Podcasting What Geeks Really Want To Hear

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Following this great article, I installed Windows Mobile 6.5 this morning on my HTC Touch Pro (Sprint, CDMA).  This is the transition interface between Windows Mobile 6.1 (and prior, back to Windows Pocket PC 2000 even) with the original Windows Mobile interface and the new Windows Phone 7, Zune-convergence interface.

My experience has been pretty good, although the UI does studder a little when using it.  I’m really getting used to at this point, but I have only been playing with it for about 30 minutes.  3 kids have a way of delaying some of my geeking off.

Its obvious that this is a way to start bringing the UI back to Microsoft, instead of partners like HTC, developing engaging phone user interfaces.  This is something for Microsoft to be proud of, but I’d hardly argue that its a quantum shift in UIs, like the iPhone was when it first came out.  Again, it is also obvious that Microsoft is trying to converge the Zune and their Windows Mobile line, as Apple has with the iPhone.  Is it a surprise that Microsoft is aiming at Apple, given their dominance in the mobile music player market, and their coveted smartphones? 

We’ll see if Microsoft gains marketshare through the work to develop convergence of their devices.  What do you think?  Feel free to share!

Chris

posted by cgrant at 17:43 in General    
Friday, April 23, 2010

This is a great graphic.  You knew all of this was going on, but this is the first good, graphical way to view it all at the same time.  Click the image to read the Gizmodo article.

posted by cgrant at 16:04 in General    
Wednesday, April 21, 2010

You should be able to mount Mac drives to do imaging using this, as I  understand it.  That would be really handy also because my MacBook Pro’s drive is making noises and it would be nice to just dupe it…

To quote the site:

Paragon Software is giving away 50, 000 licenses of this product-gain full access to Mac HFS+ File Systems from Microsoft Windows NTFS!

 HFS for Windows enables the use of Mac-formatted partitions in Windows operating systems. Utilizing Paragon’s own unique technology – the Universal File System Driver (UFSD), Paragon’s HFS for Windows is able to extend the boundaries of Microsoft Windows’ scalability and interoperability.

posted by cgrant at 11:25 in General    
Thursday, April 1, 2010

Topeka sign

See the article for more info:
http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2010/04/different-kind-of-company-name.html

See the chart for proper usage:
Topeka usage chart

posted by cgrant at 11:19 in General    

24 queries. 0.503 seconds.