This site’s browser stats, updated

It’s been six months since I last published these stats, and the recent release of Firefox 3 adds a news hook to the story. I have two separate sources of statistics now – my longtime SiteMeter database and the newer Google Analytics statistics. As it turns out, both sources tell a similar story.

Here’s the graphic analysis via Google Analytics:

browser stats June 2008

That’s the lowest number I’ve ever seen for Internet Explorer, and the SiteMeter stats are roughly 1% lower than that. That’s a 4% drop in the past year, most of it coming in the past six months. Meanwhile, Opera continues to cling to its 2% share, a fraction of a percent above the combined percentage for Safari (Mac and Windows).

According to these statistics, Firefox adoption rates have picked up this year for the first time in the past three years. The question is whether Mozilla can sustain that momentum and transfer it to mainstream users or whether it’s just a blip.

Trend-watchers can look at all previous editions by following these links:

December 2007

April 2007

September 2006

April 2006

August 2005

October 2004

More on HP’s MediaSmart Connect extender

Yesterday’s webinar (yes, I know, silly word, but what can you do?) on HP’s new MediaSmart Connect extender went very well. We had more than 250 online attendees, some great questions, and overwhelmingly positive feedback. If you missed it, you can catch the replay online. Registration isn’t required, but you will have to jump through a few hoops to use the LiveMeeting software. You can avoid a little of that hassle by downloading the Windows Media version instead, but the quality is noticeably worse.

HP’s Brian Burch gave an excellent demo of the MediaSmart Connect device and Microsoft’s Ben Reed showed off Media Center’s features. My role was to answer questions about the design and functionality of the device and to take some questions from attendees.

Yesterday’s event was the first in a series of four. I’m looking forward to the remaining three, each of which features a different guest expert. If you’re curious about Media Center technology, I encourage you to sign up for one of the upcoming events so you can ask questions directly and hear some interesting perspectives. The lineup includes:

I’ll have a more detailed review next week.

Disclosure: I am not being compensated in any way by HP or Microsoft for my participation in this event, and any opinions I express are mine alone.

Interested in Media Center extenders? Attend my webinar…

Next week, I’ll be participating in the first of a series of four web-based seminars on the new HP MediaSmart Connect devices, which were just announced yesterday. (Brandon LeBlanc has a great post with more details over at the Windows Vista Team Blog.)

I’ve been using an early model of this device for the past few weeks, and I’ll share my impressions of it and answer questions from the community. I’ve now had ample hands-on time with three of the four leading v2 Media Center Extender device families: Linksys, Xbox 360, and HP.

More details about the webinars, including sign-up details, here:

Brian Burch, Director of Marketing for HP’s Connected Entertainment group, will lead an interactive demonstration of HP’s latest advanced digital media receiver, and discuss other products on the market today. Brian will be joined by these industry experts who will share their impressions of the HP MediaSmart Connect and their thoughts on how this device will transform your living room experience:

If you can’t make it, leave questions in the comments section here.

Oh, and if you have an old (or new) media-sharing device, you can trade it in for one of these devices. In fact, if you are one of the first to pre-order one of the new devices with a trade-in at 12 noon (Pacific time) today, June 18, you can get the extender free. Details here.

A workaround for the dual-boot System Restore bug

As I point out in Tweak #8 from my 10 Top Vista Tweaks series at ZDNet, there’s a big difference between the way Windows XP and Vista handle the automatic checkpoints that are used for System Restore. The incompatibility is so profound, in fact, that it affects dual-boot machines running Windows XP and Vista. When you boot into XP, the system detects that restore points exist but that they can’t be read. It then assumes (oops) that the restore points are corrupt and immediately deletes them. When you restart Vista, you discover that your restore points are gone and any Complete PC Backups before the most recent one are also wiped out. Not good.

In the TalkBack section of that post, Vince asks about this bug. I provide a brief answer there but decided it’s worth fleshing out that answer here.

