Tag Archives: windows live

Microsoft Sidelining Zune and Windows Live BrandNames in Windows 8

It’s been in the talking for a while now,we have seen some leaked Windows 8 screenshots over the past few months indicating the departure of Zune with a new Music service taking over the same.Though we haven’t yet got any official word from Microsoft,but if we take a look at the development in the Windows 8 front it seems like Microsoft is sidelining Zune and Windows Live Brand names from the upcoming version of windows.

Image Credits[The Verge]

As pointed out earlier by tom warren from The Verge Microsoft is replacing two of the most popular brand names from Windows 8 Consumer Preview.With the replacement of Windows Live apps with “Windows Communications” and Zune with the “Xbox Live for Windows” for music and video,clearly telling the story of beginning of the end for both the prime brands.

This is how the replacement will take place in Windows 8:

  • Microsoft Account (Windows Live ID)
  • Mail (Windows Live Mail)
  • Calendar (Windows Live Calendar)
  • People (Windows Live Contacts)
  • Photos (Windows Live Photo Gallery)
  • Music (Zune Music Player)
  • Video (Zune Video Player)

At the moment we can’t say much about the official debranding  of both the brands,but by the look of it,it looks like curtains for both the brand names which were quite popular over the past few years.

Microsoft: Sign into Windows 8 with Windows Live ID

Tired of managing your multiple accounts on multiple machines,setting  preferences each and every time you change the machine? Well,that all can be a thing of the past with the introduction of Windows 8′s  new feature that allows the users to sign in once with their  Windows Live ID and forget about managing settings every single time across devices, apps, and services, allowing the users a uniquely personal experience with Windows.

Microsoft has explained in detail of how this will help its users on its official blog,Building Windows 8.

Signing in with an ID allows you to:

  • Associate the most commonly used Windows settings with your user account. Saved settings are available when you sign in to your account on any Windows 8 PC. Your PC will be set up just the way you are used to!
  • Easily reacquire your Metro style apps on multiple Windows 8 PCs. The app’s settings and last-used state persist across all your Windows 8 PCs.
  • Save sign-in credentials for the different apps and websites you use and easily get back into them without having to enter credentials every time.
  • Automatically sign in to apps and services that use Windows Live ID for authentication.

If you are tired of having to personalize all of the PCs that you use, this should be a welcome feature to the Windows platform.  This is just one of the many new features that will be coming to Windows 8 and expect Microsoft to announce many more over the coming months.

 

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TgKieJYpWyc]

credit:Microsoft

Introduction of JBOD in Hotmail

Microsoft’s web-based email service Hotmail is expected to unveil a number of new features at a press event early in October.However, Microsoft decided to reveal it’s new method that it has adopted for handling the data storage on Hotmail.On the Windows Live blog, Microsoft’s Kristof Roomp explains its upcoming storage improvements that will be put in place later this year.

Roomp explains “Hotmail’s storage system supports over one billion mailboxes and hundreds of petabytes of data (one petabyte is a million gigabytes, or a million billion bytes). The system services hundreds of thousands of simultaneous transactions from across the world.”

Microsoft has been using a RAID set up for the Hotmail storage system for while. For those who are not familiar with the term, A RAID (Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks) system basically links up two or more hard drives to one controller board. To the operating system, multiple drives under a RAID set up look like one big hard drive.

Roomp says that,”This kind of storage system works fine if  just one of the drives fails but,they don’t help if the whole machine or the RAID controller runs into problems. For larger drives,it was observed that having completely independent copies (on hard drives not sharing the same machine or controller) was much more reliable than a significantly more expensive RAID configuration.”

The new system ensures that the copies of data reside on independent hard drives, controllers, and machines. This kind of system is nicknamed “JBOD,” which stands for “Just a Bunch Of Disks.” In a JBOD system, the hard drive controller almost completely gets out of the way, which means that the software must now worry about all the failures that the controller previously handled. These failures can range from firmware bugs on the hard drives themselves to issues such as “unrecoverable read errors” that previously were automatically fixed by the controllers. In addition, the software must now scrub the drives periodically to check the data for “bit rot” (i.e., data that has for some reason become unreadable or corrupt).

