Posts Tagged ‘microsoft’

Steam: Savior or Slayer of PC Gaming?

Is Valve’s dominant digital platform the future? Or does it herald the end of PC gaming as we know it? Steam. Publishers and rival digital distributors want to be it. Gamers and developers want to be with it. And animals lacking opposable thumbs want to learn how to use computers just to use it… or so Valve would have you believe. But all isn’t as rosy in the land of PC gaming as all that, and as Valve’s digital gaming platform has picked up more and more, well, steam, it’s garnered its fair share of backlash as well. With Valve’s recent tiffs with EA over their upstart Origin distribution platform, never before has the community been so polarized by Steam. Will Steam continue to dominate the PC gaming landscape? And if so, what does this mean for gamers? First off, let’s dispel the myth that Origin is a rival to Steam. Perhaps it will be in time, but as it stands now, EA’s digital marketplace is just that – a digital store front for EA published titles. For the moment EA is content in simply bypassing Steam, in order to sell their products directly without losing revenue to a rival distributor. So, no, Origin is NOT in direct competition with Steam, but neither are any of the other PC digital distributors. And I don’t mean ‘no competition’ in the ‘we’re kicking your ass in marketshare’ kind of way. No, I mean they’re literally not selling competing products—they simply lack the depth and breadth of what Steam has to offer. Whereas Origin, Impulse, Direct2Drive, GoG, GamersGate and others are all perfectly valid online stores and distributors, they aren’t what Steam is: a unified, managed gaming platform for the PC.

Microsoft calls Google out over patent bullying accusations

Microsoft has thrown down the gauntlet following Google’s public accusation of patent bullying on the part of Microsoft, Apple, Oracle, and others. In a series of tweets sent Wednesday evening, two senior Microsoft executives implied that Google had actually declined an invitation to join the consortium that formed to buy Novell’s patent portfolio, with one representative posting a screenshot of what looks like e-mail proof of Google’s decision to not play along. In a post to the Official Google Blog on Wednesday afternoon, Google Chief Legal Officer David Drummond said that the aforementioned companies had waged “a hostile, organized campaign against Android” by snapping up patents and demanding high licensing fees for Android devices. Google specifically noted that Apple and Microsoft had not only tried to buy a number of Novell patents late last year, they were also part of a larger consortium of companies that ended up making a $4.5 billion winning bid on Nortel’s patent portfolio in July “to make sure Google didn’t get them.” Google had initially made a $900 million opening bid on the Nortel patents and later bid $3.14159 billion before bowing out of the auction. Read the comments on this post

Ballmer Mocks Rivals as Windows 7 Sales Exceed 400 Million

Microsoft’s annual Worldwide Partner Conference got underway in Los Angeles earlier today with a keynote by Steve Ballmer, who took the opportunity to thank the software leviathan’s partners for making Windows 7 the fastest-selling operating system in history and to apprise them of the record-shattering OS’s latest feat. According to Ballmer, the company has now sold more than 400 million Windows 7 licenses. Windows 7 has reached this milestone well within two years of its October 2009 launch. Despite the sustained sales momentum, the latest version of Windows could not prevent Apple Mac shipments from growing at a much faster rate than the PC market during this period. But Ballmer is satisfied with the fact that Windows-based PCs still account for most of the PC market. Comparing the sale of Windows-based machines with that of non-Windows PCs over the past twelve months , Ballmer said: “350 million, 350 million new PCs sold. That might compare with numbers from other guys that are in the 20 million range… now, 20 is too much, but 350 the last time I checked is a lot more than 20.” The company revealed that Windows XP can still be found on 200 million PCs . Both Ballmer and Tami Reller, corporate vice president and chief financial officer of Windows and Windows Live, called on partners to persuade Windows XP holdouts to finally move to Windows 7. An upgrade now, Reller feels, will “set them up for the future [read Windows 8].” Even as the company no longer wants Windows 7 to co-exist with its 10-year-old granddad, it sees “a future with a heterogeneous enterprise environment of Windows 8 devices and apps alongside Windows 7 PCs and apps.” Images Credit: iSmashphones

