Gates to leave day-to-day role at Microsoft

Posted by Joggee | Latest Hi-Tech Updates | Friday 27 June 2008 12:53 pm

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/multimedia/video.cfm?c_id=3&objectid=10518660&content_media_id=5008589

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) – Microsoft announced Thursday that chairman and co-founder Bill Gates will transition out of a day-to-day role at the company, effective July 2008, to spend more time working on his charitable foundation.

Gates will then work part-time at Microsoft (up $0.19 to $22.07, Charts) as chairman and technical adviser and will work full time for the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the organization he founded with his wife, which focuses on global health and education.

Gates and Ballmer 

 

 Microsoft chairman and Chief Software Architect Bill Gates  

Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates announcing Thursday that he is stepping down from his day-to-day role with the company by July 2008.

 

“I’ve decided that two years from today, I will reorganize my personal priorities,” Gates said during a news conference, adding,”I have one of the best jobs in the world.”

“I believe with great wealth comes great responsibility – the responsibility to give back to society and make sure those resources are given back in the best possible way, to those in need,” he said. Gates added, “It’s not a retirement, it’s a reordering of my priorities.”

(Special Report: Goodbye, Mr. Gates, stories from CNNMoney,com, FORTUNE, FORTUNE Small Business, Business 2.0)


Why Gate looks so upset.
Bill Gates

Userful link:

http://www.betanews.com/article/Bill_Gates_to_Leave_Microsoft_in_2_Years/1150404593
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/3/story.cfm?c_id=3&objectid=10518660&ref=rss

Google’s latest ideas

Posted by Joggee | Google, Latest Hi-Tech Updates | Tuesday 20 May 2008 6:57 am

Google is always experimenting with new features aimed at improving the search experience.

I dont know what to say its a latest or copied from YAHOO. But I one good thing is, Google take this idea and make it more freindly and give statistic,Keyword suggestions,Keyboard shortcuts,Alternate views for search results. I would say GOOGLE ALWAYS A HEAD than any search engine.

for more information http://www.google.com/experimental/index.html

what you say ?

Software Developer Conference 2007

Posted by Joggee | Latest Hi-Tech Updates | Thursday 6 September 2007 3:51 pm

Dear Guys, Once again Stephen Forte in action for the Software Developer Conference 2007 

This year, on the 17TH AND 18TH OF SEPTEMBER, the Software Developer Network hosts the sixteenth (!) Software Developer Conference! When you attend the conference you can be sure of the track record of SDN guarantees as well it will be an organised conference. 

DON’T MISS THIS EVENT.

For more detail click here

Microsoft announced the release of Silverlight 1.0

Posted by Joggee | Latest Hi-Tech Updates | Wednesday 5 September 2007 2:05 pm

Today Microsoft announced the release of Silverlight 1.0, the fully supported version of its cross-browser, cross-platform plug-in for delivering the next generation of media and rich experiences on the Web.

Microsoft SilverLight 

Google searches web’s dark side

Posted by Joggee | Latest Hi-Tech Updates | Friday 31 August 2007 12:49 pm

 

Men look at laptop

Malicious programs are installed by visits to a booby-trapped site

One in 10 web pages scrutinised by search giant Google contained malicious code that could infect a user’s PC.Researchers from the firm surveyed billions of sites, subjecting 4.5 million pages to “in-depth analysis”.

About 450,000 were capable of launching so-called “drive-by downloads”, sites that install malicious code, such as spyware, without a user’s knowledge.

A further 700,000 pages were thought to contain code that could compromise a user’s computer, the team report.

To address the problem, the researchers say the company has “started an effort to identify all web pages on the internet that could be malicious”.

Phantom sites

Drive-by downloads are an increasingly common way to infect a computer or steal sensitive information.

They usually consist of malicious programs that automatically install when a potential victim visits a booby-trapped website.

“To entice users to install malware, adversaries employ social engineering,” wrote Google researcher Niels Provos and his colleagues in a paper titled The Ghost In The Browser.

Finding all the web-based infection vectors is a significant challenge and requires almost complete knowledge of the web

Google researchers

Hi-tech crime

Avoiding attacks

“The user is presented with links that promise access to ‘interesting’ pages with explicit pornographic content, copyrighted software or media. A common example are sites that display thumbnails to adult videos.”

The vast majority exploit vulnerabilities in Microsoft’s Internet Explorer browser to install themselves.

Some downloads, such as those that alter bookmarks, install unwanted toolbars or change the start page of a browser, are an annoyance. But increasingly, criminals are using drive-bys to install keyloggers that steal login and password information.

Other pieces of malicious code hijack a computer turning it into a “bot”, a remotely controlled PC.

Drive-by downloads represent a shift away from traditional methods of infecting a computer, such as spam and email attachments.

Attack plan

As well as characterising the scale of the problem on the net, the Google study analysed the main methods by which criminals inject malicious code on to innocent web pages.

Spam email

Spam e-mails are a common way to infect a computer

It found that the code was often contained in those parts of the website not designed or controlled by the website owner, such as banner adverts and widgets.

Widgets are small programs that may, for example, display a calendar on a webpage or a web traffic counter. These are often downloaded from third-party sites.

The rise of web 2.0 and user-generated content gave criminals other channels, or vectors, of attack, it found.

For example, postings in blogs and forums that contain links to images or other content could unwittingly infect a user.

The study also found that gangs were able to hijack web servers, effectively taking over and infecting all of the web pages hosted on the computer.

In a test, the researchers’ computer was infected with 50 different pieces of malware by visiting a web page hosted on a hijacked server.

The firm is now in the process of mapping the malware threat.

Google, part of the StopBadware coalition, already warns users if they are about to visit a potentially harmful website, displaying a message that reads “this site may harm your computer” next to the search results.

“Marking pages with a label allows users to avoid exposure to such sites and results in fewer users being infected,” the researchers wrote.

However, the task will not be easy, they say.

“Finding all the web-based infection vectors is a significant challenge and requires almost complete knowledge of the web as a whole,” they wrote.


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/6645895.stm