Orkut Now in 40 New Colours

Friday, November 27, 2009

Yes! you can now choose from 40 new colors on how you want your orkut profile to look like. Orkuthas introduced a new feature which allows users to choose from 40 Profile Colors.

If you wish to change to a color of your choice, just navigate to the small color boxes just above your profile section (please refer screenshot) and choose from your favorite color.

In fact, you seem to have liked it so much that we decided five colors aren't nearly enough. So we've added a range of new colors for your palette:



And since not all colors play nicely with our standard blue background, the orkut background color now also changes to match the new hue you choose:



Have fun coloring with orkut!


GET MICROSOFT OFFICE 2010 (BETA) FOR FREE!

Thursday, November 19, 2009

You can now help Microsoft with their new Office 2010, by testing their new Beta version! This beta is for free (1. time Microsoft gives stuff away for free!!), so go download it, and check out the new design.


Microsoft Office 2010 (Beta)

Windows 8 scheduled for 2012 ‘roadmap revealed’

With Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 release Client and Server are in sync again, this was the case back in NT 3.1 in 1994, NT 3.51 in 1995, NT4 in 1996 and Windows 2000 in 2000. With Codename Whistler Windows XP (NT5.1) and .NET server (later named 2003, NT5.2) release went out of sync. Windows Vista (NT6.0) and Windows Server 2008 (NT6.0) the kernel got back in sync (not the release). Windows 7 which’s actually NT 6.1, so codename Windows 8 is NT 7. If next release goes according to plan we’ll have a new release of Windows client and server somewhere in 2012 codename “Windows 8”. Job offers at Microsoft already start mentioning Windows 8. So according to Server Release Cadence Windows 9 in 2015 Windows 10 in 2018.

Microsoft co-founder diagnosed with cancer

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Paul Allen suffering from non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma

Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen has been diagnosed with lymphoma.

The 56 year old Allen was diagnosed with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma earlier this month, according to a letter sent by his sister, Jody Allen, to employees of his investment company Vulcan. It is a non-Hodgkin's form of the disease. Allen left Microsoft in 1983 after being diagnosed with Hodgkin's disease.

"This is tough news for Paul and the family. But for those who know Paul's story, you know he beat Hodgkin's a little more than 25 years ago and he is optimistic he can beat this, too," Jody Allen said in the e-mail, sent Monday.

"He continues to work and he has no plans to change his role at Vulcan," she added. Vulcan spokesman David Postman confirmed Jody Allen sent the email on Monday.

After leaving Microsoft, Allen founded Vulcan and subsequently invested in DreamWorks SKG, Oxygen Media and cable provider Charter Communications. He owns the National Football League's Seattle Seahawks and the Portland Trail Blazers, a National Basketball Association team.

Jody Allen is president and CEO of Vulcan.




Hackers skip Windows 7 activation controls

Microsoft stepping up efforts to prevent OS being cracked.

Hackers are sidestepping Windows 7's activation process, winning their battle with Microsoft, which has blocked such tactics in the past. However, the company said that it knew about the hacks and was looking into ways to block them. "We're aware of this workaround and are already working to address it," said a company spokeswoman.

According to an article in My Digital Life, hackers have devised a pair of methods that circumvent the new operating system's product activation, a key component of Microsoft's antipiracy technologies.

Two utilities, called "RemoveWAT" and "Chew-WGA," remove the activation technologies or prevent them from running, said My Digital Life. Both hacking tools trick Windows 7 into reporting that it has been properly activated, preventing the nagging on-screen displays and other visual cues from appearing that Microsoft has built into its software to mark counterfeit software.

With Windows 7, Microsoft dropped the "Windows Genuine Advantage" (WGA) name for its integrated antipiracy software, and replaced it with "Windows Activation Technologies" (WAT). The end result on users' screens, however, remained similar to what Vista displayed. The most evident change to Windows 7 was the discarding of a delay during log-in on a machine with an inactivated copy of Windows. Under Vista's scheme, users had to wait 15 seconds before clicking the "Activate Later" button to proceed to the desktop. In Windows 7, users can click that button immediately.

Microsoft made dramatic changes to Vista's illegitimate software warnings nearly two years ago, then followed those with nearly identical modifications to the older Windows XP. In both operating systems, the company dumped the reduced functionality mode that essentially made the machine unusable, and instead boosted the number of on-screen messages and planted a black background on the desktop.