Microsoft has published a Knowledge Base article on this topic that details a registry edit you can make while running Windows XP to prevent this from happening. What it does is make the Vista volume appear offline:

To keep Windows XP from deleting restore points of the volume in Windows Vista, add the following registry entry under the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\MountedDevices\Offline registry subkey in Windows XP:

Value name: \DosDevices\D:
Type: REG_DWORD
Value data: 1

Note If the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\MountedDevices\Offline registry subkey does not exist, you must manually create this registry subkey. Create this registry entry when you have installed Windows Vista on the "D" partition in Windows XP.

When you boot into XP, the Vista volume will be invisible and thus protected from damage (you can see the XP volume from Vista, however). If you want a dual-boot system with a shared data drive, you’re out of luck. If you use this registry edit to make the drive appear offline, you won’t be able to access your data from Windows Vista.

Personally, I no longer recommend dual-boot setups at all. I prefer using Virtual PC, VMWare, or another virtualization solution to run XP in a virtual machine under Vista. On those rare occasions when I need to test XP and Vista on the same hardware, I swap the hard drives and access shared data files from a server to avoid this issue.

10 top tweaks for Windows Vista, part 2

Over at ZDNet, I’ve just published part 2 of my 10 top Vista tweaks series. If you missed Part 1, you can find it here

Here’s a quick list of what’s in the new installment:

6. Save your favorite searches

The Start menu search box works just fine for quick, ad hoc searches. To really tap into the power of Windows Search, though, spend a little time to create searches that bring together the types of files you use most often (Word documents modified this month or last month, e-mail messages from Fred or Rick, and so on). Then save those searches so you can reuse them later or copy them to another computer.

7. Fine-tune your search settings

Speaking of Windows Search, did you know that there are three separate areas where you can tweak settings that control search behavior? Use these tweaks to make Start menu searches more useful, simplify the complicated advanced search syntax, and add IFilters to search inside types of files that aren’t supported by a default Vista installation.

8. Make the most of System Restore and shadow copies

Did you know that System Restore in XP and Vista use completely different techniques to save snapshots of data? In this tweak, I explain why you might want to increase the amount of space set aside for volume shadow copies. I also introduce a free utility that lets users of Windows Vista home editions find and restore files from automatically created backups.

9. Bring network files closer

The fastest way to get to files in any network location is via a shortcut. And the best place to save those shortcuts to network locations is in the Computer window. You can add shortcuts to shared folders, FTP sites, or websites where you publish files. Here’s how.

10. Master power management

In XP, you have standby and hibernate. Vista adds a third power state, called hybrid sleep. Here’s what you need to know and how you can tune a desktop system to take advantage of this useful mode.

As always, I welcome feedback and questions. You’re more likely to get a response here than in the rambunctious TalkBack section over there. Word of warning: it might take an extra day (or five) for me to respond as I’m away on vacation the rest of this week.

Will we be using petabyte-sized devices in the year 2020?

I’m working on the second half of my 10 Top Tweaks for Windows Vista series over at ZDNet (Part 1 is here), and in the course of my research I saw this screen, which contains help text for the vssadmin resize shadowstorage utility:

image

The text that caught my eye was this syntax note:

MaxSizeSpec must be 300MB or greater and accepts the following suffixes: KB, MB, GB, TB, PB and EB.  Also, B, K, M, G, T, P, and E are acceptable suffixes.  If a suffix is not supplied, MaxSizeSpec is in bytes.

Given current storage media sizes, it’s perfectly reasonable that kilobytes, megabytes, gigabytes, and even terabytes are acceptable units of measure for specifying how much System Restore space should be set aside. But whoever is designing the file system here is thinking way, way, way ahead. Those last two units of measurement (PB or P, EB or E) represent values in petabytes (1000 terabytes) and exabytes (1000 petabytes). If past trends in storage continue, we’ll be able to buy cheap petabyte drives in roughly 15 years. It’s hard to imagine setting aside more than 1000 terabytes for shadow copies, but then again who would have imagined, when Windows 3.0 came out in the early 1990s, that a 1-TB hard drive would cost around $100 in inflation-adjusted dollars 15 years later?

