2010 Microsoft Research Faculty Fellowship – A chance to get cash grant for $200,000

October 27, 2009

Microsoft Research is inviting nominations for its Faculty Fellowship program. This program recognizes and supports exceptional early-career faculty engaged in innovative computing research. The objective is to stimulate and support the research of promising individuals who have the potential to make a profound impact on the state-of-the-art in their research disciplines and to become future thought leaders.  Each fellowship award includes a cash grant of US$200,000.

Seven Fellowships will be awarded in April 2010. No more than one nomination per research institution will be accepted.  The potential Fellows for the Microsoft Research Faculty Fellowship program must be nominated by their research institutions, and their nominations must be confirmed by a letter from the head of the institution (e.g., office of the Pro-Vice Chancellor, President, and so on). Direct applications from new faculty members are not accepted.

Nominations and application deadline: Monday 16th November 2009, 20:00 (UTC).

 Please visit http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/collaboration/awards/msrff.aspx for eligibility criteria and instructions.


Windows 7 – Market Feedback

October 22, 2009

Windows 7 set to break retail records

guardian.co.uk  ‎

Windows 7 has become the biggest-grossing pre-order in Amazon’s history – worth even more than the most recent JK Rowling book, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. “The launch of Windows 7 has superseded everyone’s expectations,” the managing

Windows 7 breaks Amazon records

V3.co.uk 

Windows 7 has overtaken Harry Potter novels and the Nintendo Wii to become the biggest grossing pre-order product of all time in the UK, according to e-commerce giant Amazon. In an announcement which will be music to Microsoft’s ears, Amazon.co.uk

Windows 7 pre-orders steamroller Harry Potter

Techwatch 

Microsoft’s launch of Windows 7 is going to be quite spectacular, if the figures for the UK pre-orders from Amazon are anything to go by. The operating system has grabbed the record for the biggest grossing pre-order of all time on the

Official: Windows 7 is bigger than Harry Potter

TechRadar UK 

Windows 7 is the biggest pre-order product ever, according to Amazon, beating the record previously held by JK Rowling’s Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. According to the online shopping site, in July the OS was so popular

Windows 7 More Popular Than Harry Potter

PC World 

The magic of Hogwarts has nothing on Microsoft’s new operating system, as Windows 7 raced past Harry Potter in Amazon’s UK pre-order sales. A day before Microsoft releases Windows 7, Amazon UK said the operating system has become the best-selling

New Windows 7 launch is wizard

The Sun 

By STAFF REPORTER MICROSOFT launches the latest version of its Windows software today – and it’s already more popular than Harry Potter. Pre-orders for Windows 7 – which replaces the Windows Vista operating system – beat the record set by Harry Potter

Windows 7 is biggest grossing pre-ordered product of all time

Daily Mail 

Microsoft’s latest operating system Windows 7 is set to fly off the shelves tomorrow even faster than Harry Potter did on the day of its release. More pre-orders of Windows 7 have been purchased through Amazon during the first eight

Windows 7 preorders already top Vista sales

IT PRO

Amazon has said gross pre-order sales have topped Harry Potter, while DSGi said Windows 7 has already outsold Vista. By Nicole Kobie, 21 Oct 2009 at 19:00 Pre-orders for Windows 7 have already topped the sales of copies of Vista sold in the first year

Windows 7 is finally here

ComputerWeekly.com

Windows 7 is finally here and Microsoft is hoping businesses will buy it from day one. UK retailer PC World is opening its doors at midnight to sell copies of the new desktop operating system, and Amazon has said that pre-orders for Windows 7 have


Will Your PC Do Windows 7? Here’s How to Find Out

October 7, 2009

By Stephen Williams | nytimes.com

To assuage those millions of consumers, Microsoft is establishing a “compatibility center” where customers can find out if their stuff will work with Windows 7, arriving later this month, if it’ll require a software or driver upgrade or if it just needs to be marked “obsolete.”

The compatibility Web site is now up, but won’t be completely finished until Windows 7 is available in stores on Oct. 22, the company says.

