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Windows 10 upgrade to be 'free' for one year

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Microsoft billionaire says he has found the Musashi —

Microsoft billionaire says he has found the Musashi —
 
Money rules like always. How much will it take to clean it up and bring it back to shore one may ask.
 
Microsoft is putting Internet Explorer out to pasture

A commonly held belief among heavy web users is that it's only acceptable to use Internet Explorer for the purpose of downloading Firefox or Chrome. Snarky as this sentiment may seem, for many who have purchased a computer running Windows in recent years it’s also painfully rooted in the fact that Internet Explorer can no longer keep up with its competitors.

Once a market leader with a whopping 95 per cent usage share when it peaked in 2002, Microsoft’s flagship browser has experienced a steady decline in its user base since Mozilla Firefox and Google Chrome hit the scene in 2004 and 2008, respectively. Today Internet Explorer holds just eight per cent of global internet traffic — and a reputation for being the “most-hated web browser” in existence.

Microsoft had been hinting for years that Internet Explorer would eventually be phased out, but frustrated web developers were never told exactly when its “twilight years” would be over.

This changed Monday when, at long last, the company announced that it would finally be “retiring” Internet Explorer to replace it with a new browser codenamed Project Spartan. “We’re now researching what the new brand, or the new name, for our browser should be in Windows 10," said Microsoft's marketing chief Chris Capossela at the Microsoft Convergence conference Monday. "We’ll continue to have Internet Explorer, but we’ll also have a new browser called Project Spartan, which is codenamed Project Spartan. We have to name the thing."

Whatever the new browser is called, it will likely have “Microsoft” in the name according to Capossela, as research in the U.K. found the company's name to have a positive impact on consumer perceptions.

Microsoft has yet to reveal the launch date for its upcoming Windows 10 operating system, but many online are already celebrating the end of Internet Explorer’s 20-year-long reign of "error."

For those currently using Internet Explorer, fear not — your browser won't spontaneously delete itself when Windows 10 is released. The Verge's Tom Warren reports that Internet Explorer "will still exist in some versions of Windows 10 mainly for enterprise compatibility." That said, the browser resulting from Project Spartan "will be the primary way for Windows 10 users to access the web."

Rest in peace, Internet Explorer brand. Give our best to Netscape Navigator, and thanks for all the jokes.

https://ca.news.yahoo.com/microsoft-putting-internet-explorer-pasture-224554183.html
 
[h=1]Microsoft to replace Internet Explorer with new browser[/h][h=2]Once-dominant browser to be superseded by ‘Project Spartan,’ says software giant.[/h]
It’s the end of an era for Microsoft as the software giant is set to replace Internet Explorer with a new web browser.

Currently known only by its code name, Project Spartan, the browser will accompany the Windows 10 launch later this year.

Chris Capossela, chief marketing officer for Microsoft, made the revelation at the Microsoft Convergence conference this week, according to tech news site The Verge.

“We’re now researching what the new brand, or the new name, for our browser should be in Windows 10,” said Capossela. “We’ll continue to have Internet Explorer, but we’ll also have a new browser . . . code-named Project Spartan. We have to name the thing.”

But in a market dominated by Google Chrome and Mozilla Firefox users, few are likely to shed tears over the loss of Internet Explorer, said Toronto IT consultant Aaron Lazare.


“Internet Explorer has such a mixed history. If nothing else it’s very polarizing. Some people still say they love it, most people say they dislike it or hate it,” he told the Star.

“I think it’s a smart move completely reinventing Windows and reinventing their web browser to go along with that.”


Less than a decade ago Internet Explorer was the most popular browser by far, whose dominance inspired antitrust lawsuits by the U.S. federal government and the European Union. However, Lazare said IE became unpopular for a number of reasons, including security flaws and user unfriendliness.

While Microsoft has not officially announced plans to kill off Internet Explorer, Lazare says that is likely the end goal once the new browser takes off.

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I was able to preview Windows 10 and it looks and feels more like Windows 7 but with access to the apps set behind the start button. The version I was able to play with may not be what the final release looks like. But with this preview, I like that it seems to suggest they are abandoning the Windows 8 layout.
 
Microsoft reveals pilot project to hire people with autism

Microsoft reveals pilot project to hire people with autism

Microsoft is launching a pilot program to hire people with autism, saying they bring a unique skillset to the massive technology company. In a blog post last week, Microsoft Corporate Vice-President of Worldwide Operations Mary Ellen Smith announced the pilot project focused on hiring people with autism in full-time positions at its headquarters in Redmond, Wash. "Microsoft is stronger when we expand opportunity and we have a diverse workforce that represents our customers," said Smith.

"People with autism bring strengths that we need at Microsoft, each individual is different, some have amazing ability to retain information, think at a level of detail and depth or excel in math or code."

Microsoft has partnered with Specialisterne, a company that works to provide jobs to high functioning people with autism and similar challenges through social entrepreneurship and innovative employment models.

https://www.ctvnews.ca/business/microsoft-reveals-pilot-project-to-hire-people-with-autism-1.2313934
 
In other news, Cedars Sinai Medical Centre today announced it was partnering with the Helen Keller Society to develop a specialized pool of deaf, dumb, and blind brain surgeons to add to its existing complement of staff physicians.

The reasoning behind the hospital's strategic investment decision was summed up nicely on the Cedars Sinai Twitter feed:

"Brain surgery is very tricksy business, and don't no one want a brain surgeon who can be easily distracted when poking around inside some dude's cranial cavity with a 8 inch metal probe, yo! Deaf, dumb, blind and completely oblivious is absolutely the way to go, homes."
 
Louis XIV said:
In other news, Cedars Sinai Medical Centre today announced it was partnering with the Helen Keller Society to develop a specialized pool of deaf, dumb, and blind brain surgeons to add to its existing complement of staff physicians.

The reasoning was behind the hospital's strategic investment decision was summed up nicely on the Cedars Sinai Twitter feed:

"Brain surgery is very tricksy business, and don't no one want a brain surgeon who can be easily distracted when poking around inside some dude's cranial cavity with a 8 inch metal probe, yo! Deaf, dumb, blind and completely oblivious is absolutely the way to go, homes."


Hmmmmmm


:don'twantto-see:/
 
Good for him! I guess on some level we all do, since when we put on our taps or filter it from the fridge, it's coming from lake Ontario and when we flush the toilet after doing a number, it goes into lake Ontario...difference is, his water is cleaner!
 
All bathroom sinks should drain into the holding tank to be used to flush, same with shower/bath water. Seriously, we need to start coming up with smarter ways to reuse that water that just flows down the pipes.
 
ODSP has a program in place to support employers who hire individuals with autism.
 
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