So how long do you think it will be until personal storage devices hit the petabyte range? Exabytes? Think this code or some variation of it will be in Windows 2020?

Happy Father’s Day

My father, Charles Bott, passed away in early 2006. He said he didn’t like to make a big fuss on Father’s Day, but I’m sure he really looked forward to the phone calls and visits he got from his six kids on this day every year.

In the last few years of his life we talked on the phone regularly. He used to call with questions about his computer, or to tell me with obvious pride about some cool trick he had discovered how to do in Excel. From there, our conversations always turned to other things, although we learned after years of butting heads over politics that we didn’t really need to spend a lot of time talking about current events.

He loved his children and his grandchildren and his great-grandchildren, and he loved my mother more than anything else. She probably took this picture, in fact, while standing on a bridge over the Green River Gorge in Washington State in early May, 1957. My father had just turned 25. I was not even two years old at the time (my older brother, in front, was only three). Today, when I look at this picture, I marvel at how young we all were.

dad_mike_eddie_may57

Happy Father’s Day, Dad. We miss you.

SnagIt 9 is nearly a perfect 10

A few months back I listed my 10 favorite Windows programs of all time. High on that list was TechSmith’s SnagIt screen-capture program. I’ve been using it for years to create screen captures for books. In those cases, production people in some distant city resized, cropped, paginated, and otherwise dealt with the logistics of integrating screen captures with text. In the last few years, though, I’ve increasingly used SnagIt’s capture and editing tools to produce graphics for the web without the safety net of an editor.

Two weeks ago, I got an e-mail offering me an advance copy of SnagIt 9, embargoed until June 10. I installed it a few days later and tinkered with it a bit. Then I decided to use it to create the gallery of step-by-step instructions accompanying my 10 top Vista tweaks series.

What most impressed me about this upgrade was how simpler it makes the process of capturing and creating illustrations. The new version adds an organizer that integrates with the image editor and provides access to it using the new Microsoft Office 2007 Ribbon interface. Here, take a look for yourself:

SnagIt 9 with Office Ribbon interface

I used arrow and text tools in the Draw tab of the Ribbon to annotate regions on the image in the main workspace, which I created by cropping, cutting, and pasting screen shots onto a blank canvas. That row along the bottom is the Tray, which gives you quick access to recent captures as well as those you’ve previously saved in a Library. The navigation pane on the right side lets you tag captures and then sort and browse those files (plus other image and document files) by date, by program, or by location.

Aiming the mouse pointer at a thumbnail produces a live preview a la Windows Vista.

image

This is still a labor-intensive process, and as I use these tools I’ll no doubt come up with more efficient ways to work and more interesting presentations to create. But still, it would have taken easily three times as long to accomplish this job with SnagIt 8. What I like most about this upgrade is that it didn’t try to shovel new features into a program that was already pretty feature-packed. Instead, the interface changes made it easier for me to find and work with features the program already had.

Apparently, SnagIt 9 has explicit support for x64 versions of Windows . At least that’s my guess from the DLLx64 and XP64 subfolders in the SnagIt 9 Program Files folder.

The license agreement borrows a fair and reasonable provision from Microsoft Office as well. It allows you to use the software on a work computer and on either a portable device or a home computer (but not both ), as long as the two copies are not used concurrently.

With this upgrade, SnagIt has definitely moved up a place or two among my favorites. For anyone who produces web-based content or printed pages, the $50 cost is a bargain. If you’re using any previous version, it’s worth every penny of the upgrade price. (And until August 12, the upgrade is discounted an additional 20%, so updating an old copy of version 6 or 7 is only $19.95. You can get upgrade prices and feature tables here.)