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Windows

Submission + - A History Lesson of Windows Adoption Rates (zdnet.com) 3

eldavojohn writes: "Windows Vista is a huge flop, right? I mean, it was the the most disappointing product last year so it must have been pretty bad. Well, as some people are starting to point out, it's adoption rates are actually better than those of Windows XP. I was pretty surprised to read that but in the past year about 15 percent of Windows users have switched to Vista while XP had around 13-14 percent in the first year. Indeed, you can find the same articles for XP that we find for Vista today about a slow adoption rate. But perhaps that's actually a stellar adoption rate for a commercial upgrade? Perhaps this is a testament of Microsoft's legacy support? Either way, there are some people out there that see Vista in a different light."
Media

Most Consumers Sitting Out The High-Def War 681

The New York Times notes that, despite the increasing variety of programs on the Blu-ray and HD-DVD formats, most US consumers are staying out of the DVD format war. This is a wise decision, the article states, because the two formats are essentially at a stalemate. "The two camps are victims of their own earlier success with DVD. The standard DVDs offered a quantum leap in quality from the picture and sound of VHS videotape, and for many that was more than adequate. In addition, DVD players that can convert images to near high-definition quality can be found for under $100, hundreds less than a true high-definition DVD player, further reducing the urgency to upgrade to one of the new formats."
Businesses

RIAA Not Suing Over CD Ripping, Still Calling Rips 'Unauthorized' 175

An Engadget article notes that the Washington Post RIAA article we discussed earlier today may have been poorly phrased. The original article implied that the Association's suit stemmed from the music ripping. As it actually stands the defendant isn't being sued over CD ripping, but for placing files in a shared directory. Engadget notes that the difference here is that the RIAA is deliberately describing ripped MP3 backups as 'unauthorized copies' ... "something it's been doing quietly for a while, but now it looks like the gloves are off. While there's a pretty good argument for the legality of ripping under the market factor of fair use, it's never actually been ruled as such by a judge -- so paradoxically, the RIAA might be shooting itself in the foot here."

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