Friday, June 26, 2009

Windows 7 vs. Snow Leopard; Netbook confusion; Top 25 free apps [TECH UPDATE]

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Windows 7 vs Snow Leopard: What that upgrade really costs

Windows 7 vs Snow Leopard: What that upgrade really costs Ed Bott: In one of its "I'm a Mac" ads, Apple lampoons the complexity of Windows with a dizzying display of fine print. Maybe Microsoft needs to take the same treatment with Apple's much-publicized $29 upgrade offer for Snow Leopard. The price sounds great until you look at the fine print. I did, and discovered that most Mac owners don't qualify.

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Adrian Kingsley-Hughes: Windows 7 upgrade pricing is too expensive
Microsoft unveils 'screaming deals' for Windows 7
Mary Jo Foley: Is Windows 7 pricing too high, too low, or just right?
Why is there no Windows 7 E upgrade for Europe?
iPhone 3G S: Most extortionate iPhone yet?

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My experience with Dell's Namastechnical Support

My experience with Dell's Namastechnical Support Jason Perlow: Despite my dislike for all things outsourced, my first experience with Dell's call center in India was a largely positive one. How would you rate your call center experience with various PC and equipment manufacturers?

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Pitney Bowes branded community reduces customer support costs
IT offshoring is exaggerated and the IT labor shortage is real
Collaboration 2.0: Sorry, the help desk doesn't cover that
Tom Foremski: The Internet devalues everything it touches
Building high-performance, luxury computers in a recession

Bartz to Yahoo shareholders: Change is coming; We're not Google

Bartz to Yahoo shareholders: Change is coming; We're not Google Sam Diaz: Before questions, Bartz addressed the one big question that continues to surface: a deal with Microsoft on the search business. The official Bartz-esque answer: "If we ever have a deal with Microsoft, it will be announced publicly. Until we do, there's nothing to say."

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At this rate, Microsoft won't need Yahoo at all
Is Carol Bartz a graduate of the Jobs-Ellison School of Management?

Netbook or notebook? Confusion reigns at 12 inches

Netbook or notebook? Confusion reigns at 12 inches John Morris: In the world according to Wintel, the distinction would be fairly clear. But PC makers refuse to stick to the script, leaving consumers confused about the difference between a netbook and a notebook. In the 12-inch category, things are getting more muddled every day.

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Living with a netbook: The performance penalty
Five big issues with ARM and Android netbooks
New Acer Aspire laptops start at $480
Will touchscreen Windows 7 netbooks be hot or not?
In netbook market, Wintel monopoly healthier than ever

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Who is attacking Solid Oak, whose code was stolen for Green Dam?

Who is attacking Solid Oak, whose code was stolen for Green Dam? Richard Koman: Green Dam, the child-protection software that China wants all PC makers to install, even contains an encrypted file that turns out to be a list of Cybersitter serial numbers. Plus, Solid Oak Software appears to be under attack.

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China throttles Google, U.S. ratchets up trade war over Green Dam
Who is attacking Solid Oak, whose code was stolen for Green Dam?
Christopher Dawson: Don't be like China

ZDNet Readers' Choice: Top 25 free, lightweight apps

ZDNet Readers' Choice: Top 25 free, lightweight apps Andrew Nusca: In February, I asked ZDNet readers for the free, lightweight applications they simply can't live without. After tallying the suggestions in the comments and via e-mail -- and there were an awful lot of good suggestions, believe me -- here are the 25 most popular.

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The Web's top 50 destinations during May 2009
For the web's best new downloads, sign up for ZDNet Downloads Digest

Featured TalkBack Blog

Steve Jobs nearly died and lied about it

Dana Blankenhorn: For daring to steal fire from the Gods, it is said, Prometheus was chained to a rock and sentenced to having his liver pecked out by birds. Apple CEO Steve Jobs can relate.

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What do you think?
Post Your Thoughts in TalkBack


Reader TalkBacks
Ubuntu aims at healing Linux's 'paper cuts'
"Papercuts? More like deep stab wounds that require major surgery." -- Loverock Davidson

What's really new in Windows 7? The answer, not much!
"You could've said the same thing about the OS9-OSX switch." -- JoeMama_z


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Photo Gallery
Getting screamed at, Air Force initiation-style

Getting screamed at, Air Force initiation-style Thursday was the day new Air Force cadets arrived for their first day at the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colo. More than 1,300 basic cadets showed up, and only a few turned tail and ran.

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ZDNet Reviews
RCA starts shipping 720p HD mini-camcorder

RCA starts shipping 720p HD mini-camcorder Rachel King: RCA has started shipping its Small Wonder EZ209HD. The 720p HD mini-camcorder captures video at a resolution of 1280 x 720 in H.264 format.

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Canon PowerShot A480
Lenovo ThinkPad T400s
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Sign up for ZDNet's Product Watch Newsletter for the latest product reviews, news, and expert analysis

News and Blogs

Cybercrime doesn't pay: well it does, and very well

Secunia: Average insecure program per PC rate remains high

RFID could be in all cell phones by 2010

Michael Jackson dies: Twitter's good luck

Survey: Wall Street looks to cloud technology for its next bailout

Waxman-Markey bill set for vote in U.S. House

Google Voice invitations, with vanity phone numbers, coming soon

AMD: Creating the building blocks for cloud computing

HP SimpleSave external hard drive backs your files up with ease

Corsair launches 64GB, 128GB 'performance' SSDs; 220MB/sec read, write

Review: Skooba Checkthrough Brief helps speed you through airport security

SmartPlanet: Would you DNA test your partner for compatibility?

SmartPlanet: Tips for protecting intellectual property


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Videos and Podcasts

WWDC 2009: Apple unveils iPhone 3G S

WWDC 2009: Apple unveils iPhone 3G S At Apple's WWDC in San Francisco, Apple's SVP of marketing, Philip Schiller, shows off a new, speedier iPhone. The iPhone 3G S features a 3-megapixel camera and can shoot video at 30 frames per second. The phone is available next week in the U.S and some other countries.

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WWDC 2009: Apple previews Safari 4

WWDC 2009: Apple previews Safari 4 At Apple's WWDC in San Francisco, the company's VP of Mac OS engineering, Craig Federighi, shows off improved features of Safari 4, including faster display speeds and full history search.

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A look at high-speed autonomous driving

A look at high-speed autonomous driving At JavaOne in San Francisco, Calif., Volkswagen's Marcial Hernandez and Sun's Greg Bollella detail Project Bixby, an Audi TTS programmed by Volkswagen and using a Java runtime environment. The vehicle will then be raced on a Rally course against other automated vehicles.

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WWDC 2009: Apple highlights Snow Leopard features

WWDC 2009: Apple highlights Snow Leopard features At Apple's WWDC in San Francisco, the company's SVP of Mac OS engineering, Craig Federighi, demos the Snow Leopard version of the operating system. For current Leopard users, the new OS--due in September--will be upgradable for $29.

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WWDC 2009: New 15-inch MacBook Pro revealed

WWDC 2009: New 15-inch MacBook Pro revealed At Apple's WWDC in San Francisco, Apple's vice president of product marketing, Philip Schiller, shows off the company's latest MacBook Pro. The new notebook has a 3.06GHz processor, a unibody architecture, and a built-in lithium polymer battery. Schiller adds that customers shouldn't need to change battery in a notebook at all in five years.

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