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6月26日 An Update on the Windows Roadmap
An Update on the Windows Roadmap
"""""Can it be satisfied?""""""
Today, more than 1 billion personal computers around the world run Windows. Over the years, Windows has been the catalyst for innovations that have transformed the way people communicate, access information, create and share content, and much more, at work and at home. Windows is the platform that most people use to get the greatest value and benefit from their personal computers. Windows is also the platform that brings together the broadest array of choices across PCs, devices and applications. To all of our Windows customers, thank you! To the hundreds of thousands of partners that develop millions of solutions for Windows, thank you. Your experience and satisfaction are Microsoft's top priorities. I wanted to take this opportunity to share some thoughts about Windows and to answer some questions you may have about Windows XP and Windows Vista. There are three things I want to give you an update on:
Adobe Acrobat 9 Pro / Extended
![]() Adobe Acrobat 9 Pro helps business and creative professionals communicate and collaborate more effectively and securely with virtually anyone, anywhere. Unify a wide range of content in a single organized PDF Portfolio. Collaborate through electronic document reviews. Create and manage dynamic forms. And help protect sensitive information. Acrobat 9 Pro includes Adobe LiveCycle® Designer ES software for advanced form creation.
Adobe Acrobat 9 Pro Extended is the complete PDF solution for business and technical professionals. It includes all the features and functionality of Acrobat 9 Pro, plus the ability to unify the widest range of content in a PDF Portfolio, create interactive presentations with Adobe Presenter software, easily convert and share video in PDF, create PDF maps, convert virtually any 2D and 3D designs to PDF, and enjoy expanded 3D capabilities with the new Adobe 3D Reviewer. 6月18日 I would have liked to complete the outstanding work of Firefox 3I would have liked to complete the outstanding work of Firefox 3
For me, the biggest improvement in Firefox 3 is that it no longer (at least not yet in my testing) consumes huge amounts of memory. As I work right now, with 4 tabs open including some Flash content, it's consuming 130MB, which is the most I've ever seen. Firefox 2 regularly consumed several hundred MB on my systems, and usually much more than Internet Explorer 7. Mozilla seems to have solved that problem. But not everything about it is wonderful. Even if I'm basically happy with it, there are a few things I definitely don't like about it. For example, I use the Clear Private Data feature now and then, which clears the browsing history (when you drop down the address bar), among other things. You can select Tools-Clear Private Data or press Ctrl-Shift-Del. When you do this in Firefox 3, it does not clear any browser history where the domain is in a bookmark, so your address bar drop-down may still have addresses in it. This seems wrong and confusing, and I bugged it in Bugzilla during beta. To the developers, it's one of those "it's not a bug, it's a feature" things, and they provide no way to turn it off in about:config or anywhere else. I think this was a bad choice. I don't think the developers' decision to show address bar colors only on a section on the left of the bar is correct, either. The point of these colors, such as green for EV-SSL sites, is to be conspicuous, and these seem easy to miss. The area at the left is basically an expansion of the favicon. Opera does the same thing, and the developers told me that their testing was unclear, but that some people had trouble understanding address bars that were green throughout (which is the way IE7 does it). I still disagree, but perhaps they have some evidence on their side. I've seen testing to indicate that the green EV-SSL bar does instill confidence in users and that they are more likely to complete a transaction where it is present. It would be interesting to run the same testing with the small green bar in Firefox 3 and Opera 9.5. On the other hand, Firefox 3 makes great use of that expanded favicon. Warnings show up here for phishing and malware sites. You can click it for any number of situations and it gives you useful information. It's just that you have to know to click it. Firefox 3's support for CRLs (certificate revocation lists) is lame, as it was in Firefox 1 and 2. The browsers don't download them from certificate authorities and check automatically; you have to manually import them, which of course nobody does. On the other hand, they do now support OCSP (Online Certificate Status Protocol), a new and better standard for revocation checking. On balance, from the perspective of certificate revocation checking, this makes Firefox 3 a much better option than Firefox 2. I have no doubt that the CRL problem has caused problems for people, but it's such an obscure issue that it's basically gone unnoticed. I'll also point out that I've had problems printing with Firefox since Version 2 came out, and Version 3 is no better. I'm in the habit of selecting text on a page and printing the selection, and Firefox messes this up all the time. IE is generally a better printing browser. Most of the other problems I have with Firefox 3 will probably go away over time. For instance, today I still have problems with some plug-ins. Obviously, this will improve over time. Incidentally, if you plan to stick with Firefox 2, don't plan on doing so for very long. Mozilla has a policy of providing security updates for old versions for only a few months and then you're on your own. So by all means upgrade, soon if not immediately, to Firefox 3. I use both Firefox and IE all the time, and I expect things will be better with Version 3, not just for browsing, but for my system overall, since that much more memory will be freed up. It's a good day for Web users.
thank you alot " LARRY " FROM
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