27 JanWindows 8 adds sensor support, will be the PC to turn, turn, turn

Windows 8

Microsoft is slowly turning its stalwart desktop OS into a mobile powerhouse. The company just keeps rolling out improvements and features for Windows 8 aimed at really making upcoming tablets competitive with their Android and iOS-based market mates. After cramming mobile broadband tools into the tile-happy OS, now Redmond is turning its attention towards sensors. The next version of Windows will offer integrated support for gyroscopes, accelerometers, magnetometers and ambient light sensors among other things. Devs will even be able to use multiple sensors in conjunction for more accurate interaction. Check out the video after the break for more details.

Continue reading Windows 8 adds sensor support, will be the PC to turn, turn, turn

Windows 8 adds sensor support, will be the PC to turn, turn, turn originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 25 Jan 2012 12:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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19 JanWiFi adapter stopped functioning in new Windows installation

Hi,

Could anyone help with this problem, please? I have just changed my operating system from 32-bit Windows XP Pro SP3 to 64-bit Windows 7 Professional. Since doing this my WiFi adapter has ceased to function.

It is an Edimax EW-7711In PCI card and I have downloaded new drivers which the Edimax web site says will drive the card in 64-bit Windows. They won’t. As the chipset is made by Ralink, I have also downloaded files from their web site for the Ralink3060 chip which don’t work either.

The machine is a dual boot machine with Ubuntu as the other operating system and when I boot into Ubuntu I am able to use the card, which shows that it is not damaged and ought to work.

How can I resolve this problem? I have tried installing the software by running it as administrator but that has made no difference. In device manager the card shows up as a grey outline and the message with it says that the driver is not installed. The programs that I have downloaded from the two web sites say that the driver is installed

I would be grateful for any help before I revert back to Windows XP!

Source: http://forum.webuser.co.uk/showthread.php?t=102058&goto=newpost

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11 JanWindows Phone backers declare mobile war

LAS VEGAS (CNN) –

Stephen Elop gave an impassioned speech on Monday about waging a war to re-enter the United States by establishing a beachhead here.

Elop, a Canadian with a military general’s vocabulary and haircut, is the chief executive for Nokia. The Finnish company is the highest-volume cell phone manufacturer worldwide, but has struggled in the U.S. and in staying ahead of the technological curve.

Now, for the first time in a decade, Nokia appears to have a fighting chance in the North American phone market. AT&T Mobility will carry and help promote the Lumia 900, a Windows phone that looks to be Nokia’s flagship product, the companies announced here on Monday for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show.

Elop explained in an interview with CNN that the Lumia 900 will be the anchor in Nokia’s larger invasion of the elusive U.S. market. “There is much more that we can do in this battle,” he said.

Nokia will have to lean on other phone manufacturers that are also betting on Microsoft’s Windows Phone operating system in order to spur interest from both consumers and application developers, Elop said. They are up against Apple, which develops iOS for its iPhones, iPads and iPods; and Google, which makes the Android software that powers most smartphones on the market.

“We believe that the industry has shifted from a battle of devices to a war of ecosystems,” Elop said at Nokia’s news conference. “With Lumia, our intent has been to establish a series of beachheads.”

HTC, which fights for both the Windows and Android camps, unveiled a new Windows phone on Monday for AT&T, the Titan II. It has a giant 4.7-inch screen and an unusually beefy 16-megapixel camera.

“This is my personal device,” HTC CEO Peter Chou said at AT&T’s news conference, held on the eve of CES. “I’ve been using this all the time.”

That Chou currently favors a Windows phone over one of the dozen or so more popular HTC models that run Google’s Android could signal a change in allegiance for a major smartphone player.

HTC launched the first Android phone in 2008, T-Mobile USA’s G1, and collaborated again with Google for the major Nexus One initiative. But Samsung has quickly surpassed HTC as the leading Android device maker by just about all meaningful metrics, and Google has chosen Samsung as the anointed partner for every Nexus phone since the first.

While Microsoft supporters unite, the Android army is not putting down its rifles. The number of new phones with Google software announced so far at CES is far greater than those of any other platform, including RIM (one: the BlackBerry Curve 9370 world phone for Verizon Wireless) and Apple (none).

Before AT&T and its partners made a big hoopla about the two new Windows phones on Monday, the cellular giant unveiled six Android devices: four smartphones, a waterproof tablet called the Pantech Element, and a Samsung phone-tablet hybrid with a 5.3-inch screen and stylus that’s called the Galaxy Note. Separately, LG showed the Spectrum, an Android with a 4.5-inch screen for Verizon, and Motorola Mobility issued a news release to announce new Droid devices.

Androids outnumber all other phones here, but few people in the industry are counting Microsoft out.

“It’s not a numbers game,” AT&T executive Glenn Lurie said in an interview. “It’s a quality game.”

HTC and Nokia, which are launching the new Windows phones, succeeded in creating a fair bit of hype, but they lacked some important details. Neither announced release dates or pricing.

More details from Nokia on the Lumia 900 will be announced in the coming weeks, and the new phone, with its 4.3-inch screen and refined 8-megapixel camera, will hit stores in the coming months, Elop said. Nokia’s less stellar Windows phone for T-Mobile, the Lumia 710, is set to arrive on January 11, he said.