Microsoft has blocked anti-activation hacks in the past, using Windows Update to push changes to users. In early 2008, for example, the company stymied a pair of activation cracks with just such an update, then rolled the crack detection code into Vista Service Pack 1 (SP1) a month later. It issued another update in February 2009 to block another crack that affected Vista Ultimate.

The post on My Digital Life acknowledged that Microsoft might take the same tack with the Windows 7 workarounds. "As [the] cracks based on removal of activation component involves patching, changes and modification to many system files, it's likely to be easily detected and nullified by Microsoft, especially in [the] next WGA update or Service Pack 1 (SP1) for Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2," My Digital Life reported.



Microsoft previews Office 2010 beta to developers.............But pirated copies of the software are already leaked online

Microsoft has posted the Office 2010 beta to its developer and IT subscription sites, another clue that it will soon offer the preview to the general public.

Both the MSDN (Microsoft Developer Network) and TechNet sites now host the Office 2010 Beta in 32- and 64-bit editions, which can be downloaded by the developers and IT professionals who have subscriptions to those services.

TechNet, for example, has posted the downloads, while the MSDN site sports a message saying that the beta is now available. The TechNet downloads are for Office Professional Plus 2010, an edition that will be available only to enterprises and organisations that purchase licences in volume.

Other builds of the Office 2010 Beta, which have already leaked to the Internet, can be found on numerous file-sharing sites.

Microsoft is expected to open the beta to all users sometime this week. It has already prepared a revamped version of its Office.com site - still in beta as of now - to offer three different editions, including the consumer-oriented Home and Business 2010.


The company has also posted additional information about the beta, including the hardware requirements necessary to run its newest suite, on its web properties.

Microsoft will provide previews of three of the five editions it intends to ship in the first half of 2010: Home and Business, Professional and Professional Plus. The first two will be available at retail.

Last week, Microsoft shut down its earlier test, dubbed "Technical Preview," and told users running that version to expect news of the public beta this week.

Microsoft kicks off its annual Professional Developers Conference (PDC) in Los Angeles today, and is expected to use that forum to unveil the public beta.

Go: New Open Source Programming Language from Google

Go is a new programming language from Google that aims for performance that is nearly comparable to C, but with more expressive syntax and faster compilation. What it won't do, however, is liberate the coding masses from bracist tyranny. Google's Go is yet another take on C.

The language is called Go, and it was released under an open source licenseTuesday. Google is no stranger to the open source world. The company has released the underlying code for several of its tools and services under open source licenses over the years. Just last week, Google released its Closure JavaScript tools for building Ajax web apps. And now Google has considerably upped its investment in free software with the release of Go, which is an entirely new programming language.

Google never seems to just be satisfied with the status quo, and when they run out of fields to compete in they create their own! Google’s new “Go” programming language is one of their newest ventures, a language which is an amalgamation of Python and C++.

The Go language, in development since September 2007, has been unveiled by Google along with the release of a free and open source compiler. In fact, Google has released both a stand-along compiler implementation with cryptic names such as 6g (amd64 compiler), 8g (x86 compiler), and 5g (ARM compiler) and one which is a front-end for GCC (gccgo).

Born out of frustration with existing system languages, Go attempts to bring something new to the table, and mix the ease of dynamically typed and interpreted languages with the efficiency of compiled languages.

At first glance, Go looks a bit like C++, but borrows some elements, such as garbage collection, from scripting languages like Python and JavaScript. But Go’s real standout feature is its speed. A demo video shows the entire language — over 120K lines of code — compiling in under 10 seconds.

Go offers:

  1. An Expressive type system,
  2. Fast compilation,
  3. Great performance, and
  4. Built-in language features that simplify threaded programming and concurrency.
So why make a new programming language?

Google believes that the current languages have run their course. The prominent languages in use today (C/C++, Java, C#) are all based around a similar syntax, and updating and adding new features in these language consists of piling on libraries, with little or no upgrade to the core of the language itself. What Google intends to do requires more than just the addition of a new library.

Hello World in Go

package main

import "fmt"

func main() {
fmt.Printf("Hello, ??n")
}

The landscape of computing has changed a lot since C, and as Google notes “Computers are enormously quicker but software development is not faster.” Languages have had to morph quite a bit to take on support concepts such as parallel processing, and garbage collection.

Go, on the other hand has been designed by Google from the ground up as “a concurrent, garbage-collected language with fast compilation”.

