Windows 8 - News & Updates

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RE: Windows 8 beta : in February 2012

Biswajit bhai this time i have read all post anf what ddf fan had told nothing wrong and i really like his posts as he is jonior too but helping others to improve their quality and hope you too understand him. :)


Now concentrate towards the topic. ;)
 
RE: Windows 8 beta : in February 2012

but i said what i felt, hope thats nothing wrong..... anyways people do sometimes vary in their way of thinking..... no issues in that..... thanks bapun for your post..... back on topic....
 
RE: windows 8 direct download links

Its cracked,links removed,if it will happen again action should be taken.

/closed.
 
Windows 8 to come with built-in Malware Protection

Microsoft's next version of Windows will ship with "tons of security features," including one that automatically scans boot drives for malware and a revamped version of the Windows Defender antivirus program, company executives said.

At the company's BUILD conference in Anaheim, California on Tuesday, Corporate Vice President of Windows Planning and Ecosystem Michael Angiulo demonstrated an early version of Windows 8 that automatically scanned an infected USB drive used to boot the next generation operating system. Before the OS was able to load, the computer stopped the process and displayed a warning that the boot volume contained an "invalid signature" indicating it had been compromised.

He was able to get the valid version of Windows to load by turning off the system and turning it back on. The presentation starts around the 1:08 mark



The technology making this possible is known as UEFI, short for Unified Extensible Firmware Interface. A successor to the BIOS ROM firmware that Microsoft operating systems have relied on since their beginning, UEFI was designed to shorten the time it takes a PC to start up. It was built by Intel, but is designed to work with a variety of CPU architectures.

"It's not just about speed and having a boot that looks better," Angiulo said during Tuesday's keynote, referring to UEFI. "It's about security, too."
Steven Sinofsky, president of Microsoft's Windows and Windows Live division, went on to say that Windows 8 developers "have taken Defender and we've actually built a whole new range of protection, all the way up though antimalware, antivirus." Users are free to run Defender or security software supplied by another company. In all, the new OS will offer "tons of security features," he added.

The company issued a statement Wednesday saying Windows 8 would include "low-level security features such as Secured Boot to help defeat classes of threats, and user facing features including Windows Defender and SmartScreen" spam-filtering. The statement didn't elaborate.

Windows 8 will also offer a new way to log on to PCs equipped with a touchscreen. Sam Bowne, a security instructor at San Francisco City College, provided a screenshot herethat describes the feature this way: "You choose the picture – and the gestures you use with it – to create a password that's uniquely yours."

Bowne and his students have been testing the security features in the new Windows beta, according to a source.

"There is built in antivirus, and it works!" he wrote "It stopped not only thr EICAR test file, but more than a dozen malware items in Metasploit. So it might be time to sell your Symantec stock."
 
RE: Windows 8 to come with built-in Malware Protection

Windows defender is there right from windows xp era. Though they might have improved it, but it will be a tough task to defeat antivirus giants like symantec and others.
 
Windows 8 'Clover Trail' Tablets Expected After Mid-2012

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Two more names were added Monday to the growing list of Windows 8 tablet makers: Acer and Lenovo.

The announcement of these players have a twist, though. They're rumored to have tablets in the works based on Intel's "Clover Trail" processor, which isn't expected to be released until June at the earliest.

By being added to the Win 8 tab list by DigiTimes, the Far East follower of firms in the upstream supply chain, the computer makers join compatriots Dell and Hewlett-Packard as well as Nokia, as manufacturers apparently ready to mount yet another challenge to the iPad, which currently owns about 70 percent of the tablet market.

Intel is expected to soon pull the wraps off its "Medfield" chip, which is designed to improve the performance of Android tablets. Early indicators are that the processor -- Intel's first "system on a chip" -- can outperform its competitors, racking up a 10500 score in Android benchmarking tests, compared to 7500 for the Nvidia Tegra 2 chip, 8000 for the Qualcomm Snapdragon and 8500 for the Samsung Exynos.

PC makers, though, are looking for more horsepower for their Windows 8 tablets and think they can get it with "Clover Trail."

Battling Apple
So far, PC makers haven't been able to garner much success with their Android slates. Tablet wins aside from the iPad have gone to content providers -- Amazon with its Kindle line and Barnes & Noble with its Nook family -- who can afford to sell their hardware at close to the cost of making it because they expect to sell lots of content for it.

Moreover, the success of the content providers has soured some hardware makers on the Android market, especially those who jealously eye the margins Apple gets on its products. They see Windows 8 as a chance to get fresh traction in the tablet arena.

While some PC makers have produced tablets running Windows 7, the real push for the operating system into the market won't be until Windows 8 arrives on the scene. That's because it has been designed with tablet use in mind and has tablet-friendly characteristics from Microsoft's mobile operating system, Windows Phone 7.

Since, in the minds of some observers, Microsoft is getting to the tablet party late, slates based on Windows 8 could find it even more difficult to gain traction in the market than its Android counterparts.

Indeed, one analyst firm, Forrester, found consumer interest in Windows tablets rapidly fading. In the first quarter of 2011, 46 percent of consumers surveyed by the firm said they were interested in a Windows tablet. But by the third quarter of the year, only 25 percent had such an interest.

Those poll numbers, though, might be the equivalent of poll results for a presidential candidate today and one taken next October. Even Forrester acknowledged that Windows 8 hadn't yet entered the consciousness of the participants in the survey.

In addition, the early-bird-gets-the-market rule isn't inviolate. Phones based on Android entered the market after the iPhone was introduced and yet, according to the latest Comcast numbers, 47 percent of all smartphone subscribers in the United States are Android users, while only 29 percent are in the iPhone fold.

What's more, Windows 8 will be promising users something that no other mobile platform can provide: a uniform experience across mobile, tablet, and computing devices that is enjoyable to use. If Microsoft can deliver on that promise, then many of the challenges that come with late entry into a market will fall by the wayside.

source : pc world
 
Microsoft to unveil Windows 8 on Feb 29

Microsoft revealed plans to unveil a test version of its latest Windows computer operating software later this month.

The US technology titan sent out invitations to a "Windows Consumer Preview" event to be held on February 29 at a hotel in Barcelona during a Mobile World Congress gathering in that city.

Microsoft promised to release more information closer to the end of the month.

The introduction of a test, or beta, version of Windows 8 to the public is expected to be accompanied by the opening of an " app store" stocked with mini-programs tailored for the next-generation operating system.

more on http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/tech/personal-tech/computing/Microsoft-to-unveil-Windows-8-on-Feb-29/articleshow/11819635.cms
 
RE: Microsoft to unveil Windows 8 on Feb 29

Already tried its Dev version last year. Not suitable for normal PC users, yeah, its great for those having touch interfaces...
Also, I would tell u a notable change...No Start menu !
 
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