Jeff Rivett has worked with and written about computers since the early 1980s. His first computer was an Apple II+, built by his father and heavily customized. Jeff's writing appeared in Computist Magazine in the 1980s, and he created and sold a game utility (Ultimaker 2, reviewed in the December 1983 Washington Apple Pi Journal) to international markets during the same period. Proceeds from writing, software sales, and contract programming gigs paid his way through university, earning him a Bachelor of Science (Computer Science) degree at UWO. Jeff went on to work as a programmer, sysadmin, and manager in various industries. There's more on the About page, and on the Jeff Rivett Consulting site.

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Windows 8.1 (aka Windows ‘Blue’)

Microsoft is moving toward a release system for Windows that more closely resembles Apple’s OS releases. The reason is fairly obvious: money. With major new operating system releases from Microsoft separated by several years, and every other release being largely ignored (think Windows Me and Vista), Microsoft just isn’t making enough money on Windows.

So, Microsoft has been working away on their next Windows release, code-named ‘Windows Blue’, and they plan to produce additional releases on a yearly basis. Pricing remains unclear, but apparently the upgrades will be “low-cost”. If Microsoft can make this work, they will have a steady inflow of cash from Windows sales.

In the past, incremental releases were provided in the form of service packs, which were always available for free. Microsoft insists that the new releases will do much more than the old service packs, but that remains to be seen. For now, the simplest way to think about this is that Microsoft is going to start charging for service packs.

The Verge has a series of posts about Windows Blue that are worth reading.

Firefox 20 released

On Tuesday, Mozilla released another new version of Firefox, version 20.

The new version includes several security fixes, as well as private browsing, changes to the download system, performance improvements, and several other bug fixes and enhancements.

As usual, the release notes and complete list of changes for this release are a jumbled mess of old and new information, making the job of figuring out what has actually changed needlessly difficult. Will they ever fix this?

Microsoft improves Windows 8 apps

The basic applications that come bundled with Windows 8 were received unkindly by most reviewers. Seeking to redress some of the concerns raised, Microsoft recently began releasing updates for some of those applications, including Mail, Calendar and People (contacts).

The Verge has a useful summary of the changes, which include folder management and speed improvements for Mail, and readability improvements for Calendar. Inexplicably, Microsoft has removed support for Google Calendar from the Windows 8 Calendar app.

Google Reader to be retired on July 1, 2013

Google’s excellent feed reader service is being retired in July. Visitors to the Reader site are seeing this message:ReaderRetirementAlert

Clicking the ‘Learn more’ link takes you to a Google Support page that offers some assistance in exporting Reader settings. Google’s explanation for the change is, frankly, lame.

I recognize that Reader was a free service, so I’m not going freak out about all the cool stuff Google seems intent on shutting down, but Reader was a big part of my daily news intake, and I’ll miss it.

Techdirt’s Mike Masnick just posted his thoughts about this. As usual, he hits the nail on the head. I’m one of those people who has become almost entirely dependent on Reader and now I’m going to be scrambling to find an alternative.

Update: I’ve settled on RSSOwl as a replacement for Reader. It’s fast, powerful and flexible. So far, so good.

Patch Tuesday for March, 2013

Yes, it’s that time again. Time to update all your Windows computers, or at any rate helplessly watch as auto-update randomly siphons away your computer’s resources at the most inopportune times.

This month’s crop of updates includes a total of seven bulletins, which address vulnerabilities in Internet Explorer, Outlook, Visio, Silverlight, SharePoint, OneNote and Windows driver technologies.

This month’s bulletins:

  • MS13-021 – Critical : Cumulative Security Update for Internet Explorer (2809289)
  • MS13-022 – Critical : Vulnerability in Silverlight Could Allow Remote Code Execution (2814124)
  • MS13-023 – Critical : Vulnerability in Microsoft Visio Viewer 2010 Could Allow Remote Code Execution (2801261)
  • MS13-024 – Critical : Vulnerabilities in SharePoint Could Allow Elevation of Privilege (2780176)
  • MS13-025 – Important : Vulnerability in Microsoft OneNote Could Allow Information Disclosure (2816264)
  • MS13-026 – Important : Vulnerability in Office Outlook for Mac Could Allow Information Disclosure (2813682)
  • MS13-027 – Important : Vulnerabilities in Kernel-Mode Drivers Could Allow Elevation Of Privilege (2807986)

If you can’t get enough about these patches, there’s more technical stuff over at the MSRC blog.