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This week’s critical drubbing of Windows Mobile 6.5 may give Redmond something to smile about.


Back in the day, used to get it in the neck from the Feds, from the developer community and from the industry at large. It seemed that whatever they did provoked ire. From their heavy handed negotiations with PC manufacturers, to their wilful bundling of useful new features into their market dominating operating system.

How times have changed. These days, it just doesn't seem sporting to bait Microsoft. They appear to have lost the search engine wars (with Bing proving to be more of a Blip); they've lost the digital music wars (with enjoying Windows-like market domination for their ubiquitous iPod & iTunes ecosystem); and then there's the sorry tale of Windows Mobile – a product that is hard even for Steve Ballmer to love.

So what’s eating Microsoft? They have some of the best and brightest minds in the world cooped up in their Redmond campus, and yet, time after time, they appear to fail to deliver, ceding one sector after another to an arch rival… Or do they?

Superficially, Microsoft may not seem much like a possum. After all, possums are cuddly-looking and cute, whilst Microsoft is testosterone-charged and sweaty. But perhaps they have more in common than meets the eye. North American possums (or technically “opossums“) have developed the remarkable ability of feigning sickness and injury to evade a predator: they “play possum”, exhibiting the unsavoury behaviour of looking and even smelling like a sick or dead animal, thus repelling their enemies.

Could Microsoft be employing a similar strategy? Certainly, their predators’ attentions are elsewhere. President Obama’s new antitrust czar at the Department of Justice, Christine Varney, is famously quoted as saying “For me, Microsoft is so last century. They are not the problem.” Instead, the U.S. will see problems “potentially with .”

The truth is that Microsoft’s high profile failures mask their rude health and notable success. It’s a significant but oft-overlooked fact that Microsoft earns money on the sale of every iPhone, through its Exchange ActiveSync Licensing Program. As Apple, Palm and Blackberry battle it out for domination of the emerging mainstream smartphone sector, you can rest assured that Microsoft will win regardless the outcome, since interoperability with Exchange is a prerequisite for the success of any handset. And that means a healthy Microsoft tax on every handset and server sold. That poor old possum, Microsoft, must be weeping all the to the bank with Apple’s recent success.

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One day, Sysinternals will probably run out of ideas and stop releasing incredibly useful free apps for Windows administrators and technicians. That day isn’t today, though.

Just released on TechNet is Disk2vhd, which is designed to create .vhd image files from physical hard drives. Like many other Sysinternals apps, Disk2vhd is tiny, free, and fully portable. It’s also available on live.sysinternals.com so you can run it right over the internet should you forget your trusty drive at an inopportune time.

The tool is dead simple to use: launch the executable, browse for a destination, choose which physical drive you want to image, and click create. Disk2vhd creates a snapshot that you can then mount in Virtual PC or HyperV, or as a virtual hard drive on a Windows 7 system.

Disk2vhd is compatible with Windows SP2 or newer. One word of warning: images over 127GB are not bootable in Virtual PC, so keep under the limit if that happens to be in your plans.

Sysinternals Disk2vhd helps migrate physical desktops to virtual machines originally appeared on Download Squad on Thu, 08 Oct 2009 08:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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If there’s one thing better than a handy, free application it’s a handy, free application that runs on everyone’s computer. Looking for a cross-platform download manager? Take a look at Multiget.

Once installed, Multiget monitors your clipboard for download links — or you can start putting the app to use via its floating drop box. Find something you want to download in your favorite browser, then click and drag a link onto the box to initiate the transfer. Downloads can also be started via Multiget’s task menu.

Multiget supports multiple simultaneous threads per download, FTP and HTTP resuming (as long as the server supports it), and it works through proxies.

The developer provides binaries for and Windows – as well as the source code, of course. Those of you running a distro with apt-get can likely do a simple apt-get install multiget. and BSD users have to jump through the additional hoop of compiling from source, but Multiget will work for you, too!

Multiget is a multi-threaded download manager for any OS originally appeared on Download Squad on Thu, 08 Oct 2009 11:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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will offer its upcoming Office 2010 office suite in the form of a product key card for new purchases and a downloadable click-to-run offering for existing PCs.