“We will have more on this as we get closer to launch, but thousands of products are being populated into the Compatibility Center right now based on confirmed statements of support from partners,” Mark Relph, a senior director with Microsoft’s Windows Product Strategy Group and leader of its Windows Ecosystem team, told PC Mag.com.

Microsoft says that there are thousands of peripherals and applications to check, and that the site will evolve as testing proceeds and data is supplied. The company is also encouraging users to e-mail their own product requests and to look for new gear that shows the “Compatible with Windows 7” logo.

Meanwhile, people planning to upgrade their existing PCs can download the Windows 7 Upgrade Advisor Beta here. The app scans the computer and peripherals connected to it and determines if Windows 7 can be installed. The instructions on the site say, “if you are running a PC with Windows Vista and the Windows Upgrade Advisor says you can upgrade it, the transition to Windows 7 should be pretty smooth.”

For users running Windows XP or earlier versions of Windows, the advice from Microsoft is to “get help with this process from your local computer service provider. You’ll need to back up your current files and settings, perform a custom (clean) installation, and then reinstall your files, settings and programs.”


Microsoft SQL still top choice in developing markets

October 7, 2009

Iain Thomson in San Francisco | V3.co.uk,

Microsoft’s SQL Server is the most popular database application in China, India, Eastern Europe and Latin America, but its open-source competitor MySQL is gaining ground.

A survey of 400 developers found that more than 50 per cent are running SQL Server, particularly in China and Latin America. MySQL’s popularity is growing, however, and is used by 46 per cent of companies, mostly in the Indian market.

Microsoft’s Visual Basic programming language is also popular in emerging markets, according to the survey. Latin America and China lead the way, but Visual Basic is less popular in Eastern Europe.

The research also found that development teams are typically largest in India and smallest in Latin America and Eastern Europe. Around 80 per cent of Latin American development teams had fewer than six members, compared to under 30 per cent in India.

“Even in this economic downturn the emerging markets represent a significant opportunity for independent software vendors, as we see developer population growth more than double that of the rest of the world,” said John Andrews, president of research firm Evans Data, which carried out the survey.

“However, the approach to these markets has to be tailored given the vast differences with developer demographics and the associated differences in technology and services adoption.”


Book Review : Cloud Computing for Dummies

October 7, 2009

Daniel Robinson | V3.co.uk

Microsoft and analyst firm Freeform Dynamics have produced Cloud Computing for Dummies, a book intended as a basic introduction for a business audience to cloud computing and how the technology is best employed.

Following the format of the familiar For Dummies series, the new book is aimed at people who may be unsure about the benefits of cloud computing, but who keep hearing the buzzword cropping up everywhere.

A relatively slim volume at not much more than 30 pages, the book is divided into five chapters starting with a definition of cloud computing, then providing information on what it can do for businesses, advice on adopting an approach, and a final chapter containing tips.

“The important thing to realise is that cloud isn’t one thing, but lots of things lumped together under one umbrella. People can look at this book and pick up the business issues that trigger the need for these,” said David Tebbutt, programme director at Freeform Dynamics.

Tebbut said that a survey of 477 organisations by Freeform Dynamics last year revealed that 49 per cent were not yet using cloud computing, 41 per cent were selectively using some cloud resources, but only 10 per cent were adopting it enthusiastically.

Cloud computing is a nebulous term that can include applications delivered as software-as-a-service, online storage, and hosting of virtual machines in a service provider’s datacentre.

Microsoft’s Azure, for example, provides a mix of services including hosted compute capability for running code, online storage and an online SQL database, while Amazon’s EC2 platform provides customers with virtual server instances on which to deploy applications of their choice.

How businesses make use of cloud facilities can vary by their size, according to Tebbutt, with enterprises often using them as an extension of their existing infrastructure, while smaller companies can use cloud-based resources to get the benefits of IT without having to invest in costly infrastructure and the staff to operate it.

“Development and testing is the classic example in the enterprise. New applications can prove very expensive if they fail, whereas cloud lets you develop them using outsourced infrastructure,” said Matt Deacon, chief architectural advisor for Microsoft’s Developer and Platform group.

