You probably heard about Mojave, a fake new Windows operating system that turned out to be Vista in a experiment conducted by Microsoft with persons that didn't quite like it, so they could catch their reaction after saying how bad Vista was and how good Mojave was. I'm not really interested in talking about the Mojave Experiment itself in this post, so I will say only a few words about it.

First, I don't think it was fake has many bloggers do. It may be an ad, but that doesn't mean the experiment was all acted. I believe Microsoft is already in trouble because of Vista's bad reputation and doesn't really need more stuff that can be criticized at the same level. However, the way the experiment was conducted was far too wrong to get conclusions out of it (that is the meaning of the quotes in the word real in the title, I think it was, but not well conducted).

Second, the website is pretty bad designed. Without Silverlight I, on my Mac, wasn't able to see much (the videos didn't load for example), and with Silverlight the design shows a cloud of movies difficult to manage that will make a normal user see only the first and greater ones, which can also be the ones Microsoft wants us to see. In the videos of the sales guys from Microsoft showing what was showed to the people and how the experiment was conducted,  one can see that they showed them stuff like gadgets, instant search, backup utilities, flip 3d, and few more. If what they showed to people was in fact what one can view in those videos then the experiment is completely bullshit, for everyone can see that it is Vista and just someone that never used it can not see that. Also, they were only showing the cool features of Vista, the ones that everyone likes, and no product is used for the cool things it has, it is used because it can solve our everyday problems, because it can really do the simplest things simply, and also the advanced things easily, which is something largely criticized on Vista. This makes me think the people they choose were really below the normal computer user, or never caught a glimpse of Vista, or the video featured a pretty camouflaged version of it. Also, I don't think those HP Pavilions used for the test were really a normal desktop for Vista, since I don't think 2 GB of Ram and Core 2 Duos are that mainstream (they said it has a Windows Vista rank of 3.5/5. What kind of computer gets a 5 after all?).

Bottom line, there can really be no conclusive fact out of this test, but this not the main point I want to talk about so don't bother argue with me it was acted, I'm not that interested in it, but admit it could have been.

The truth is Mojave Experiment has a valid point behind it. The point is valid not only to Vista but to everything in this computer world. In it, there's a lot of people that know about something and give their opinion, people that don't know about something and remain quiet, and people that don't know but talk like they do. Unfortunately, these later ones are the majority and almost everyone commits this mistake several times in their life. With Vista the amount of persons judging it without even having used it exceed the line of what would be normal.

That could have many reasons but most of them result from the fact that a good part of our own knowledge comes from persons which we trust, if we trust someone its easier to take their word as the truth, and we don't bother having an opinion based on our own experience. We just act passive, receive info, accept, and pass it to more people but, and this is important, in the same way that we'd do if we've had in fact experience in the subject. This appeal to authority fallacy is one of the most common, being constantly committed in advertisement, but in this computer world, in the internet, this fallacy starts being equally common. Bloggers and respected users of online communities are great mind making agents, if they've succeeded proving us in the past their opinions about something were relevant, more probable is that in a future subject we will trust them. This is not bad, it's normal, but what if they start somehow judging something without proving to us their opinion or judging based on their own preferences, will we take the opinion as ours, or try to find the truth for ourselves?

This is mainly what happened with Vista, and what's constantly happening with other operating systems and products, people get into discussions and flamewars, people argue, but don't usually realize maybe none of the participants may in fact have experience in what is defending. There is almost a public belief that Vista sucks and there's a lot of people that never even used it thinking they have the obligation to convince others of how bad it is. I say everyone should either use Vista and see for itself, or search for valid reasons for not using it. If you don't have enough money for a Vista license, remain in XP and talk about Vista only to criticize about how expensive it is, which is the only truth you can claim.

This is the reason I think a good conducted Mojave Experiment could in fact have the type of results it had. People say a lot about Vista, but get some of them in a experiment where they have to use it for a month, working, trying to solve its everyday problems, and they may actually say in the end Vista is not that bad, or may say it's terrible. The difference lies in the experience factor and a ten minutes video is not experience. Microsoft launching this ad just committed the exact same fallacy as the users who say bad about Vista without using it, it is trying to convince everyone Vista is good based on person's thoughts not based on real experience.

