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|  | Explore Your PC Friday, May 16, 2008
Most PC users are not aware of their PC’s hardware components. In order for people to become acquainted with their PCs, Fiona has just written a new guide named “What’s in Your PC?”. With the help of this article you’ll discover what kind of hardware you have in your system. Once you have done this, you'll have the information at hand for upgrades, technical support, driver updates and checking that your system meets the minimum specifications for adding peripherals, installing software or purchasing games. Click the following link to explore your PC. | |
| Gates Talks Up Windows 7 Friday, May 16, 2008
Another version of Microsoft Windows is expected to be released by 2010 as the successor of Windows Vista. The upcoming Windows is codenamed “Windows7”. Formerly it was named Blackcomb and Vienna. According to a Microsoft representative “Microsoft is scoping Windows 7 development to a three-year time frame, and then the specific release date will ultimately be determined by meeting the quality bar.“ Even though the time frame is set for three years, it may take longer if it’s buggy and doesn’t hit the “quality bar”. In a press release issued in Tokyo, Japan, Bill Gates commented on Microsoft’s upcoming Windows7: “We're hard at work, I would say, on the next version, which we call Windows 7. I'm very excited about the work being done there. The ability to be lower power, take less memory, be more efficient, and have lots more connections up to the mobile phone, so those scenarios connect up well to make it a great platform for the best gaming that can be done, to connect up to the thing being done out on the Internet, so that, for example, if you have two personal computers, that your files automatically are synchronized between them, and so you don't have a lot of work to move that data back and forth.
Obviously we'd all love it if people had more PCs per average, and so making that simple is important. Also the effort to upgrade, I think that's an area we got a lot of feedback in Vista, that we need to invest in that, and we're going to make that very, very simple for people. So Vista is doing well, and we're hard at work putting even more investment now in the version that comes after that.” Like Windows Vista, Windows7 will also be available in consumer and business versions, and in 32-bit as well as in 64-bit versions. Windows lovers like me, are desperately waiting for “Windows7” to be released soon and hope that the upcoming version of Windows will fix all the current issues faced by Vista users at present. I hope and Windows7 will provide more security features, less memory requirements and lower power consumption with greater stability,.Source: PCMech. | |
| Microsoft’s WorldWide Telescope – Google Earth & Sky Eat Your Heart Out! Thursday, May 15, 2008
The WorldWide Telescope (WWT) is a computer program developed by Microsoft that allows you to explore outer space. WWT enables your computer to function as a virtual telescope. The WorldWide Telescope was announced at the Technology Entertainment Design (TED) conference in Monterey, California in February 2008. The WorldWide Telescope was created with Microsoft’s Visual Experience Engine technology that enables you to pan and zoom around the night sky, planets and various environments. Images are taken from the Hubble Space Telescope – one of the largest space telescopes, which was carried into earth’s orbit by space shuttle in April 1990. WWT blends terabytes of images, information, and stories from multiple sources over the Internet. The WorldWide Telescope has four objects that you can explore: Sky, Earth, Planets and Panoramas.: Sky Mode: This is WorldWide Telescope’s main feature. It allows you to view high quality outer space images from the Hubble Space Telescope and ten Earth bound telescopes. You can see the same images that scientists use for their research. Earth Mode: You can switch to this mode for viewing the Earth, using Google Earth, NASA World Wind etc. Planets Mode: This mode allows you to explore three planets, namely Mars, Jupiter and the Moon. Panoramas Mode: You can use this mode to explore panoramas and you can download images and save them to your desktop. The system specifications are pretty hefty and include: Operating System: Microsoft Windows XP SP2, Windows Vista (recommended).
Processor: Intel Core 2 Duo CPU with 2GHz or faster.
RAM: 1GB of RAM, 2GB is recommended.
Graphics: 3D accelerated card with 128MB of RAM; for higher performance, discrete graphics card with dedicated 256-MB VRAM is recommended.
HDD space: 1GB of available HDD space. 10GB is recommended for off-line features and higher browsing experience.
Display: XGA (1024 x 768) or higher resolution monitor.
DirectX and .NET Framework: Microsoft DirectX version 9.0c and .NET Framework 2.0.
Internet access: 56Kbps or higher. Uncharacteristic for Microsoft, this gem of a Sunday afternoon time-killer is a free download! Click here to visit the page from where you can download the WorldWide Telescope and start exploring the universe. | |
| | | Game Testing 2GB versus 4GB of Memory on Vista 64-bit Tuesday, May 13, 2008
Legit Reviews have been very busy testing 9 games in Windows Vista 64bit with 2GB RAM and 4GB to see what difference the extra RAM makes to framerates. Is it worth the extra cash? “Inspired by the Corsair Performance Analysis of 4GB versus 2GB of memory we figured it would be fun to see for ourselves how gaming performance is impacted by adding more system memory. We got our hands on a 2GB and a 4GB set of Corsair DOMINATOR PC2-9136C5 memory modules and set off to see what happens to the average frame rate in nine games at 1920x1200. Our average frame rate increase of 1.6% in nine games was slightly higher than the 1.1% shown by Corsair in the three games they tested, but our test system was a little newer and we were running Vista SP1. Something else that we noted while running the benchmarks is that game loading times were also significantly enhanced by installing 4GB of system memory. While load times was not the focus of this article we noted that Crysis v1.21 loaded 54.1% faster (14.28s versus 22.00s) on the initial level load. After the level was loaded and then restarted (as if one died and started over) the load times were within a hundredth of a second..." | |
| | An Overview of Today's Graphics Cards Monday, May 12, 2008
Big PC tech review sites get a lot of samples and every once in a while they paste all their test results together to paint a picture of where things stand. Tech Report has used their wealth of tests and product samples to being you a definitive overview of the video card industry as it stands today. “Thanks to our latest round of graphics card reviews, which culminated with the massive GeForce 9 series multi-GPU extravaganza last month, we've ended up with enough benchmark data to paint a fairly complete picture of today's mid- to high-end GPU market. Armed with this information, we've taken another crack at quantifying value, this time by looking at what sort of GPU power you get for your dollar. The results are interesting, if nothing else. Read on to see what we found.”
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| Virus Logic |  |
|  | Location: Blogs Fiona's Ramblings |
 | | Posted by: fiona | 5/7/2008 6:33 AM | A friend of mine was using USB flash drives to cart her homework to and from college. One day there was a problem. She wasn’t sure what was going on but she did the smart thing and stopped what she was doing to run her virus protection software, in her case, AVG. When it completed the scan she found that sure enough, it had found something – delete, quarantine or ignore it asked? She did what would seem to be the most logical thing to do – she chose delete. Problem is that it was a worm virus that attached itself to a dll file for Windows Explorer, so by choosing delete, she could no longer navigate through her files. Opening My Computer and then double clicking on one of her hard drives now just comes up with an error – how would you like to open this file? Windows will have to be reinstalled. This has got me thinking – how was she to know? Of course deleting a virus is a good idea – right? Was it because the free AVG virus anti-software she was using was not advanced enough to tell her it was part of a critical file? Or at times, is there just no way to beat a clever virus? | | | Permalink | Trackback |
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