Currently:    from Twitter.
# Thursday, April 28, 2005

Scoble posted his new video interview with Jim Allchin, Group VP of Platforms (tip: he runs Windows and reports to Steve Ballmer). Jim has been running Longhorn on his primary work machine for three months now and I can attest to it- I was in a review w/him as it was installing in his office next-door.

Jim talks about Longhorn, about his days as a professional musician (he's an accomplished guitar player), scenarios that will be enabled with Longhorn, what's worked and what hasn't in the past.

The video is conversational and raw- two guys and a handheld-camera. He's also very frank about where we are in the development process. The goal at WinHEC wasn't to thrill- it was about hardware fundamentals- drivers and connectivity models to enable the "thrilling" features that are being being built on-top.

posted on Thursday, April 28, 2005 5:40:07 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback

At WinHEC this year, Senior VP of Windows Client Will Poole showed a new video for the Next-Generation Windows PC Design Competition.  It's a departure from the original but hints at the direction we expect to see software and hardware go in the Longhorn timeframe. It's a departure from your regular stuff coming out of MSFT.I hope you enjoy. ;)

Run time 1:12 min
Watch it now (300 Kbps, streaming)

Download it in WMV HD
360 (750 KB)
720 (8 MB)
1080 (10 MB)

posted on Thursday, April 28, 2005 5:25:53 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Monday, April 25, 2005

They're all a part of the judging panel for the Next-Gen Windows OS PC Design Competition.

You can find more details at www.startsomethingpc.com. The secrecy has been lifted and now I can talk about it.  At ~2pm PST we also posted new links to the trailer shown at WinHEC.

RSS feed here with more details I wrote on what we're doing. Yet another team is hopping on the Cluetrain

posted on Monday, April 25, 2005 3:52:04 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback
# Sunday, April 24, 2005

A long week but a productive one at that. Here's a quick catchup on items:

- Tomorrow is the official launch of 64-bit Windows XP Professional for AMD and Intel 64-bit processors. Let's see, 16-terabyte limit for memory vs. 4GB and system cache jumps from 1GB to 1TB.  Thomas, maybe you can keep your entire music library in memory :). There are also hardware/software level improvements for security and anti-virus purposes. While the focus right now is on business applications, now is the time to start ensuring your device manufacturers are working on 64-bit drivers. If you don't know after next week- email them and ask is my suggestion.

- Startsomethingpc.com - I'm hearing about lots of downloads of the teaser video and pickups of the RSS feed. No, it's not an ad campaign, yes it is affiliated in concept. Let's just say it's a long-term conversation. More tomorrow.

- New York Times has a very favorable article on Media Center PCs in the "Circuits" section this week, just posted to C|Net's News.com. One thing they don't quite explain is that Entertainment PC's are for the traditional desktop/den as well as expanding out into the living room.

- I hosted a MS geek dinner with Mick Stanic of The Podcast Network, on Thursday night. It was my first time meeting Mick in person and I was impressed. He's talented, passionate, bright and off to a great start with TPN. Besides, he loves Media Center ;).

- Business Week gets on the cluetrain with their cover story on Blogging, noting, "Look past the yakkers, hobbyists, and political mobs. Your customers and rivals are figuring blogs out. Our advice: Catch up...or catch you later"

- Speaking of Podcasting, SciFi Channel launched another RSS feed and Podcast for news. Too bad they didn't bother to validate the feed.

- Seems everyone has trouble with cables and cabling.  I came across these interesting designs for managing cables at JR's Cool Hunting. Why doesn't anyone consider this in PC design?

- In his posting, "One Step Forward, Two Back with Apple iTunes", Dan Gillmor says that, "Apple, beholden to the copyright cartel, reserves the right to screw over its customers whenever it pleases. You can blame America's insane copyright laws for this, not just Apple's way of doing things."  In reviewing the list- I'm actually going to come to Apple's defense on this point. The technology provider must respect the rights of the Intellectual Property holder under the law and champion the rights of the consumer. It's a balancing act and until consumers rise up en-masse, I don't see this changing.

- I recently upgraded from a set of Shure E2c sound isolating earphones to the E3c and I'm convinced these are the best earphones I've ever used. I even mow the lawn in near silence listening to playlists downloaded from Napster.

- I saw the new Xbox run through some paces earlier this week. Holy cow. John Porcaro (now thankfully healed from his burns) talks about the invitations he sent out for the E3 Press Briefing.

