื้นที่เรามีจำกัด อยากให้ลองอ่านกันดูนะครับ

    Wednesday, October 14, 2009

    Microsoft reboots or do they!!

    After the Vista debacle, Microsoft changed the way it makes software. The result – Windows 7 – is winning raves. Can a new operating system (and a new attitude) help the company take on Google?

    Microsoft


    With Microsoft’s founder and chairman, Bill Gates, trotting the globe in a quest to abolish diseases, his handpicked successor, CEO Steve Ballmer, has had most of a decade to move the company beyond its two biggest cash cows, the Windows operating system and the Office productivity suite. So far, not so good.

    The company’s web forays, such as MSN, have only highlighted the dominance of Google and Yahoo. In software for smartphones, there is Apple, RIM (RIMM), and everybody else. MP3 players? Microsoft’s Zune hardly merits a mention. And even the core franchise has suffered. In the face of slowing PC sales and the economic pall, Microsoft’s fiscal 2009 revenue actually contracted, to $58.4 billion from more than $60 billion in fiscal 2008 — and the company missed its earnings estimate by more than $1 billion.

    But the biggest failure under Ballmer’s tenure was self-inflicted. Vista was meant to be a wholesale reimagining of Windows, the brand name for Microsoft’s operating systems dating back to the early 1980s. Every so often the company unveils a new OS, blandly named for the year of the release (Windows 95, Windows 98) or a geeky abbreviation (Windows XP is short for Windows Experience). Vista had a marketing-friendly moniker, a fancy user interface, new security architecture, a better file-storage system, and much more.

    After a protracted six-year development process, much internal squabbling, false starts, blown deadlines, and broken promises to partners, the engineering team mopped up 50 million lines of code, wrung it all out into a shrink-wrapped box, and heaved it onto the world in early 2007.

    The timing couldn’t have been worse. Vista required top-end hardware to operate even while users were downgrading from desktops to notebooks. The bloated OS was incompatible with printers, web cams, and device drivers of all sorts. Early adopters scurried back to Windows XP; many corporations skipped the upgrade altogether. Worst of all, Vista energized the cloud computing chorus, led by Google (GOOG), whose vision of the future involves ubiquitous broadband, a good web browser, and everything else hosted on the Internet. No sophisticated operating system necessary. “Vista was the biggest debacle in the history of the company,” says one former senior executive. “People were ashamed to say they worked on it.”

    But here’s some good news: On Oct. 22 Vista will be safely behind Microsoft (MSFT). On that day, the company will introduce a successor, Windows 7, and guess what? It doesn’t suck. In fact, it’s really pretty good. For all the pomp around each new version of the iPhone, the latest Kindle, or Google’s next beta, Wave, Windows 7 is sure to go down as the technology launch of the year. Critics love it, and IT managers are ready to buy. A recent Credit Suisse survey says that a quarter of corporate customers plan to upgrade within two years. Analysts estimate that the new OS could boost Microsoft’s revenue by more than $3 billion over that time and ignite the entire ecosystem built on Windows — from computer makers like Dell and Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) to third-party software vendors, resellers, and system supporters. It could be the shot in the arm the entire tech sector has been looking for.

    On a warm September day in Redmond, Wash., sitting in a conference room in Building 34, the economic epicenter of the Northwest, Ballmer is not ready to declare the doldrums over. A stock market turnaround means little in the face of staggering unemployment. But he remains hopeful because he thinks this version of Windows is a winner. “It’s a great product. We did our best. Is that going to cause huge increases in spending by the world’s businesses? I can’t make that promise,” he says, “although I think things are becoming slightly less cautious. There’s some hope that says, ‘Hey, look, maybe this is part of the turnaround.’”

    Back from the abyss

    It’s just a hint of optimism from an executive who has been bearish on the economy of late, an indication that the mood is shifting at one of the most self-loathing, hypercritical corporate cultures you’re ever likely to encounter. As bad as the Vista years have been, Microsoft seems to be getting its act together. The Wall Street collapse stunned the company, and management reacted with uncharacteristic alacrity. “There was a week or two where everything seemed to come to a stop,” says CFO Chris Liddell, “and we said, ‘We’re going to have to operate in a different way.’ “The company laid off 5,000 employees and instituted a “10-point plan” to cut wasteful spending, from vendor allotments to travel and entertainment.

