Microsoft will be pushing Vista hard this holiday season. It has 
new 
  TV commercials and a big retail campaign coming. Part of the retail strategy 
  is 
hiring 
  hundreds of gurus to work in stores and talk to you all about Vista. 
Then again, the word "guru" might be a little strong. If you're hiring 
  hundreds of people to work in big electronics stores, you're not going to find 
  too many true gurus. Trust me, I've met some Mac geniuses and their IQs are 
  far from Mensan. 
Want to read about real Windows gurus? Read my cover story here.
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on September 11, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The almost-long-awaited 
Jerry 
  Seinfeld ads for Microsoft 
finally 
  debuted. And like so many Super Bowls (especially when the Patriots lose), 
  the "Sopranos" final episode and the new Guns N' Roses, the Seinfeld 
  ad (at least the first one) was a colossal disappointment. 
Jerry showed flashes of his former brilliance, and Gates was pleasantly goofy 
  (as the script called for). But man, oh man, were the jokes flat. Jerry had 
  a groaner about taking a shower in your clothes (you're dressed, and you're 
  clean; open the door and go about your business), and the piece ended with Jerry's 
  dream of a moist and chewy PC you could eat like cake. That line was as big 
  a bomb as Windows ME, Bob and the Yahoo deal put together. Interestingly, Gates 
  was funnier that Jerry!
Did you love or hate the new commercial? High praise and catcalls both welcome 
  at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on September 10, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    There must have been some interesting dinner conversation after Diane Greene 
  was fired as CEO of VMware while her husband and co-founder, Mendel Rosenblum, 
  stayed on as chief scientist. Now, on the eve of VMworld, 
Rosenblum 
  has left the company, as well. 
My guess is that Rosenblum's departure was only a matter of time. I think he 
  was mentally ready to leave after his wife was ousted, but out of loyalty to 
  his troops he stayed on to ease the transition. 
The couple made many millions, but neither seems like the type to drift off 
  into the sunset on a 250-foot yacht. What would you like to see from this dynamic 
  duo? Suggestions welcome at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on September 10, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Earlier this week, I talked about the 
new 
  atom collider in Switzerland that some scientists think will create microscopic 
  black holes that will swallow our world. The topic was clearly controversial, 
  as I got nearly as many letters as when I talk about Vista or the Mac. Have 
  a look: 
   I am a science buff, not a scientist, so I can't "do the math" 
    on the risk of black holes going postal. I doubt that anyone can. Arguments 
    against permanent black holes are persuasive but they are anecdotal, not objective. 
    Picture the Manhattan Project with massively (no pun intended) greater energies 
    involved. I did not sleep very well last night.
    -Jim
  The same henny-penny scenario was discussed when the first fission experiments 
    happened under the University of Chicago in the '40s. Look how well that turned 
    out!
    -Brian
  Wouldn't it be the ultimate irony if the scientists, the same ones that 
    have been telling us that we are destroying the planet through global warming, 
    beat us to the punch?
   But it won't happen. Technically (if I understand it correctly), all 
    black holes are much smaller than microscopic. They are infinitesimally small 
    points of mass. It is the size of their gravitational influence that grades 
    their size. If their gravitational influence is microscopic, then the likelihood 
    of them swallowing anything is as unlikely as the black hole at the center 
    of our own galaxy reaching out and swallowing us. These things will most likely 
    disappear as quickly as they are created. The scientists' biggest problem 
    will be to pull useful data from them before they do disappear. I'd be real 
    interested in hearing from someone with the proper credentials on this topic.
    -T.W.
  Want to see what the experts think? Go here. 
    Anyway, if one of the scenarios listed there or some unknown scenario occurs, 
    we probably won't be here immediately afterward.
    
    I'd be more worried that after all that money has been spent, humanity is 
    no closer to understanding how the universe is put together at the subatomic 
    level. We should all hope that new understanding is gained from the CERN experiments. 
    Nine thousand physicists could be wrong, but what are the odds of that?
    -Mike
  The collider has the potential to create microscopic black holes. It's 
    not worth the risk of destroying a billion-plus people on the Earth because 
    a very small minority wants to be God. It's totally ridiculous.