- IE7 Beta details released - I spent a good part of Wednesday meeting with members of the IE7 dev team and got a good look at Beta 1.  All I can say is as a former Web developer, I saw first-hand the fixes that demonstrate they're listening as Chris talks about here and then some.  IE7 Beta 1 is this Summer and I'm already seeing the benefits that make me want to run the Alpha now.

- Microsoft's WinHEC (Windows Hardware Engineering Conference) is next week.  I'll be there ;)

posted on Sunday, April 24, 2005 6:58:33 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback
# Saturday, April 16, 2005

Outlook_MCE_01.jpgStopping over at TGB, I discovered Dr. S.A. Miedema's new My Outlook Client for Windows Media Center Beta.  Overall I was very impressed.  Now if my wife wants to know when I have time during the week to run an errand etc, I can show her myself.  

This is beta software and I cannot confirm how exactly he's accessing the Outlook data.  The UI is overall very good though responsiveness lacked in a few areas.

Outlook_MCE_02.jpgTons of screenshots and the download here. He certainly seems to have taken a holistic approach to design for 10', even including a triple-tap and full on-screen keyboard.  I also noticed I can access multiple Outlook accounts so if you have your Hotmail or POP3 accounts also aggregated you can check them there as well.

Miedema had a large suite of MCE add-ons including Weather and more.  Now if someone would just build an MCE-based Seattle traffic monitor and Skype client I'd be very happy.

posted on Saturday, April 16, 2005 5:02:09 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [8] Trackback

I've known Thomas Hawk for about a year or so now, having met only once in person at our co-hosted Geek Dinner. What's impressed me most about Thomas is his fresh perspective that is unfettered by allegiances to any particular technology or brand as a high-end enthusiast.  He's a family man, works in the financial industry and is smart and pointed about his technology feedback. You can see this yourself in his criticisms regarding HD across the DVR space, and admittedly regarding a few products I've worked on :). 

I got a mail from Thomas yesterday:

You guys are really working on great technology.  Can’t wait to blog about it...

Pinged the folks in PR. No embargo on the bloggers - let's start the conversation, get the feedback. Thomas rolls up his sleeves on what he saw here. My favorite excerpt:

One of the most impressive aspects about Longhorn is the speed with which it catalogs, organizes and searches your PC. In addition to great new views (you can see a physical representation of every file on your PC that can be magnified as you move the scroll wheel of your mouse), the speed at which Longhorn renders the views was spectacular. Best of all was Jim’s reaction when I expressed my delight at how quickly views were rendered. Jim reacted strongly and said that the speed that we were seeing was unacceptable and that over the course of the next year the system will get even faster.

Sometimes for those of us close to building the technology, we're so familiar with the product that we start to take things for granted, both big and little- since we're running our products for weeks or months in builds before others get to really see it. It's great that the hard-working teams are getting recognition for their hard work.  Stay tuned... lots more to do.

posted on Saturday, April 16, 2005 1:19:32 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

Dell XPS Gen 5Dell starts shipping the XPS Gen 5 with a P4 EE Dual-Core processor next week. PC Magazine has a full review and notes under the "Pros", "Too many to list, but here are a couple--dual core processors and dual-TV tuners".  PC Magazine does on to say,

"With the addition of Microsoft Windows XP Media Center 2005, the XPS Gen 5 is more than just a gaming system, it's Dell's top-of-the-line gaming/multimedia machine and our latest Editors' Choice." 5 out of 5- Excellent

At $4G's, you're going to pay for it, but this system definitely sets a new bar in the boutique area. Interesting that PCMag notes that it is available direct with monitor using Dell e-value code 6V411-XPS5PC.  I haven't seen that level of detail before but it's welcomed. 

posted on Saturday, April 16, 2005 9:01:46 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Friday, April 15, 2005

Looks like a new conversation is about to start... startsomethingpc.com has a video trailer and an RSS feed (with video enclosure) up on it.  More details to come on April 25th.

 

posted on Friday, April 15, 2005 10:13:32 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

Today is the day... the first day I can start talking about what I've been working on for the past months. LONGHORN, the next-generation Windows OS.

When I was first asked to join the team, I had read reports that the de-coupling of WinFS, Avalon, and Indigo made this release "XPSP3".  I was skeptical, and I did some digging.  I delved into primary and secondary research. I read the specs, I talked to PM's and Devs. And I came away fired up.

You know why?  Because many got it wrong. WinFS is important, metadata is important, but the overwhelming majority benefits for how end-users actually want to find, view, and organize their documents, media, and assorted files is going to be delivered.

Today, you'll start hearing more details about Longhorn. C|Net, PC Magazine, and CRN are all running stories so you can go there for the mainstream skinny.  I'm not going to re-hash what they're saying, but here's a few points of my own:

1.  There will be a LH build given out at WinHEC.  This will not be Beta 1. This is a driver and hardware developer release to get the industry building hardware solutions for Longhorn.  Beta 1 will be this summer.

2.  I used to get really bummed by the "grouping" feature in Windows XP - r-mouse in My Documents and choose "Arrange Icons By|Show in Groups".  Some thought it was fantastic but for me it wasn't very compelling when I have family members who still can't find the files they've just downloaded.  The ability to visualize and organize your information in Longhorn kicks ass.  It's FAST already and going to get even better.  It goes beyond physical location of files. WinFS wasn't required to deliver this and that's where I think many stumbled in their perceptions.

3. Don't expect to see a lot of updates to or new consumer-focused features right now. Right now it's about fundamentals- getting hardware to work great, tapping into features that are in most PCs lying dormant for 90%+ of your time, addressing how people view and organize their information. They'll be plenty of cool new wizardry to come.

So... I've added a new category on my blog for "Longhorn" and an RSS feed for just that topic.  As I can talk more and provide my own perspective on things that are happening, I will do it as soon as I can.

In the meantime, you can send me questions but understand I won't be able to respond.  I will start keeping tally of the questions and answer as many as I can, when I can without executing a career-limiting maneuver. :)

posted on Friday, April 15, 2005 6:44:19 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [7] Trackback

The most often-asked question I get is, "What TV tuner should I select for my MCE PC?" (ok, by those in the US at least).  Tech Report compares the ATI TV Wonder Elite, eVGA NVTV (based on Nvidia's tuner design), and Hauppauge PVR-150MCE.  This is an article definitely worth reading.  I think the video quality comparisons are a bit too subjective, but it's a good comparision of any number of performance and quality gates in the technical sense.

 

posted on Friday, April 15, 2005 5:51:34 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback

Thomas Hawk writes:

Dell Inspiron 9300 review by PC Magazine PC Magazine is out with a review of the new Dell Inspiron 9300, their first Media Center laptop. They rate it "Very Good" and as the bottom line write, "The Dell Inspiron 9300 is the company's first Media Center Edition notebook, and it's a fine effort.

Hop on over to  Thomas' site for more details

posted on Friday, April 15, 2005 5:41:58 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

According to Slashdot:

In a major hiring coup, the MSN Search blog announced that Yahoo's head of Research and Development, Dr.Gary William Flake has now joined MSN. According to Oshoma Momoh, General Manager, MSN Search, Dr.Flake will be 'responsible for bridging the innovation happening between Microsoft Research and MSN and for setting the technology vision and future direction of the MSN portal, web search, desktop search and monetization engine.' Dr.Flake is also the first person to be directly hired as a Microsoft Distinguished Engineer, an elite group that has Dave Cutler and Anders Hejlsberg among other luminaries"

I'm getting that old feeling again.  Like that first early morning when you can smell Spring in the air. Talk to Dean over on IE and you'll see how fired up he is. He loves new ideas - I gave him one and the team is investigating if they can make it happen (more on that later).  MSN Messenger 7 has cool new features.  MS Office Communicator is set to change the way I work and make me more productive. I went to multimon a few months ago, haven't had a single glitch and I can never go back too.

And the more I talk to folks on the Longhorn team, the old excitement about shipping great software is back.  I can't talk about that...yet. :)

posted on Friday, April 15, 2005 5:18:11 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Thursday, April 14, 2005

Barb Bowman details what you need to do to get your MCE Recorded TV onto an Playstation Portable (PSP) in 4 steps. 

 

posted on Thursday, April 14, 2005 5:48:18 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Tuesday, April 12, 2005

Part of the challenge with mainstream adoption of WMA Pro is the cabling required to install. 3 cables from your sound card into 6+ RCA jacks on your receiver if you support it.

Why can't you just plug in a single optical cable like you can for Dolby Digital? Now you can starting at ~$179.00US. Pioneer has started shipping their new line of receivers with WMA Pro support and all sorts of goodies. And you get a whole bunch of formats to boot.

What is WMA Pro? WMA Pro offers full 5.1-7.1 audio that's was the world's first for the Web, and is also distributed with HD movies on WMV HD discs, movies, trailers etc at a fraction the size of other surround sound audio formats.

If anyone gets one, I'd love to hear your feedback.

posted on Tuesday, April 12, 2005 6:10:55 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback