Posted on 01/08/2002 9:55:32 AM PST by Bush2000
LAS VEGAS--He may not yet be on the level of Siegfried and Roy or the Folies Bergere, but Bill Gates is on his way to having one of the longest running shows in Vegas.
The Microsoft chairman's treatise on the fully digitized home, a staple of Comdex computer trade shows for many years, has been extended to the Consumer Electronics Show, where Gates made his third consecutive keynote speech here on Monday evening.
Presented in the new wrapper of eHome--the Microsoft division formed after last year's CES to focus on technology for the home--Gates offered variations of the familiar theme. Central to his presentation were a couple of new technologies that tie in with Microsoft's new Windows XP operating system to turn the PC into a central home jukebox for content--ranging from Web connections to digital video.
"All the new things we're doing build on the success of Windows XP," Gates said.
Among the new efforts were "Mira," software for a wireless flat-panel display that connects directly with a PC but also can be carried around the house as a Web pad or a home entertainment control center, while communicating wirelessly with a main PC. As originally reported by CNET News.com, Mira devices would help extend Microsoft's vision of the PC as an electronic nerve center for the home.
Manufacturing partners such as PC monitor maker ViewSonic are expected to have touch-sensitive, wireless displays based on the Mira concept on shelves by the end of this year, according to Microsoft executives.
The concept is also likely to find its way into television sets, where it could allow touch-screen control of DVD playback or Web access, and wireless computing kiosks for the home such as the short-lived Audrey appliance.
Another new part of Microsoft's plans for linking the PC to other home devices is Freestyle, an extension to the Windows XP operating system announced Monday and reported earlier by CNET News.com.
"This is the idea of using a PC without sitting down at a keyboard," Gates said. "Wherever you are, the idea of remote interactivity comes with Windows."
Freestyle includes applications for DVD and digital music playback and for processing and recording live television signals, allowing the PC to become an entertainment command center and a potential rival to digital video recorders such as TiVo devices.
It also sounds quite similar to products announced earlier at CES by Moxi Digital to create a Linux-powered control system for digital entertainment.
Hewlett-Packard, NEC and Samsung are working on entertainment-centric PCs built around Freestyle, Microsoft said.
Gates also showed a Panasonic DVD player that can play digital audio files in the Windows Media format and announced additions to Microsoft's Ultimate TV service that will allow subscribers to remotely schedule TV recording via any Web-enabled device.
Gates' speech also marked the release of the new version of Windows CE, Microsoft's embedded operating system for devices ranging from robots to cell phones.
The most notable additions to Windows CE.Net, code-named Talisker, focused on delivering Internet services, as outlined in Microsoft's .Net strategy for shifting computing functions to Internet-delivered services.
The new operating system includes support for Microsoft's instant messaging software and Passport, the controversial online identification program that underlies much of Microsoft's online strategy.
Final code for Windows CE.Net is now available to hardware manufacturers, with the first devices based on the software expected to arrive this summer. Those include handheld computers, cell phones and a variation on the Internet-enabled refrigerator. The Icebox, from Salton--makers of the George Foreman Grill--will be a kitchen data terminal that can show TV programs, retrieve recipes from the Web and perform other domestic chores.
Gates also touted some recent history, reporting sales of 17 million licenses for Windows XP in the two months since its launch, making it the fastest-selling version of Windows to date.
He also touted robust sales for the company's new video game console, the Xbox, with 1.5 million units sold since the machine was released in mid-November.
I'll stick with one of your previous sucky versions of Windows.A nice Wendsleydale would go well with that whine. Buy a Mac, or run Linux, for Pete's sake, and stop complaining.
I have a Linux box at home which is even more stable, and it's a terrific server, but sorry, StarOffice doesn't come close to the Evil Empire's Office. I wish it did.
Yes massah. I sorry.
Each to his own. I must admit I didn't care for the original iMac (in pictures, ads only). When I saw it up close in personal, I thought it was fabulous. I rather like the retro look of the current iMac. I'm anxious to see it in the store.
But that's a personal issue. Its a SuperComputer with a flat screen with an impressive array of software that, i find, very hard to walk away from. Others can walk away, that's fine -- but I need the absolute best machine for my $$$ for animation, 3D graphics, et al. One of the software tools I use is Maya. (So does George Lucas, btw). Maya runs on OS X - that's it. The graphics on X are so superior to anything out there - no one comes close.
When Jobs announced that Final Cut Pro will do rendering in real life -- I was floored. That is what I need.
For my needs, the Mac is better. I tried to do a simple movie on the PC, etc.. and it was too painful.
If Sun made what I needed, I'd be praising Sun. There is a need for a powerful, graphics machine where software hardware are fully integrated. And because of that, Apple will never go away. Was playing with the free iPhoto all last night - its cool, but then again, I like graphics and applications that simply work.
Apple is here to stay. If you don't like it, don't buy it. As for me, I will.
Agreed. Windows 2000 is the only semi-stable OS from Microsoft, and it still crashes all the time, but only when running other Microsoft apps (go figure).
Plus, you can run Windows on a Mac. But you can't run Mac OS on Windows.
Oh, that is so true. I have a system, on which I have running (if I want) in separate windows:
I can drag/drop between Windows -- its the funniest thing ever! Can't do that on a PC!!!
How many programs are you all trying to run at one time that causes it to crash? Believe me, I'm not being sarcastic ... I know just enough about computers to turn them on and off. They're the original "magic black box" to me, so I am really curious as to how so many of you seem to be able to "destroy" their operating systems.
Oh, man, I just ride in 'em. I don't know what makes 'em work."
Oddball (Kelly's Heroes)
Ditto here, and mine runs continuously (unless the power goes out) without crashing.
I'm beginning to think I'm missing out on something here. :o)
Actually, you can...sort of. You can cut and paste between sessions of VMWare, which will run all of the above operating systems. However, as alluded to earlier, it won't run Mac OS, since it emulates a PC, not a Mac.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.