Video of Nokia’s first Windows Phone device "leaks" onto the Internet

Videos of the first Nokia handset to use Microsoft’s Windows Phone operating system have hit the Internet after Nokia CEO demonstrated the phone to staff earlier this week. Codenamed “Sea Ray,” the device is a Windows Phone-powered version of the Maemo/MeeGo-driven N9 that was announced earlier this week. The N9 looked great, and so does Sea Ray. A deep black, featureless glass front, single piece polycarbonate body, and a 8 megapixel camera with a Carl Zeiss-branded lens; the only obvious differences are the tell-tale camera button and slightly different placement of the LED flash. No mention was made of the release date—though we know it will be no earlier than fall, since the phone will ship with Windows Phone “Mango”—nor do we know if the phone will come in the same range of colors as the N9. The Sea Ray demonstration unit was black; N9s will be available in black, magenta, and cyan. (Magenta is my pick, recapturing the spirit of the hot pink RAZR.) The video, made yesterday, doesn’t show off the phone too much; most of it is a look at Mango itself, rather than the hardware. But the mere existence of the video is something of an oddity. Before showing off the phone, Elop said, several times, that those present should stop taking videos and pictures, and that he didn’t want to see the phone showing up on the blogosphere. The video that leaked, however, is clearly professional; filmed by a fixed camera on a tripod (not a handheld cellphone), with clean cuts between different video feeds. This strongly suggests that the stream was intended for internal distribution. As such, there’s more than a hint of this being an “official unofficial” leak. Many of the responses to the N9 were along the lines of “Wow, if only I could get that with Mango!”—this could be Nokia’s way of saying “You can!” Read the comments on this post

Nokia’s new MeeGo-based N9 is set up for failure

Nokia has finally announced the long-anticipated N9 handset, the culmination of Nokia’s five-step plan to deliver a mainstream Linux-based smartphone. The N9 is an impressively engineered device that is matched with a sophisticated touch-oriented interface and a powerful software stack with open source underpinnings. It’s a worthy successor of the developer-centric N900, but it provides a user experience that is tailored for a mainstream audience. The N9 is the first truly modern smartphone that Nokia has unveiled since the start of finger-friendly interface revolution. Although it’s a significant technical achievement, it’s sadly a pyrrhic victory for Nokia—the device has arrived a year too late. The Finnish phone giant has already abandoned its Linux platform in favor of Microsoft’s Windows Phone 7 operating system. Read the comments on this post

Mango goodness: Windows Phone developer firmware invitations roll out

Registered Windows Phone developers now have access to a beta build of Windows Phone Mango, the major upgrade to the smartphone operating system that’s due in fall. The beta build doesn’t include everything that Mango will eventually include, but does have major features like multitasking, background tasks, programmatic access to the camera, network sockets, and more. The Windows Phone Developer Tools have also been updated to bring them in-line with the beta firmware. Read the comments on this post

Update: AMD Resigns from BAPCo Over SYSmark 2012 Concerns; NVIDIA & VIA Also Leave, BAPCo Responds