“From a business perspective, it’s not about buzzwords but about what brings a competitive advantage, such as avoiding the cost of deploying applications locally and having online access to data,” said Koby Amedume, platform marketing lead for Microsoft’s Developer and Platform group.

Tebbut said that most organisations will inevitably end up with a mix of internal and cloud-based IT, depending on what best fits their needs.

“Anyone who thinks they can move their whole business to the cloud and then just sit back, needs their head examined. It’s an opportunity to do things that you can’t do internally,” he said.

Although Cloud Computing for Dummies is backed by Microsoft, the content of the book is provided by Freeform Dynamics and does not endorse any particular cloud platform, according to Tebbutt.


Exit Interview: Sam Ramji Assesses Microsoft’s Open Source Ascent

October 7, 2009

By Jeffrey Schwartz | reddevnews.com

Sam Ramji’s five-year tenure at Microsoft was marked by, among other things, the company instituting interoperability principles and more recently gaining closer ties to the Linux and PHP communities.

Shortly after Labor Day Ramji announced that he planned to depart Redmond to return to Sillicon Valley, where he would join cloud infrastructure vendor Sonoa Systems, as reported here. In his final three months at Microsoft, Ramji said he achieved his long-held goal of launching a non-profit open source foundation sponsored by Microsoft. The CodePlex Foundation was launched in conjunction with the announcement of his departure. Ramji will serve as the foundation’s interim CEO for its first 100 days.

Can you describe your last few weeks at Microsoft since your move and the foundation were announced?
I spent most of the last three weeks launching the foundation. I had very little time for anything else. I was dealing with very mundane logistics like getting a tax ID, and opening a bank account and all the things required of creating a startup that you don’t necessarily associate with a non-profit foundation. We had a ton of coverage in media, blogs, journals, Twitter and our Google group. In general people are pretty optimistic about what the foundation can represent. There are always a few people that are going to be concerned no matter what the topic if it’s something about Microsoft and open source. But that was a small minority. The majority was optimistic.

We had some people from both what I think of as the core open source community as well as specific communities like the Apache Software Community or the .NET Open Source Community, who immediately got engaged and sent recommendations and asked questions. We’ve gotten some very good advice on how to structure the foundation, on where to have our initial focus and we will continue to get out to the public and to ask questions. We will be at the MonoSpace Conference on October 29th talking about the range of .NET open source developers, and we’ll be at the Apache Conference the week of November 2.

Speaking of advice that you’ve gotten, can you discuss your reaction to Andy Updegrove’s advice and concerns, which generated a lot of discussion?
Andy made a number of salient points based on his early extensive experience with foundations for standards. I appreciated his feedback. We’ve discussed it and look forward to taking some of those steps such as becoming a membership-based organization. He had suggestions on expanding the size of the board of directors, we think that’s important. There’s a tremendous amount of open source being used in academic institutions, but also some of the challenges academic institutions have had in making contributions back to the open source community projects have echoed some of the challenges we see with software companies. So we think the foundation can serve as a useful conduit for them to be able to start to contribute back to some key projects.

Was there anything you take issue with or disagree with?
It’s an education for me, frankly. Four of us including myself are new to foundations. The amount of time you need to spend analyzing the bylaws and formulating responses, we all saw was a very useful education. The one comment I had for Andy was we didn’t plan to launch it in a perfect state. We launched it at alpha or beta, depending on your point of view. I think we are going to get more independent, different software companies and communities participating, especially sponsoring. I think he had a very good point about financial independence.

Whose idea was it to start the foundation and how much buy-in did you get from top levels at Microsoft?
Bill Staples is a key figure in the formation of the foundation, Mark Stone is our deputy director. There was a pretty good size team of people across legal, my team in the Platform Strategy Group and people in the developer division and the server and tools business. Of course, we had to plan executive sponsorship right up to the senior leadership team. Collectively there’s an open source community within Microsoft for some years. We started having this idea in earnest probably a couple of years ago.
I named Sandy Khaund. She wrote a paper called Microsoft.org, which was thinking about the great things we could do for Microsoft and for open source if we were to establish a non-profit, open source foundation. So we took a stab at starting a foundation a couple of times before, but weren’t successful getting those projects off the ground. This time around we had really strong buy-in and strong leadership from product groups from people like Bill Staple that helped make it successful at this time.

