Microsoft isn;t sitting around awaiting its Yahoo acquisition to get the nod. It really is continuing to roll out new Windows Reside and Live Lookup technologies and applications.Here are just a few with the Live-related announcements from the previous couple of days that caught my eye:Microsoft tweaks its Live Lookup algorithm. Microsoft is admitting that its Reside Search engine left a bit to become ideal,
Cheap Windows 7, in terms of crawling sites. It seems like the drop Live Lookup update might have resulted in the de-indexing of a variety of web-sites (perhaps which includes the notorious — and now seemingly dormant “Shipping Seven” blog). Microsoft didn;t wait for the next Live Lookup update (codenamed “Rome”) to fix the problem; it has tweaked its algorithm. (And “Shipping Seven” is now being indexed,
Buy Office Professional Plus 2010, for what it;s worth….)Microsoft officially rolls out its Windows Live developer program for mobile. Microsoft has been emphasizing mobile operating systems as key platforms for its own Reside services. Now it's recruiting third-party software, hardware and mobile-operator developers to develop mobile services,
Buy Office Home And Business 2010, as properly. Before they are granted access to the program,
office Home and Student 2010, developers need to sign non-disclosure agreements and a development agreement that “is non-negotiable and contains the minimum acceptable terms from Microsoft,” according to a slide-deck describing the program. Confusingly,
Thomas Sabo, the new program;s official name seems to become the “MSN Mobile Developer Program.”Microsoft considers Iowa for future datacenter. The Iowa House last week approved a set of incentives designed to convince Microsoft to locate one of its next datacenters in that state. According to reports, Microsoft is mulling many states as candidates for its next datacenter home.