Microsoft’s $7.2BN+ Acquisition Of Nokia’s Devices Business Is Now Complete

Microsoft’s $7.2 billion acquisition of Nokia’s devices and services business has been completed. Nokia confirmed the completed transaction in a press release, noting that it has “completed the sale of substantially all of its Devices & Services business to Microsoft” (using the same phrasing it has deployed throughout the process).
Nokia said it expects the final price-tag to be “slightly higher” than the

original figure of €5.44 billion given when the deal was announced last September due to the transaction being “subject to potential purchase price adjustments”:

The estimate of the adjustments made for net working capital and cash earnings was slightly positive for Nokia, and we currently expect the total transaction price to be slightly higher than the earlier-announced transaction price of EUR 5.44 billion after the final adjustments are made based on the verified closing balance sheet.
Another adjustment is to the terms, with Nokia’s manufacturing facilities in Chennai in India and Masan in Korea not transferring to Microsoft. Nokia has been facing ongoing tax proceedings in India which was presumably holding up the deal — hence the workaround, with Nokia noting that it has entered into a service agreement with Microsoft to produce mobile devices for Microsoft. (Some small irony there then, that Nokia is not technicallygetting out of mobile-making altogether.)
The release notes that the Korean facility will be closed by Nokia, with the loss of 200 jobs. But Nokia said it plans to extend “elements” of its Bridge Program — which elsewhere gives support to employees who leave the company to set up their own businesses — to staff in Chennai and Masan.
Amid the uncertainty for our employees in Chennai and because of the planned closure of our facility in Masan, Nokia plans to offer a program of support, including financial assistance which would give our employees the chance to explore opportunities outside Nokia starting from a sound financial base. The company plans to bring to Chennai and Masan elements of its Bridge program, which we have made available for employees affected by company changes in other sites.
The transaction’s closing had been delayed slightly by regulatory hold ups (and presumably also the ongoing Indian factory-related tax affair). The two companies had originally said they expected the deal to close in Q1– but last month bumped that time-frame up to April, saying they were still pending approvals in certain markets.
The deal got the green light in China earlier this month, although the Chinese Ministry of Commerce did have some concerns about how Microsoft’s patent licensing practices might change post-acquisition. And required the company to agree to a list of patent-related commitments to grant approval.
Commenting on the completion of the transaction in a statement today Tom Gibbons, Microsoft corporate vice president who is responsible for the Nokia integration, said the advantages it will bring are greater intimacy between the two entities — which have of course been publicly working together on Windows Phones since their 2011 ‘strategic partnership’ announcement — and greater efficiency.
“Customers should see a bunch of great end-to-end experiences that really empower them to have very enjoyable, very comprehensive solutions to things that they want to get done, whether you’re talking about smartphones or feature phones,” Gibbons added. “The feature phone product family coming to Microsoft will start to have more of the Microsoft services shipped on those phones right out of the gate.”
Specifically Microsoft summed up what it’s getting as follows:
With the deal closed, Microsoft acquires Nokia’s smartphone and mobile phone businesses, its design team, most of its manufacturing and assembly facilities and operations, and sales and marketing support…The acquisition also brings key capabilities around supply chain, distribution, operational processes and systems and skill in managing hardware margins to Microsoft. The unified company will benefit from speedier execution and best-in-class business operations.
It will be interesting to see what Microsoft does with the Nokia X family of smartphones, which are built atop the Android Open Source Project — and sit between Nokia’s feature phones and the full-fat Windows Phone Lumia devices.
Gibbons’ comments about pushing Microsoft services on “feature phones” is opaque on the question of what Microsoft does with Nokia X devices — and whether new CEO, Satya Nadella (pictured below with former Nokia CEO Stephen Elop, who’s now been brought back into the Redmond fold), is willing to give Nokia’s “Lumia feeder” strategy some breathing room (or not).

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Microsoft Officially Welcomes the Nokia Devices

Microsoft’s Acquisition of Nokia Mobile Business Completes. Nokia logo gets replaced by Microsoft

Nokia and Microsoft have sent a joint email to Nokia account holders talking about the process of data transfer between the two entities.
The email says that with the sale of Nokia’s sale of its Devices & Services business to Microsoft – expected to be completed this month, the email reiterates – a Microsoft Finnish affiliate named Microsoft Mobile will assume “responsibility for your personal data

and the contractual relationships for the products and services related to this business.” The email adds that customers “should experience no difference as a result of the sale.”

While the name of the entity will be changed to Microsoft Mobile, Microsoft is likely to continue using the Nokia as the consumer-facing brand, having licensed it from the Finnish company earlier.
“Microsoft has also agreed to a 10-year license arrangement with Nokia to use the Nokia brand on current and subsequently developed mobile phones based on the Series 30 and Series 40 operating systems,” Nokia had said soon after announcing the sale of its Devices & Services business to Microsoft.
After the completion of the deal, Nokia will be left with its telecom equipment (NSN), location (HERE) and patent development businesses, would have the right to continue and maintain the Nokia brand, except for certain period as per the agreement.
After the closing of the deal “Nokia would be restricted from licensing the Nokia brand for use in connection with mobile device sales for 30 months and from using the Nokia brand on Nokia’s own mobile devices until December 31, 2015,”.
Update 28 April 2014: Stephen Elop, Executive Vice President of the Microsoft Devices Group, confirmed the above in a ‘ask me anything’ session on the Nokia website saying, “Microsoft Mobile Oy is a legal construct that was created to facilitate the merger. It is not a brand that will be seen by consumers. The Nokia brand is available to Microsoft to use for its mobile phones products for a period of time, but Nokia as a brand will not be used for long going forward for smartphones. Work is underway to select the go forward smartphone brand.”

Nokia 3310 given 41-megapixel camera upgrade on April Fools’ Day

ust when one thought that Nokia will launch even more products in its Nokia X family running Android or new Lumia devices based on Windows Phone 8.1, April Fools’ Day comes and Nokia announces its heritage 3310 in a new avatar.

The Nokia 3310, which was initially launched in 2000 and is one of the most successful phones ever released by Nokia, has made a modern-day comeback.
The Finnish giant has introduced its 3310 sporting a

41-megapixel PureView sensor with Zeiss optics and Xenon flash. Further, the 3310 is seen boasting a huge camera hump at the back panel, much like Nokia 808 PureView and Nokia Lumia 1020.

The company claims that the Nokia 3310 now runs a modified version of Windows 8 (yes, you heard it right) with a new ‘ClearDiamond’ 3-inch WXGA (768×1280) display.
The Nokia 3310 PureView will be available in Blue, Dark Blue, Green, Red and Yellow colour variants.
The revamped Nokia 3310 is a touchscreen device and also sports three soft-touch navigation buttons, alongside a Windows Phone ‘home’ button.
Other specifications of the Nokia 3310 include a 1.5GHz dual-core processor; 2GB of RAM; 1430mAh battery; 32GB inbuilt storage; Bluetooth 4.0; Wi-Fi and 3G.
The yesteryear device Nokia 3310 comes with pre-loaded with four games – Snake II, Pairs II, Space Impact and Bantumi. Other pre-installed apps include MS Office, Xbox Games, Outlook and OneDrive.
Nokia notes that the Nokia 3310 will be rolled out with 3G connectivity, while LTE-enabled devices will follow later this year.
Commenting on the Juha Alakarhu, Nokia’s Head of Imaging Technologies said, “I’m really excited that we’ve found a way to marry our innovative PureView technology with such a beloved device. With its durable design and iconic look, we think even more people will enjoy our signature PureView magic.”
Earlier on Tuesday, HTC and Samsung both showed off smart-gloves on April Fools’ Day.
Samsung hit the hammer first, announcing its first ‘all-over-hand’ wearable device dubbed Samsung Fingers that features a flexible Super Emo-LED for the technology-sensitive consumer. HTC on the other hand teased its HTC Gluuv, which is also a smart-glove.
Google, despite being one of the biggest tech companies showed off its unique sense of humour and that’s most apparent on April 1 every year. The Mountain View giant has a long list of gags that include Google Pokemon Maps, Gmail Shelfie, Emoji Translate in Chrome, Auto Awesome Photobombs, Google Magic Hand, Nest Total Temperature Contro and WazeDates.

NOKIA 3310 GETS 41-MEGAPIXEL, WINDOWS PHONE MAKEOVER

Heritage, much-loved and foolproof handset brought back from the ashes with powerful PureView imaging capabilities.

Initially released in the year 2000, the Nokia 3310 went on to be one of the most successful mobile phones ever. More than 125 million were sold and, thanks to a small group of Nokia fanatics, this cult handset is making a modern-day comeback.
Staying near-true to the original design, the Nokia 3310 with

PureView will add a 41MP PureView camera with Zeiss optics and Xenon flash, and will run a modified version of Windows Phone 8 to fit the unique ‘ClearDiamond’ three-inch touch screen.