How long did it take to pull it together?
We started running in early June and we sprinted through most of the summer to reach our launch date of September 10. It was a solid three months.

What happened this time that made this effort work, where past attempts failed?
I think the idea of open source being complimentary to Microsoft has just gotten so much broader acceptance. Additionally, the work that Bill Staples’ team has been doing with the open source communities, like PHP applications, as they look at what are developers doing today, how are they building Web applications, what types of technologies and languages are based on teams. [They] built a real strong competency in understanding how open source is driving the Web application model. Everyone has gotten used to the idea that open source and Microsoft have a complimentary future and there is a real strategic push by an organization that focuses heavily on developers.

Did this reach up to Steve Ballmer?
Steve was briefed.

What was his initial reaction?
We had no resistance.

So can you say you have left Microsoft with the feeling that the company truly is grounded in this new open source mission? You didn’t leave with any frustrations that things were happening too slowly?
No, in fact in the last few years, and last few months especially, the slide wheel has been going faster and faster, and I would say we’ve gotten some of our fast results quite recently. For example, when we released the Linux kernel drivers for HyperV under the GPL, we achieved the PHP 5.3.1, which is the fastest PHP on Windows in June, so there were too big hits in a short amount of time.

I am not saying it happened overnight — it was pushing on four years or so — but more and more people have gotten on board with it and it started to go faster and faster. What I expect to see from Microsoft in the coming 12 months would probably be conservatively twice as much open source contribution activity than we saw in the previous 12 months. The open source concept is really spreading across the engineering teams inside the company. It’s really becoming part of the DNA.


Ballmer’s Son Helps Ensure Windows 7 Isn’t Next Vista

October 6, 2009

Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) — Microsoft Corp. Chief Executive Officer Steve Ballmer says the company got the wrong impression from early positive feedback on Vista and won’t make the same mistake with the software’s successor, Windows 7.

Ballmer established a process for gathering feedback from computer makers, and he’s personally surveying customers — along with his teenage son — to make sure Windows 7 works. Early users, including Continental Airlines Inc., Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc. and the city of Miami, say they are upbeat about the software.

“The test feedback has been good, but the test feedback on Vista was good,” Ballmer, 53, said in an interview last week. “I am optimistic, but the proof will be in the pudding.”

Ballmer needs a winner. Before today, Microsoft had dropped 54 percent on the Nasdaq since he took over as CEO in 2000. For most of the past year, Ballmer ran the Windows business himself, and he’s counting on Windows 7 to restore investor confidence after corporations and consumers snubbed Vista. About 80 percent of companies plan to switch to the software in the next two years, ISI Group, a brokerage firm in New York, said yesterday.

“Windows 7 is important for how Microsoft is seen in the marketplace, especially after how Vista was received,” said Ken Allen, a portfolio manager at Baltimore-based T. Rowe Price Group Inc., the seventh-biggest institutional holder of Microsoft shares. “It will be an important year for how Ballmer is viewed as CEO.”

Underestimating?

Wall Street is underestimating the impact of Windows 7, which debuts on Oct. 22, said Sarah Friar, a Goldman Sachs Group Inc. analyst in San Francisco. Analysts’ profit estimates for Microsoft, the world’s largest software maker, are 3 percent and 5 percent too low for 2010 and 2011, she said. The company’s Windows sales will increase 9 percent to $16.3 billion in 2010, the first full year Windows 7 is on sale, compared with a 10 percent decline this year, she predicts. “We have big expectations for what Windows 7 can do,” Friar said.

Others remain unimpressed with Windows 7 and Ballmer.

