Bing Wants To Sleep With The Enemy: Promotes Firefox With Bing


Microsoft indeed learns that if they want Bing to succeed it will need to sleep with the enemy, at least through promoting Internet Explorer rival Firefox. The proof: Bing is now offering “Firefox With Bing.”

Bing, through a blog post invites people to download a special version of Firefox where Bing is used as the default search engine. It is packed with a search bar that well, searches on Bing through “AwesomeBar” address window.
You can download Firefox with Bing here: www.firefoxwithbing.com/

Recommending a rival product is a first for Bing. Experts agree that it’s a much needed move should Microsoft want to go grow further. Pushing in their very Internet Explorer is a religion that has met countless controversies over the past few years. Internet Explorer is bundled in Windows Operating Systems and other Microsoft products.

This notes Danny Sullivan of SearchEngineLand.com is a big move since Firefox 4 added Bing as option in serving search results October last year. But users can of course see this as more than reciprocating Firefox’s

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Open SVG: What's Missing on the Web?

SVG: What's Missing on the Web

You can be forgiven for never having heard of SVG, or scalable vector graphics, even though they've been in development since 1999 and in release since 2001. In short, SVG is an open standard XML file format that graphical and web developers can use to describe graphical constructs like lines, polygons, circles and other shapes, along with their characteristics. Since it is fully extensible, future SVG standards will include more powerful video capabilities. SVG received broad support throughout the web development community, but for reasons that can only be guessed at, Microsoft never included the capability to display these files in its market-dominating Internet Explorer browser, putting web developers in the difficult bind of whether to bother utilizing a format that the vast majority of web users wouldn't be able to view without a special plugin.

Why SVG?

SVG is a superior file format for displaying graphics on the web for several reasons. First and foremost, it's an open standard that can be utilized by any party without restrictions of any kind. In addition, SVG files are generally smaller than JPEG files or other similar formats. This makes SVG a particularly efficient format for use by mobile devices, such as the iPhone, which have the capability of displaying SVG files without a third-party add-in. The SVG standard is also backward compatible, meaning if a future version of the standard is released that an SVG rendering application doesn't support, it will simply render what it can and ignore the rest. Marketers will be able to take advantage of SVG's format to more easily index images and optimize them for search engine placement. Vendors of assistive technologies such as screen-readers may be able to utilize SVG to give their users a better understanding of the screen and its layout.

The Microsoft Effect

With all those positives, you may be wondering why Microsoft seems so reticent regarding integrating SVG capability into Internet Explorer. The general consensus, accurate or not, seems to be that Microsoft was hoping that its Silverlight technology would ultimately supersede SVG. Although Silverlight has come a long way in multimedia applications, for simple vector graphics, developers would still prefer something simple but extensible like SVG. In fact, a member of Microsoft's team has now been accepted to the W3C's SVG working group. He is now a member in good standing, and developers are hoping this bodes well for SVG in IE 9. The company has had no comment on the matter, neither now nor over the past nine years as SVG was passed over for inclusion in their flagship browser again and again.

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Linux, Microsoft and Sun to discuss the future of operating systems, but where's Apple?

San Francisco (CA) — At the Hotel Kabuki in San Francisco on April 8-10, 2009, a meeting of the great OS minds will take place. There, sponsored by Intel, will be assembled together the Linux Foundation, Sun Microsystems and Microsoft representatives. For the first time ever, the three-way group will sit down at a single table to debate and discuss the future not only of their respective operating systems, but also the OS industry in general. What will come from such a meeting? I truly believe that only God knows.
The sit-down meeting will be moderated by Jim Zemlim, Executive Director at the Linux Foundation. It will include Microsoft's Sam Ramji, Director of Platform Strategy, and Sun's Vice President of Developer and Community Marketing, Ian Murdock. But where's Apple?

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