    -Ken 
  It's just a bunch of people practicing their religion, nothing more.
    -Anonymous
  I think there's an opportunity to see the bright side on this one. If 
    we're ever going to get the chance to see the inside of a black hole first 
    hand, it'll be tomorrow. Certainly no one wants the Earth to be swallowed 
    up, but at least it would be a more interesting demise than many alternatives 
    -- like being hit by a bus. Eat, drink and be merry (and you know the rest).
    -Dave
 And Dave also chimes in on the slightly more sobering topic of backward compatibility:
   For John, 
    the Mailbag writer who rightly worries about access to electronic documents 
    in the future, here's 
    an article I found interesting. It's about the PDF/A format for archiving 
    PDFs. One of the more interesting points is that converting a PDF to PDF/A 
    can result in loss of fidelity to the original.
   And John, try to dream of more pleasant things, remembering that it might 
    be all over after tomorrow, anyway.
    -Dave
Got something to add? Let me know! Leave a comment below or drop me a line 
  at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on September 10, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    As expected, Microsoft 
sent 
  out four patches yesterday, all to fix eight holes that could allow for 
  remote execution attacks. While there are only four patches, all are deemed 
  critical.
A hole in Windows Media Player that could let someone use a media file to take 
  over your machine got plugged. The Windows graphics engine, GDI+, also got a 
  hole filled that affects everything from SQL Server to Office. This hole is 
  one analysts expect to be heavily attacked, so patching is of the essence.
The last two remedies are aimed at Windows Media Encoder 9 and a remote execution 
  flaw in Office.
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on September 10, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    It worked with browsers -- so does that mean it will work with hypervisors? 
  Microsoft apparently thinks so, as it's now 
giving 
  away Hyper-V. 
We've called Hyper-V virtually free since it was only supposed to cost $28 
  (a strange price indeed). Now it's literally free. The $28 price cut was made 
  during a huge Microsoft virtualization rollout announcing the imminent delivery 
  of the standalone rev of Hyper-V. 
Trying to match the attention this is getting, VMware in turn announced that 
  customers were eschewing the Microsoft tool (which hasn't even really shipped) 
  in favor of ESX. The VMware 
  press release pointed to a couple of companies that recently had large-scale 
  ESX rollouts. Not sure how that turns into "VMware Momentum Builds as Customers 
  Select VMware Platform over Microsoft Hypervisor"!
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on September 09, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    John writes that while new technology is great, backward compatibility is nothing 
  to sneeze at:
   I had a nightmare this past weekend. I dreamed that Office 2007 would 
    not read all the old Microsoft Word documents. This was particularly terrifying, 
    because I work at a courthouse and we have more than 10 years of historical 
    and legal electronic documents from various Word versions that we may have 
    to read and print. If the most recent version of Word won't do this, we will 
    have to keep older systems and software versions for that purpose.
   For 10 years, I have been telling people to move to a paper-less world, 
    but the threat of unreadable electronic documents scares me. There has been 
    a lot of noise in the past few years about electronic document standards. 
    Microsoft seems resistant to the idea. The threat of having unreadable electronic 
    documents in the public or private sector is very real and should scare people 
    to think about standards. I have been using personal computers for almost 
    30 years and have many documents at home on hard-sectored 5 1/4-inch and 8-inch 
    floppy disks. I suspect I may never see these documents again. Already, the 
    3 1/2-inch floppy is fading from use, but how many home computer users have 
    photos and documents on such disks? New technology is great, but we must have 
    a backward eye for both legal and personal reasons.
    -John
And Dave thinks that you can pan 
  Apple's Newton all you want -- it still had a few things going for it:
   In a recent article, you spoke about Apple's Newton as a big mistake, 
    and rightly so. Even so, take a moment to reflect on what Apple got right. 
    No matter what else Apple missed with Newton, one thing it got right was the 
    form factor. Right now, it would be the ideal size to replace my ultra-Micro 
    PC and my iPhone. In landscape mode, we could have a virtual keyboard that 
    we could actually type on. In either mode, we would have a screen big enough 
    for useful free-hand drawing. Don't get me started about how much better it 
    would be for videos or the maps we use in navigation. Ideally, we could have 
    it use cellular IP for everything, including phone and answering service. 
