Microsoft and iPhone Get Cozy, MS Issues Quick IE Fix


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  • Microsoft's First Love: The iPhone
  • Hackers Force Quick IE Fix
  • Get Set for IE 8
  • More News from Redmondmag.com
  • Best of Redmondmag.com: Top 10 Columns of 2008
  • Redmond Radio: Former Yahoo Exec Joins MS, Patch Tuesday Explodes, More
  • Mailbag: Ice Storm Stories, More
 
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1) Redmond Report
By Doug Barney
Editor in Chief, Redmond magazine


Microsoft's First Love: The iPhone
Microsoft bought Seadragon Mobile a year or two back for its mobile GUI. As I recall, Seadragon lets users drill into content on small screens so you can actually read words and see images -- pretty handy for someone like me who has 48-year-old eyes and refuses to get glasses. But is Seadragon good to go on Microsoft-powered phones? Not yet.

So what exactly does it run on? How about an iPhone? That's right: Microsoft is shipping a preview version for Apple fans, while the Windows Mobile faithful has to wait. And it's all because the iPhone has a strong enough graphical processing unit (GPU) to run the new interface.

This is all good news. Along with growing support for open source, moves like this signal a kinder, gentler, more accommodating Microsoft.

Hackers Force Quick IE Fix
Any time you have dozens of hackers attacking thousands of systems, you know a fix is on the way. And that's just what IE is getting. A day after Microsoft released a workaround but no promise of a fix, the company reversed course and is slaving away on an out-of-cycle patch due today.

The attacks originally focused on IE 7 but spread down to IE 5 and 6, all the way up to the IE 8 beta. This is one patch well worth installing.

Get Set for IE 8
Usually, when Microsoft tells customers to get ready for a new product, I yawn. But in the case of IE 8, it has a point -- at least for IE shops.

Earlier this week, we reported that IE 8 had the fewest bugs of any mainstream browser -- and it's still in beta. If those security testing results are correct, IE 8 will be far safer than earlier Microsoft revs.

Microsoft expects a final product in the first quarter or 2009, and suggests that IT get ready for a fast, smooth rollout. This time around, Microsoft's advice makes a lot of sense.

 

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3) Best of Redmondmag.com: Top 10 Columns of 2008
With 2009 fast approaching, we're taking a look back at the year that was by linking to the most popular articles of 2008. As promised, here are 2008's 10 most-viewed columns:

1. Windows Insider: Au Revoir, MCSE
2. Beta Man: Internet Explorer 8 Shows Promise
3. Foley on Microsoft: Will Windows Service Pack History Repeat Itself?
4. Mr. Roboto: Dive Deep with SubInACL
5. Windows Insider: 5 Rules for Managing User Desktops
6. Foley on Microsoft: Microsoft's SOA Strategy: Back to Earth
7. Beta Man: Microsoft Search Server 2008 Express
8. Barney's Rubble: Owning Up to Vista
9. Barney's Rubble: Forget Yahoo! Buy Mac
10. Foley on Microsoft: If MicroHoo Goes Through, What Then Should Microsoft Do?

And check in tomorrow for 2008's most-viewed product reviews!
 

4) Redmond Radio: Former Yahoo Exec Joins MS, Patch Tuesday Explodes, More
This week, host Michael Domingo covers the following topics:

  • Microsoft hires former Yahoo search exec.
  • Patch Tuesday explodes with 28 fixes.
  • Open source thrives in the enterprise.
  • U.S. is biggest malware culprit.
Get the podcast here.

 

5) Mailbag: Ice Storm Stories, More
Doug wrote his column on Monday from the front lines of a bad New England ice storm -- and he wasn't alone:

Similar to yourself, I live in Southern New Hampshire, just outside of Portsmouth. We were without power for two days, but I was able to hook up a portable generator to do the following: 1) get the refrigerator working, 2) get the heat working (it's gas -- just needed to get it started) and 3) get the wireless Verizon modem working. For some reason, even though my Comcast cable was down, the Verizon FIOS fiber was not broken.

This is one of those occasions where my wife was glad I'm a geek! We were able to stream videos and catch up on the news even though we were confined to a couple of rooms.
-Anthony

You must be near us in Nashua. We're still on generator but we're OK. Add one to the geek factor: I rigged up my neighbor with a 2,000-watt inverter I bought so he's got mini-power -- enough to heat a portion of the house and get them hot water (by hooking it to the car battery and using the car's alternator).

Our dead-end street is an island of eight "powerless" homes surrounded by houses with power that are taunting us with Christmas lights!
-Kevin

I just read your blurb about your powerless marooning in a sea of ice. As a Marlborough, Mass. native, we were spared the worst, but our hearts go out to those inconvenienced (and worse). We got ice here but only half as much as you did, meaning our power was only out for about 12 hours. There is something to be said for underground utilities and living near intersections on the grid!
-Richard

Just wanted to let you know to be ready as the weather we have is headed your way. Out here on the Central Plains (Central Iowa) the high for today is 3. On Sunday, the temperature dropped over 40 degrees in a matter of a few hours and the winds were 30 mph or greater. We were at 50 in the morning and -3 this morning. Hope you get heat at home soon.
-Anonymous

About 15 years ago in Lanesboro, Mass., we had 30-below-zero for more than a solid week. The last night of the 30-below weather, the power line on Route 7 snapped at 2 in the morning. The loss of power caused all the hot water heater lines to freeze in our house in the middle of the night. That was not pretty. The whole community was affected.

Ice storms are not pretty. Even here in Virginia Beach, we had that same problem about seven years ago. We lost so many trees around the house. It was like a maze trying to get through it with a chainsaw. Which, thank God, I had at the time.
-Kurt

Glad to hear you're weathering the winter. That's the reason I left Minnesota for the California Bay Area.
-Scott

And Google recently unveiled its "Native Client" to speed up Web browsers and improve security. Kevin wonders if there's something else about the name that he's missing:

I noticed that Google is abbreviating the Native Client as NaCl. That happens to be the chemical shorthand for sodium chloride (aka, table salt). Is that just a coincidence? If it was intentional, I'm missing the clever reference.
-Kevin


 
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