Tag Archives: Tami Reller

New updates streamline the Mail, Calendar and People apps in Windows 8

Microsoft is nothing if not tenacious, and that’s a good thing when it comes to Windows 8’s baked-in apps.

Those modern-style apps might be eye-catching, but they’ve been disappointments in terms of pure usability. In fact, Windows co-chief Tami Reller has admitted that Windows 8’s default apps need some hardcore tinkering before they can truly compete with top-tier alternatives. But rather than sitting still and waiting for the big release of Windows Blue later this year, Microsoft’s engineers rolled up their sleeves and created a series of updates for Windows 8’s core communication apps—Mail, People, and Calendar—which will begin rolling into the Windows Store late Monday or early Tuesday.

None of the updates reinvent the proverbial wheel, but each app is receiving numerous tweaks designed to improve basic usability. Windows tablet owners will be especially happy with the new-look apps.

The new updates provide increased performance on Windows RT tablets.

“If you used the apps before on Windows RT systems like Surface, you’ll notice a pretty significant improvement in responsiveness and overall performance (in the updated apps),” Gabriel Aul, Microsoft’s director of program management, told PCWorld during a demonstration. Common functions such as creating new messages and moving or deleting information benefit greatly from the speed boost, he says, and this greatly enhances the general feel of the apps.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

How's Windows 8 doing? Microsoft reflects, 90 days in

Forget the naysayers; Windows 8 is doing fine–at least according to Microsoft.

“We feel good about where we are with Windows 8 – and of course there is still much more

to do,” Tami Reller, Microsoft’s chief marketing officer, said in a Q&A post on the official Windows blog. Reller said the 60 million licenses Microsoft has sold is on par with the pace of Windows 7.

As you might expect, Reller’s answers all have a decidedly upbeat tone. You can read the blog yourself to see the responses in all their sugar-coated glory. For our purposes, though, let’s engage in a little Kremlinology and provide some extra context.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

Does Windows 8's three-month report card read pass or fail?

Windows 8 is passing two big milestones this week. On Thursday, Microsoft released its quarterly financial results, and hidden inside the numbers are clear indicators of the new operating system’s impact on the company’s bottom line. Tomorrow, meanwhile, marks the three-month anniversary of Windows 8’s October 26 release date. The world has had plenty of time to live with the new OS, and now we can more comfortably score whether it’s a success or failure.

Has the OS stepped up its game since our none-too-cheery one-month progress report? Let’s just say that Windows 8’s school grades still aren’t quite meeting expectations.

Sales

The multi-billion dollar question: Are people actually buying Windows 8 and Windows 8-powered laptops, desktops, and tablets? The answer’s far from cut-and-dry, because Microsoft refuses to provide many concrete details.

The company’s quarterly earnings report showed the Windows division earning $5.88 billion in the holiday quarter, a staggering 24 percent increase over holiday 2011, but Microsoft maddeningly refused to provide specifics beyond that total. We still have no idea how many Surface tablets are in consumer hands, for example. At CES, Windows business head Tami Reller said that the company has sold more than 60 million Windows 8 licenses—but that figure includes licenses sold to manufacturers like Dell and Lenovo, making it an unreliable tool for figuring out whether everyday people are actually buying Windows 8.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld