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Can you pass this trivia test—without looking up the answers on you-know-what? Please fill in the following information and we'll email this link. Full Article at MSNBC
Over the last five years, Microsoft has undergone a gradual, but significant, shift in its public image, a shift toward interoperability and a willingness to play more fairly in competitive markets. Full Article at BetaNews
I’ve read a few articles that appeared on my Tweet stream regarding PDC this year and unfortunately they took a rather negative point-of-view. Full Article at Steve Trefethen's Blog
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer and Rupert Murdoch's publishing syndicate News Corporation (News Corp). are considering the concept of charging search engine providers to access indexed online content. Full Article at Gerson Lehrman Group
Twelve months after Microsoft slid into the worst economic recession in the company's history, Chief Financial Officer Chris Liddell is leaving and ready to be more than a numbers guy. Full Article at The Seattle Times
Rupert Murdoch wants your attention on his news and advertising, and ideally for you to pay for it, too. Full Article at Crikey
Microsoft today announced that Chris Liddell will be leaving the company at the end of 2009, and named Peter Klein as the company’s new chief financial officer. Full Article at MacDailyNews
Microsoft Corp. have announced that kiwi Chris Liddell will be leaving the company at the end of 2009, and named Peter Klein as the companys new chief financial officer. Full Article at Geekzone
Memo to Steve Ballmer: A deal to carry News Corp. content on Bing.com exclusively may sound good--who wouldn't want to wall off millions of search customers mining news about American Idol or scouring the latest Wall Street Journal stories? Full Article at Forbes
Rupert Murdoch and his whiny kid are spinning in their graves before they’re buried. Perhaps a paleontologist can tell us if ol’ T. Rex and his pups made so much noise before sinking into the swamp. Full Article at Follow the Media
I've had problems with Windows 98, 98SE, ME, 2000, XP, Vista, 7 all of the operating systems released by Microsoft in my short life. I've waited many hours on Microsoft's Customer Support Line, waiting for some solutions to my problems. Full Article at Something Awful
By James K. Glassman 'There are more new innovative ideas. . . coming out of Israel than there are out in [Silicon] Valley right now. And it doesn't slow during economic downturns." Full Article at Wall Street Journal
I am not sure if you can put a price on stupidity or not; but I am pretty sure that if you could weasel out of Steve Ballmer how much this possible getting into bed with the newspaper giants is going to cost you’d have a pretty good idea. Full Article at The Inquisitr
Microsoft has had discussions with News Corp over a plan that would involve the media company being paid to de-index its news websites from Google, setting the scene for a search engine battle that could offer a ray of light to the newspaper industry. Full Article at WebmasterWorld
If the world needs one browser-based operating system, why not three more? With the interest Google's Chrome OS has generated, can operating systems based upon Firefox, Internet Explorer, even Opera, be far behind? Full Article at PC World
Here's the thing, Steve. I'm gonna go out on a limb and say that no one goes to Google to search the Wall Street Journal. They may come across the Wall Street Journal in their search. Full Article at Search Engine Watch - Blog
Download of the day Despite the fact that Microsoft recently posted its first declines in revenue and earnings in its history, stockholders today at the company's annual shareholder meeting appeared forgiving. Full Article at Internet.com
If an angry, perspiring Steve Ballmer took over control of my iPhone and said I could only have one third-party app on it, I know which app I'd keep. Full Article at The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW)
No it's not. ActiveX was the source of countless security bugs. COM Automation is new and sexy and contains a TLA. ActiveX was the sexy name for COM, so it was the other way around. Full Article at Slashdot
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer was all smiles at the company's shareholders meeting, as he touted the early success of Windows 7. Full Article at E-Commerce Times
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MUNICH, GERMANY - OCTOBER 07: Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer addresses the media during a news conference on October 7, 2009 in Munich, Germany. Ballmer talked about the upcoming launch of the new Windows 7 computer operating system.
View Photo »MUNICH, GERMANY - OCTOBER 07: Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer looks on during a news conference on October 7, 2009 in Munich, Germany. Ballmer talked about the upcoming launch of the new Windows 7 computer operating system.
View Photo »MUNICH, GERMANY - OCTOBER 07: Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer looks on during a news conference on October 7, 2009 in Munich, Germany. Ballmer talked about the upcoming launch of the new Windows 7 computer operating system.
