Dell, Intel cut out Microsoft

Dell, Intel cut out Microsoft

Dell, Intel, and their partners announced this week new technologies that represent major leaps forward for mobility. The companies seem to have discovered the secret to making such bold leaps: Cut Microsoft out of the deal.

One technology involves enabling users to gain instant access to a laptop's e-mail, browser and other basic functionality — without booting Windows at all.

[ Get the analysis and insights that only Randall C. Kennedy can provide on PC tech in InfoWorld's Enterprise Desktop blog. And download our free Windows performance-monitoring tool. ]

The second technology enables an Internet-based message to wake a Windows PC from sleep mode. It's useful both for VoIP applications and for anyone away from their PC who wants remote access.

These new technologies are perfect metaphors for what's happening in the industry. In both cases, Windows is asleep while Microsoft's own partners give users what they really want.

Let's have a look at the new technologies.

Dell Latitude ON
Dell announced this week a new feature called Latitude ON that enables the use of e-mail, Web surfing, basic PIM functionality, and document reading — all without booting Windows. The idea is to enable basic use without having to wait for the main OS to boot, and also to extend battery life.

A more accurate name than "Latitude ON" would have been "Windows OFF."

The codename was "BlackTop," a combination of "BlackBerry" and "laptop." The original aim of the project was to give users the same basic functionality of a BlackBerry using their laptops' full-size keyboard and screen.

What Dell is really doing here is building the equivalent of a secondary ASUS Eee PC into a full-featured, full-size laptop. The Latitude ON feature uses a low-power Intel Arm processor (just like the new Eee PCs), flash storage and Linux (Suse Linux Enterprise Desktop 10) separate from the laptop's main CPU, hard drive, and Windows OS. But unlike a subnotebook, the Latitude ON system won't allow you to install applications. It's essentially a "cloud computing" device that depends on the Internet for much of its functionality.

As far as I can tell, none of the applications are made by Microsoft. ON's custom Web browser is based on Firefox. E-mail, "diary" and contacts are, of course, non-Microsoft applications. But some Microsoft data types are supported in one way or another. The system, for example, includes viewers for Microsoft Office documents (as well as for Adobe PDF documents). The built-in organizer grabs the 100 most recent Outlook e-mail messages from the laptop's cache and displays them.

If you use only the Latitude ON system, battery life lasts not hours but days, according to Dell.

ON is expected to hit in two months for just some of Dell's laptops.

From a Microsoft perspective, Latitude ON represents a debacle comparable to the UMPC disaster. Microsoft led a big push to drive sales of Vista-based Ultra-Mobile PCs, all of which failed catastrophically in the market, rejected by users in favor of first Linux, then XP-based subnotebooks.

Now, it's happening again. Remember Windows Vista Sideshow? The feature was part of a broader effort by Microsoft to provide basic functionality on laptops while the main Windows OS was in sleep mode. A tiny screen on the lid would display the UI. Obviously that failed, and now partner Dell is delivering roughly similar but vastly superior functionality using Linux and other non-Microsoft software.

Intel Remote Wake
Intel introduced new technology Thursday called Remote Wake, a chip set and SDK that enables a PC to be "awakened" over the Internet when in sleep mode.

Intel worked not with software giant Microsoft, but Silicon Valley VoIP startup JaJah to build the company's software into the Intel chipset in some PCs. The Intel-JaJah combination will enable you to dump your landline phone and use a PC-based VoIP phone without leaving your PC on all the time. Other VoIP applications, such as Skype, can also take advantage of Remote Wake, but will need to be tweaked to support Remote Wake, then installed by the user. Orb Networks, Cyberlink and Pando Networks are also Intel partners on Remote Wake.

Remote Wake should also be useful beyond VoIP calls for things like remote, off-peak backups and for downloading media and other files. Remote Wake also makes PCs greener, because they don't have to be left on all the time.

You can check out a demo on the Pando site.

Again, from Microsoft's perspective, this is another disaster. It couldn't be more obvious that Microsoft and Intel should have partnered on this functionality 10 years ago. Microsoft has been pushing Remote Desktop and its communications software for years. But apparently it never occurred to anyone in Redmond that people might want to leave their PCs in sleep mode, then have them turn on for remote access or VoIP calls.

Based on all the information released so far, there is literally no downside (other than marginal additional cost) to either of these new offerings. They both improve life dramatically for mobile users.

The usefulness of these technologies stands in stark contrast to Microsoft Windows' ongoing slumber. When is the last time Microsoft rolled out something that boosted mobility the way these new features do?