 

The software we developed for the JBOD system monitors the hard drives schedules repair actions, detects failures, and diagnoses repairs. This software consists of a number of “watchdogs” that constantly monitor for certain types of failures. If the watchdog detects the failure that it is looking for, it raises an alert, which automatically triggers a repair process. This repair process can range from rebooting a machine or restarting a process, to fixing data corruption or even involving a human if progress can’t be made.

A big advantage of managing the drives in software is that the system knows exactly how many good copies of an email message we have. In the case where it finds that there are too few copies, it can prioritize repair actions to avoid a potentially dangerous situation. In situations where repairs are taking too long, it is possible to move data to another location altogether. This is also possible in RAID in a limited fashion, but it requires that every RAID controller has an extra spare drive hooked up to it, which increases costs significantly.

In addition, Hotmail will also add solid state drives to handle other functions. SSDs are much faster than normal hard drives but are also much more expensive. Roomp says the new Hotmail storage system will use SSDs to handle features like “the list of messages in your inbox, read/unread status of your messages, conversation threading, mobile phone synchronization etc.” This kind of data normally takes most of a hard drives activity. With SSDs handling this data and normal hard drives handling the actual email storage Roomp says, ” … we are able to take advantage of the trend in larger and cheaper hard drives without making any sacrifices in the performance of our system.”

Microsoft States the Reason Behind September 8 Outage

A couple of weeks ago on a fine Thursday suddenly people all over the social networks started complaining about the Windows Live Services like the Mail services and the Skydrive services weren’t working for them.

Uptill now there was no statement made about the sudden outage from Microsoft,but yesterday on the WindowsTeamBlog they posted the reason behind the September 8 outage  which had something to do with the DNS issues which was causing the problems to the services users.Apart from the outage they also stated that no customer data was either compromised or lost during that outage.

Here’s what happened,

A tool that helps balance network traffic was being updated and the update did not work correctly. As a result, configuration settings were corrupted, which caused a service disruption.

At 10:23 PM PDT we began to see service restoration. We confirmed that the incident was resolved by 11:35 PM PDT, although it took some time for the changes to replicate around the world and reach all our customers.

We determined the cause to be a corrupted file in Microsoft’s DNS service.  The file corruption was a result of two rare conditions occurring at the same time.  The first condition is related to how the load balancing devices in the DNS service respond to a malformed input string (i.e., the software was unable to parse an incorrectly constructed line in the configuration file). The second condition was related to how the configuration is synchronized across the DNS service to ensure all client requests return the same response regardless of the connection location of the client.  Each of these conditions was tracked to the networking device firmware used in the Microsoft DNS service.

After restoring service, we have identified two streams of work to drive specific service improvements around monitoring, problem identification, and recovery.  Along with these service improvements, Microsoft is focused on further hardening the DNS service to improve its overall redundancy and fail-over capability.

 

They are working on an additional recovery process so that when such scenario occurs it will add the  ability to fail over to restore service and then fail back when the DNS service is restored and also working on the recovery tools as well.

 

 

[Solved] .eml Extension Problem from Windows Live Mail in WP7

Most of us use the Windows Live Email Account as the primary email account,mostly because one Windows Live account is mandatory to download applications from the Marketplace and as well as for those who use the Windows Live email services as their prime email services over the Windows Phone.

I personally use Windows Live account for keeping track of my mails and for forwarding important documents and presentation attachments to my friends on the go from my phone,most of the times while forwarding the mail with attachments which include .Docx or any other extension files gets converted to .eml extension while forwarding it from the Phone itself,many of my friends complain about not able to read those files,since most of them are unaware about Microsoft Outlook and prefer the attachments in their original form.

So one simple solution to this problem is to use an alternative email account (different services than Windows Live),in my case i use Gmail account to forward mails which works flawlessly without any such problems of doc –> .eml conversion at all.So whenever you forward a mail with document attachments from Gmail it is sent as it is (holding the same extension as earlier) without converting it to .eml to the receivers.

Read More @ MSNewsFlash