Microsoft Corp. is scheduled to stop selling its Windows XP operating system to retailers and major computer makers Monday, despite protests from a slice of PC users who don’t want to be forced into using XP’s successor, Vista. Read the rest of this entry »
If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed

January
If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed
“The stereotype for each OS is well known: Mac OS X is elegant, easy-to-use, and intuitive, while Ubuntu is stable, secure, and getting better all the time. Both have come a long way in a short time, and both make excellent desktops. So we have two great desktop operating systems out at roughly the same time. Let’s see how they stack up against each other.”
If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed

Microsoft has made available the release candidate of Windows XP Service Pack 3 on its website.
Although its not the final version, the real one which is schedule to be launch in the first of of 2008 will not differ much.
The release candidate of Windows XP SP3 has a download size of 336MB while the full SP3 will be around 70MB. SP3 will be the final major upgrade of the Windows XP operating system
Try if you dare by downloading it here.
via PC World
If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed
I just got the news that Windows Vista Service Pack 1 is available for public download. It’s not the final version but at least, its the first release and should be extremely close to the real one. It’s a large download - 32-bit version is between 440 and 550 MB, and the 64-bit version is between 730 and 880 MB - and you might need to uninstall it completely when the full Vista SP1 Final is ready.
Download here.
If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed

For people who appreciate finer laptop accoutrements such as a backlit keyboard and a slot-fed DVD drive, Apple has crafted another tasty offering in the form of the 17-inch MacBook Pro. Sleek, powerful, and able to run Windows as well as the Mac operating system, the MacBook Pro makes a strong case for becoming anyone’s ultimate notebook.
Equipped with a 2.4-GHz Core 2 Duo T7700 processor, the maximum 4GB of RAM, a 160GB hard drive, and nVidia’s new top-of-the-line notebook graphics card, the nVidia GeForce 8600M GT, our $2949 test unit set new speed records. The MacBook Pro outperformed the rest of the notebooks we tested, all of which claim Windows as their primary–nay, their only–operating system. We loaded Windows Vista Home Premium on the Apple notebook, and it snagged a WorldBench 6 Beta 2 score of 88. In games it achieved a blazing frame rate of 141 frames per second in Far Cry (with antialiasing turned off).
At 6.6 pounds and just 1 inch thick, the MacBook Pro is the lightest 17-inch notebook available. But it has no memory card slots and only three USB ports, and it comes configured with an ExpressCard/34 slot instead of the more versatile ExpressCard/54 slot. Though it has Bluetooth and 802.11n Wi-Fi, built-in cellular broadband is not an option. On the other hand, video editors will be happy to have not one but two FireWire ports. Battery life was disappointing: Apple pegs it at 5.7 hours on one charge, but in our tests we got less than 2 hours, 45 minutes.
Nevertheless, the MacBook Pro is elegantly designed and remarkably mobile for a 17-inch notebook.
– Carla Thornton, PC World
If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed