Windows 7 better than Mac OS X and Linux

In a three-way battle among operating systems, Windows 7 comes out ahead by a nose. At least that’s how the experts at Munich-based Chip magazine see it.

The magazine recently compared the latest operating system from Microsoft with Apple’s Mac OS X Snow Leopard and Kubuntu, a Linux distribution. The testers found that Kubuntu is hardly a pushover, especially for tech-savvy computer users. Even so, the review ultimately turned into a duel between Mac OS and Windows 7.

Mac OS easily paces its rival when it comes to installing programs. “Thanks to its victory in the Features discipline, Windows is able to pull even with its rival, though,” one tester noted. The experts were particularly positive about Microsoft’s backup concept. The integrated media centre is also seen as a boon for Windows 7 because it not only works with devices like TV cards, it even provides the electronic program guide.

Windows 7 and Snow Leopard are equally impressive in the performance category. This includes factors like installation time, start-up time and the benchmark testing of the browser.

The element that won the day for Windows 7, however, was security. Mac OS and Linux are rarely attacked, but don’t possess any real protective system, either. “Windows comes under fire every day, but also has the best defence,” the testers noted.

Microsoft developing transliteration tools for six Indian languages

In a move that reveals Microsoft’s interest in the Indian market, the well-known software maker is seeking to attract current as well as new users to its proprietary products with the currently-under-development local language input tools, similar to the Japanese tools it introduced a decade-and-a-half back.

In a recent statement, Microsoft said that the beta version of the Indian transliteration tools – initially to be available for six languages including Hindi, Bengali, Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam and Kannada – will become available for free download in nearly two months, with their commercial launch to follow next year.

Noting that lack of proficiency in English language has kept people away from computers, Srini Koppolu, Corporate VP and Managing Director of Microsoft India Development Centre (MSIDC), said that only 1.2 crore households in the country have PCs, while 45 crore people use mobile phones.

Elaborating about the transliteration tools, Koppolu said that with these tools “Users can enter Indian language words using English alphabets and the tools will translate them into right words in the chosen Indian language.”

To be available in both desktop and Web versions, the transliteration tools – which will enable users to send e-mails or chat in their mother tongue – will comprise virtual keyboards with the alphabets as well as the derivative words in the respective linguistic order of each of the six languages.

Twitter named ”top English word”

Twitter, the popular phenomenon of social networking, has been named the top English word this year in a survey.

Texas-based Global Language Monitor put together a list of the top words and phrases and found that the word was more popular than Obama and H1N1, commonly known as the “swine flu”.

Wrapping up the top five words were ”stimulus” and ”vampire”, reports the Telegraph.

Founder Paul Payack said: “In a year dominated by world-shaking political events, a pandemic, the after effects of a financial tsunami and the death of a revered pop icon, the word Twitter stands above all the other words.

“Twitter represents a new form of social interaction, where all communication is reduced to 140 characters. Being limited to strict formats did wonders for the sonnet and haiku.

“One wonders where this highly impractical word-limit will lead as the future unfolds.”

The top 15 words were:

1. Twitter
2. Obama
3. H1N1
4. Stimulus
5. Vampire
6. 2.0 – as in suffix attached to the next generation
7. Deficit
8. Hadron
9. Healthcare
10. Transparency
11. Outrage
12. Bonus
13. Unemployed
14. Foreclosure
15. Cartel

More time needed for revised Google Books deal

Google and groups representing authors and publishers have asked for more time to revise their controversial settlement over the rights to scan digital books. Judge Denny Chin approved the request to extend the deadline to Friday, which was submitted ahead of a Monday night deadline for the parties to submit a revised settlement after the U.S. Department of Justice objected to the settlement as previously worded. After it was sued in 2005 by The Author’s Guild and other groups representing the publishing industry over its decision to scan certain types of books without explicit permission, Google reached a settlement a year ago that would grant it unique rights to scan books that have gone out of print but are still protected by copyright laws.

However, that settlement has been met with objections from authors and privacy advocates almost since it was filed, and Google has faced a long and difficult road in getting it approved. Monday’s delay comes after a Friday meeting with the Justice Department, according to a copy of the request filed with the U.S. Federal Court for the Southern District of New York.

Google refused to comment on the subject of that meeting, but it’s not too hard to imagine that the Justice Department was not ready to give the new draft its blessing. It had previously objected to provisions of the deal that it felt “serious in isolation, and, taken together, raise cause for concern.” However, in recent weeks Google has sought to downplay the proposed changes as “targeted and surgical.”

Hundreds of Facebook groups hijacked

Facebook groups are under attack. But the attackers say they come in peace and insist they want only to highlight a flaw in the way Facebook handles group administration. An organization called Control Your Info has taken control of hundreds of Facebook groups.

Those groups had administrators that eventually stepped down from their position, creating a power vacuum at the top. According to the organization, when the administrator steps down, anyone can take over a group, view the members’ personal information, and change group information to say whatever they want. Control Your Info believes that the way Facebook handles group administration is a major flaw. And it wants to bring that to everyone’s attention.