    Meanwhile, executives ramped up development cycles. This past summer the company kicked off, in its words, “a year of product launches unlike any other in Microsoft history.” Since then, Ballmer et al. have revamped Windows Server and unveiled the Zune HD line of MP3 players. On the way: overhauls of Windows Mobile, Office, Internet Explorer, Xbox Live, Bing (its new search engine), and the introduction of Azure, a plunge into the enemy territory of cloud computing. Microsoft is also about to venture into retailing, an area conquered by longtime nemesis Apple (AAPL).

    All this, says Bob Muglia, president of the server and tools division, is part of what he calls Microsoft v.3 — a play on the old saw that it takes the company three releases to get a product right. “In the Vista era, we lost track of a bunch of things,” he says. “Now Windows 7 has shipped, and it’s the official start of [a time of] mature leadership, competitive focus, aggressive competition — and I think you see the results. You could say it’s us getting our mojo back.”

    If Steve Ballmer has one attribute of a great leader, it’s an ability to inspire the troops — which is what he’s about to do standing onstage in July at a convention center in downtown New Orleans. The Big Easy is broiling in a midsummer haze. The locals have cleared out, making way for the 5,000 Microsoft partners — resellers, builders, software developers — who have gathered at a conference organized in their honor. Ballmer is, naturally, the headline act. He’s peeled off some pretty outlandish keynotes over the years, including “Steve Ballmer Going Crazy” (2 million views on You- Tube) — in which he huffs, “Come on, give it up for me!” — and the much-remixed “Developers” (1 million-plus views), where a heavier Ballmer performs a sweaty, arrhythmic stomp dance.

    Today job one is to inject some optimism into the crowd. Ballmer had a tough year. He took a modest (for a man worth $11 billion) pay cut. But his small-business partners are reeling from the downturn. “This is the most phenomenal year we’ve ever had for technology releases,” he rumbles, ticking off reasons to be hopeful about 2010. Microsoft vows to keep investing $9 billion-plus in R&D, it’ll increase spending on partner support, and most of all it will keep fighting competitors — because, well, that’s what the company does best. “We don’t go home,” he says. “We just keep coming and coming and coming. We’re tenacious, tenacious, tenacious. Boom!”

    That’s not entirely true. Over the years the company has cowered at least a few times. It bailed on Microsoft Money (a personal finance product designed to oust Quicken), would-be YouTube killer Soapbox, the long-forgotten BOB operating system for kids, tablet PCs, web-enabled TVs, etc. But the company has surely disrupted many markets — from web browsers to console games — by offering a fresh perspective. “Novell said, ‘The world is about single purpose operating systems,’ ” explains Ballmer, back at Building 34.”We had to say, ‘No, the world is really about multiple-purpose operating systems.’ Lotus and WordPerfect said, ‘The world is character-based,’ and we said, ‘No, let’s try some graphics.’ Apple said, ‘The world is a proprietary software-hardware combination,’ and we said, ‘No, the world needs to be open to choice.’”

    The enemy within

    Such conquests, while dated, have earned the company a reputation for being obsessed with competitors — a characterization Ballmer does little to diminish. Unlike most executives of his ilk, he says what’s on his mind, which can include calling Google a “house of cards” or referring to Linux as a “cancer that … attaches itself to everything it touches.” He once laughed derisively on camera at the prospect of the iPhone ever succeeding. But in Microsoft’s core business, there is no real competition. Various versions of Windows run more than 95% of all PCs. So when it came to preventing another Vista, Ballmer had to find the enemy within.

