60-Second Science
RSS news feed This will just take a minute.

Results tagged “microsoft” from 60 Second Science

What will happen to Microsoft?

76d42_microsoft_tentacles.jpgThe last couple weeks have been filled with news on Microsoft. Microsoft attempts to acquire Yahoo! Microsoft invests $3 million in the development of healthcare applications. Microsoft gives away high-end software development tools to college students. Microsoft takes sides in the high-def DVD format war. Microsoft may partner with Netflix.

Microsoft was famously late to the Internet business, and has always lagged behind one online giant or another, whether it be Google, AOL, Yahoo!, take your pick. Now, as many people begin shifting their digital lives from their desktops to their homepages, online applications of the Google Docs variety have the potential to eat away at the supremacy of Office. Now, the European Union has slapped Microsoft with a $1.3 billion fine for noncompliance with a 2004 antitrust ruling.

Continue reading 'What will happen to Microsoft?' >

Microsoft issues $44.6 billion "Screw You!" to Google

File this under "Very big news in technology that's just not as exciting as gadget-laden power suits."

Early this morning Microsoft made an offer of $44.6 billion in stock and cash to acquire Yahoo! That's a 62% premium over where Yahoo's stock closed last night. That's a nice way of saying, "Hi!" Less nice is Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer's open letter that went out across the newswire: " A year has gone by, and [your] competitive situation has not improved." Ouch.

Continue reading 'Microsoft issues $44.6 billion "Screw You!" to Google' >

Efficiently turning electricity into computing is the new way to make money

It's kind of kooky that it's come to this, but here you have the Chief of Research at Yahoo, Prabhakar Raghavan, pointing out what science fiction writers have dreamed of for decades -- that computing, long the province of the boutique provider (the home PC) is becoming a commodity, just like the electricity that produces it.

"In a sense," says Raghavan told Businessweek, "there are only five computers on Earth."

Those five computers would be the sums of the respective server farms owned by Google, Microsoft, Yahoo, Amazon and IBM.

Just as virtually no one, not even rural farmers, depends on their own generators for energy, but takes their electricity from the grid, so too will universities, businesses, and even individuals come to rely more and more on the grid -- or the "cloud" of computers out there in nowhere land -- for their processing needs.

Anyone who relies on web-based services -- e.g. Google or Yahoo mail -- is already plugged into the grid/cloud. And if "Google Office" has anything to say about it, this dependency will only intensify.

Combine cloud computing with ever faster and more ubiquitous internet access and what you've got is supercomputing for the masses -- even if it's only being used for the mundane: on-demand television, sharing our lives through Youtube and Flickr, and storing all that data we need to get our jobs done.

Kottke has more (...and he only scooped everyone else on this story by about three years.)

Monkey's Choice: A reader and editor favorite article
Know a story we missed? Have a scoop? Tip us!

Get 60-Second Science by Email:

The Best Comment

Recent comments

You might also like...

60 Second Science: Your Source for Technology, Biology, Health, Space, Environment and Science News