Office 2010, the next iteration of the company’s popular office suite, is expected to be available in the first half of 2010. In July, Microsoft released a “technical preview” of the suite, and the company expects a “broad beta” of the product later this year.

When Office 2010 does hit retailers’ shelves, users buying new PCs will have access to a product key card that activates Office on computers that have been pre-loaded with the suite. “The product key card is a single license card (with no DVD media) that will be sold at major electronic retail outlets,” Takeshi Numoto, corporate vice president for Office at Microsoft, said in a blog post.

The card will be available for the three full versions of Office – Office Home & Student 2010, Office Home & Business 2010, and Office Professional 2010.

For new PC buyers who are not sure about also purchasing Office, new PCs will come equipped with Microsoft Office Starter 2010, a replacement for Microsoft Works.

This version has reduced-functionality and is supported, Microsoft said.

“Office Starter 2010 will include Office Word Starter 2010 and Office Excel Starter 2010, with the basic functionality for creating, viewing and editing documents,” Numoto wrote.

It will include the option to upgrade to full-featured versions from within the product, but Starter 2010 does not expire and does not require you to upgrade.

Meanwhile, for those who already have a PC and want to upgrade to Office 2010, Microsoft will offer “click-to-run” downloads from Office.com.

“Click-to-Run uses virtualization technology so it allows customers to maintain multiple versions of Office,” Numoto said. “This enables them to try Office 2010 side-by-side with the existing version of Office.”

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Volery

If you’re going to be buying a new computer soon, or if you regularly work on a number of different computers, you’re probably going to spend a fair bit of time installing the latest version of a bunch of applications that you use most frequently. And that means downloading a bunch of apps, and then clicking next a few dozen times to until everything is configured properly.

Or you can use Volery. This service lets you create a single installer for dozens of popular freeware applications. You can pick and choose from a long list of web browsers, multimedia applications, and other utilities. Honestly, almost every application I use on a daily basis was on the list. And if you wish a program that wasn’t on the list was included, you can fill out the suggest an app box at the bottom of the page.

Once you choose your applications, you just click the Get Installer button and Volery will download all of the programs and create a single installer. Click it to run, and the installer will load all of the selected applications onto your PC. The apps will all be installed to their default directories and shortcuts will be added to your desktop and Start Menu. You don’t get all the advanced installation options you might be used to, but the fact that you can leave the installer running unattended kind of makes up for that.

Volery is in private beta at the moment, but the first 500 people to sign up using the following link should be able to get in on the action:

The program is free while in beta, but eventually the company plans to charge for access to the service. In other words, there will never be any offers to install the Toolbar or other applications that you didn’t ask for during the installation process.

Final pricing hasn’t been set yet, and while the company will begin charging for service, any installers you create with a beta account will continue to work even after Volery goes pro. Of course, if you want to create installers with the most up-to-date versions of each application, you’ll need to pay up.

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AVG 9 is finally here — and like other 2009/2010 antivirus suites the emphasis in the new version is on speed, performance, and minimizing the impact on system resources.

Even the install process has been streamlined, with developers reducing the number of tedious, finger-numbing mouse clicks from 22 to 11. Thank you, AVG, for doing this. It’s a little thing, but no techy enjoys tapping “next” nearly two dozen times.

Grisoft says scanning speeds have been increased by as much as 50% and that version 9 also reduces Windows boot lag by 10 to 15%. The firewall is more intuitive and has been made less intrusive — another small but welcome change.

The paid versions are available now through the AVG web site, and we’ve been told that the much-loved free version will be good to go in ten days.

If you’re a believer in free antivirus, your preferred version will be up for grabs on October 15th. Keep your browser tuned to free.avg.com — that’s where the download will appear when it goes live. Of course, you’ll also be able to read about the release here at Download Squad.

AVG releases version 9 – Free version to drop on October 15th originally appeared on Download Squad on Mon, 05 Oct 2009 17:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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I don’t know how they manage to do it, but they do. Every now and then a customer drops off a system for repair and things that a home user should ever need to with – things like TCP/IP settings, registry entries, Windows services – have been mangled beyond recognition.

Services in particular can be a big pain to reset, simply because of how many their are. Fortunately, there’s an incredibly handy web app which makes the process a whole lot easier.