View Photo »MUNICH, GERMANY - OCTOBER 07: Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer addresses the media during a news conference on October 7, 2009 in Munich, Germany. Ballmer talked about the upcoming launch of the new Windows 7 computer operating system.
View Photo »MUNICH, GERMANY - OCTOBER 07: Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer addresses the media during a news conference on October 7, 2009 in Munich, Germany. Ballmer talked about the upcoming launch of the new Windows 7 computer operating system.
View Photo »MUNICH, GERMANY - OCTOBER 07: Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer addresses the media during a news conference on October 7, 2009 in Munich, Germany. Ballmer talked about the upcoming launch of the new Windows 7 computer operating system.
View Photo »MUNICH, GERMANY - OCTOBER 07: Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer looks on during a news conference on October 7, 2009 in Munich, Germany. Ballmer talked about the upcoming launch of the new Windows 7 computer operating system.
View Photo »MUNICH, GERMANY - OCTOBER 07: Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer is dazzled by spotlights while addressing the media during a news conference on October 7, 2009 in Munich, Germany.
View Photo »MUNICH, GERMANY - OCTOBER 07: Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer looks on during a news conference on October 7, 2009 in Munich, Germany. Ballmer talked about the upcoming launch of the new Windows 7 computer operating system.
View Photo »MUNICH, GERMANY - OCTOBER 07: Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer addresses the media during a news conference on October 7, 2009 in Munich, Germany. Ballmer talked about the upcoming launch of the new Windows 7 computer operating system.
View Photo »MUNICH, GERMANY - OCTOBER 07: Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer looks on during a news conference on October 7, 2009 in Munich, Germany. Ballmer talked about the upcoming launch of the new Windows 7 computer operating system.
View Photo »MUNICH, GERMANY - OCTOBER 07: Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer looks on during a news conference on October 7, 2009 in Munich, Germany. Ballmer talked about the upcoming launch of the new Windows 7 computer operating system.
View Photo »MUNICH, GERMANY - OCTOBER 07: Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer looks on during a news conference on October 7, 2009 in Munich, Germany. Ballmer talked about the upcoming launch of the new Windows 7 computer operating system.
View Photo »MUNICH, GERMANY - OCTOBER 07: Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer looks on during a news conference on October 7, 2009 in Munich, Germany. Ballmer talked about the upcoming launch of the new Windows 7 computer operating system.
View Photo »MUNICH, GERMANY - OCTOBER 07: Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer looks on during a news conference on October 7, 2009 in Munich, Germany. Ballmer talked about the upcoming launch of the new Windows 7 computer operating system.
View Photo »French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde, right, congratulates Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, left, during the inauguration of the French branch office of Microsoft, in Issy-Les-Moulineaux, next to Paris, Tuesday Oct. 6, 2009.
View Photo »Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer speaks during the CBI's annual lecture at the Landmark Hotel in Central London, on October 5, 2009.
View Photo »Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer is pictured during the CBI's annual lecture at the Landmark Hotel in Central London, on October 5, 2009.
View Photo »Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer is pictured during the CBI's annual lecture at the Landmark Hotel in Central London, on October 5, 2009.
View Photo »Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer speaks during the CBI's annual lecture at the Landmark Hotel in Central London, on October 5, 2009.
View Photo »Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer speaks during the CBI's annual lecture at the Landmark Hotel in Central London, on October 5, 2009.
View Photo »Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer speaks during the CBI's annual lecture at the Landmark Hotel in Central London, on October 5, 2009.
View Photo »Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer (L) and Nokia's President and CEO Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo listen to a panel discussion at the GSMA Mobile World Congress in Barcelona in this February 17, 2009 file photo.
View Photo »In this combo made from file photos, Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer, left, and Yahoo Chief Executive Carol Bartz are shown.
View Photo »In this photo released by Yahoo shows Yahoo Chief Executive Carol Bartz, left, and Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, right, smiles at Yahoo headquarters in Sunnyvale, Calif. , Wednesday, July 29, 2009.
View Photo »MUNICH, GERMANY - OCTOBER 07: Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer looks on during a news conference on October 7, 2009 in Munich, Germany. Ballmer talked about the upcoming launch of the new Windows 7 computer operating system.
View Photo »We've already sold more copies of Windows 7 than we ever have
From the point of view of AD these would look like domain controllers, but you could do these magic queries ... I could say who are all the people who report up to Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer; in AD that query would take hours.
