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November 17, 2009

PDC 2009 Opens: Mid-Week Short Takes

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Today, Microsoft takes the stage for the first of two days of Professional Developer Conference (PDC) keynote addresses, with the software giant promising big surprises at each. Despite this, PDC 2009 will likely be a much less exciting time than the previous three PDC shows, which focused on Longhorn/Vista and Windows 7.

I'm here in LA to cover PDC in person, but with the first keynote looming, there is a spate of non-PDC news to cover. I thought it might make sense to provide coverage of this news in a mini-Short Takes style. Here's what's happening as Microsoft preps to start its latest PDC.

Windows 7 Suffers First "Zero-Day" Flaw
And the countdown begins for the inevitable "told you so" Apple advertisement. Microsoft admitted that reports about a denial of service vulnerability in its newly-minted Windows 7 (and Windows Server 2008 R2) were correct but downgraded the seriousness of the issue because it cannot lead to remote control or remote installation of malicious software. It's unclear now if Microsoft will deliver before or at its next regularly-scheduled monthly security patch release (which is due in December).

Microsoft Ports Windows Marketplace for Mobile to Older Devices
Microsoft provided Windows Mobile 6.5 users with a Windows Marketplace for Mobile online store at the system's launch in October. But this week it opened up the store to users of older versions of Windows Mobile, including versions 6.0 and 6.1. The store now has 800 applications, or about three times the number at launch. But looked at another way, it has about 1/125th the number of apps in Apple's iPhone Apps Store. It's getting there. Right?

Office 2010 Beta Comes Early to MSDN, TechNet Subscribers
Microsoft previously said that it would ship a broad public beta of Office 2010, but this week it delivered the beta only to subscribers of MSDN and TechNet. You can expect the public release soon, since I know that's what you're really worried about. And yes, I'll be providing a thorough overview on the SuperSite for Windows.

Microsoft Co-Founder Treated for Lymphoma
If you're steeped in Microsoft lore, you know that Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen came down with Hodgkin's lymphoma in the early 1980's and left the company. Allen survived his bout with lymphoma and went on to become one of the world's richest and most successful men. Sadly, after over 20 years of good health, Allen was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and is now undergoing chemotherapy. He said he expects to beat cancer this time too and he continues to work. Good luck, Mr. Allen.

The Misreporting of Zune's "Global Launch"
When the Financial Times reported this week that Microsoft was getting set to launch Zune around the world, a lot of people got excited about the prospect of buying Zune HD portable media devices in countries other than the United States. There's just one problem: That's not happening. Instead, Microsoft is simply launching the Zune brand worldwide, courtesy of the limited Zune Video Marketplace service for the Xbox 360 video game console. The service launches today in the United States and 17 other top western markets, Microsoft says. "The strategy and vision of Zune is to continue to build out that full entertainment experience," a Zune spokesperson said. "This is a very important step for us to introduce Zune to new consumers around the world." A more important step, methinks, would be to get the device out there. Just a thought.

Microsoft Loses Font Ruling in China
Microsoft this week lost a court case in China and was found to have infringed on a Chinese company's intellectual property rights by including certain fonts in Windows. "We plan to appeal the decision for the fonts case," a Microsoft spokesperson said. "We believe our license agreements with the plaintiff cover our use of the fonts." The case was filed in 2007 and doesn't cover Windows 7.

Bing Continues to Increase its Usage Share
Microsoft's Bing search engine accounted for 9.9 percent of all web searches in the United States, up from 9.4 percent the previous month. However, most of that gain clearly came at the expense of Yahoo! since market leader Google also expanded its share, from 64.9 percent to 65.4 percent. Yahoo! lost big time, falling to 18 percent from 18.8 percent.

OK, back to PDC. See you at the show: I'll be providing blog posts and news articles over the next two days and will be live-blogging the keynote events on both Tuesday and Wednesday. Stay tuned to the SuperSite for Windows for updates.

End of Article



Reader Comments
I don't understand MS reasoning on the zero-day hole in Win 7. Good grief, denial of service should qualify as a critical problem! Heck, knocking a box offline multiple times is very costly for businesses. This problem should be addressed & a patch released ASAP.

scottm99999 November 17, 2009 (Article Rating: )


Yeah but Microsoft are just soooo cool:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TSAXEVXvNz8

infiniteloop November 17, 2009 (Article Rating: )


Scottm99999, probably because the percentage of firewalls that have Port 139 and/or 445 open to the Internet is less than Zune's share of the market for mp3 players.

That said, it SHOULD be patched, just not rushed so it needs re-patching.

Webdev511 November 17, 2009 (Article Rating: )


I agree, Webdev511...do it right the first time so you don't have to do it over. I guess this has me bothered because I know past clients who are vulnerable, and who refuse to close those ports for "business reasons".

scottm99999 November 17, 2009 (Article Rating: )


Non-story - DOS holes will always come about and will be patched during next cycle...yawn

sx4sport November 17, 2009 (Article Rating: )


I disagree, sx4sport. DoS problems can be terribly bad. I was present during one a few years ago when a client had one of his production boxes knocked offline for several hours. The estimated cost for the downtime was over $2 million.

scottm99999 November 18, 2009 (Article Rating: )


Thanks Paul.

Microsoft has published a Security Advisory for it. its SA 977544.

A temporary workaround is to block TCP ports 139 and 445 at the firewall. However, the following will be effected by the block.

Microsoft provided a partial list of applications and services that could be impacted by the blocked ports: Applications that use SMB (CIFS), Applications that use mailslots or named pipes (RPC over SMB), Server (File and Print Sharing), Group Policy, Net Logon, Distributed File System (DFS), Terminal Server Licensing, Print Spooler, Computer Browser, Remote Procedure Call Locator, Fax Service, Indexing Service, Performance Logs and Alerts, Systems Management Server, and License Logging Service.

Hopefully that helps folks until the patch becomes available.

subzerohitman721 November 18, 2009 (Article Rating: )


in other words, anybody behind a nat router won't even notice anything. that is 99.9% of people out there. next news please.

guruguru November 18, 2009 (Article Rating: )


"Bing Continues to Increase its Usage Share"

No. Quite the contrary. GOOGLE continues to increase it's share. The graph at the bottom is the whole story.

http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/09/11/19/web_search_statistics_show_bing_stagnant_google_growing.html

chuckb84 November 19, 2009 (Article Rating: )


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