Monday, 6 April 2015

40th B'day Of Microsoft...



Microsoft has turned 40-years-old today, making it among the oldest tech companies in a time when startups are all the rage. One of the biggest brands by market value, Microsoft makes products that are used by billions of people worldwide.

Windows was the breakthrough product for Microsoft, a software that reduced the dominance of the hardware in the computer industry. On Microsoft 40th anniversary, let us take a look at how Windows has changed since it was unveiled in 1985...
1) Windows 1.0: 1985


The first version of Windows was basically a simple layer on top of MS-DOS, the character based operating system that ran most PCs then. It was not widely used.

2) Windows 2.0: 1987



This was the first operating system to run Microsoft Word and Excel. It also caused Apple to file a "look and feel" lawsuit against Microsoft for ripping off some elements of the Macintosh and Lisa. Apple did not win that case.


3) Windows 3.0: 1990



Windows 3.0 did a lot more to hide the underlying MS-DOS guts with graphical icons like the Program Manager. Not surprisingly, it became the first really popular version of Win.


4) Windows 3.1: 1991


This is the version of Windows that really made it the standard on most IBM-compatible PCs back in the early 1990s. It's also the last version that kind of looked like MS-DOS.


5) Windows 95: 1995

Windows 95 was a big break with the past, emphasizing the desktop and introducing icons for almost everything. Internet Explorer, the Recycle Bin, and the Start button were all introduced here. The basic design for Windows hardly changed from this up until Windows 8, which came out in 2012.

6) Windows 98: 1998


If it ain't broke, don't fix it. This update looked and worked just like Windows 95, but was more stable and had a few extra features.

7) Windows ME ("Millennium Edition"): 2000


This was basically Windows 98 with a few new consumer features. It didn't sell very well. Most people waited for XP, which was known to be coming soon.

8) Windows XP: 2001


In 2001, we got Windows XP. It was the first big update since Windows 95, and the first consumer version of Windows to break completely from MS-DOS and use the same underlying technology as Windows NT — the more stable and powerful version of Windows that had been used on servers and "workstation" PCs.



9) Windows Vista: 2006


Windows Vista took Microsoft five years to build, and there were a lot of missteps and resets along the way. It was not a hit, and former CEO Steve Ballmer has said that the time and effort the company spent on Vista — instead of pursuing new opportunities in mobile — was one of his biggest regrets.

10) Windows 7: 2009


Fortunately for Microsoft, it was able to recover from the Vista debacle on the desktop. Windows 7, which came out in 2009, was basically a polish-up of Vista, but much more stable. 

It's still very popular in businesses. In fact, one of the big challenges with Windows 10 will be getting enterprises to upgrade from Windows 7.


11) Windows 8: 2012


The iPad came out in 2010, and its early success spooked Microsoft into another misstep. Instead of continuing to adapt on 30 years of of desktop success, Microsoft took a lot of the concepts from the unsuccessful Windows Phone operating system and brought them over to the main version of Windows.

The goal was to make an operating system that functioned equally well on touch-screen tablets, to compete against the iPad and regular PCs. The main interface had no start button, huge colorful boxes instead of icons, and changed how basic tasks were done.

Windows And Windows Phone 8.1: 2014


Last year, Microsoft updated both its PC/tablet and mobile operating systems, and began to bring them closer together. It also used Windows 8.1 to reverse some of the big changes it had made with Windows 8, like returning the Start menu.

Windows 10 is expected to continue in this vein, bringing the PC, tablet, and phone platforms even closer together and making the traditional Windows desktop more easily available if you're using a keyboard and mouse.

Sources: TOI.

Tuesday, 17 February 2015

6 tech skills you need to know in 2015


 Feburary 13,2015
6 tech skills you need to know in 2015
Technology is one area that no one
in any industry can afford to grow
complacent about — tech is
changing so quickly that skills 
you mastered last year may 
already be outdated.

In such a quickly evolving industry
, information decays at a rate of
30% a year, according to Research
in Labor Economics, rendering
 nearly a third of last year's tech
-related knowledge irrelevant.

But don't panic — there's a solution. Staying up-to-date with emergent technologies
and trends — as well as the skills needed to master them — will help you offset the
 lightning-fast pace of skills disruption and keep you ahead of the curve.
 Continuous learning is the key to maintaining an ongoing competitive advantage, 
both for individuals and organizations.

On that note, here are the top six tech skills that Pluralsight has identified as not just
"nice to know," but "need to know," in 2015:

1. Coding

Feburary 13,2015
Coding
As I've written recently, coding is the
 number-one skill in demand today
worldwide. Although coding and
computer science are still
marginalizein the K-12 education
 system, it's clear that the ability to
 code has become as important as
 other basic forms of literacy like 
reading and math.

Fortunately, no matter what your age
or current comfort level with
technology  there are ways to pick up intro coding skills — and many of them are free.

2. Big data

Feburary 13,2015
Big data
According to Forbes, big data will
continue to grow in 2015, due in part
to the rise of the Internet of Things,
 which has the power to embed
technology  in practically anything.

As ever-larger volumes of data are
created , it's vital to know how to 
collect and  analyze that data -
particularly when  it's related to
 customer preferences and
 business processes.

No matter what industry you're in, you'll miss out on key marketing and decision-making
opportunities by ignoring big data.

3. Cloud computing

Feburary 13,2015
Cloud computing
TechRadar reported this month that
 2015 will be the year that the cloud
 becomes the "new normal." The
 reason, writes Mark Barrenechea
CEO of OpenText, is that costs
 can be slashed as much as 90%
 through digitization of information-
intensive processes.

Barrenechea predicts that by year-end,
we'll see "a world of hybrid
deployments  in which some
 information and applications reside in the cloud and the  remainder resides on-premise."

Learning to utilize the cloud's flexible power can improve everything from your data
security to your collaboration ability.

4. Mobile

Feburary 13,2015
Mobile
As Six Dimensions states, "If you
don't have a mobile strategy, you 
don't have a future strategy." This 
has never been truer than in 2015,
 the year in which The Guardian 
predicts an increasing number
of companies will learn how to
 mobilize their revenue-generating 
processes, like making purchases 
and depositing checks.

This is also the year that we'll hit
 critica mass with the fusion of mobile and cloud  computing, according to Forbes.
 That means many more centrally coordinated apps will be usable on multiple devices.

5. Data visualization

Feburary 13,2015
Data visualization
Data keeps multiplying, which means
whatever message you hope to
communicate  online must find 
increasingly creative ways  to break 
through the noise.

That's where data visualization comes
 in, which involves using a visual
 representation of the data to discover
 new information and breakthroughs.
 Creative Bloq notes that this
 technique can reveal details that
 poring through dry data can't.

Fortunately, you don't have to be a web designer or developer to create compelling
infographics.

6. UX design skills

Feburary 13,2015
UX design skills
User experience (UX) designers
consider  the end user's ease of 
use, efficiency, and general 
experience of interfacing with
 a system (such as a website or
application).

Smashing Magazine notes that
while user experience has long 
been important, it has become
 more so recently in relation to
 the  diverse ways that users
 can now access websites, including mobile and apps.

"The more complex the system, the more involved will the planning and architecture
have to be  for it," writes Jacob Gube. But it's not just professional designers who
 can benefit from understanding UX design — anyone can.


Sources:Times Of India