May 16, 2011

Google launches Chrome OS, says Windows is 'torturing users'

Google co-founder Sergey Brin said Windows and other traditional PC operating systems are "torturing users" at Google's Chrome OS launch event Wednesday, where the company claimed 75% of business users can be converted from Windows to Chrome OS right away.






Best Microsoft MCTS Training – Microsoft MCITP Training at Certkingdom.com



Google is partnering with Samsung and Acer to ship laptops based on Google's browser-turned-operating-system on June 15, it was announced at the Google I/O conference. In a briefing with reporters afterward, Brin was asked how many Google employees still use Windows. As a rough guess, he said it's about 20%. The rest must use Macs or Linux. But by next year, Brin hopes the vast majority of Googlers will be doing their work on Chrome OS.

"I don't think there is anything inherently wrong with Windows," Brin said. "Windows 7 has some great security features."

But Chrome OS, by putting most of a user's applications and data on the Web with some offline capabilities, presents a "stateless" model that Brin believes will eliminate complexity for users and IT departments by un-tethering people from machines that are difficult to set up and manage.

"With Microsoft, and other operating system vendors, I think the complexity of managing your computer is really torturing users," Brin said. "It's torturing everyone in this room. It's a flawed model fundamentally. Chromebooks are a new model that doesn't put the burden of managing the computer on yourself."

Google executives said they surveyed 400 companies and found that with a combination of Web applications, offline access to Google Docs and other services, and applications delivered through virtualization software, businesses could move 75% of their users onto Chrome OS devices.

Microsoft (and even Apple) could probably come up with a survey showing exactly the opposite. But Google does have an interesting plan to market Chrome OS devices, including partnerships with VMware and Citrix to deliver remote access to enterprise applications.

Chrome OS is basically nothing more than the Chrome browser on top of a stripped-down version of Linux, with no need to install antivirus software because of Chrome's sandboxing security, and cloud-based backups to restore data on the off chance you get a virus. All user data is encrypted by default.

While the devices are primarily designed to surf the Web, the laptops will have a file system and some offline access to key productivity applications.

CHROME OS: 10 things you can (and can't) do with the Google PC

Devices from Samsung and Acer will be sold at Best Buy and Amazon.com for between $350 and $500, but businesses can get the devices in a package for $28 per user per month, which includes support and hardware replacements. A similar deal for $20 per user per month is available to schools.

Samsung will offer a $429 version with a 12.1-inch screen and Wi-Fi, and Verizon will ship a 3G version for $499. An Acer device with an 11.6-inch screen will start at $349.

May 15, 2011

Windows 8 to kill off Adobe Reader?

So long, farewell to Acrobat
Windows 8 is set to include its own native PDF reader, signalling the end of forced Adobe Reader integration.





Best Microsoft MCTS Training – Microsoft MCITP Training at Certkingdom.com



A thousand weary PDF perusers are no doubt crying tears of happiness at the mere thought of never again having to update their PDF reader eighty-four times a day.

Hopefully the proprietary reader will also see an end to the almost-mandatory desktop shortcut that Adobe Reader drops on your desktop every time you update - but then again, this is Microsoft so we wouldn't bet on it.

Modernity

The new Microsoft PDF reader is known as 'Modern Reader', and uses the new AppX application package type, which is very similar to that of Windows Phone 7 and is likely to be used in Windows Phone 8 software too.

This should make emailing and opening PDF files on your phone and computer a much smoother experience, we'd hope, and could make developing cross-device applications much easier for devs.

The screenshots of the Modern Reader UI are pretty standard, featuring a very Windows Phone 7-esque look; it renders PDFs in full fidelity, offers zoom, allows for side-by-side page viewing and has a bookmark side-bar for skipping through chapters.

May 14, 2011

Windows Event Viewer tips and tricks

The Event Viewer doesn't look like a very exciting Windows componment. If your PC is unstable you might use it to check for error messages, but otherwise, well, that's about all. Or is it?

Look a little closer and you'll discover that the tool has all kinds of useful additional capabilities. It can sometimes be hard to find important events using the default settings, but creating a custom view will help you zoom in quickly on the data that really matters, which can be an essential troubleshooting aid.





Best Microsoft MCTS Training – Microsoft MCITP Training at Certkingdom.com




If you have a network, then you can set up one copy of the Event Viewer to collect events from several PCs, and manage them all centrally.

One excellent feature gives you the ability to run a particular program or task when a given event occurs. If a program crashes you could restart it, for example. If you're short on hard drive space, you could delete your temporary files – whatever you like.

Then there are the secret Event Logs that you may not even know exist, the leftover logs that need to be deleted, the hidden management features and a whole lot more.

Please note, while we're focusing on the Windows 7 Event Viewer here, much of what we're saying also applies to Vista and even XP. Whichever version of Windows you're using, the Event Viewer deserves a much closer look.

The basics

Event viewer

The prime purpose of Event Viewer is to act as a log for various applications and Windows components. Many of these issues don't have an interface, or don't report all their problems and status issues via alert messages, so if you want to find out what's really going on with your PC then it's essential to take a look at the Event Viewer on a regular basis.

You can access the viewer via the Control Panel (go to 'System and security | Administrative tools | View event logs' if you're using Windows 7), but we find it easier to launch the tool directly: click 'Start', type eventvwr.msc, click the 'Event Viewer' link and it will pop up in a second or two.

If you just want to find out more about your PC, then you can expand the 'Windows Logs' section of the tree and browse the Application, Security, Setup and System logs for any interesting looking events.