“Ballmer needs to retire — it’s been a huge disappointment from a shareholder’s perspective,” said Dave Stepherson, a fund manager at Hardesty Capital Management in Baltimore, referring to Ballmer’s tenure as CEO. He helps manage $650 million, including Microsoft shares. Windows 7 won’t change things because it doesn’t have any “must-have” features, he said.

Microsoft advanced 25 cents to $24.89 at 9:48 a.m. New York time in Nasdaq Stock Market trading. Before today, the shares had gained 27 percent this year. Of the 35 analysts following the Redmond, Washington-based company, 24 suggest buying the stock, 10 say hold and one says sell, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Continental Airlines

Continental and Starwood say Windows 7 runs faster than Vista. It starts up and shuts down more quickly, and lets users preview the contents of windows by placing their mouse over the entry on the bottom of the screen. It also supports multi-touch navigation, letting users control the software using their fingers.

In the past, companies have typically switched to a new version of Windows when buying new PCs, said Heather Bellini, an analyst at ISI in New York. Because Windows 7 runs on older machines, ISI’s survey saw a “significant jump” in companies saying they will put Windows 7 on existing computers.

More Responsive

Continental says Microsoft is more responsive to suggestions than it was with Vista, when the airline’s proposed features never made it into the software. Windows 7 now offers those options, such as better mobile access to corporate networks, said Eric Craig, managing director of technology at Houston-based Continental, the fourth-largest U.S. carrier.

Because Windows 7 can run on older machines, it’s more appealing to budget-conscious customers, Craig said. Continental can use the software on more than 60 percent of the PCs it already has, he said. Microsoft has developed tools that help customers upgrade operating systems and assess whether their applications will work.

“We’re all struggling with the economic reset,” Craig said, adding that Ballmer should get a lot of the credit for focusing on the cost of Windows 7. “He really understands the incredible pressures on us to deliver with what we already have.”

Vista debuted in 2007 — two years behind schedule and more than five years after the previous version, Windows XP. Vowing never to go that long again between releases, Ballmer reshuffled executives. He put Steven Sinofsky, known for sticking to deadlines with Office releases, in charge of Windows development.

‘Exciting Product’

Even then, Ballmer said he worried that Windows 7 wouldn’t be exciting enough. That changed two summers ago, when he saw a demo of a math feature. Users could handwrite an equation onto a panel, and the software recognized the notation. Ballmer, who went to math camp as a kid, was impressed.

“I said, ‘Yep, this product’s going to be an exciting product,’” he said.

To gauge the reception to Windows 7, Ballmer is doing his own polling. A test version of the software has been available since January, giving early adopters a chance to try it out.

“He asks everyone he talks to, ‘Are they using Windows 7? What are they experiencing?’” said Tami Reller, a Windows vice president. “He’s his own market-research firm.”

14-Year-Old Critic

Ballmer says his toughest critic is his 14-year-old son, who has helped find bugs in the software. He put an early version of Windows 7 on his school laptop about 18 months ago, “probably well before he should have,” Ballmer said.

With Vista, many computer and software makers didn’t have compatible products out soon enough. To fix that problem, Ballmer has his lieutenants gather feedback from computer makers in a systematic way and act on it. The new approach has won praise from Hewlett-Packard Co., Dell Inc. and Acer Inc., the three largest personal-computer makers.

“Windows 7 is the first right thing they have done in the recent five years,” J.T. Wang, chairman of Taipei-based Acer, said in an interview in April.

Windows still dominates the market, running more than 90 percent of PCs. Even so, Apple Inc.’s Macintosh has gained market share since Vista debuted. Apple’s share of U.S. PC sales increased to 8 percent in the fourth quarter of 2008 from 5.1 percent in 2006, according to Stamford, Connecticut-based Gartner Inc.

Apple Rivalry

“We often hear from our customers that they chose Mac because they’re tired of the headaches with Windows,” said Bill Evans, a spokesman at Cupertino, California-based Apple. He said many existing Windows users will have a “painful upgrade” to Windows 7, giving them a reason to buy a Mac.