With 2% in market share for Windows Phone versus a combined 82% held by Apple and Google, according to market research firm NPD Group, it’s hardly a war yet. Microsoft’s allies will need more than a Las Vegas rallying cry to turn the tides.

Source: http://www.ksat.com/lifestyle/Technology/Windows-Phone-backers-declare-mobile-war/-/2597106/7683190/-/f1pxw2z/-/index.html

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16 JunUpdated: Windows 8 tablets: what you need to know

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CNETAnalysis: Microsoft?s been pushing tablet computers for the best part of a decade, so you can imagine how happy the iPad?s success makes them. But Microsoft doesn?t give up easily, and Windows 8 tablets will emerge. So what?s Steve Ballmer going to be shouting about when he shows them off? Windows 8 tablets will have a new touch interface As we saw from the recent Windows 8 preview , Windows 8 tablets will have a marvellous new interface that looks rather like Windows Phone 7. ?Fast, fluid and dynamic, the experience has been transformed while keeping the power, flexibility and connectivity of Windows intact,? says Microsoft?s head of Windows Experience Julie Larson-Green. ?Although the new user interface is designed and optimized for touch, it works equally well with a mouse and keyboard. Our approach means no compromises ? you get to use whatever kind of device you prefer, with peripherals you choose, to run the apps you love. This is sure to inspire a new generation of hardware and software development, improving the experience for PC users around the world.? Windows 8 tablets? release date In December 2011, the New York Times wrote that Microsoft would unveil tablets running Windows 8 at CES 2011 in January , which proved to be incorrect. The NYT credited an unnamed source for the leak, which suggests that Microsoft?s keynote will be enlivened by the arrival of the next generation of Windows, as well as Samsung and Dell tablets. As it turned out, no Windows 8 tablets were shown at the show. However, the Windows 8 release date may be sooner than you think. Speculation is rife that a Windows 8 beta will surface at PDC , a developer conference being held by Microsoft in September 2011. The dates for the conference were announced by Microsoft at its MIX event on 12 April 2011. That means Windows 8 tablets could be out by early 2012 ? after CES 201! 2. Accor ding to Bloomberg there will be no Windows for tablets until 2012. As we reported on 4 March 2011 , sources told Bloomberg that a tablet-friendly version of Windows will be tested at the end of this year and not released until the summer of 2012. Microsoft may launch its own Windows 8 tablet New rumours suggest that Microsoft is working on an own-brand tablet to launch running Windows 8 . The speculation comes from Taipei, with sources claiming that the tablet will make use of a Texas Instruments chip and will launch by the end of 2012. Digitimes, which first published the rumour, claims its sources say that Microsoft is also looking to launch a tablet brand, as it did in gaming with the Xbox. Windows 8 tablets manufacturers It?s no surprise to see the names Dell and Samsung in the NYT piece: both firms have close relationships with Microsoft, although it?s interesting to see Microsoft getting groovy with an Android tablet manufacturer. We?d expect to see something like the leaked ? Lap PC ? from HP too. UPDATE: On 9 May 2011, we reported on a rumour of a forthcoming Nokia Windows 8 tablet . The info comes from phone commentator Eldar Murtazin, who wrote on the Mobile Review forum that Nokia will launch a tablet in 2012, possibly pushed back to 2013. Windows 8 tablets will probably look like iPads While Dell makes some unusually shaped tablets already, the Samsung tablet is ?similar in size and shape to the Apple iPad, although it is not as thin.? Unlike the iPad, ?it also includes a unique and slick keyboard that slides out from below for easy typing.? Windows 8 tablets will be designed for business use ?The company believes there is a huge market for business people who want to enjoy a slate for reading newspapers and magazines and then work on Microsoft Word, Excel or PowerPoint while doing work,? the NYT says, quoting the inevitable ?person familiar with the company?s tablet plans?. Windows 8 tablets will have apps an! d an app store Apps are a big part of Windows 8 , with Microsoft convinced that ?app development will move to the web? and building a Windows Store with manufacturer-specific entrances. Again, we saw a lot more detail on this from the Windows 8 preview . Windows 8 tablet specifications aren?t strange or startling We?d expect Windows 8 tablets to have similar specifications to other iPad rivals such as the Galaxy Tab or BlackBerry Playbook , essentially netbooks in a different form factor: a gigahertz processor, a gigabyte of RAM, 802.11b/g/n wireless and multitouch capacitive displays. Expect lots of connectivity too, with USB ports a key selling point. Windows 8 tablets will run on ARM, Intel and AMD chips On 18 May 2011, Intel confirmed that there will be separate editions of Windows 8 that run on ARM processors as well as standard x86 processors from Intel and AMD ? all companies involved are serious about tablets, though ARM has stolen a lead; all major tablets on the market are ARM-based. The x86 versions of Windows 8 will feature a Windows 7 compatibility mode, while ARM versions won?t. Windows 8 tablet prices should be similar to Android ones Windows 8 tablets will be up against iPads, Android tablets and Chrome OS netbooks, so if they?re not priced very aggressively they?re going to be a tough sell. Related Stories TechRadar launches new tablet reviews channel Sponsored: How HTC Watch delivers movie magic Updated: iPad 3 rumours: what you need to know In Depth: 25 essential Kindle tips and tricks BlackBerry PlayBook gets another software tweak Posted by: Maryum

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