The "old Microsoft" would have never allowed all this. The company would have leveraged its multi-billion dollar labs to figure all this out first, then, coerced Intel, Dell and the rest of the industry into supporting it. Now, Microsoft is on the sidelines while its closest partners innovate using companies that compete with Microsoft in the software marketplace.

When will Microsoft itself wake up from "sleep mode"?

Dell, Intel cut out Microsoft

Dell, Intel cut out Microsoft

Dell, Intel, and their partners announced this week new technologies that represent major leaps forward for mobility. The companies seem to have discovered the secret to making such bold leaps: Cut Microsoft out of the deal.

One technology involves enabling users to gain instant access to a laptop's e-mail, browser and other basic functionality — without booting Windows at all.

[ Get the analysis and insights that only Randall C. Kennedy can provide on PC tech in InfoWorld's Enterprise Desktop blog. And download our free Windows performance-monitoring tool. ]

The second technology enables an Internet-based message to wake a Windows PC from sleep mode. It's useful both for VoIP applications and for anyone away from their PC who wants remote access.

These new technologies are perfect metaphors for what's happening in the industry. In both cases, Windows is asleep while Microsoft's own partners give users what they really want.

Let's have a look at the new technologies.

Dell Latitude ON
Dell announced this week a new feature called Latitude ON that enables the use of e-mail, Web surfing, basic PIM functionality, and document reading — all without booting Windows. The idea is to enable basic use without having to wait for the main OS to boot, and also to extend battery life.

A more accurate name than "Latitude ON" would have been "Windows OFF."

The codename was "BlackTop," a combination of "BlackBerry" and "laptop." The original aim of the project was to give users the same basic functionality of a BlackBerry using their laptops' full-size keyboard and screen.

What Dell is really doing here is building the equivalent of a secondary ASUS Eee PC into a full-featured, full-size laptop. The Latitude ON feature uses a low-power Intel Arm processor (just like the new Eee PCs), flash storage and Linux (Suse Linux Enterprise Desktop 10) separate from the laptop's main CPU, hard drive, and Windows OS. But unlike a subnotebook, the Latitude ON system won't allow you to install applications. It's essentially a "cloud computing" device that depends on the Internet for much of its functionality.

As far as I can tell, none of the applications are made by Microsoft. ON's custom Web browser is based on Firefox. E-mail, "diary" and contacts are, of course, non-Microsoft applications. But some Microsoft data types are supported in one way or another. The system, for example, includes viewers for Microsoft Office documents (as well as for Adobe PDF documents). The built-in organizer grabs the 100 most recent Outlook e-mail messages from the laptop's cache and displays them.

If you use only the Latitude ON system, battery life lasts not hours but days, according to Dell.

ON is expected to hit in two months for just some of Dell's laptops.

From a Microsoft perspective, Latitude ON represents a debacle comparable to the UMPC disaster. Microsoft led a big push to drive sales of Vista-based Ultra-Mobile PCs, all of which failed catastrophically in the market, rejected by users in favor of first Linux, then XP-based subnotebooks.

Now, it's happening again. Remember Windows Vista Sideshow? The feature was part of a broader effort by Microsoft to provide basic functionality on laptops while the main Windows OS was in sleep mode. A tiny screen on the lid would display the UI. Obviously that failed, and now partner Dell is delivering roughly similar but vastly superior functionality using Linux and other non-Microsoft software.

Intel Remote Wake
Intel introduced new technology Thursday called Remote Wake, a chip set and SDK that enables a PC to be "awakened" over the Internet when in sleep mode.

Intel worked not with software giant Microsoft, but Silicon Valley VoIP startup JaJah to build the company's software into the Intel chipset in some PCs. The Intel-JaJah combination will enable you to dump your landline phone and use a PC-based VoIP phone without leaving your PC on all the time. Other VoIP applications, such as Skype, can also take advantage of Remote Wake, but will need to be tweaked to support Remote Wake, then installed by the user. Orb Networks, Cyberlink and Pando Networks are also Intel partners on Remote Wake.

Remote Wake should also be useful beyond VoIP calls for things like remote, off-peak backups and for downloading media and other files. Remote Wake also makes PCs greener, because they don't have to be left on all the time.

You can check out a demo on the Pando site.

Again, from Microsoft's perspective, this is another disaster. It couldn't be more obvious that Microsoft and Intel should have partnered on this functionality 10 years ago. Microsoft has been pushing Remote Desktop and its communications software for years. But apparently it never occurred to anyone in Redmond that people might want to leave their PCs in sleep mode, then have them turn on for remote access or VoIP calls.

Based on all the information released so far, there is literally no downside (other than marginal additional cost) to either of these new offerings. They both improve life dramatically for mobile users.