Anyway, I hope the true idea behind it makes people realize they may be judging Vista unfairly.




Have you ever seen a collection of photos of some place or monument and felt the desire of wanting to see it all together in a 180º picture? Since two days ago, you can. Microsoft launched Photosynth, an engine that let's you see your photos of anything pasted together, giving you the experience not of the camera that took the photo, which is limited, but of the photographer thas was behind it and saw it all. The engine tries to catch the intersection areas of each photo and then simulates a 3D environmment that gaves you the whole picture. There's no way you could take this picture from the Beijing's Forbidden City.

 

forbidden city

 

I had to try this, so I took the family's Cybershot and start taking shots from my loft's window of my hometown's skyline. This is what I think is the best feature of Photoshynth, the hability to generate 180º pictures. Supposedly, it was a great tool too to generate a 3D view of an object, but I saw it in some of the project's best examples (like the Ferrari) and didn't particularly love the result. You always end up with the feeling you are just seeing inidividual round photos of something, and not some 3D thing. My first experience could end up better, I was just able to achieve 55% of synhty, because suddently the engine was unable to deal with the distance of the objects present in the photos or the lack of intersection areas between those, but I achieved a sequence of twelve photos succesfully conected to each other. So I tried a second time with a bit more patience, and hurray, 100% synthy. It takes you a lot more pictures than you usually would take to achieve a good synthy in Photosynth, so if you're on some synth just seeing two images at a time, of course a normal shot would be able to get the whole area in just a photo, so you achieve litle. But a good synth can show you 7 or more images tied together in a environment you couldn't possibly shoot.

Now, restrictions. Yes, this is a Microsoft product, so don't expect it to be availble on Mac or Linux for now. Also, on Windows, you will need a plugin to experience this all. Anyway, if you meet this conditions try it. Although this has 2 days, I expect it to get even better and surprising. The service is getting so much attention the server is having an hard time dealing with all the demand.

This is the best of Microsoft working so, as a good product it deserves good comments. Hating just for the sake of it, leads to missing the coolest things of today's technology.




 
 
Being a Google apps user by default, I doubted that any new online maps service would grab my attention. This was till Microsoft Live Maps came and I heard news about the deal they made with the Portuguese Geographic Institute, which gave them (and to Google) high-defenition images of the whole country.

The difference is just astonishing. It really made me wish Google was a bit faster in updating the now old-fashioned images of Portugal that it has. But what really made me play around with Live Maps was their new feature "Bird's Eye", which displays images with a slight inclination and with the possibility of rotation for seeing from another angle. Sure Google has street view, eye alt, 3D view and all that stuff, but hardly any of those is really helpful. The first will take a crazy amount of time for being available worldwide, and even by that time, it still will display a pretty useless view of the streets. The second, eye alt, I don't even know what is supposed to be, since is just a option for seeing worse what you already have. It might make more sense in 3D view, but even that, in my opinion, had a bad approach by rendering computer-made images of the buildings as a supposed real view of the planet. If I wanted a maps system which was like a CoD4 map I would ask.

With Bird's Eye Microsoft made it simple and stupid, but it's far better than any of the existent alternatives.



I had the chance today to participate in the today's started XV Sinfo, the computer science week here at IST, and to watch to some of the talks that were given. Unfortunately, my class schedule didn't allow me to participate in everything, but I managed to see two thirds of a talk hosted by Raymond Chen from Microsoft.

It was quite fun actually, since this was not supposed to be, as Raymond said , one of that talks in which you actually learn something. It was rather a nostalgic narration of fun events that only one working for Microsoft for so long can have in the bag of memories.

So, it seems, Windows XP, one of the most successful windows versions, comes, in its CD, with a hidden encrypted version of Microsoft Bob, one of the biggest failures of Microsoft, just to fill up the remaining disk space.

Doesn't that make it one of the most shipped products ever?

 

Later today, after the class that didn't allow me to see the whole Raymond Chen's talk, I begged the oportunity to attend to Miguel Vicente's presentation, another guy from Microsoft, talking about the Imagine Cup. It was a very good presentation actually, not because of the project itself, but rather because of the direction that was given by Miguel, that turned out to talk most of the time about "changing the world", creating and having ideas that actually matter. 




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