harrymccracken I love the fact that Windows Blue’s official name is Windows 8.1. I hope there’s a Windows 8.11, too. But not for workgroups.
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A jack of many hobbies and a master of none - spending lots of time on amateur/ham radio, running, and technology.
Showing posts with label Windows. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Windows. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 15, 2013
What's in a name?
Thursday, June 28, 2012
No More Start Button Drama
Drama in the comments on the Slashdot post... don't move my cheese! But then you get clever ideas like this:
"Maybe they'll develop a single field where you can type in whatever you want the computer to do. Wouldn't that be great? Let's see, you type in a line of commands, so you could call it a 'command line'. You wouldn't need all those icons! That would be the ultimate evolution of Windows."
Tuesday, June 12, 2012
Retina Windows 7 PC
Well this answers that.
harrymccracken Tragically, the Retina MacBook Pro isn't letting me install Boot Camp. I so wanted to see if it could be a Retina Windows 7 PC.Tue, Jun 12 02:57:21 from web
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Monday, June 11, 2012
MacBook Pro with Retina Display
The new MacBook Pro (full WWDC coverage here including more details) is a powerful and sexy looking machine, but will it run Windows?
Monday, February 27, 2012
Windows 8 Logo
Pogue I love the new logo for Windows 8. Ties in well to the "tiles" concept. ("Your name is Windows. Why are you a flag?") bit.ly/AakTVdFri, Feb 17 17:31:22 from TweetDeck
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Labels:
Microsoft,
Technology,
Windows
Saturday, February 4, 2012
Windows 8 + Kinect
Some Windows 8 laptops will include the Kinect sensor system (similar to the Xbox, but tweaked to work at shorter distances). I may have to work some magic and get one at the end of this year. I think the Kinect is the "what's next" beyond the now ubiquitous touchscreens.
Labels:
Controller,
Microsoft,
Sensor,
Windows,
Xbox
Friday, January 20, 2012
Win7 on your iPad
Interesting...
"The app—a bare-bones, free version was released last week at CES—lets an iPad run Windows 7 in the cloud. It’s a bizarre, head-turning experience: You touch the app and suddenly Microsoft’s familiar interface is emblazoned on your Apple screen. Then you tap around and everything just works—Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Internet Explorer, and pretty much anything else that runs on Windows, which is everything—can now run on your iPad."OnLive Desktop
fmanjoo Why OnLive’s Windows-on-iPad App is Revolutionary. My first @PandoDaily post. bit.ly/w1hTyYFri, Jan 20 13:49:04 from bitly
retweeted by sarahcuda |
Thursday, January 5, 2012
Refresh and Reset
The two new big features of Windows 8:
- Refresh gives users an easy way to reinstall the operating system if they encounter a problem. Data and some settings are kept, while potential trouble spots are wiped clean. Users will also have to reinstall most desktop apps, although apps that use the Metro interface (the bright colored UI that was designed mainly for touchscreens) will stay around.
- Reset is a little more dramatic: it restores the PC to a clean state, like when you bought it, which will be useful when you want to sell or give away an old PC.
Via Business Insider
Labels:
Windows
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Word of the Day: Panoply
I was trouble-shooting an Active Directory/DNS problem at work today and was using my google-fu to find a resolution. My search lead me to Troubleshooting DNS - which did not help me solve my problem, but did expand my vocabulary:
So Microsoft has an impressive array of naming services. Who knew?!?
"Windows supports a whole panoply of naming services: DNS, WINS, HOSTS, LMHOSTS, and more."And thus, I present "panoply" - a wide-ranging and impressive array or display.
So Microsoft has an impressive array of naming services. Who knew?!?
Labels:
Learning,
Microsoft,
Technology,
Windows,
Words
Tuesday, September 13, 2011
QotD
One of the accountants at work just recently got his new Windows 7 laptop. Upon hearing that Windows 8 is coming out and will have a new interface, he wondered why they couldn't just release a Windows Classic, so we don't have to keep learning new operating systems.
Labels:
Change,
Microsoft,
Technology,
Windows
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