The usefulness of these technologies stands in stark contrast to Microsoft Windows' ongoing slumber. When is the last time Microsoft rolled out something that boosted mobility the way these new features do?

The "old Microsoft" would have never allowed all this. The company would have leveraged its multi-billion dollar labs to figure all this out first, then, coerced Intel, Dell and the rest of the industry into supporting it. Now, Microsoft is on the sidelines while its closest partners innovate using companies that compete with Microsoft in the software marketplace.

When will Microsoft itself wake up from "sleep mode"?

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Dell, Intel cut out Microsoft

Dell, Intel, and their partners announced this week new technologies that represent major leaps forward for mobility. The companies seem to have discovered the secret to making such bold leaps: Cut Microsoft out of the deal.

One technology involves enabling users to gain instant access to a laptop's e-mail, browser and other basic functionality — without booting Windows at all.

[ Get the analysis and insights that only Randall C. Kennedy can provide on PC tech in InfoWorld's Enterprise Desktop blog. And download our free Windows performance-monitoring tool. ]

The second technology enables an Internet-based message to wake a Windows PC from sleep mode. It's useful both for VoIP applications and for anyone away from their PC who wants remote access.

These new technologies are perfect metaphors for what's happening in the industry. In both cases, Windows is asleep while Microsoft's own partners give users what they really want.

Let's have a look at the new technologies.

Dell Latitude ON
Dell announced this week a new feature called Latitude ON that enables the use of e-mail, Web surfing, basic PIM functionality, and document reading — all without booting Windows. The idea is to enable basic use without having to wait for the main OS to boot, and also to extend battery life.

A more accurate name than "Latitude ON" would have been "Windows OFF."

The codename was "BlackTop," a combination of "BlackBerry" and "laptop." The original aim of the project was to give users the same basic functionality of a BlackBerry using their laptops' full-size keyboard and screen.

What Dell is really doing here is building the equivalent of a secondary ASUS Eee PC into a full-featured, full-size laptop. The Latitude ON feature uses a low-power Intel Arm processor (just like the new Eee PCs), flash storage and Linux (Suse Linux Enterprise Desktop 10) separate from the laptop's main CPU, hard drive, and Windows OS. But unlike a subnotebook, the Latitude ON system won't allow you to install applications. It's essentially a "cloud computing" device that depends on the Internet for much of its functionality.

As far as I can tell, none of the applications are made by Microsoft. ON's custom Web browser is based on Firefox. E-mail, "diary" and contacts are, of course, non-Microsoft applications. But some Microsoft data types are supported in one way or another. The system, for example, includes viewers for Microsoft Office documents (as well as for Adobe PDF documents). The built-in organizer grabs the 100 most recent Outlook e-mail messages from the laptop's cache and displays them.

If you use only the Latitude ON system, battery life lasts not hours but days, according to Dell.

ON is expected to hit in two months for just some of Dell's laptops.

From a Microsoft perspective, Latitude ON represents a debacle comparable to the UMPC disaster. Microsoft led a big push to drive sales of Vista-based Ultra-Mobile PCs, all of which failed catastrophically in the market, rejected by users in favor of first Linux, then XP-based subnotebooks.

Now, it's happening again. Remember Windows Vista Sideshow? The feature was part of a broader effort by Microsoft to provide basic functionality on laptops while the main Windows OS was in sleep mode. A tiny screen on the lid would display the UI. Obviously that failed, and now partner Dell is delivering roughly similar but vastly superior functionality using Linux and other non-Microsoft software.

Intel Remote Wake
Intel introduced new technology Thursday called Remote Wake, a chip set and SDK that enables a PC to be "awakened" over the Internet when in sleep mode.

Intel worked not with software giant Microsoft, but Silicon Valley VoIP startup JaJah to build the company's software into the Intel chipset in some PCs. The Intel-JaJah combination will enable you to dump your landline phone and use a PC-based VoIP phone without leaving your PC on all the time. Other VoIP applications, such as Skype, can also take advantage of Remote Wake, but will need to be tweaked to support Remote Wake, then installed by the user. Orb Networks, Cyberlink and Pando Networks are also Intel partners on Remote Wake.

Remote Wake should also be useful beyond VoIP calls for things like remote, off-peak backups and for downloading media and other files. Remote Wake also makes PCs greener, because they don't have to be left on all the time.

You can check out a demo on the Pando site.