Some customers put off PC purchases altogether after Vista. And makers of netbooks — the cheap laptops that have surged in popularity this year — have opted to use the older Windows XP because it’s less expensive and doesn’t require powerful hardware. Windows revenue has declined in each of the past three quarters.

Vista’s failings, coupled with the recession, may actually help Windows 7, said Loren Loverde, an analyst at Framingham, Massachusetts-based research firm IDC. Corporations are now saddled with aging software and computers, so many may be eager to upgrade.

‘Very Responsive’

“We essentially missed an operating system with Vista — very few businesses migrated,” said Mark McBeth, vice president for information technology at Starwood, the third-largest U.S. lodging company. “Microsoft has been very responsive with Windows 7 and we all know why. They’ve got it right this time, and they want to make sure everybody knows.”

James Osteen, Miami’s assistant director of information technology, decided to upgrade his existing PCs to Windows 7 — even though budget cuts may force him to stop buying new machines. He estimates Miami’s government offices can save almost $400,000 a year from Windows 7 because it uses less energy and is easier to install.

Other customers, such as Sprint Nextel Corp., the third- biggest U.S. mobile-phone operator, say they are holding off on Windows 7 because of the economy.

Ballmer’s record as CEO depends on more than just the success of Windows 7, ISI’s Bellini said. He needs to reach beyond the achievements of his predecessor, Bill Gates, she said.

Being able to say: “‘I took what someone else did and maintained it’ is not a bad legacy, but it’s not a great legacy,” said Bellini, who recommends buying Microsoft shares. “His legacy should be: What can he build on his own?”


Microsoft Security Essentials

September 30, 2009

Microsoft Security Essentials provides real-time protection for your home PC that guards against viruses, spyware, and other malicious software.

Microsoft Security Essentials is a free* download from Microsoft that is simple to install, easy to use, and always kept up to date so you can be assured your PC is protected by the latest technology. It’s easy to tell if your PC is secure — when you’re green, you’re good. It’s that simple.

Microsoft Security Essentials runs quietly and efficiently in the background so that you are free to use your Windows-based PC the way you want—without interruptions or long computer wait times. download now


Microsoft Web Application Toolkits to the Web

September 28, 2009

For the Microsoft WebsiteSpark launch, we have released 7 Web Application Toolkits, together with an introduction to the Web Application Toolkits on Channel9 by James Senior and Jonathan Carter. The scenarios were selected based on feedback from community developers with the first 7 being detailed below.  

 

Web Application Toolkit for Internet Explorer 8 Extensibility 

Today users can access rich information and services while they are browsing a site; it’s not a trivial task to expose this content to the same users when they are not on that site. The goal of this Web Application Toolkit is to leverage the new features in Internet Explorer 8 (Web Slices, Accelerators and Visual Search Providers) to extend the reach of your web site and services also to those users that are not on your site. The Web Application Toolkit includes a set of ASP.NET Web Controls that you can use to take advantage of these IE new features in your own Web application.

Check out the accompanying screencast.

   Web Application Toolkit for Bing Search 

Bing is a powerful new Decision Engine designed to help consumers accomplish tasks and make faster, more informed decisions. The Bing Application Programming Interface (API) provides developers programmatic access to Bing, offering flexible options for building or enhancing your site or applications. This Web Application Toolkit shows how to take advantage of the Bing API to add search capabilities to your Web site by leveraging the various search results that the Bing API provides, including Web content, images, news and videos, among others. Through this Web Application Toolkit you will also discover how to use ASP.NET AJAX and jQuery to provide an enhanced and more interactive end user experience when using the Bing API.

 

 

   Web Application Toolkit for REST Services 

Many Web applications today are starting to expose data as REST service interfaces, so it can be accessed through APIs by other tiers of the application or even by other applications. A RESTful web service is a simple Web service implemented using HTTP and the principles of REST. REST Services focus on resources; each one is represented by a unique URI, and users interact with them via their URI using the HTTP uniform interface. This Web Application Toolkit shows how to easily add REST service interfaces for an existing Web application. The Web Application Toolkit includes a sample REST service, two sample client applications that access the REST services, one using simple ASP.NET Web Forms and a second Web application using AJAX to asynchronously invoke the REST service and finally a custom project template for Visual Studio to make it very easy to build new REST Services.