In order to not alienate the majority of developers though, its syntax is quite similar to C, and would not take much time for a developer to catch on to.

Go has accomplished some impressive feats. The language is designed to compile fast and Go can compile a “large" program in a few seconds on a single computer. It is designed to simplify the creation of application which can better utilize today’s multi-core processors. The language supports concurrent execution and communication between concurrent processes natively, and is fully-garbage collected.

Goroutines allowed are Google’s answer to threading in Go, and any function call which is preceded by the go statement runs in a different goroutine concurrently. A feature called channels allows for easy communication and synchronization between such routines.

Unlike other object oriented languages, Go has a much “simplified” type structure, which disallows sub-classing! Go offers a different flavour of object oriented programming using interfaces, which Google believes will simplify use.

By using interfaces, explicit type hierarchies need not be defined, instead, a type will satisfy all interfaces which are subsets of its methods. The relationships between types and interfaces need not be defined explicity! This can have some interesting implications as people can add interfaces to connect unrelated types even later in the development of an application.

So how much effort did undergo for it’s development?

The GO has been under development for roughly two years. Like other most innovative projects from Google, it started out as a 20 percent project and evolved into a serious full-time undertaking.If youa re not aware Gmail, Google Earth, Google News and several other projects came from 20 percent of Google employee’s time which were later moved to mainstream.

So it’s Open Souce Where is the Source code?

Google is releasing the source code under the BSD license (and not GPLv2) with the hope that a community will contribute to make it even better.

How mature is the Language?

Rob Pike, a google Engineer, says that the Go language itself and the current implementation are relatively mature, but it’s not quite ready for adoption in production environments. The ecosystem around the programming language is still a work in progress. It lacks on several fronts like there is no IDE integration, the standard libraries are thin, and there aren’t a whole lot of real-world code tutorials, examples, debugging info yet. But liek any other open source project, Opening up Go could help to accelerate its advancement and hence adoption.

Compilers: Go comes with two native compilers: 6g and 8g (for 64-bit and 32bit), are designed to be extremely fast. There is an alternative compiler called Gccgo that is based on the GCC. As one would expect, the GCC-based compiler isn’t as fast but, on the other hand, is said to generate more efficient code. On the inside, compiler has a lot of LLVM expertise and is using it extensively for their awesome Python optimization effort.

The compiler generates native binaries, directly executable, no VM, no bytecode, and that’s what makes it faster and comparable to C.

Syntax: The syntax is very generic, hence easy to grasp. There assignments, functions, “for” loops, standard condition expressions, and many other features look easy. But there are certain tricks e.g. it has anonymous function syntax that lets you use real closures.

Go seems inspired by Python as well. Python has been one of Google’s favoured languages and was the sole language supported on Google’s AppEngine when it launched. Like Python, Go supports “slices”, which allow you to refer to parts of arrays using a simple syntax. Thus for an array “a” with 100 elements, a[23,42] will result in an array with elements 23 through 42 of a. Go also tracks the length of arrays internally, further simplifying array usage. Additionally, Maps in Go allow you to create “arrays” with custom index types, and are a native feature of the language.

“Our target was to get as close as we could to C or C++,” said Rob Pike, a principal software engineer working on Go. “They’re reasonably close–programs run about 20 percent to 30 percent slower right now.”

One consistent point in the features of Go is that it is better to have one excellent implementation of commonly used features such as garbage collection, strings, maps etc. rather than have them rethought and re-implemented in each program.

Google says that Go takes full advantage of modern, multicore hardware; that it simplifies dependency analysis and avoids the overhead present in C-style languages (such as files and libraries); that Go's type system has no hierarchy, which saves the programmer from having to define relationships between types; and that Go is fully garbage-collected and naturally supports concurrent execution and communication.

Final Words :

As nearly all Google products, Go is “beta” and not yet suitable for production use. By releasing it early Google hopes to garner a community around.

Offering a new open source programming language is not a big jump for Google. They already have their own Chrome browser and Android mobile operating system. There are even plans to offer a Chrome OS (GCOS) for netbooks some time next year. Like Android and the upcoming Chrome OS, Go’s success will rest solely on the shoulders of developers who choose to use it.