Again, from Microsoft's perspective, this is another disaster. It couldn't be more obvious that Microsoft and Intel should have partnered on this functionality 10 years ago. Microsoft has been pushing Remote Desktop and its communications software for years. But apparently it never occurred to anyone in Redmond that people might want to leave their PCs in sleep mode, then have them turn on for remote access or VoIP calls.

Based on all the information released so far, there is literally no downside (other than marginal additional cost) to either of these new offerings. They both improve life dramatically for mobile users.

The usefulness of these technologies stands in stark contrast to Microsoft Windows' ongoing slumber. When is the last time Microsoft rolled out something that boosted mobility the way these new features do?

The "old Microsoft" would have never allowed all this. The company would have leveraged its multi-billion dollar labs to figure all this out first, then, coerced Intel, Dell and the rest of the industry into supporting it. Now, Microsoft is on the sidelines while its closest partners innovate using companies that compete with Microsoft in the software marketplace.

When will Microsoft itself wake up from "sleep mode"?

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Cooley: Personal Data Concerns (Security Risks)
Recently, I made the decision to update to XP Service Pack 2. In hindsight, I'm not sure what compelled me to that course of action. Somebody at work (tech support call center) mentioned it, and then I recalled how I have avoided downloading it since it's release because I heard it can cause problems.

Anyway, I wake up in the morning to get ready for work, and I see a couple of error messages and I knew something was going to be screwed up. So in my haste, what's the first thing I do? Why, restart the computer of course - that way I can see as soon as possible what the new status of the machine was. Obviously, it wouldn't boot. All I had on me was a Dell XP Reinstallation CD, and after running through that it still failed to boot up.

Fast forward a bit, a friend at work said I should just bring it in and we could work on it during downtime. We took out the hard drive hooked it up with an IDE to USB cable and plugged it into his laptop. It wasn't being detected, so we took the hard drive to another guy there who had a much newer laptop, and it showed up under Disk Management, but as being unrecognized. The main goal for me was to save the data I have on there, and later try the regular Windows repair install, since I now had access to it through a co-worker.

The guy with the newer laptop had a program called Easy Recovery Pro, ran it and then I saw all of my C: folders. I was excited, and he asked if he wanted me to have him back it up to his 100 GB hard drive, and then we could try the Windows repair and worse comes to worse, we could format my original drive, reinstall a fresh Windows, and then copy over my files.

This guy seems pretty cool, the first week I was there he modded my PSP for me with CFW free of charge. So I thought, okay lets back this stuff up and see what we can do. Yesterday, after appending some Program Files directories that I also wanted to have added to the backup - we came to realize that we wouldn't be able to finish this process by the end of the work day. So I recommended that he just take my hard drive home and finish backing it up during that time. He already had half of my files on his laptop to begin with, so what's the big deal. I'm already in a compromising position (which I never have been before).

Anyway, in hindsight, it seems that I probably panicked a little too much after this unfortunate series of events began to unfold. My files were still there, and I probably could have just taken my tower and hard drive back home after that first day and said, "ok, I can back up/recover this stuff on my own." Although, only having one computer in my possession (no laptop or anything), made me feel that going through with relying on this other guy was the best option. I had this computer and hard drive since 2002, and it was my first real, decent personal computer. I have a lot of personal files on there, mainly all in the My Documents folder, but also have many Notepad files with personal information, log-ins, and then all of my favorites and cookies, etc.

Do you think I made a bad decision? Should I have just taken everything back once I saw my files there, before anything was backed up to his drive? As I said, he's a co-worker, and someone that I've been cool with, albeit have only known for a little less than a month now. I've always been super smart and cautious when it comes to security and not divulging personal stuff that I have stored on this well-worn hard drive. Now thoughts are racing through my head about my hard drive being at someone's else house for a weekend, and how even after we delete the folder that all of my hard drive is stored on within his laptop - he could still just as easily use that same recovery software to pull everything back up and I would never even know. And unless a low-level format were performed, my data would always be there somewhere forever.

I know people do this all the time, bring their computers to have data backed up and everything. But I always thought I was like a lot of you, I'd imagine - "No, I wouldn't do that. I'd just do it myself." Guaranteed to be safe and secure, the most important thing to keep in mind when dealing with personal data/information.

This is less of a technical question, and more of a request for honest opinions from people who are more well versed with these sort of situations than I am.

I'm going to be talking to the guy and be straight with him about my concern, and whether or not he looked around or grabbed anything off my drive for his own storage. But that can only accomplish so much. In the end, I guess it's better to do this sort of thing with someone you work with in the professional field, than some service with people you're paying that have no face or name.

Anyway, should I be worried the way I am? What would you recommend that I do?

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CyberNotes: Encrypt, Backup, and Recover Files on a USB Drive
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