These logs are presented in reverse chronological order, so the most recent events are at the top and as you scroll down you'll move back in time.

What will you see here? It depends entirely on the setup of your system, but we checked a test PC and came up with many interesting entries. There were detailed error messages for application and system crashes, for instance. If you come home and someone tells you the PC crashed an hour ago, but they can't remember the error message, the Event Log may tell you more.

We found performance-related information, including an Outlook message that said its launch was delayed because of a particular add-on. There were also warnings about four boot drivers that had failed to load. That's information we wouldn't have found anywhere else, and could explain all kinds of odd system behaviour.

Other issues

There were also events relating to the PC startup and shutdown process, installed programs, hardware problem, and many other issues. You wouldn't want to browse the Event Viewer for fun, but if you're having any kind of computer issues then it's wise to give it a closer look – you just might find the clues you need to uncover their real cause.

The problem with scrolling through the main Windows logs is that there are only a few interesting events, and they're masked by a great deal of irrelevant junk. Fortunately the Event Viewer provides several alternatives that will help you zoom in on the data that matters.

Custom view

The Windows 7 Event Viewer, for instance, opens with a useful 'Summary of Administrative Events'. Particularly important event types, such as 'Critical', 'Error' and 'Warning', are listed right at the top and you can expand these to find out more.

Trying this on our test system revealed seven disk errors in the past week. Double-clicking the entry revealed the details, and it turned out one of our drives was experiencing controller errors. Could the drive be about to fail? We're not sure, but at least the Event Viewer has given us a warning so we can back it up.

Another possible option is to expand the 'Applications and Services Logs' section of the viewer. This area contains logs dedicated to applications and areas of your system, such as hardware events, Internet Explorer and Media Center.

Perhaps the most important log here is a little buried, though. Browse to 'Applications and services logs | Microsoft | Windows | Diagnostics-Performance | Operational' and you'll find information about your PC's boot and shutdown processes. Again, everyone will see different things, but when we checked this log on our PC we found a wealth of essential data.

There were events warning us that the Bonjour Service, Function Discovery Resource Publication Service and Orbit Downloader were all causing delays in the system shutdown process. Other events pointed fingers at particular programs for delaying our PCs boot, too – if we were to remove anything non-essential, our system would speed up.

There were general warning events too, such as 'Video memory resources are over-utilised and there is thrashing happening as a result'. If your PC seems slow, or unstable, then this could be a clue. Simply closing some windows could make all the difference, as might updating the video drivers.

As usual, these logs are packed with clues to all sorts of problems, many of which you may not even realise you have. Take a look – it's surprising what you can learn.

Subscriptions

Subscriptions

The Event Viewer isn't only able to reveal issues with your own PC. It can also collect information on Vista or Windows 7 systems all across your network, so you can troubleshoot many problems from the comfort of your own desktop.

To set this up you must prepare the remote computers to forward events. First launch an elevated command prompt on each of these (do this by right-clicking the link 'cmd.exe' and selecting 'Run as administrator'), then enter the command winrm quickconfig.

Next, go to the central PC where you'll be collecting these events, launch another elevated command prompt and enter the command wecutil qc.

You can then launch the Event Viewer on the collecting computer, click 'Subscriptions | Create subscription' and tell the system exactly which events you'd like to collect from which computers. These will then appear in the log you specify, and you'll be able to view and filter them just as you can events on your own computer. Well, that's the basic principle at least.

In practice, there are usually some complications. You might have to specifically allow the Remove Event Log Management process to connect through your firewall, for instance, and you'll need to add an account with administrator privileges to the Event Log Readers group on each of the remote PCs. Check the 'Event viewer help' file under 'Manage subscriptions' for more details.

Run a task

Alert

So far we've only used Event Viewer in a passive way, allowing it to record what various apps are doing, but the best part of the tool is that it can also be active and dynamic, responding to events with the specific action that you choose.

Suppose one of your favourite apps has its own event log, for instance. It might only add one event a week, but that event might be very important and you may want to know about it right away. Is this a problem? Not at all. In a few clicks you can be alerted whenever a new event appears.

To make this happen, launch Event Viewer, expand the 'Applications and services logs' section of the tree, right-click your log of choice and select 'Attach a task to this log'. Click 'Next' twice, choose the 'Display a message' option, and click 'Next' again. Enter a title for your message, then the message itself, and click 'Next'. Click 'Finish' and that's it – Windows will now display a pop-up alert with your selected message whenever an event is placed in this particular log.

You can also attach a task to a specific event. If you see something that might be really important, like a message that a hard drive is returning controller errors, then right-click it, select 'Attach a task to this event' and the wizard will appear. With a few clicks, you can ensure that you're informed directly about important events, rather than just hoping you'll catch them later.

Perhaps most usefully, the Event Viewer can also launch a task in response to a particular event. If your system is regularly displaying some low-level drive error, for example, you could automatically launch Windows chkdsk or some other drive error checker to confirm that all is well.

If you're running short of hard drive space and related events are appearing, you could have these launch something like CCleaner to quickly free up a little space.

The principle is the same: right-click an event and select 'Attach a task to this event' to launch the Create Basic Task Wizard. This time, when you get to the 'Action' point, select 'Start a program'. Click 'Next', choose your program or script and any optional command line arguments, then click 'Next', finish the wizard and your configuration is complete.

Event details

Windows will now respond automatically to events as they occur, which could mean your PC problems are fixed before you realise they've occurred.
Bookmark and Share