As well as the classic metallic dark blue, the Nokia 3310 with PureView will also come in yellow, blue, red and green.
Three ‘soft-touch’ navigation keys still feature a Windows Phone ‘home’ button has been introduced to you straight back to the Start Screen.
LiveTiles and App Folders are supported and it comes pre-installed with MS Office, Xbox Games, Outlook and OneDrive that offers 7GB free cloud storage out of the box.
Juha Alakarhu, Nokia head of Imaging Technologies, said:

“I’m really excited that we’ve found a way to marry our innovative PureView technology with such a beloved device. With its durable design and iconic look, we think even more people will enjoy our signature PureView magic ”

To power the next-gen operating system and class-leading camera, Nokia engineers have achieved the unthinkable, scaling down a dual-core processor, 2GB RAM and 32GB of on-board storage into a case that mimics the original size (113 x 48 x 22mm) and weight (133g).
A side-mounted MicroSD card slot offers additional storage expansion. The first devices will rollout with 3G connectivity while LTE-equipped devices will follow later in the year.
With a nostalgic nod to yesteryear, the Nokia 3310 with PureView comes pre-loaded with four games – Snake II, Pairs II, Space Impact and Bantumi -, a currency converter and original monophonic ringtones.

Norman Gage, who has been campaigning for the return of the Nokia 3310 since its discontinuation, said:

“It’s an historic day. For five years, we’ve worked hard to make our voice heard and now our dreams are about to become reality. Personally, I’d have preferred to keep the five-line, monochrome screen, six ringing-tone volume levels and original message templates, but you can’t win them all!”

Were you an original Nokia 3310 owner? Will you upgrade? Let us know, below.

Specifications


Dimensions
Height: 113 mm
Width: 48 mm
Thickness: 22 mm
Weight: 133 g
Display and User Interface
Display size: 3-inch ‘ClearDiamond’
Display resolution: WXGA (1280 x 768)
Display features: Brightness control, Nokia Glance screen, Refresh rate 60 Hz, Sunlight readability enhancements, Corning® Gorilla® Glass 3, PureMotion HD+, Sculpted glass, Wide viewing angle
Display colors: TrueColor (24-bit/16M)
Touch screen technology: Super sensitive touch
Sensors: Ambient light sensor, Accelerometer, Proximity sensor, Barometer,
Gyroscope, Magnetometer
Keys and Input Methods
User Input: Touch + Softkey
Operating keys: Volume keys, Camera key, Power/Lock key, Microsoft Home, Navigation keys.
Hardware
Connectivity
SIM card type: Micro SIM
Charging connectors: Micro-USB
AV connectors: 3.5 mm audio connector
Bluetooth: Bluetooth 4.0
Wi-Fi: WLAN IEEE 802.11 a/b/g/n
Network: 3G
Battery:
Battery capacity: 1430 mAh
Battery voltage: 3.7 V
Removable battery: Yes
Wireless charging: No
Processor
Processor type: Dual-core 1.5 GHz
Memory
User data storage: In device
RAM: 2 GB
Mass memory3: 32 GB
Free cloud storage: 7 GB
Photography
Primary camera sensor size: 41 MP, PureView
Camera Focus Type: Auto focus
ZEISS optics: Yes
Sensor size: 1/1.5 inch
Main camera f-number/aperture: f/2.2
Camera focal length: 26 mm
Camera minimum focus range: 15 cm
Camera image formats: JPEG
Camera Flash Type: Xenon flash
Flash operating range: 4.0 m
Flash modes: Off, Automatic, On
Main camera features
Main camera – other features: 6-lens optics, Backside-illuminated image sensor, High resolution zoom 3x, Optical image stabilization, PureView
Image capturing
Capture modes: Video, Still
Scene modes: Automatic, Sports, Night
White balance modes: Cloudy, Incandescent, Fluorescent, Daylight, Automatic
Light sensitivity: Automatic, ISO 100, ISO 200, ISO 400, ISO 800, ISO 1600, ISO 3200
Video
Camera video resolution: 1080p (Full HD, 1920 x 1080)
Camera video frame rate: 30 fps
Camera video zoom: 6 x
Video playback frame rate: 30 fps


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NOKIA 3310 LOADED WITH 41MPs running Win8

Microsoft officially welcomes the Nokia Devices and Services business

Microsoft and the Nokia Devices and Services business are coming together as one to deliver a family of devices and services that will delight consumers and empower businesses.