    Windows 7 is a departure from Vista in many ways. It will be unveiled on time after a three-year development cycle. It’s compatible with previous versions and has excised all the security-permissions protocols that were lampooned in Apple’s “I’m a Mac” ad campaign. It’s sharp-looking, almost as sleek as the Mac OS, and has a few cool new features, like support for multitouch monitors and Aero Shake, which allows users to clear the desktop with a jiggle of the mouse. Perhaps most impressively, it requires less computing horsepower than Vista. That just never happens with a new OS. But the biggest departure comes in scope and ambition. Ballmer claims to have learned something from Vista: It’s no longer advisable to try a “big bang” rollout — i.e., completely reimagine a product as sophisticated and interconnected as Windows.

    So he hit control-alt-delete. He brought in a new taskmaster, Steven Sinofsky, to oversee the engineering. Sinofsky became known for hitting deadlines while overseeing the Office group from 2000–07. An executive close to the Windows team characterizes his changes as such: “Reset — or reboot — is something that we hear a lot about the transition,” he says. “What we did was [give] the development team a clarity that was probably missing.” With Vista, teams worked on features simultaneously without an awareness of other schedules. When separate features came together, they were often incompatible. “The goal was to produce a plan for features, but not just a plan — also the motivation, the business rationale,” the executive says.

    Sinofsky oversaw the largest beta test in history — more than 8 million users — blogged tirelessly about every little tweak, and kept lines open with partners. The team scrubbed inefficiencies and ushered out a fully functional, backward-compatible OS on time, earning Sinofsky a promotion to president of the Windows division. The new openness has resonated in the marketplace. According to Credit Suisse, 58% of corporate customers were either dissatisfied or extremely dissatisfied with Vista. With Windows 7, it’s 21% dissatisfied and none extremely dissatisfied. The PC makers seem happy too. “With Vista, the expectations were very high, and the customer reaction was not so positive,” says Satjiv Chahil, senior VP of global marketing for HP’s Personal Systems Group. “This time the response has been very positive. It’s what the market has been waiting for.” In the end Windows 7 is what Vista should have been the first time.

    Software fades

    With its house in order, Microsoft can safely get back to its imperialistic ways. And there’s no bigger land grab than web search. Ballmer has pledged to fund his new search engine, Bing, with as much as 10% of operating income over the next five years (potentially $11 billion). Why do something so risky when he’s lost so much online already? Because the opportunity is simply too big to ignore. Microsoft considers the global search market to be worth as much as $80 billion. And Ballmer recognizes that there’s even more power than money in being the leader. Google.com is what Windows used to be: leverage. Controlling the on-ramp to the web allows a company to distribute a broad array of products, which is what Google does so effectively. “They promote YouTube, they promote Chrome,” he says, referring to Google’s web browser. “If it was us, people would call it an unfair advantage.”

    As the importance of client software diminishes, so too does Microsoft as we know it. Bing represents the company’s best hope yet of maintaining its own unfair advantage. And Ballmer thinks that Google, despite its enormous market share, is vulnerable. “There are a lot of negative views right now of what’s going on — Google Books, monopolization, blah, blah, blah,” he says, simultaneously highlighting and waving away a growing anti- Google sentiment. “Put all that aside and you have to ask, ‘Has the experience really changed much? Is it easier to find what you’re looking for? Is there a chance to do a better job?’ I think there’s a real opportunity to do that, and somebody had better seize it. Who’s got the best shot?”

    Microsoft launched Bing in May, and it confirms Muglia’s assertion that the company has become more focused on customers. Rather than Google’s minimalist homepage, Bing rotates stunning photos embedded with interesting snippets about various parts of the globe. Like Google, the site acts as a jumping-off point, but has just enough flair to make you want to linger. Visitors see more information than they do in Google results and can even play videos without clicking away. Bing is organized more intuitively, and it outperforms in real-time search — a big plus for the Twitter set.

    Early returns have been promising. Before Bing, Microsoft’s search engine, Live Search, had 8% of the market, according to ComScore. After three months Bing stands at 9.3%; meanwhile, Google’s share has dropped 0.4%. Over the summer Microsoft struck a deal for Bing to power the search function across many Yahoo (YHOO) properties. Once the arrangement kicks in, Bing’s share could jump to around 30%. “It’s a pretty good start,” says Yusuf Mehdi, SVP of Microsoft’s online audience group. “Best of all, it’s really hot with certain demographics, like elementary school children and women, because of the aesthetic design and feel.”