Of course, it's way too early to predict the impact of Go on programmers or programming. But we have a feeling that in this way, as in so many others, quite a few people will fall behind Google and look at this as a convenient way of writing programs for modern hardware. If it won't spell the end of the various programming languages in common use, it will undoubtedly represent at least the start of a major C change.

gologo.jpgGoogle just released a new open source programming language called Go.Go is intended to offer built-in support for concurrent processes, make the most of modern hardware and deliver a super-fast coding experience. Google says in its announcement that "Go attempts to combine the development speed of working in a dynamic language like Python with the performance and safety of a compiled language like C or C++." Go was created by a five person team that includes UNIX co-creators Ken Thompson and Rob Pike.

It's not for everyone, but we talked to a variety of developers who are looking forward to kicking the tires. Below are opinions before launch from three developers we have a lot of respect for. Two are enthusiastic and one is skeptical.

Sponsor

Rob Pike also gave an hour-long talk about Go late last month.

Developer Reactions

GitHub Co-Founder Chris Wanstrath
wansrath150x-1.jpg

I'm definitely on the lookout for C-like languages with good C integration and solid package support (for organization). Hopefully Go provides the former with its "syscall" package (or something similar) - building on existing libraries is a huge boon to young languages, as Scala and Clojure have shown with their Java integration.

Organizing big C projects is always a challenge, and borrowing packaging ideas from higher level languages like Python could really help.

Can't wait to see the site and play with a few examples.

Alex Iskold, founder and CEO of Adaptive Blue

alexiskold150x.jpg

Go appears to be procedural language, based on C/C++ syntax, skewed heavily towards C. It has C memory manipulation model with addresses and pointers, which is complicated and not used in Java, PHP, Ruby, etc.

There is nothing in this tutorial that attracts my eye, other than built-in parallel processing capability. C historically lacked threading (although current versions have it), but having it built in natively into the language is always great.

I am a fan of Java and Object-Orientation, so new procedural languages sound like a thing of the past to me.

If this is positioned as alternative to JavaScript, I do not see why this is necessary. Why not take JavaScript and make it better / add richer libraries like JQuery as part of thelanguage. What Google has done with Gears for example, is built stuff using native C/C++ code and wrapped it into JavaScript calls - I think that is a better way to move forward and to make things faster.

Larry Price, Computer Systems Consultant
laprice150.jpg

This is a very clean and powerful language. It's a direct descendant of C with elements of Haskell, OCaml, python and erlang visible as influences. It seems like yet another attempt to make a "better C than C", and from a first shallow glance it seems like a clear winner.

Objective-C fans (mac programmers) will probably sniff that it's nothing new, and that clean message passing semantics have been available to programmers for decades, but there are some deep differences; Go is not an object oriented language although you can use it in an objected oriented manner. In many respeccts Go is not a new language, it will seem very familiar to anyone who has used C or C descended languages; and most of the advanced features that it adds to C are implemented in other languages.

Go strikes a good balance between legibility, low-level functionality and high-level functionalprogramming features. It will have a strong appeal to programmers who are interested in the type safety and concurrency friendly features of Haskell or erlang, but want to access them in a more familiar C-like syntax.

It has a good chance to make type-safe concurrent programming a mainstream choice.