Satya Nadella(L) & Stephen Elop(R)  together

 Microsoft Corp. announced it has completed its acquisition of the Nokia Devices and Services business. The acquisition has been approved by Nokia shareholders and by governmental regulatory agencies around the world. The completion of the acquisition marks the first step in bringing these two organizations together as one team.
“Today we welcome the Nokia Devices and Servicesbusiness to our family. The mobile capabilities and assets they bring will advance our transformation,” said Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella. “Together with our partners, we remain focused on delivering innovation more rapidly in our mobile-first, cloud-first world.”
Reporting to Nadella is former Nokia President and CEO Stephen Elop, who will serve as executive vice president of the Microsoft Devices Group, overseeing an expanded devices business that includes Lumia smartphones and tablets, Nokia mobile phones, Xbox hardware, Surface, Perceptive Pixel (PPI) products, and accessories. Microsoft welcomes personnel with deep industry experience in more than 130 sites across 50 countries worldwide, including several factories that design, develop, manufacture, market and sell a broad portfolio of innovative smart devices, mobile phones and services. As part of the transaction, Microsoft will honor all existing Nokia customer warranties for existing devices, beginning April 25, 2014.
Windows Phone is the fastest-growing ecosystem in the smartphone market, and its portfolio of award-winning devices continues to expand. In the fourth quarter of 2013, according to IDC, Windows Phone reinforced its position as a top three smartphone operating system and was the fastest-growing platform among the leading operating systems with 91 percent year-over-year gain.[1] Furthermore, with the Nokia mobile phone business, Microsoft will target the affordable mobile devices market, a $50 billion annual opportunity,[2] delivering the first mobile experience to the next billion people while introducing Microsoft services to new customers around the world.
Microsoft will continue to deliver new value and opportunity, and it will work closely with a range of hardware partners, developers, operators, distributors and retailers, providing platforms, tools, applications and services that enable them to make exceptional devices. With a deeper understanding of hardware and software working as one, the company will strengthen and grow demand for Windows devices overall.
As with any multinational agreement of this size, scale and complexity, Microsoft and Nokia have made adjustments to the deal throughout the close preparation process. As announced previously, Microsoft will not acquire the factory in Masan, South Korea, and the factory in Chennai, India, will stay with Nokia due to the tax liens on Nokia’s assets in India that prevent transfer. As a result, Microsoft will welcome approximately 25,000 transferring employees from around the world.
More information about Microsoft’s expanded family of devices and services is available here.
Founded in 1975, Microsoft (Nasdaq “MSFT”) is the worldwide leader in software, services and solutions that help people and businesses realize their full potential.
Microsoft refers to Microsoft Corp. and its affiliates, including Microsoft Mobile Oy, a subsidiary of Microsoft. Microsoft Mobile Oy develops, manufactures and distributes Lumia, Asha and Nokia X mobile phones and other devices.
For further information regarding risks and uncertainties associated with Microsoft’s business, please refer to the “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations” and “Risk Factors” sections of Microsoft’s SEC filings, including, but not limited to, its annual report on Form 10-K and quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, copies of which may be obtained by contacting Microsoft’s Investor Relations department at (800) 285-7772 or at Microsoft’s Investor Relations website.
All information in this release is as of April 25, 2014. The company undertakes no duty to update any forward-looking statement to conform the statement to actual results or changes in the company’s expectations.

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Microsoft’s Acquisition of Nokia Mobile Completes.

DR.doob EXPERIMENTS; Google Zero Gravity Tricks,Google Gravity Funny Pranks


Google Zero Gravity is an effect developed by. Mr. Doob which turns the simple and clean Google homepage into a mess with a  Google Gravity. The search results fall on each other with no alignments, no borders, no arrangements. Now we may think it happens only with the home page, no it happens with all the search results, images, videos or whatever you search on Google Search Box.
Imagine, the Google homepage suddenly drops to the bottom of screen, somehow you find the search box and hit search. Now, even the search

results look scrambled and messed up and they fall to the bottom of screen piled upon each other. Well, you are victim of Google Zero Gravity. It’s a coolest prank that you can use with friends to amaze them.

Google Zero Gravity Tricks & Pranks,Google Gravity:

This is the basic effect of Google Gravity. There. There are many other Google Gravity Tricks and Pranks available, some of which are even more interesting than this. Try all the Google Gravity Effects and tell which you feel is the best effect in search results below.
As I said earlier in Google Zero Gravity the Google homepage becomes gravity free and all the elements fall to the bottom of screen. So, how to use Google Zero Gravity? Here are the ways. It can also be call Google No Gravity. The best way is to click on the link placed above the image or try this.
OR
Once you open the page the elements fall to the bottom. Now, to have the maximum fun type something in search box and hit enter. Now alL the results will fall. Now search for images and hit enter. Search anything you want and the scrambled results will make the google home page look messy and unusual. If you show this to normal user, he may think that there is something wrong with his PC. He may even think of virus attack.