    Of course the hope is that greater traffic will lure advertisers. Craig Macdonald is the chief marketing officer at media-buying firm Covario. He spends $250 million a year on search ads for clients like McAfee, Intel (INTC), and Procter & Gamble. Impressed with Bing’s aesthetic and buzz, he initially increased spending, but has been disappointed. “We saw a 15% to 20% increase in impressions but a 39% spike in the cost of acquisition,” he says. Compared with Live Search traffic, driven primarily from the MSN homepage, Bing users are younger, more web-savvy, and frugal. “They did a nice job creating buzz, but we said, ‘We’re pulling back.’ “

    Microsoft may yet benefit from the anti-Google sentiment that Ballmer calls out. No one likes a monopoly, and everyone’s favorite web brand has become a freeloader in the eyes of the telecom, book, and media industries. Some of Google’s partners have grown disenchanted as well. “With Google, everything’s a black box, completely opaque. You have no idea why things go up or down. They’re impossible to deal with,” says the president of a website that each year generates more than $10 million hosting Google AdSense ads. “Everyone who’s not Google is rooting for someone to be a counterweight.”

    It’s not obvious from walking around the company’s sprawling campus that Microsoft is locked in combat with some of the business world’s most ferocious competitors. There’s little resemblance here to the 24/7 sleep-under-the-desk startup culture that permeates Silicon Valley. Many executives are tanned and fit from weekend sails on Puget Sound, hiking up Mount Rainier, golfing, or exploring Machu Picchu. People arrive promptly to meetings, smile broadly, and are exceedingly polite. If quality of life were the most important metric for a recent grad deciding between Redmond and Redwood City, there really would be no choice.

    Monday, October 12, 2009

    Thin gets Thinner

    The continuing onslaught of ultra thin computers that forgo optical drives is heating up. Apple started it all with their ok-spec’ed MacBook Air in 2008. Dell’s been readying itself to be crowned the thinnest, and it looks like they’re serious. Previous attempts with the Dell Adamo to dethrone the MBA were in vain. The Adamo was just too much of a premium machine to be fully appreciated. Dell is hoping round two will hit it with consumers.

    Dell released teaser imaged of their new Dell Adamo XPS notebook.

    There won’t be 3 USB ports, HDMI, eSata, card readers and all that goodness that is to be expected in a modern notebook, but it it should come with the greatly anticipated Windows 7.

    Official tech specs haven’t been released yet and nobody has even gotten a look at the inside of the notebook, so at this point it’s a mystery. It could be an entire touch-sensitive screen like a giant Nintendo DS. The only thing that has been known about the Adamo XPS is that it is 9.99mm thin. What can be taken from these two images is that this machine is thin and that the hinge design is unlike any other.

    If Dell can deliver on the specs with perhaps Nvidia Ion graphics for full HD and a decent processor, then this one might be the MBA for Windows fanboys. A competitive price to the MBA wouldn’t hurt either.

    Monday, October 5, 2009

    The Importance of Workplaces

    I’ve just discovered this today.

    Workspaces, workplaces, workstations, whatever you wish to call them, they all play a big role in:

    1) How much work you get done

    2) How fast you get that work done

    3) What kind of work you get done

    My story is extremely short, but here goes:

    Two days ago, my internet went down.  That’s not correct, as my mom could still access it, but I thought that my router was broken, something like that.  So, I go downstairs, and asked my mom if she could access the internet.  She said yes.

    I thought it was weird, so I went back upstairs, and tweaked my computer settings, my router settings, connection settings, used different cables, changed my IP, and after an hour of fruitless troubleshooting, I went downstairs.

    From the kitchen, where it is close enough to the router to get a “Good” on the Windows Connection Gauge/meter/tray notification, I enabled my Wireless, and connected to my network.  Bingo.  Ran back upstairs with my laptop, and tested the connection with cable, again.  No cigar.  I thought it was a problem with my router.

