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  • Just About Microsoft Corp.

    Microsoft Corp. has taken the wraps off "Surface," a coffee-table shaped computer that responds to touch and to special bar codes attached to everyday objects.

    The machines, which Microsoft planned to debut Wednesday at a technology conference in Carlsbad, Calif., are set to arrive in November in T-Mobile USA stores and properties owned by Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc. and Harrah's Entertainment Inc.


    Surface is essentially a Windows Vista PC tucked inside a shiny black table base, topped with a 30-inch touchscreen in a clear acrylic frame. Five cameras that can sense nearby objects are mounted beneath the screen. Users can interact with the machine by touching or dragging their fingertips and objects such as paintbrushes across the screen, or by setting real-world items tagged with special bar-code labels on top of it.

    Unlike most touchscreens, Surface can respond to more than one touch at a time. During a demonstration with a reporter last week, Mark Bolger, the Surface Computing group's marketing director, "dipped" his finger in an on-screen paint palette, then dragged it across the screen to draw a smiley face. Then he used all 10 fingers at once to give the face a full head of hair.

    With a price tag between $5,000 and $10,000 per unit, Microsoft isn't immediately aiming for the finger painting set. (The company said it expects prices to drop enough to make consumer versions feasible in three to five years.)

    Some of the first Surface models are planned to help customers pick out new cell phones at T-Mobile stores. When customers plop a phone down on the screen, Surface will read its bar code and display information about the handset. Customers can also select calling plans and ringtones by dragging icons toward the phone.


  • #2
    رایانه میزی مایکروسافت


    مایکروسافت می گوید هدف اصلی اش فروش این رایانه به موسساتی نظیر هتل ها، کازینوها، فروشنده های تلفن و رستوران هاست.
    شرکت مایکروسافت رایانه تازه ای به نام "سورفیس" Surface با صفحه نمایشگر "لمس پذیر" (touch-sensitive) عرضه کرده که شبیه میز طراحی شده است.
    این رایانه به گونه ای طراحی شده که نیازی به موش و صفحه کلید معمول ندارد و کاربران می توانند به جای آن از انگشتان دست خود برای فرمان دادن به آن استفاده کنند.

    رایانه میزی "سورفیس" همچنین طوری ساخته شده تا بتواند با گوشی های تلفن همراه که رویش گذاشته می شوند ارتباط برقرار کند.

    مایکروسافت می گوید هدف اصلی اش فروش این رایانه به موسساتی نظیر هتل ها، کازینوها، فروشنده های تلفن و رستوران هاست.

    این دستگاه از جمله محصولاتی است که ادعا می شود مجهز به فن آوری "چند لمسی" (multi-touch) است. این فن آوری رایانه ها را قادر می سازد برای اجرای دستورات، از تماس همزمان چند انگشت به جای موش و صفحه کلید فرمان بگیرند.

    یکی از نمونه های پر سر و صدای چنین ابزارهایی آی فون iPhone شرکت اپل است که گفته می شود ماه ژوئن به بازار می آید.

    شرکت هیولت پکارد Hewlett-Packard نیز در زمینه گسترش فن آوری چند لمسی فعال است و در این زمینه انجام تحقیقات علمی را نیز راهبری می کند.

    "سورفیس" با صفحه ۷۶ سانتیمتری اش (۳۰ اینچ) قرار است بین ۵ تا ۱۰ هزار دلار فروخته شود.

    با این حال، مایکروسافت گفته است قصد دارد در چند سال آینده نسخه های ارزان تر این محصول را برای اسفاده در منازل عرضه کند.

    مایکروسافت گفته است که این رده محصولات بازاری چند میلیارد دلاری خواهند بود و استفاده از آنها در آینده از روی میزها و پیشخوان فروشگاه ها به داخل خانه ها گسترش می یابد.

    این شرکت می گوید گروه کوچکی از افراد قادر خواهند بود همزمان از رایانه "سورفیس" استفاده کنند.

    در ماه های اخیر فروش محصولات این شرکت بزرگ نرم افزار سازی فراز و نشیب هایی داشته است. در حالی که فروش دستگاه های بازی ایکس باکس (Xbox) موفقیت آمیز بوده، دستگاه پخش کننده موسیقی موسوم به زیون (Zune) همچنان با فاصله زیادی از آی پاد شرکت اپل عقب مانده است.


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    • #3
      TOKYO (AFP) - A senior Microsoft Corp. executive expressed optimism Thursday about the software giant's takeover bid for Internet firm Yahoo, saying the two companies' top managers were in close discussions.

      "We continue to have a very close dialogue with Yahoo's shareholders (and) Yahoo's management," Microsoft senior vice president Jean-Philippe Courtois said.

      "We simply hope for what we think is a very nice merger in terms of economies of scale, research and development, innovation, data centers...(and) to play a major role in the world," he told AFP after a press conference here.

      Yahoo spurned Microsoft's 44.6-billion-dollar bid for the veteran Internet firm on February 11. Courtois declined to comment on prospects of a hostile offer.

      Microsoft is currently offering a combination cash and stock deal initially valued at 31 dollars per share but which fluctuates with the price of Microsoft shares.

      Yahoo's board is said to believe the company is worth at least 40 dollars per share.

      Courtois, who heads Microsoft's international division, also said his firm was taking steps to become more open after EU regulators on Wednesday fined the software giant a record 899 million euros for defying a 2004 anti-trust ruling.

      "This fine is about the past," he said.

      The European Commission fined Microsoft 497 million euros in March 2004 and ordered the company to open some key software to rivals so they could make compatible products.

      In July 2006, the commission fined the company a further 280 million euros after determining that it was not respecting its original ruling.

      The latest penalty, the sum of daily fines running from June 21, 2006 to October 21, 2007, was imposed because Microsoft failed to charge rivals reasonable prices for access to key information about its work-group or back-office servers in contravention of the 2004 ruling.

      Microsoft on Thursday announced that the head of its Japanese subsidiary, Darren Huston, was stepping down. He will be replaced on April 1 by the current chief operating officer, Yasuyuki Higuchi.

      Huston is expected to be appointed as vice president of a new Microsoft division, Consumer & Online International Group.

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      • #4
        Microsoft showed off a new operating system on Tuesday, but don't get too excited.

        Think of Singularity as "a concept-car OS," said Rick Rashid, general director of Microsoft Research. Microsoft is making the prototype OS available free to the academic and research communities in the hope that they'll use it to develop new kinds of computer architectures.

        It's difficult for the academic community to experiment with computer architectures, he said. Singularity is designed to make it easier for researchers to test how operating systems and applications interact with each other, he said.

        "It's a new system built from the ground up, with the specific goal of being more reliable," Rashid said. Microsoft hopes that Singularity will help improve software reliability and boost research in programming languages and tools.

        Singularity is available on Microsoft's CodePlex Web site. It was unveiled on Tuesday at TechFest, Microsoft's annual showcase of projects from its research division.

        Rashid also showed off BEE3, a hardware project that Microsoft designed with researchers at the University of California, Berkeley to let researchers experiment with computer architectures. "The idea behind it is to build a computer system that is configurable," Rashid said. "You can program this computer to be another computer or do another kind of architecture or experiment with new kinds of algorithms," he said.

        Rashid and his colleagues are demonstrating technologies that Microsoft's research group is working on. Some of the projects ultimately contribute to Microsoft products but others, like vaccine design and quantum computing, often seem irrelevant to the software giant's core business.

        Still, Rashid said that the best return on any investment that Microsoft makes consistently comes from its investment in Microsoft Research. The group generates about a quarter of the company's patents, he said.

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