Samsung pampers youth market

Tuesday, November 10, 2009


JEDDAH - In yet another first, Samsung Electronics launched on Sunday the latest in its full-touch mobile phone family designed primarily to support the digitally connected lifestyles of today’s young mobile users.
Dubbed Samsung “Corby Touch” and “Corby Messenger,” the new stylistic mobile phones seek to further meet the varied needs of the youth market, while aligning with Samsung’s strategy of designing mobiles to match every lifestyle.
Samsung Corby is notable for both its body design and colors -a marked departure from the way full touch phones are usually designed.
Corby Touch’s sensuous design comes in four different irresistible vibrant colors - Jamaican Yellow, Festival Orange, Cupid Pink and Minimal White - fitting for “youthful trendsetters.”
Each Samsung Corby also comes with two additional back covers (also called fashion jackets) - a unique pattern design cover and a standard black cover inside the package. These interchangeable back covers ensure that Samsung Corby users can quickly adapt their mobiles to reflect their personal style.
A wider variety of colored covers and designs will be made available in the future.
In a press conference held at a plush seaside restaurant in Jeddah on Sunday, Samsung officials said Samsung Corby aims to stand out from the crowd with its pop-style contours and curved edge design.
Moreover, the new models, just like its predecessors passed the 1.4 meter height “fall test” to determine their durability, Mohamed Kais, Samsung’s hand-held phone (HHP) country manager said.
He revealed that Samsung’s “water-proof and dust-proof” mobile phones are already in the pipeline.
Samsung, retaining its reputation as a leading mobile phone manufacturer, and a pioneer in technological innovation, said the global demand for “full-touch” mobile phones has skyrocketed by 96 percent to 75 million units in the second quarter of 2009 from 38 million units in the same period last year.
In the Middle East and Africa region, the demand for the “full touch” mobile phones more than quadrupled to 937,000 units from 217,000 units or a staggering 430 percent increase over the same period.
And Samsung has a commanding lead.
“Globally, we are number one for full-screen touch phones and recognize the importance of social networks in the modern mobile industry,” said Inamullah Bhutt, PR & Marketing manager at Samsung Electronics KSA.
With the launch of the Corby family devices - Corby Touch and Corby Messenger, Samsung extends its reach to youth audience.
“Samsung Corby Touch and Corby Messenger seek to further meet the varied needs of the youth market, while aligning with Samsung’s strategy of designing mobiles to match every lifestyle,” the official said.
“The Corby family is consistent with Samsung’s legacy of developing new products and technologies designed for specific audiences and bringing new devices quickly to market,” Bhutt added.
“The focus with the Corby family has been to offer our consumers choice - choice over the color of the handset, choice over how they stay connected and choice over the features and functionality that best suit their unique personalities and communications requirements,” he explained.
At the presentation of the phone’s salient features, Kais said the “Corby Touch is a full-touch handset that places users at the center of the social media revolution with a wide range of social networks support, such as Facebook, Twitter and MySpace. The new mobile complements the company’s touch screen strategy, touch for every lifestyle by targeting the youth market.”
The device represents a complete transformation for the youth segment, with its eye-catching profile featuring two-tone diagonal contours.
“Samsung’s target audiences are at the heart of its business strategy and the design and functionality of Corby Touch meets the needs of a highly digitally connected and style conscious youth audience - as does the affordable price point,” Inam further said.
The Corby Messenger, on the other hand, is a QWERTY keypad’s device matching the latest Saudi market trend of communication and offering an optimal experience to the Saudi young users.
It is a message-centric mobile for heavy texters, delivering easy-to-use SMS and IM (Instant Messenger) features as well as intuitive social media uploading functionality.
It incorporates the best social networking services combined with enhanced multimedia capabilities in a compact form factor. It also offers a quality online video experience and its quad band connectivity and support for EDGE network, enable the Corby family users to be in touch regardless of their location.
The Corby phone has a retail price of SR649.
Samsung also announced its ongoing one-month free service campaign in key cities across the Kingdom that will end on Nov. 20.
And this early, mobile phone lovers are already eagerly anticipating the arrival of Samsung Omnia II and Samsung Android (Google platform) phones in the local market.
G.C. Cho, Samsung’s general manager in Saudi Arabia, added that they will be available in the Kingdom next month.
Convinced that the touchscreen is the way of the future, the Omnia II carries on where the year-old original Omnia leaves off. It’s “a success story of PocketPC wisdom and touch wizardry, of big screen and pixel,” one critic said. - SG/QJM

Happy Birthday, Firefox--Firefox Is Celebrating Its 5th Birthday

Monday, November 9, 2009


Five years ago on this date, Mozilla Firefox 1.0 was released to the public. The browser, with the support of search engine giant Google, has emerged from an experimental branch of the Mozilla project to one of the world’s most popular web browser, killing Microsoft’s Internet Explorer, which is currently still the top browser, although it’s losing its dominance to new comers like Google Chrome. With over 1 billion downloads and 330 million monthly users, I believe Firefox will ‘rule’ the browser market by the time it celebrates its 10th anniversary.

Originally an experimental branch of the Mozilla project, a new web browser was launched on November 9, 2004: Firefox 1.0. Its aim was to reduce Mozilla’s bloat (if you remember those early days, the Mozilla Suite consisted of a web browser, mail client, news reader, irc client; it even had a web page creator called Mozilla Composer), and it was an instant hit among users and developers alike.

Five years later, and Firefox holds a quarter of the browser market, and while technically not being the most popular (Microsoft’s Internet Explorer still clings to that honor), it’s definitely the most prominent browser, with thousands of plugins (add-ons, they’re called), a busy developer community, and over 330 million users.

As for the future, Christopher Blizzard over at hacks.mozilla.org has some idea about that; it can be summed up in three words: privacy, video, and mobile. From the blog post:

“Over the next five years everyone can expect that the browser should take part in a few new areas – to act as the user agent it should be. Issues around data, privacy and identity loom large. You will see the values of Mozilla’s public benefit mission reflected in our product choices in these areas to make users safer and help them understand what it means to share data with web sites.

Expect to see big changes in the video space. HTML5-based video and open video codecs are starting to appear on the web as web developers make individual choices to support a standards-based, royalty-free approach. Expect to see changes in the expectations around the licensing of codecs.

And over the next five years mobile will play an increasingly important role in our lives, and in the future of the web. The decisions of users, carriers, governments and the people who build phones will have far-reaching effects on this new extension to the Internet and how people will access information for decades to come.”

Mozilla plans to celebrate this milestone by throwing parties (oh no, not that again) around the world. The campaign is called “Light the World with Firefox”, and it will include shining the Firefox logo in cities such as Paris, Tokyo, Rome and San Francisco. Find out more at www.spreadfirefox.com/5years/en-US/.

Come back with me to the turn of the century, circa 1996. Your humble narrator was working for campus police at Carnegie-Mellon University in Pittsburgh, creating FileMaker databases for their police reports. It wasn’t uncommon then to see DOS machines sitting beside Windows 95 machines and the web was a primitive and strange thing. There were only two browsers of note, Netscape and Internet Explorer, and firing either up was neither particularly comfortable or interesting. But, hidden deep behind Netscape’s bland carapace, was Mozilla. When you typed “about:mozilla” in the Netscape address bar, for example, you got:

And the beast shall come forth surrounded by a roiling cloud of vengeance. The house of the unbelievers shall be razed and they shall be scorched to the earth. Their tags shall blink until the end of days.

from The Book of Mozilla, 12:10

Pretty badass stuff, especially when most websites were dedicated to kittens and burgeoning corporate identity. I was hooked instantly. This was the browser for me and it slowly became the browser for everyone with self-respect and a brain.

Fast forward to 2004: Mozilla and Netscape were on the rocks and it looked like the browser wars had been won. IE was the victor. In order to combat bloat and “feature creep,” however, a ragtag team of coders led by Dave Hyatt and Blake Ross built something they called “Phoenix,” then “Firebird,” then, on November 9, 2004, Firefox 1.0 was born. This turned into the Mozilla suite – Firefox and Thunderbird – were born.

On this, the fifth anniversary of that momentous occasion, let’s all tip out a little Jolt for Netscape and toast to the future of Firefox, the best browser in the world. Best of all, the book of Mozilla is still being written and any time you type ‘about:mozilla’ into Firefox you get a red screen and a potent reminder of the early days of the Internet.

Happy birthday, Firefox.

Firefox is the best browser according to me
I love you Firefox.

Sixthsense interface to go open source

MYSORE : MIT Media Lab’s Pranab Mistry demonstrated the latest version of his Sixth-Sense wearable gesture interface at the TEDIndia conference on
Thursday, where he showed how it could be used to compute using just a piece of paper. Sixthsense was first presented by Mistry at a TED conference in February 2009.

In his latest demo, he attached a microphone to the paper and was able to use it as a touch interface, play 3D games, watch movies, and seamlessly transition work between a PC and his interface.

The demo received a huge round of applause from the audience at TED, but he saved the best for last.”I am trying to make this tech available to people, and I will provide all the open source software for Sixth sense starting next month.” said Pranab when talking to the host Chris Anderson.

Microsoft launches online services in India

Friday, November 6, 2009
Software giant Microsoft today announced the commercial availability of its online services in India at prices starting from $2 (Rs 95) per user per month which will allow small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and enterprise customers to access Microsoft’s e-mail, collaboration, conferencing and productivity capabilities online.

The services, that include Microsoft Online Services product family, offers Exchange Online (for e-mail) and Office SharePoint Online (portals and collaboration), Microsoft Exchange Hosted Services and Microsoft Office Communications Online (for instant messaging and presence), from Saturday.

“Customers can access a suite of products directly from the company website and pay a use-based monthly subscription fee and thus manage their IT needs efficiently and lower their IT spend 10-50 per cent,” said Microsoft’s Business Group President Stephen Elop while launching the services here today.

Microsoft has partnered with HCL Infosystems, Infosys and Wipro to market and offer value-added services around the Microsoft Online Services.