    I moved my whole workstation downstairs in one fell swoop.  I was carrying my computer + my cooler in one hand, along with the battery, my keyboard in my other hand, my mouse in my pocket, backpack on my back, papers, pencils, erasers on top of my laptop, and textbooks that I couldn’t cram into my backpack under my arms.

    On the kitchen counter, it was an easy set-up.  Around a minute, and I had everything connected, ready to go, just like it had been there for months.

    I stayed downstairs for a day.  Eventually, I was sick of the amount of activity in the kitchen, and the mess of papers and items on the island and the table itself.  My dad would watch TV at the loudest volume, my mom would wash the dishes, and my dog would whine and beg for food.

    Later on Sunday, I decided to move.

    I first hunted around for an area with good connection.  My router wasn’t top-notch, so it could only reach about half of my house.  Sad, my room was on the opposite end.  Blegh.

    Anyways, I go to my room again, hoping, but not expecting, the cable connection to work.  No dice.  I go to my sister’s room (she’s off to college) and set up there with a great connection to the internet.

    I quickly bring my stuff up, clear off a short table, one shelf of a large bookshelf, and set up my workplace here.  Right now, the wires of everything are behind my desk, out of site, and the well-lit table I’m at right now is large and without any pockmarks or scratches.

    I quickly finished my homework it would have taken me 7 hours to finish at my normal station, even with checking my RSS feeds and other things.  I didn’t time it, but I believe it was around two hours (includes reading other blog entries, CNN, BBC, Wall Street Journal, The Economist, Engadget, Gizmodo, Lifehacker, Wired, GNews, and my mail.  :D)

    Now, I do agree with the articles I’ve read on how to be more efficient at work and at school.

    First, never work in the same place you sleep.  I feel the stress from normal work doesn’t give you good sleep.  My examples?  I fell asleep in EVERY math test so far.  I didn’t do well at all.

    Second, disconnect yourself from all distractions.  Including computers.  (I can’t live up to this, but I’m trying.  The time the power outage occurred, I finished my homework in half an hour.  And I had easily twice the amount to do.

    Thirdly, be neat and organized.  Try to start from the beginning of the time you start working in a specific workstation and maintain it all the way to where you currently are.  This piece of advice I learned on my own had helped me with finding the things I want to find, when I want it.  Make sure to have a large, open space for your desk, and have very few items on it.  Have a secondary table for your books, materials, and finished work.  If you have to, have a third for your papers.

    Fourthly, give yourself breaks.  I give myself a break after every major assignment finished, or three minors lumped together. EX: After I finish my math and my World Geo homework, I put it away and pull up my keyboard, and start reading up on CNN and the news I missed.  After 15 minutes, I get back to work, and I do this until I finish my homework.  Breaks allow you to clear the cache of your mind and lets you start anew on your next assignment, leaving you feeling refreshed and ready to take anything on.

    And there’s my advice and my tactics on staying on top of what you do, how you do it, and how fast you do it.  I’d also like to hear your tips and trick on how you get things done.  Leave a comment, if you’d like to share, or if you just appreciate my post.  Thanks!

    Saturday, October 3, 2009

    Nike’s statement at HR Tech could redefine our industry (HR Tech Conf Part 1/3)

    The Talent Management Panel provided one statement by Nike’s John Schroeder that totally blew me away and made me wonder why in the world the other vendors in the room (with giant development budgets) didn’t jump up and run out to build the next generation of performance management software.  Nike made a point that they should be using the social networking internally in order to manage the relationships and create a global enterprise – not seem so big.   In the grander scale – what better way to be able to track what someone is actually doing, projects they are working on, and their job satisfaction than a social network.  The next generation of employee’s and many of those in the current generation have been brought up around social networking.  The annual 360 performance review will not be the standard in the future.  It isn’t the process that is going to keep a generation of entrepreneurial minded people employed and engaged at your organization.  The single statement made such an impact that I actually pulled out my laptop – wrote a full business plan and designed a new evolution of Performance Management software while I watched the rest of the session.