What’s in a Benchmark? This is a pertinent question that all users need to ask themselves, because if you don’t know what a benchmark actually tests and how that relates to the real world, the scores are meaningless. Today, AMD has announced that they are resigning from BAPCo over a long standing dispute over the weighting of scores within the SYSmark suite. AMD specifically references SYSmark 2012 (SM12), but there have been complaints in the past and the latest release is apparently the proverbial straw that broke the camel’s back. You can read more about the decision on Cheif Marketing Officer (CMO) Nigel Dessau’s blog , but this announcement comes at an interesting time since BAPCo just shipped us copies of the final SM12 release. We haven’t had a chance to run the suite yet, and we’ll still have a look at the results and see how AMD and Intel platforms compare at some point, but it looks like we have a foregone conclusion: Intel will come out ahead. What we really need to examine is why Intel gets a better score. If you’ve been reading AnandTech for any length of time, you’ll know that we place a lot more weight on real-world benchmarks rather than synthetic tests, but certain tasks can be very difficult to test in a meaningful way. How do you measure every day tasks like surfing the web in a meaningful way when most CPUs are 95% idle performing that task? When we really look at the market right now, in many cases we can conclude that just about any current computer will be fast enough for 90% of users. If you want to surf the Internet, write email, work in Office applications, watch some movies, listen to music, etc. you can do that on anything from a lowly AMD Brazos netbook to a hex-core monster system. Yes, we did leave out Atom, because there are certain areas where it falls short—specifically, certain movie formats prove to be too much for the current Atom platform, particularly if you’re looking at HD H.264 content (e.g. YouTube and Hulu). Reading through AMD’s announcement and Nigel’s blog, it’s pretty clear what AMD is after: they want the GPU to play a more prominent role in measurements of overall system performance. On the one hand, we could say that AMD is simply trying to get benchmarks to favor their APUs, since Brazos and Llano easily surpass the Intel competition when it comes to graphics and video prowess. This would certainly be true, but then we also have to consider what users are actually doing with their PCs. SYSmark has always included a variety of tests, and certainly knowing how fast your computer is in regards to Excel performance can be useful. However, AMD claims that a disproportionate weight is given to some tests, with mention of optical character recognition and file compression activities in particular. We don’t have the full SM12 whitepaper yet, but we can look at the list of applications that are tested, and a few things immediately stand out. There are two web browsers in the list, but both versions are now outdated. Internet Explorer 8 has been replaced by Internet Explorer 9, and Firefox 3.6 is replaced by Firefox 4.0—with Firefox 5 just around the corner . Without newer browsers, HTML5 is basically untested by SM12, and while we understand that SM12 has been in development for a while, for something calling itself 2012 to include mostly 2010 applications feels out of place. Considering IE9 and FF4 both shift to GPU-accelerated engines, AMD would certainly have benefited from the use of the latest versions. The remaining applications look reasonable, but again we have no information on weighting of scores, so we’ll have to see how the results pan out. Ultimately, the main thing to take away from all of this is that, just like the PCMark, 3DMark, Cinebench, SunSpider, etc. benchmarks we routinely refer to, SYSmark 2012 is merely one more tool to analyze system performance. It will be interesting to see how other elements—like the presence or lack of an SSD—impact the score. In our opinion most users would benefit far more from running something like Llano with an SSD as opposed to Sandy Bridge with an HDD, so the CPU/GPU/APU are not the only factors, but it still depends on your intended use. If you’re running a server, obviously the demands placed on the system will be far different from the average home computer. Multimedia professionals that spend a lot of time in Adobe Photoshop and/or Premiere likewise have different needs. Is AMD right? Is heterogeneous (e.g. CPU and GPU working together) computing more important now than raw CPU performance, or is SYSmark12 merely proving what we already know: Sandy Bridge is really fast? Let us know what you think, but as always remember that when you’re looking at benchmark charts, take a minute to think about what the bars actually represent. The full news release is below, but again you can find substantially more detail in Dessau’s blog. Update : It turns out AMD is not the only party to have left the BAPCo consortium recently. We've just confirmed with NVIDIA that they have also left the BAPCo consortium. No reason was given. Update 2 : BAPCo has released a statement in return. The consortium notes that AMD approved 80% of the development milestones and that AMD was never threatened with expulsion. The full statement is attached below. Update 3 : We've finally gotten official confirmation (as rumored earlier) that VIA has also left the consortium. They have sent a short statement to SemiAccurate which we have included below. The basis of their complaints are much the same as AMD's: they don't consider SYSMark 2012 to reflect real world usage. AMD Will Not Endorse SYSmark 2012 Benchmark — AMD Separates from Association with Industry Group BAPCo — SUNNYVALE, Calif. — 21, 2011 — AMD (NYSE: AMD) today announced that it will not endorse the SYSmark 2012 Benchmark (SM2012), which is published by BAPCo (Business Applications Performance Corporation). Along with the withdrawal of support, AMD has resigned from the BAPCo organization. “Technology is evolving at an incredible pace, and customers need clear and reliable measurements to understand the expected performance and value of their systems,” said Nigel Dessau, senior vice president and Chief Marketing Officer at AMD. “AMD does not believe SM2012 achieves this objective. Hence AMD cannot endorse or support SM2012 or remain part of the BAPCo consortium.” AMD will only endorse benchmarks based on real-world computing models and software applications, and which provide useful and relevant information. AMD believes benchmarks should be constructed to provide unbiased results and be transparent to customers making decisions based on those results. Currently, AMD is evaluating other benchmarking alternatives, including encouraging the creation of an industry consortium to establish an open benchmark to measure overall system performance. AMD encourages anyone wanting more details about the construction and scoring methodology of the SM2012 benchmark to contact BAPCo. For more details on AMD’s decision to exit BAPCo, please read AMD’s Executive Blog authored by Nigel Dessau. BAPCo

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