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Showing posts with label Software. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Software. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Helping Microsoft's next marketing boss


At Microsoft, the problem isn't marketing. Just last week, BrandFinance ranked Microsoft as the second most valuable brand in the world. But it continues to lose ground in consumer markets to hipper brands with cooler products.
That's really the challenge that faces the next leader of Microsoft marketing operations. Late Tuesday, the current boss, Senior Vice President Mich Mathews, told Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer and Chief Operating Officer Kevin Turner that she was planning to leave this summer, in news broken by AdAge. Microsoft remains one of the best known global brands. Its Windows is the most widely used computer operating system on the planet. It remains hugely profitable.
But in much of the consumer world, Microsoft remains an afterthought to rivals such as Google and Apple. Many of Microsoft's marquee consumer products--Windows Phone, Zune, Bing--have failed to make a dent in the competition. The fact is that it's hard to sell a product when rivals have something more innovative and more compelling already for sale.
Without question, Microsoft has offered up some dubious consumer marketing efforts over the years. The company famously hired edgy ad firm Crispin Porter and Bogusky, known in marketing circles for resurrecting the old Burger King character, to create ads to sell the much-maligned Windows Vista. The most notorious of the resulting ads was a series that featured Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates palling around with comedian Jerry Seinfeld, which left many consumers scratching their heads. A few years earlier, Microsoft rolled out ads with dinosaurs dressed as office workers, encouraging users to upgrade to Office 2003. More recently, Microsoft unveiled ads for Windows Phone 7 that seemed to mock users for being too connected to their phones, suggesting that Microsoft's technology lets users do what they need to quickly and get on with their lives.
But if Microsoft has a marketing problem, it's not really because of a handful of curious ads. The real challenge to the company is its products themselves. Apple has pulled away from Microsoft in consumer perception because, as most reviewers and consumers will tell you, the iPhone is a better device than any mobile phone that runs Microsoft software. The iPad created a new product category that Microsoft could have seized years earlier with its Tablet PC software, had it not botched the execution. Apple's ads are clever. But the company's products give its marketers plenty to work with.
Microsoft's next marketing chief will have some consumer-pleasing products to work with, and the Xbox 360 and its innovative Kinect motion-sensing game controller are at the top of the list. Earlier this month, Microsoft Disclosed that it's sold 10 million units of the Kinect.
So who will replace Mathews and control the marketing group's $1 billion budget? AllThingsD's Kara Swisher Speculates that Yusuf Medhi, senior vice president of Microsoft's online audience business, and Chris Capossela, who until recently was a senior vice president of Microsoft's business division, are likely candidates. Whoever gets the job will have some work to do.


Resources: http://news.cnet.com/8301-10805_3-20048972-75.html#ixzz1I8Ydw8Mg

Untethered jailbreak for iPhone, iPad running iOS 4.3 in beta


If you are a jailbreak fan, there's finally some good news coming from the untethered jailbreak camp, led by the hackers at the Dev Team--an untethered jailbreak is running iOS 4.3 in beta.
According to iPhone Download blog, hacker Stefan Esser (@iOn1c) has come up with a solution, posting a tweet saying: "The iphone-dev-team is already beta-testing the untether. So it is up to them to give you your tool of choice."
Certainly if the Dev Team is running an untethered jailbreak solution for iOS 4.3, we can expect something soon. In the three weeks since the iOS 4.3 (and iPad 2) release, there hasn't been much exciting news coming from the jailbreak community. Until now, that is.
To back it up, renowned hacker MuscleNerd tweeted: "well @iOn1c's untether is solid! Just working out overall 4.3.x JB issues and Cydia :)"
There's still no official word on when the untethered jailbreak might be available, but signs are pointing to soon.


