Results tagged “microsoft”

Windows 7 On Sale

Pre-orders for Windows 7 went up yesterday. If you expect to upgrade an XP or Vista computer anytime in the next year, pre-order Windows 7 before July 11 to save half off retail. Home Premium (super-duper edition?) is only $50.

Mac and Linux remain my environments of choice for real work, but Windows 7 does look promising. I definitely expect to upgrade my gaming rig at some point, and $50 feels right for a Windows upgrade.

In other news, I'm having too much fun with my iPhone to write about it. More later...

Friends, Stop Embarassing Yourself

Over the past month, I've had several friends message me on MSN Messenger with something like this:

"check out these awesome pics from the awesome party LOL
http://www.gone-wild-patry-pics.com"

When I follow the link in the message, I'm greeted with a prompt for my MSN account information. The page doesn't look reputable at all, and the "terms of service" are plastered all over the bottom.

fraud.jpeg

By providing MSN account information, a visitor grants this company permission to log into the MSN account and send advertisements to everyone on the buddy list. Among other interesting clauses in the "terms of service," the company also claims the following.

  • "... the right to change the terms of use / privacy policy at any time without notice."
  • "... this agreement shall prevail if there is any conflict between this agreement and the terms of use you accepted when you signed up with MSN."
  • "... TST Management, Inc is NOT agreeing to MSN's terms of use and therefore not bound by them."
  • "You expressly consent to the exclusive venue and personal jurisdiction of the courts located in the Republic of panama for any actions arising from or relating to this agreement."

The most entertaining aspect of all this is that I know exactly which friends fell for this trick. I would encourage anyone who provided login credentials to this fradulent web site to change your MSN password immediately! Your friends will thank you.

Remapping Mac Modifier Keys

I'm sure most Mac users encounter situations when they're forced to use a Windows keyboard. In my case, I attach a Mini and ocassionally my MacBook to a KVM switch shared by Vista, Ubuntu, and a Windows keyboard.

Up until now, I've just dealt with the fact that Windows keyboards switch the Option and Command key locations. I've trained my brain to use the Windows key rather than the key immediately adjacent to the space bar when I need Command. Previous versions of Mac OS had a feature that remapped the modifier keys, but this was a global setting that remapped all keyboards whether they be Windows or not.

I was pleasantly surprised when I discovered this dialog under Leopard's keyboard system preferences.

modifiers.png

That new drop down list at the top lets me create mappings for all keyboards or specific keyboards, identiifed by their USB device name. Very nice, Apple!

Why Is File Sharing Still So Difficult?

I wanted to do something very simple over the weekend. I wanted to set up my Windows Vista computer to backup automatically to a drive shared on the network by my Mac Mini. In this day and age, digital information has become so important in our everyday lives that one would hope this is now relatively straightforward, right?

First, let me say that I can accomplish this in my sleep on any non-Windows computer. I work, live, and play on unix operating systems. I know how to configure key pairs and schedule a regular cron job to rsync files over a secure ssh connection. These technologies have a significant learning curve, but they work consistently and reliably.

My first hurdle was Leopard's horrible SMB support. Enabling Windows file sharing on Leopard confronts the user with an intimidating dialog box that warns about storing passwords in a less secure manner. The password on my primary account is important, so I decided to create a separate backup user. Unfortunately, Leopard "sharing only" accounts don't appear on the list of accounts available for Windows file sharing. I had to create a full user account, complete with a home directory.

The next hurdle was logging in from Vista. As I discovered after a solid half hour of tinkering, Leopard's SMB support only accepts the account's full name, not the abbreviated short version.

Vista comes with a backup tool that only supports network backups to Windows file shares. Once I had file sharing with the Mac working, I happily pointed the backup tool at that location. Windows complained about not having "full access," and Leopard doesn't have any option for enabling a higher level of privileges beyond "read & write." So there goes that idea. My Vista computer doesn't store anything more valuable than saved games and screenshots. It's not worth the time to hack something together for automatic regular backups.

Microsoft, how about adding support for backing up to SFTP or WebDAV? These are not new file sharing protocols, and they work cross-platform!

And to be fair, Apple's Time Machine is equally frustrating when backing up to non-Apple computers over the network. Time Machine relies on specific features of HFS+, including a hack in Leopard to enable hard links for directories, so network backups must create an HFS+ disk image on the remote computer.

Discussion on Web Applications

I just ran into a fascinating and insightful discussion about web applications and the future of computing. The article includes lots of good dialog and many links to other related articles. My favorite is an article written by Joel Spolsky earlier this month: How Microsoft Lost the API War. His article touches on such diverse topics as backwards compatibility in the Windows API, the sudden stall in Internet Explorer development a few years back, the .NET framework, Microsoft's "bad bets" in the upcoming Longhorn, and the decline in rich clients. Enjoy!

1
Creative Commons License
This blog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.