    With the newer technologies used in producing the MacBook Air, we could have 
    the whole package in a slim, light tablet. Wow.
   In the world of personal computing, the future's so bright, you gotta 
    wear shades.
    -Dave
Share your thoughts by filling out the comment form below, or sending an e-mail 
  to [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on September 09, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
     The greatest virtualization company you've probably never heard of is 
now 
  part of Red Hat. 
Qumranet was unknown to me before Redmond magazine Editor Ed Scannell 
  did an interview 
  with its CEO. I found out from Ed (and CEO Benny Schnaider) that Qumranet 
  has an open source Type 2 hypervisor. That means the hypervisor runs on top 
  of an OS (in this case Linux) and the OS runs against the processor. 
Red Hat, which paid just north of $100 million for Qumranet, is now hoping 
  to push this hypervisor, called KVM, as the primary solution for Linux. With 
  Red Hat's muscle and Xen owner Citrix's love of Hyper-V, Red Hat might just 
  get its way.
Red Hat also gets a commercial desktop virtualization product out of the deal. 
  There are quite a few of those in the market already.
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on September 09, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The new multibillion-dollar supercollider in Switzerland has many scientists 
  excited about discovering the origins of our universe -- and others claiming 
  
it will spell 
  our doom. The collider has the potential to create microscopic black holes, 
  which turn into larger black holes that could literally eat the earth alive. 
My take? The thing is probably safe, but when you're manipulating the very 
  structures that created the universe, you better be darn sure you know what 
  you're doing.
Is it worth the risk? Are the fear mongers crackpots or the only ones making 
  sense? Hurry and send your thoughts to [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on September 09, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Google has had it easy for the last few years. Everyone seems to love this cuddly 
  company with the kooky name. Its new browser, Chrome, is beginning to change 
  all that. Fact is, Google is gaining more power and reach -- and with that comes 
  
controversy 
  and criticism. 
Let's start with Chrome. Soon after the beta came out, security researchers 
  reported a denial 
  of service vulnerability. The same day, a researcher demonstrated how a 
  "malformed URL" could take the browser down. All this a day after 
  the beta came out! 
Then there's this: The original license gave 
  Google the rights to anything you might create with Chrome. That didn't 
  go over too big. 
And there are still fears about how much Google knows about us -- and, more 
  importantly, will know. For example, some believe that Google does deep-packet 
  inspection, letting it see everything we do on the Web. I'm not sure about this 
  deep-packet inspection, but I do know that Google isn't backing down from things 
  like Street View, which lets strangers see what's going on in your yard and 
  sometimes right inside your own house. 
As you'll see in our Mailbag, Redmond Report readers have mixed feelings about 
  Chrome. Some see it as fast, simple and slick. Others complain about the lack 
  of features and how it isn't that friendly with some Microsoft technologies. 
  Who would have thought? More Chrome impressions welcome at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on September 08, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Tomorrow's Patch Tuesday is nice and light. Only 
four 
  fixes are scheduled, all designed to repair remote execution vulnerabilities. 
  Office, Windows Media Player and Media Encoder all get plugs. Like this item, 
  Patch Tuesday 
should be short and sweet.
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on September 08, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Is this is a coincidence? Next week is VMworld, VMware's annual trade show hosting 
  over 10,000 customers, press and partners. This week, Microsoft has a 
massive 
  virtualization launch event focusing on old products, current products and 
  products yet to come. 
The biggest news, in my view, is the release of a standalone version of Hyper-V. 
  Until now (actually, it doesn't ship for another month) you had to buy Windows 
  Server 2008 to get it. 
Microsoft is also getting serious about management, promising to ship System 
  Center Virtual Manager 2008 in the next 30 days. The company is also expected 
  to make noise about Live Migration, a feature it needs to truly compete with 
  VMware on the high end. 
So, is this timing with VMworld a coincidence? Given that the big products 
  Microsoft is talking about won't be out for a month, I'd say yes. 
Is Hyper-V a true competitor to VMware? Yes and no answers welcome at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on September 08, 20080 comments