Resources: http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-31747_7-20048833-243.html#ixzz1I8XtAv6b

Fake Android app steals date, takes shot at pirates

A malicious Android app that masquerades as a free version of a legitimate app steals data and sends spam text messages and a warning that chastise the user for trying to get around paying for the actual app, Symantec said today.
The app, available on several file-sharing sites in North America and Asia that are known as clearinghouses for pirated software, is called Walk and Text. That's also the name of a legitimate app--available on the Android Market for $1.53--that uses a device's camera to let people see what's in front of them as they text while walking. However, the bogus app is labeled as version 1.3.7, which doesn't exist yet, according to a Symantec blog post.
Once the fake software--which Symantec has dubbed "Android.Walkinwat"--is downloaded and running, it displays a dialog box that indicates that the app is in the process of being compromised or cracked, ostensibly to scare the person who thinks they're getting the legitimate app for free. Behind the scenes, the software is gathering sensitive data--including username, phone number, and unique device identifier--and trying to send it to an external server, Symantec says.
The app also sends out a text message (rife with misspellings and errors) to all the numbers listed in the user's contact list: "Hey, just downloaded a pirated App off the Internet, Walk and Text for Android. Im stupid and cheap, it costed only 1 buck.Don't steal like I did!"
The app also displays a message that says "Application Not Licensed" and warns: "We really hope you learned something from this. Check your phone bill;) Oh and don't forget to buy the App from the Market." It includes buttons for buying the app or exiting.


Resources: http://news.cnet.com/8301-27080_3-20049004-245.html#ixzz1I8XR4TmN

Skype in the Classroom graduates from beta


Skype in the Classroom, a video networking service for educators worldwide, is officially out of beta, the company said today.
The service, which has been in beta since December, allows educators to collaborate with others around the world over video. The VoIP provider said it developed the service "in response to, and in consultation with, the growing number of teachers using Skype to help their students learn."
Skype's service can help educators find one another by location, among other criteria.
(Credit: Screenshot by CNET)
To set Skype In the Classroom apart from the company's basic service, teachers can use the tool to find fellow educators who may be teaching on the same topic. It can also be used to expose kids to guest speakers or collaborate on projects with other classes. Teachers can search through the service using age groups, location, and subjects of interest, Skype said.
In some ways, Skype is trying to be the next generation's "pen pal" service. For decades now, students have had pen pals around the world with whom they would communicate during a school year. It was effective at helping them learn more about the world, but it was rather impersonal. Skype, it seems, wants to change that.
The company cited one project under way between two classrooms--one in France and the other in Canada--that used Skype to enhance the pen pal relationship students previously had.
"Before arranging the first video call, our students exchanged letters and e-mails but we decided to bring the two classes together face-to-face over Skype video to enrich their relationship," Christophe Fetat, one of the teachers involved in the project, said in a statement. "The result was amazing. Students were really engaged to discuss different topics."
That project is one of more than 40 started via the service. More than 4,700 teachers are already checking it out. The figures were growing by the minute today.
Skype isn't alone in trying help teachers enrich their classrooms through technology. The Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, for example, launched a social network for educators last year. The program, called EDge, helps teachers collaborate on best practices, create lesson plans, and upload multimedia content for others to use in their classrooms. It's free to join.


Resources: http://news.cnet.com/8301-13506_3-20048751-17.html#ixzz1I8Wm55T9

Monday, March 14, 2011

10 Must-Have Free Downloads!

10 Must Have Free Downloads!
Some software is so good that you just have to download it. Unfortunately, often you have to pay for it after you try it out. But every once in a while, a must-have program is totally free. Such indispensable, no-cost tools are the hardest programs to find--but we've found the best ones for you.