    During the same session Bill Kutik raises the question about social media use.  He says he is “sick to death” of its discussion in recruiting since it is a no brainer, slam dunk to do  – how else are you using social media?

    • Jay Smith from Target says to use social networking in Onboarding  to find who is like you, skills like you, etc
    • Andy Valenzuela from Dell says to use social networking for project management, mentorship – find/connect w/a mentor in the org, internal updates – tech details etc instead of sending hundreds of emails.  Built in sharepoint environment and includes IM technology to really connect with them – see if they are online, at their desk, etc.

    There are a lot of blogs on all the stuff around HR Tech – so I’m going to post on the sessions that really made a big impact on me…more to come…

    Thursday, October 1, 2009

    Managed IT Services

    These are especially tough economic times for many small to medium sized businesses.  Small businesses often rely on technology to help their business grow and operate effectively.  Most small and medium sized business can not justify employing full time IT staff. 

    Based on several focus groups and meetings we have had with our clients, we have decided to offer a managed services product.  We have demonstrated this product will be a win / win for our clients and Argent Systems.  We can help drop our clients IT cost on average of 3o percent and at the same time improving our problem resolution time.  As a added benefit to Argent we have reduced our own operating costs because in most cases we do not always have to dispatch a tech on-site.  Of course if we do, we promptly dispatch a system engineer. 

    Argent Systems’ Small Office Solution provides all of the core network, server, hardware, software, and support management services a small business needs to run smoothly and efficiently. For a single, low monthly fee, your business will have an outsourced, managed IT solution that is secure, reliable, customizable, and most importantly – cost effective. And, as your sole outsourced IT service provider, we proactively manage all aspects of your server and network.   In many cases we will be able to detect and resolve an issue on your servers before you even notice. 

     

    Benefits Overview 

    • Server Monitoring
    • Proactive Problem Resolution
    • Unlimited Remote Support
    • Monitor Critical Applications
    • Data Backup Monitoring and Administration
    • Software Updates on PC’s and servers
    • Automated Reporting
    • 24 x 7 Support
    • Remote Resolution
    • Application Deployment
    • Network Monitoring
    • VPN / Firewall Management
    • Anti-Virus Monitoring
    • Anti-Spyware Monitoring

     

    If you would like to find out about a Managed IT solution for your small business please call 561-784-9464 and select option 1 for a consultant.  If you prefer email, please email us at info@argentsys.com.  For information about our other services please visit our web site

    Announcing The Ultimate Virus And Spyware Killer PC!

    Hello Friends:

    It’s been a while since you’ve heard from me.

    I hope you’ve missed me as much as I’ve missed not being in communication with you.

    In case you’re wondering why I haven’t been in communication, here’s the reason:

    About three months ago, you might recall, I told you that I was having issues with my computers.

    For several years, I’ve owned a Dell Latitude Desktop that was running Windows Millennium.

    I also own a Dell Inspiron laptop computer.

    A few weeks ago, I received a message on my desktop computer that the anti-virus software provider I use no longer supports Windows Millennium, and because of all the viruses on the Internet, I could not risk using that computer to browse the Internet.  So that computer has been turned into a glorified hi-fi system, since all I use it for now is to listen to the CDs of the brilliant emerging musicians, like Serotonen, Anthony Melillo and The Melillo Brothers, and Irena Hart, who I’ve been interviewing on Alive with Clive, as well as, I confess, a few others I love.

    That left me with my laptop, and as mentioned my laptop has at least one virus that has made it slower than molasses.

    That, in turn, put me on a quest to find a solution to my computer woes.

    Do I buy another PC and deal with anti-virus software, which doesn’t always work since it failed to prevent my laptop from getting a virus, or do I buy a Mac?  Or, is there an even better alternative hardly any one knows about?

    In my quest to find the ultimate computer, through the law of attraction, I was introduced to a man who has created a computer with lots of fabulous features. But the most fabulous feature of all is that it is immune to viruses, and I interviewed him and the public relations director of his company on Alive with Clive.

