Flying back in time


flightPictureThere are some things you just have to write about.

For me the return of Microsoft Flight Simulator is one of them. Dreams of earlier days sitting at my wheezing desktop, landing my plane at a California airstrip, as the hard drive and the machine RAM spluttered like the propellor.

It’s going to return, it’s called Flight and you can see the campaign vision here.

Get your goggles and gloves ready, this time we are in high-def plasma and high speed broadband.

Microsoft, I can hardly wait!

Small Basic – big concept


buildingBlocksMicrosoft’s Small Basic has reached version 0.9.

Microsoft say that many bugs have been fixed and the system now works faster than ever. To see the updates in this version you can visit the Small Basic archive here.

What’s it for? One thing is as a great entry level for young people into the world of coding and software creation.

Lynn Langit and Llewellyn Franco have put together a great web site for children and teachers – www.teachingkidsprogramming.org

You can find a great way, as a tutor, into the world of code here and for young people the site offers the tools to get to grips with programming too.

We have written about Small Basic a long time ago, but the latest version and the Langit/Franco concept makes it a great way to get started for young people to create their own programmes.

The Third Sector Web home page is here.

Microsoft Web Office – now live


wordOnlinePicMicrosoft have gone live with their new free online versions of  Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote.

You can access them thorugh your Windows Live desktop after signing in. The files are stored on your linked SkyDrive account and enable you to recall, share or edit files just as if they were on your laptop or PC.

windowsBarPic

The suite available offers a reduced set of functions from the full set of facilities available in Office 2010, but still includes enough to make creating documents a useful online experience.

We were pleased to see OneNote included. This is a powerful information management and note taking, action list driven tool and is a useful compliment to the other online services available.

Microsoft with Windows Live accounts, the revamped Hotmail and this new suite now offers a useful and intuitive package.

We think the road-warriors on our team will definitely be using it.

You can find our Third Sector Web home page here.

The future according to Microsoft


Craig Mundie is the Chief Research and Strategy Officer for Microsoft. His job is to envision and explain how changes in software and hardware will have an effect on the computer user in the coming decades.

Use the Microsoft News link below to access the film archive and see a short film by Mundie which explains some of the key concepts in Microsoft future thinking. Not only will  ‘cloud computing’ become more powerful and accessible, but the development of what Microsoft call natural user interfaces’ will dramatically affect present day users.

Our laptops and devices will also go on getting more powerful and, Mundie argues, enable the creation of ‘personal assistants’. Where our devices can render support and services in the way that a human support worker can offer at present.

Games and flat screen touch technology will also offer a paradigm shift in how we look at, interrogate and sort information.

Mundie’s film is good on featuring practical application change that will be recognisable to the computer user of today.

You can find the Third Sector Web home page here.

Apple reaches 25th birthday


Apple reaches a quarter of a century of design, development and product innovation. The video above is the original Apple Mac advertisement from 1984. Not a keyboard in sight.

We have traditionally argued that we cleave to a PC based work environment because so many of our clients use Microsoft and Windows products.

Recent debate in the office has made us realise how redundant this argument is now. Macs have synchronicity with Windows and clearly, in our creative output as a business, being Mac based would be no drawback to efficiency.

We are rethinking our position this year as we review our technology needs for 2009.

Apple continue to be news makers, perhaps too strongly for their iPod and iPhone creations, whereas their core computing experience clearly and quietly goes from strength to strength. You seem not to hear such a debate about the failings of Mac OS, as opposed to WIndows Vista’s faltering or the hype surrounding the forthcoming Windows 7.

Apple as a company continue to be cutting edge, despite their principals being in their 50′s. (We think there’s still hope then for small outfits like Thirdsectorweb, where our team contribution is generated by practitioners from their early twenties to their fifties too).

Wired Magazine have recently published a great timeline review of Apple product history. There’s also a great graphic of the timeline too. Worth checking out if you are interested in seeing a great visual capture of Mac history.

You can find the latest Mac products on the Apple pages here.

You can find the Wired Magazine article here.

Our Third Sector Web home page is here.



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