Some downloadable software is so good that you just have to grab it. Unfortunately, often you have to pay for it after you try it out. But every once in a while, a must-have program is totally free. Such indispensable, no-cost programs are the hardest kind to find.
We've saved you the time it takes to dig up such gems. Read on to learn about ten must-have programs that can keep your PC fast, fun to use, and safe. Some of the creators ask for a small donation if you like the application, and some of these downloads are older, "lite" versions of more full-featured software--but all are free to download, and free to use.
System Cleanup and Maintenance
System maintenance and cleanup utilities are always useful, and we know of some excellent tools that anyone should have. Start with CCleaner, the best free/donationware program you can find for cleaning a system and keeping it in tip-top shape. It deletes temporary and unneeded files, erases your browsing tracks, kills unwanted cookies, and zaps unnecessary files associated with various programs, including all the popular browsers. It even provides a Registry cleaner.
Want to make CCleaner even better? Download CCEnhancer (free/donationware), which powers up CCleaner by increasing the long list of cleanable programs. It tidies up the traces of more applications than CCleaner can do alone, adding favorites such as Ashampoo Burning Studio, LogMeIn, Microsoft Works, and many others. It integrates directly into CCleaner, so you have nothing new to learn.
Part of keeping your system in ideal condition is knowing what's inside it, and that's where LookInMyPCcan help. It peers into your computer and gives you an exceptionally detailed report, including the PC's manufacturer, its serial number, the amount of RAM, the hard-disk space, and similar hardware info. Overall it offers far more than most users want to know, though the amount of detail is perfect for geeks; if you dig into it, you can see the part number of your RAM chips, all your installed printer drivers, the name and address of your ISP, lists of installed updates and patches, and plenty more.
Making sure that your machine has the latest software is important as well. The free Secunia PSI scans your PC, finds all the installed software, alerts you about which programs need updates, and then helps you do the updating. It also warns you about which of your out-of-date programs represent a security risk, and it can even automatically update your programs after a little configuration.
Be sure to download some great free tools for handling media, too. One you absolutely must get isIrfanView, a superb graphics viewer and basic image editor. It's fast, it's simple to use, and it's free/donationware--what else could you want? It views just about any image file type in existence, and does so with lightning speed. You can also use it to convert between file types, crop images, add effects, and perform other basic editing chores. It can show files as slideshows and play multimedia files, too.
If you're looking for a more powerful tool for photo editing, you'll want to download Photoscape. That a piece of software this powerful is free/donationware is remarkable; you'll be amazed at how much functionality is built in. For a start, it offers a photo editor, a file viewer, a slideshow creator, a batch editor, and a screen-capture program. And each component is packed with features. For example, you can combine multiple photos into a single frame, and can even convert RAW-format photos--used by many digital cameras--into .jpg files.
If your tastes run to multimedia, one great freebie for you is Ashampoo Burning Studio 6 Free. Contrary to what some people may believe, CDs and DVDs are not a thing of the past, and this free program is ideal for anyone who needs to rip, burn, or copy such discs. (The current commercial version, the $50Ashampoo Burning Studio 10, adds editing, menu creation, and other features.) With Ashampoo Burning Studio 6 Free, you can copy entire discs, burn movies to a CD/DVD/Blu-ray Disc, create Video CDs, create .iso images from a CD or DVD, create a CD or DVD from an .iso image, and a lot more. Despite all those capabilities, the program is exceedingly easy to use.
Productivity Boosters
Several other must-have free tools don't fit into a neat category. One of my favorite all-time utilities isClipX. This venerable clipboard enhancer powers up the anemic Windows Clipboard, keeping the last 25 Clipboard clips so that you can reuse them. It stores graphics as well as text, takes up barely any RAM, and is exceptionally easy to use. It also accepts plug-ins. Make sure to get the developer's own ClipX Stickies Plugin, which stores clips you frequently access--such as boilerplate text or corporate logos--so that you can pop them into any application. Note: ClipX isn't officially supported on Windows 7, but it worked fine on my Windows 7 test PC.
If you use archive or compression formats, download Hamster Free Zip Archiver. With this tool you can create and open archives with drag-and-drop ease. It handles all the popular compression formats--including .zip, .rar, and .7z--and gives you a host of useful capabilities, such as changing compression levels and splitting files.
One of the biggest free productivity boosters I've ever encountered is Evernote. It's perfect for anyone who suffers from information overload and needs a way to store data of any kind and then find it quickly. The program captures information from the Web, e-mail, and even digital cameras, scanners, and microphones. You can manually enter notes yourself, too. You categorize the information, tag it, and annotate it so that it's easy to find and use. Since Evernote syncs the information to the Web and mobile devices, you have it wherever you go. I use this tool to research and write books and articles, plan vacations, and more. You'll likely find plenty of uses for it as well.
Resources : itnews.com