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Showing posts from January, 2015

Windows 10 - Build 9926 - First Impressions

Yesterday I loaded the latest build of Windows 10 Tech Preview - 9926 onto both a traditional desktop and a Dell Venue 8 Pro tablet. The desktop is an HP Pavilion E9280t with Core i7, 8GB RAM and 256Gb SSD.  It was configured for dual-boot Win 8.1 / Win 10 and had the previous 9879 build. The install was easy and painless via the Update & Recovery section of Settings and took about 30 minutes.  So nothing exciting here - I'll combine general comments after my comments on the tablet install. The Venue 8 Pro is a 5300 series model with Atom 7730, 2Gb RAM and 64GB onboard storage + a 64GB SD card running Win 8.1.  I had to do a bit of storage cleanup prior to upgrading.  I downloaded the ISO to the SD card and made sure there was at least 16GB of primary storage available prior to upgrading.    One nice feature was the ability to simple mount the ISO as a DVD and then run setup in Administrator Mode.  This was a nice option versus having to burn the ISO to a USB.  One note

Windows Phone - Fading into Obscurity - Update

The numbers are in for 2014 and Windows Phone has not fared very well.   In all but two major markets (Germany & Australia) Windows Phone lost market share. According to Kantar World Panel - in the US Windows Phone share dropped from 4.6% to 3.0% an over 30% drop.  The big gainer in Q3 and Q4 was Apple with a 4.3% increase from 43.1 to 46.4%.  The iPhone 6/6Plus was a huge hit (in fact I bought one).   I blame this drop purely on MS's poor execution and fractional release of their fall product line up.  In the US only 1 of their new phones - the 830 was made available and on only 1 carrier AT&T.  Additionally the phone was way overpriced @ $499.   The one device that seemed very promising - the 735 - did not even make the market as it was delayed by Verizon and not available on any other US carrier.   I was able to purchase an unlocked NA LTE version that works fine on TMO or AT&T for $299.    According to AdDulpex as of December - the new 830 does not even regist

Technology Predictions for 2015 - Part II

In my last post I discussed my predictions for 2015 in the end user computing and mobile spaces.   Now let's switch to the corporate side.... On the server side of things, two big changes... First is the introduction of the newest generation of Intel Processors with DDR4 RAM and Haswell architecture.  This continues the evolution of the server to be a virtualization platform.  You see much higher CPU Core density - moving from 12 - 14 to 18 - 20 / CPU and much higher memory capacity.   Start thinking 1.5TB of RAM in a 2U server.   But at much higher cost.  DDR4 ram is impressive with it's improved speed and capacity but is very expensive - so are the high core count processors.  So while you can certainly support more VMs per server - the servers will be more expensive.   This trend will continue through 2015 and in to 2016.   You'll buy fewer server, but pay more for them. Second is the dramatic change in server storage in both capacity and performance.  6TB and 8TB

Technology Predictions for 2015 - Part I

Being Jan 1 - I'll try my hand at some technology predictions for 2015. Let start with end-user computing - desktop, laptop and tablet.   On the hardware front, I see three trends...    First is the expansion of ultra-low cost devices.  There continues to be a huge push downwards on the price of devices driven by Chromebooks.  There appears to be a target price of $199 for a entry laptop in the 11 - 12" range.    These are by no means powerful devices, but with the expansion of cloud based services from Google and MS, the number of these good enough devices will explode in 2015.   Second will be the opposite end of the spectrum - more ultrabook style devices for the corporate world.  They come in all sorts of traditional clamshell or hybrid designs and 4K will start to show up more and more in displays.  Almost all of these will come with M.2 SSD drives, and 8 - 12 hour battery.  And will fit into that $800 - $1200 range. Finally some of the new Intel Real Sense techno