    So impressed was I with what this man and his public relations director had to say about the amazing computer he has invented that I decided to help them tell the world all about it

    I thought it would take only a couple of weeks to put the marketing materials together, but as I began to work on the project I realized that if people who own PCs are going to consider buying this computer, they are going to need answers to lots of questions first.

    So, over the past twelve weeks, while creating a Web site and accompanying components to offer this computer to the public, I’ve been obtaining answers to each and every single question anyone might think to ask, and have compiled these answers in a document that is now available to anyone who would like to read it.

    Now, clearly, you’re probably asking yourself, what makes this computer so unique and amazing, and is it really immune to viruses?  And if it is so amazing, would it be possible for me to get one?  And if I can buy one, will it cost a fortune?

    Those are great questions and I commend you for asking them!

    The wonderful news for you is that because you receive email from me or are reading this Blog post, you can be one of the first to discover all you want to know about this PC and how to buy one at an incredible bargain if you’d like to do so now before the crowds get to hear about it and create a huge backlog of orders.

    But first, I’d like you PLEASE to do me a BIG favor, and if you do I have a SUPER GIFT for you!

    You see, we are just getting started rolling out this PC to the public and we would love you to help us create the slogan for this PC.

    I’ve created a form for you to fill out.  The form has a few slogans, and what I’d like you to do is grade each slogan on a scale of 1 to 5 based on how much you like each one.  If you like each one a lot, you can give each one a 5, or if you like none of them, you can give them each a 1. When all the submissions are in, I will add up all the scores for each one.  The slogan with the highest score will win.

    Here are the slogans you’ll find on the form at the following Web site address:

    http://theultimatevirusandspywarekillerpc.com/slogans.htm

    1.  The world’s only virus- and spyware-free PC!

    2.  With this PC, viruses and spyware are history!

    3.  Oh my goodness gracious me, this low-cost PC is a luxury!

    4.  It’s not just a PC.  It’s an epiphany!

    5.  With this PC, I am worry free!

    On the form, there’s also room for you to suggest a slogan or few of your own and leave any comments, thoughts, ideas or suggestions.  Any input or feedback will be very much appreciated.

    I’ve also made it possible for you to provide me with the names and email addresses of friends of yours who you think would like to know about the ultimate virus and spyware killer PC and receive the FREE Special Report mentioned below.

    Here again is the Web site address for you to grade the slogans and post your thoughts:

    http://theultimatevirusandspywarekillerpc.com/slogans.htm

    As mentioned above, I have a gift in store for everyone who goes to the above-mentioned Web page,

    http://theultimatevirusandspywarekillerpc.com/slogans.htm,

    to answer the survey.

    After we receive your response, you will receive a FREE Special Report:  “11 Secret Tips To Help You To Save Time And Get More Out Of Your PC NOW!“

    And, as promised, since you are still reading this Blog post, if you’d like to be one of the next ten people to buy this PC at an incredible bargain before the crowds begin to create a feeding frenzy for the limited number that will initially be made available, go to the following Web page now:

    http://theultimatevirusandspywarekillerpc.com

    We’re looking forward to receiving your responses and to giving you the gift:  “11 Secret Tips To Help You To Save Time And Get More Out Of Your PC NOW!“

    Again, here’s the link to the slogan survey form:

    http://theultimatevirusandspywarekillerpc.com/slogans.htm

    Thank you.

    P.S. If you happen to take a sneak peak at the Web site, www.theultimatevirusandspywarekillerpc.com, and you have comments or questions about the unique PC described there, or want to recommend ways for me to spruce up the Web site a little or a lot, please feel free to leave your suggestions for me by posting a comment below.  Your comments will be very much appreciated.

    P.P.S. Don’t forget, if you want to be one of the next ten people to qualify for “an absolutely killer deal” on the amazing new PC that is immune to viruses and spyware, pay attention to what is stated on the Web site, www.theultimatevirusandspywarekillerpc.com, and take the steps recommended NOW!

    Best regards.

    Clive

    www.theultimatevirusandspywarekillerpc.com