Check out the accompanying screencast.

 

  Web Application Toolkit for Mobile Web Applications 

This Web Application Toolkit is designed to demonstrate how to extend an existing ASP.NET MVC Web application to provide access from mobile devices. To enable mobile access, the Web application should have views targeting each of the mobile devices to be supported. The MVC pattern helps you create applications that separate the different aspects of the application (input logic, business logic, and UI logic), while providing a loose coupling between these elements.  This Web Application Toolkit provides a component called MobileCapableViewEngine that enables the Web application to show the appropriate view depending on the device’s browser that is performing the request.   It also includes a sample site that provides different views for Windows Mobile, IPhone, and Blackberry devices.  

Check out the accompanying screencast. 

 

   Web Application Toolkit for Template-Driven Email 

This Web Application Toolkit is designed to demonstrate how to generate and send dynamic, template-based emails from a web application. There are many common scenarios where notification emails need to be sent to end users. Examples of these common scenarios may involve notifying a user of their newly created account, sending a new password in respond to a forgotten password request, or emailing an alert under specific business circumstances, such as the creation of a order. Typically the E-mails sent from a Web application scenario are formatted as HTML, include CSS stylesheets, and images and need to be generated dynamically with custom or user-specific data.  This Web Application Toolkit includes samples that show how to use templates to generate these dynamic email bodies. 

Check out the accompanying screencast.

 

Web Application Toolkit for making Your Web Site SocialAdding social capabilities to your Web site allows you to attract new users, keep them on your Web site for longer and get them to come back more often. This Web Application Toolkit shows how, using a few lines of code with the Windows Live Messenger Web Toolkit, it is possible to add social capabilities to a Web site with instant messaging from a website to various client endpoints like Windows, Windows Mobile, Xbox 360 and Mac.  Behind the scenes is a powerful set of UI Controls and a JavaScript library that connect your website to the Messenger Service which is used by 330 million users around the world. 

Check out the accompanying screencast.

Web Application Toolkit for FAQs 

The majority of web sites have the need to display a list of frequently asked questions to their users. Although it’s not difficult to create a simple set of FAQ pages, creating a great user experience that supports searching for FAQs, filtering, and paging, can become more difficult. Furthermore, this is often common functionality that has to be implemented repeatedly in multiple Web sites. This Web Application Toolkit is designed to provide a starting set of code including ASP.NET pages, data access logic, and database schemas, for integrating Frequently Asked Questions into your own ASP.NET MVC Web application.

Check out the accompanying screencast.

 

 You can find the complete list of Web Application Toolkits here.


Alibaba Aims to Draw Micro-entrepreneurs Online

September 25, 2009

Owen Fletcher, IDG News Service

China’s Alibaba Group will fund a microlending program started by a Grameen Bank organization that could eventually draw loan recipients onto Alibaba’s e-commerce Web sites.

Alibaba will give the program seed funding of US$5 million and technical support to help loan recipients eventually run their businesses online, it said in a statement Wednesday. The program, which will start in the less prosperous Chinese provinces of Sichuan and Inner Mongolia once it gains government approval, will be run by Grameen Trust, a Bangladesh-based group guided by microlending pioneer Muhammad Yunus.

Alibaba’s main site, Alibaba.com, provides a platform for small business owners to buy and sell everything from raw materials to iPods. The group also runs China’s top online payment platform and Taobao.com, a user auction and retail site. Alibaba is working to expand its user base on Alibaba.com, which has over 33 million registered business users in China and about 9.5 million users abroad.

The loan program will target poor recipients. More than 8,000 people are expected to take average first loans of about $400 in the program’s first five years and with its initial funding, Alibaba said. Alibaba also runs a loan program that assigns credit ratings to small and medium businesses based on their transaction history on Alibaba Web sites. The program, which fills a gap in a country without a central credit system, is expected to facilitate 6 billion yuan ($880 million) in loans this year.


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