Serviceseditor.com supports Windows , , and Windows 7. Click the appropriate version, and you’re presented with a comprehensive list of radio buttons covering all the built-in services. Scroll through the list and toggle any values you don’t want set to the default settings and press the submit button. You’ll receive a .reg file which you can then merge with the Windows registry.

It’s quite a bit faster than clicking through services.msc manually to get things back to normal and (obviously) doesn’t even require an install. Slick!

Easily restore Windows services to default settings with a web app originally appeared on Download Squad on Mon, 28 Sep 2009 09:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Some of my favorite Windows apps are simple little programs that are little more than a collection of commands with buttons. Take Matt’s System Helper-Outer, which I’ve only just discovered.

Sure, I’ve launched most of these commands from the run dialog so many times that I have them memorized — but an app like Helper-Outer still comes in handy for me. It’s much easier to talk my staff through clicking a couple buttons in the network panel than walking them through opening a command prompt.

And it’s helpful when a part-time tech with less experience is helping me out. Hey, not everyone is as familiar with commands like compmgmt.msc. Helper-Outer makes these tasks – things like starting and stopping the print spooler and Windows Update services, finding an IP via IPconfing, performing a DNS flush – and easy.

If Helper-Outer looks like it can make your life a little easier, grab it from Freeware Files – the author’s download link isn’t working at the moment. The app runs on Windows 2000+, though you may need to right-click and run as admin on and Windows 7.

Matt’s System Helper Outer simplifies common Windows admin tinkering originally appeared on Download Squad on Tue, 29 Sep 2009 11:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Double steroids? Really? Yes, really. If we’re going to call Device Remover a “Device Manager alternative,” the double is totally necessary.

This is no sissy-boy device tree. Five tabs present you with a tree view, list view, drivers and services, list of drivers in memory, and active system processes and handles. You can also export or print a full list of your devices and search for a specific device or driver.

On the Device Remover tools menu, you’ll find links to your control panel applets, relevant registry hives, shutdown options, system restore functions, MMC snap-ins, and macro that automatically removes all your data from every one of ’s web apps. Ok, the last one not so much. But there’s a hell of a lot packed into that menu.

It’s also good at backing up drivers and cleanup duties, and it’s available as a portable app (though the .NET framework must be installed).

Pictures do this app more justice than words, so have a look at the author’s screenshot gallery on Live.com. Device Remover works on Windows , , and 7.

Device Remover is like Device Manager on double steroids originally appeared on Download Squad on Wed, 30 Sep 2009 17:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Everyone would agree that usability is an important aspect of Web design. Whether you’re working on a portfolio website, online store or Web app, making your pages easy and enjoyable for your visitors to use is key. Many studies have been done over the years on various aspects of Web and interface design, and the findings are valuable in helping us improve our work. Here are 10 useful usability findings and guidelines that may help you improve the user experience on your websites.

Form Labels Work Best Above The Field

A study by UX Matters found that the ideal position for labels in forms is above the fields. On many forms, labels are put to the left of the fields, creating a two-column layout; while this looks good, it’s not the easiest layout to use. Why is that? Because forms are generally vertically oriented; i.e. users fill the form from top to bottom. Users scan the form downwards as they go along. And following the label to the field below is easier than finding the field to the right of the label.

Tumblr
Tumblr features a simple and elegant sign-up form that adheres to UX Matter’s recommendation.

Positioning labels on the left also poses another problem: do you left-align or right-align the labels? Left-aligning makes the form scannable but disconnects the labels from the fields, making it difficult to see which label applies to which field. Right-aligning does the reverses: it makes for a good-looking but less scannable form. Labels above fields work best in most circumstances. The study also found that labels should not be bold, although this recommendation is not conclusive.

Users Focus On Faces

People instinctively notice other people right away when they come into view. On Web pages, we tend to focus on people’s faces and eyes, which gives marketers a good technique for attracting attention. But our attraction to people’s faces and eyes is only the beginning; it turns out we actually glance in the direction the person in the image is looking in.

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Eye-tracking heat map of a baby looking directly at us, from the UsableWorld study.

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And now the baby is looking at the content. Notice the increase in people looking at the headline and text.

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