When we meet back here in 10 more years, we will look back and say, 'Wow, wasn't technology really primitive in 2009? Computers didn't recognize our speech, they didn't recognize our gestures ... we didn't have instantaneous access to the world's information, we still used pen and paper.' ... Microsoft ...
I think we could all be running Microsoft Linux...I sent an e-mail to Steve Ballmer about this and he said he wasn't interested...Microsoft could very easily dominate the Linux market if they wanted to.
Windows 7 is the simply best PC operating system we have ever built ... It enables people to do more of what they want to do more easily and more quickly, and customers are responding.
The Lost Decade: Why Steve Ballmer is no Bill Gates
We have greater market share to Google Android. Our objective is to have a leading position among these competitors ... We have just recently launched a new generation of Windows phones with new software. We are going to keep making investments, we have a lot of opportunity.
My name is Steve Ballmer, and Windows 7 was definitely not my idea...
Microsoft Corp. has sold twice as many copies of Windows 7 in its first few weeks than any previous version of the operating system
I can't believe Steve Ballmer just stepped on my iphone! Now what? A sidekick? Oh wait, I would still have my head down because it lost all my data.
There's no doubt that fiscal year 2009 was one of the most challenging we've ever faced ... The economic reset had a major impact on companies around the globe, and Microsoft was certainly no exception.
During an interview yesterday, Steve Ballmer was asked about Blu-ray and the Xbox 360. I wanted to clear something up. Steve was referring to Blu-ray accessories for the PC
We’ve already sold twice as many units as any OS in a comparable time frame ... Windows 7 is simply the best PC operating system that we or anyone else has ever built.
But Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer scorns the idea that smart phones could unseat PCs as the technology of choice for on-the-go consumers. 'Let's face it, the Internet was designed for the PC. The Internet is not designed for the iPhone,' Ballmer said. 'That's why they've got 75,000 applications -- they're...
Since launch, were already sold twice as many units of Windows 7 than any other operating system weve ever launched in a comparable time
If Windows 7 doesn't do as well as Microsoft hopes, it wouldn't be fair to lay the blame on Steve Ballmer
With today's netbooks, we sell you XP at a price. When we launch Windows 7, an OEM can put XP on the machine at one price, Windows 7 Starter Edition at a higher price, Windows 7 Home Edition at a higher price, and Windows 7 Professional at a higher price
I've been around long enough to know that empires come and empires go, and I can't tell how long the Google empire is going to last – but I'm pretty convinced that the answer is less than forever. Microsoft still has a big empire, but when Steve Ballmer thinks a new thought, the world doesn't tremble th...
Through this agreement, Microsoft and CHT will work together to deliver a new generation of seamless, connected experiences that bring the power of cloud computing to consumers and to business of all sizes here in Taiwan ... These efforts will include everything from the implementation of an optimized, ...
Microsoft's latest array of ads displaced a short-running, ill-received campaign featuring former Chairman Bill Gates palling around with Jerry Seinfeld. It was Gates' last turn as the public face of Microsoft... Microsoft's new ads seem as sporadic and mercurial as its current figurehead and one of the...
We’ve had a great response here in Japan ... Certainly we’ve seen initial sales be fantastic. The first ten days were bigger than the first ten days of XP or Vista or any other Windows launch that we have done.
What new features await you with the Steve Ballmer edition of Windows 7? For starters, when you open the box, it yells, 'Developers! Developers! Developers!' at 200 decibels. And then it tries to smash any iPhones in the vicinity.
It's possible we would extend that partnership outside of the U.S., but we'll have to wait and see until we actually are able to get approval and consummate our partnership with Yahoo inside the US, and perhaps there'll be news on that some other day
I'm absolutely of the opinion that this is a trustful deal that we're making ... I trust Microsoft. I have contact with Steve Ballmer [Microsoft's CEO]. There can't be a misunderstanding.
Microsoft as a company will invest US$9.5 billion into innovations to drive cloud computing, new screens and new application types ... It's that R&D effort that gives us products like Windows 7 or some of the innovations you see in our search engine, Bing, or the kind of work we're doing in the new rele...
analisis, analisis, analisis, analisis... que no developers, como predica steve ballmer :p
- eeeh 2 hours ago
- Serrio
2 hours ago
- techchuff
3 hours ago
The New Efficiency presented by Steve Ballmer. http://tinyurl.com/yguoc54
- bethmassa 4 hours ago
Anyone else think Steve Ballmer was born balding?
- exoart 6 hours ago