Why I pay extra for "business-class" broadband at home
No data caps, no blocked ports, and better support are pretty darn compelling.
No data caps, no blocked ports, and better support are pretty darn compelling.
Volume license and MSDN availability starts in November, retail not until 2013.
Give an average PC user Windows 8 and Office 2013, and watch frustration reign.
There's bad communication and lots of resentment on BOTH sides of the phone line.
US customers can now preorder the Franken-Mac made into a drawing tablet.
From bank accounts to health insurance, bring a little sanity to your inbox.
Would you pay $99 a year to use Office at home?
Windows RT's Office preview will be updated shortly after release.
DISA's DOD Enterprise E-mail service aims to serve over 9 million with Exchange.
Also, more than 10 million people are using the Windows 8-inspired Outlook.com.
Non-game apps will debut on Sept. 5, but specific titles aren't yet revealed.
We'll show you ours if you show us yours.
We talk desk setups, ergonomics, peripherals, and the swoosh of a trackball.
Steve Ballmer lives in Office '13, Windows 8. He wants you to be his neighbor.
The executive summary of our exhaustive review of the next generation of Office.
New Android app, improved accuracy featured in Dragon NaturallySpeaking 12.
You can watch anything in your video library on your iOS or Android device.
The OS X and iOS Sparrow clients will get critical updates but no new features.
Based on Microsoft’s App-V technology, new Office isn’t the usual SaaS, exactly.
Updated applications augment, but can't replace, their desktop counterparts.
It won't put an end to bad presentations, but PowerPoint 2013 is a step forward.
Are you ready for the next generation of Microsoft Office?
Office 2013 makes concessions to tablet users, but they're far too few.
Big changes await for mobile, but only devotees will note changes on desktop.
New features like "flash fill" take some pain out of number and data crunching.
Op-ed: An opening for Linux? A herald of the end of the PC? No, and no.
Are Windows to Go and tweaks to enterprise features enough to justify upgrading?
Historical fiction has never been so nuanced—unless you're hiding from bad guys.
Messaging, people, and calendar apps filled with promise, bugs, and limitations.