Tag Archives: Windows operating system

Windows 8 set for 2012?

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Just as you were getting comfortable with Windows 7, it looks like Windows 8 is coming in the next two years. In a post celebrating the one-year anniversary of Windows 7 — the fastest selling OS in history — Microsoft’s Dutch Web site briefly mentioned the construction and release of its successor:

“Microsoft is on course for the next version of Windows. But it will take about two years before ‘Windows 8′ on the market.” Winrumors.com grabbed and translated the post, and CNET took a screenshot of the text, which unsurprisingly disappeared shortly after the news stole headlines. Now Microsoft is back to being tight-lipped about Windows 8 and its expected release.

Windows 8

Windows 8

Microsoft has let slip that it expects the next version of its Windows operating system to tip up in two years.

The revelation came as part of a birthday celebration for Windows 7, with the firm saying that “it will take about two years before Windows 8 [is] on the market.” Most of its operating systems typically appear around three years after the previous version, though the Vole, like many software companies, is very cautious about making predictions about upcoming products.

The problem for Microsoft is that now that its customers, especially its bread and butter enterprise ones, have a whiff of when the next Windows, or Windows 8, will be released, that might put them off from purchasing the current version. Perhaps knowing this, the firm announced a rather vague “first half of next year” release date for its Windows 7 service pack 1 (SP1).


Last week Microsoft CEO and impressario Steve Ballmer claimed that the firm’s biggest challenge would be Windows 8. That’s probably the most accurate statement Ballmer has made in some time, with Apple’s computer sales continuing to grow and Linux becoming a bigger threat with every passing day. For many of its users the biggest selling point of Windows 7 is that it is not Windows Vista, but that’s not going to be the case with Windows 8.

Although Windows 7 is an improvement over Vista, the Vole will have to pull something major out of its hat with Windows 8 to entice people to upgrade from Windows 7 and not consider alternatives. Going by documents leaked earlier this year, there is relatively little in Windows 8 at this point to get users salivating.

Microsoft will be hoping that its customers won’t wait two years to purchase another version of Windows, although if Ballmer is to be believed, the biggest question mark at this point is whether Windows will be worth spending more money on to upgrade when Windows 8 arrives.

Microsoft issues its biggest-ever security fix

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* Microsoft addresses record 49 flaws in its software

* Affects Windows, Internet Explorer, Office

* Fixes vulnerability exploited by Stuxnet virus (Adds details on Stuxnet virus, comments from researcher)

Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O) issued its biggest-ever security fix on Tuesday, including repairs to its ubiquitous Windows operating system and Internet browser for flaws that could let hackers take control of a PC.

The new patches aim to fix a number of vulnerabilities including the notorious Stuxnet virus that attacked an Iranian nuclear power plant and other industrial control systems around the world.

Microsoft said four of the new patches — software updates that write over glitches — were of the highest priority and should be deployed immediately to protect users from potential criminal attacks on the Windows operating systems.

Microsoft said it also repaired other less serious security weaknesses in Windows, along with security problems in its widely used Office software for PCs and Microsoft Server software for business computers.


Microsoft released 16 security patches to address 49 problems in its products, many of which were discovered by outside researchers who seek out such vulnerabilities to win cash bounties as well as notoriety for their technical prowess.

“This is a huge jump,” said Amol Sarwate, a research manager with computer security provider Qualys Inc. “I think the reason for it is that more and more people are out there looking for vulnerabilities.”

The geeks who report such vulnerabilities to software makers are known as “white hat” hackers. Sarwate warned that there are also plenty of “black hats,” or criminal hackers who look for vulnerabilities in software that they can exploit to launch attacks on computer systems.

Indeed, the world’s biggest software maker said that the patches released on Tuesday include software to fix a vulnerability exploited by the Stuxnet virus — a malicious program that attacks PCs used to run power plants and other infrastructure running Siemens (SIEGn.DE) industrial control systems.

The virus, which infected computers at Iran’s Bushehr nuclear power plant, was discovered over the summer. Security research Symantec said that it detected the highest concentration of the virus on computer systems in Iran, though it was also spotted in Indonesia, India, the United States, Australia, Britain, Malaysia and Pakistan.

So far Microsoft has patched three of the four vulnerabilities exploited by Stuxnet’s unknown creators.

The total of 49 vulnerabilities exceeds the previous record of 34, which was set in October 2009 and matched in June and August of this year.

The constant patching of PCs is a time-consuming process for corporate users, who need to test the fixes before they deploy them to make sure they do not cause machines to crash because of compatibility problems with existing software.