Anti Google Zero Gravity : effect 2 

CLICK HERE  BINGO

anti gravity google
Well, the name says it all. All the effects are same just with open minor change that will surprise you and for some it may be freaking. All the elements on page become gravity free but they are reversed. All the images, search results, video results look like the mirror image. Try this cool effect by clicking this link.Click on the link above and The effect will  start automatically, you have to click somewhere on the page. 

Google Gravity effect 3: Google Sphere 

sphere
In this gravity trick all the elements on the page float across the screen. When you type something in the he search box and hit enter the generated results all starts floating. Google sphere effects is cool and entertaining. Try this Google Sphere effect by clicking here. 

Google Gravity Tilt Trick

  • Just Click here   BINGO
google tilt
Using this trick the google homepage tilts downwards. If you are not ware of this effect you may think something is wrong with your computer. Many people search “my compute got tilted and how to fix it” the poor victims of Google Gravity funny Pranks.

Google Zerg Rush

  • Just click Here  BINGO

zerg
Trust me this is truly awesome Google trick. You like simple games? Google Zerg Rush is exactly the same. Zurg eats the google search results and you need to kill them. Its cool engaging trick that lets you forget everything and you start playing the Zerg Rush unknowingly. Its definitely one of the best Google trick.
Let us know which Google Gravity Prank you find out freaking and interesting. Subscribe to our blog to get latest news and updates on Google new tricks and pranks.


ALSO CHEAK THE FOLLOWING EFFECTS BY DR DOOB…………………



                                                GOOGLE EFFECTS
    >> Google Space 
    >> Google Sphere

1: SPOREL
2: Obsidian
3: Translucent Network
4: Beach Balls
5: Aaronetrope
6: The Google Space (BEST OF ALL)
7: HTML editor
8: Webcam Displacement
9:Magic Dust
10:GLSL sandbox
11:Winning Solitair
12:Voxels Liquid
13:Sphere
14: Audio Visualizer
15:Dreams of Black
16:WebGl Globe
17: Clouds
18:Disturb
19:Voxels
20:Internet Explorer 6
21:The Wilderness Downtown
22:Or so they say
23:Multi-user Sketch Pad
24:Plain Deformation
25:Water Type
26:Three.js
27:Harmony
28:Zoom Blur
29:Rotozoomer
30:Fire
31:Water Mix
32: Water
33:Branching
34:Branching2
35:Branching3
36:3d waveform
37:Strange Attractor
38: Cheakbox Painter
39:Cheakboxes Ball
40:60 fps
41:Depth of Field
42: Google Sphere
43: Google Gravity
44:Ball Pool
45: Youtube in Super HD

                   Please Keep Visiting for more updates!!!!!!

                                     THANKS

Microsoft extends Windows 8.1 Update migration deadline for business

Microsoft on Wednesday extended the Windows 8.1 Update migration deadline for businesses by three months, but again told consumers they had less than four weeks to make the move before the company shuts off their patch faucet.

The aggressive schedule was criticized by enterprise IT personnel who saw it as a repudiation of Microsoft’s long-standing policy of giving customers 24 months to upgrade to a service pack. Although Windows 8.1 Update (Win8.1U) was not labeled as such, many saw similarities to Microsoft’s service packs and believed Win8.1U should hew to that policy as a wannabe for Windows 8.1.

Microsoft didn’t see it that way. In an email reply to questions Continue reading Microsoft extends Windows 8.1 Update migration deadline for business

Don’t wait for Windows 9: How to get a Start Menu, windowed Metro apps today

THE ALL NEW BUNCH OF CHANGES YOU ARE GOING TO LOVE

 

Between the release of the PC-friendly spring update for Windows 8.1 and the newfound introduction of universal “buy once, play anywhere” Windows apps, Microsoft is doing all it can to spur the One Microsoft vision while, well, letting a PC be a PC and a tablet be a tablet. But, sadly, the most anticipated improvements have yet to arrive.

At Build 2014, Microsoft operating system head Terry Myerson teased bringing the Start Menu to Windows 8, along with the ability to run universal Metro apps in desktop windows rather than the full screens they consume today. (See screenshot above.) Myerson didn’t say when the features were going live, however—only that they’d eventually appear in a later update for Continue reading Don’t wait for Windows 9: How to get a Start Menu, windowed Metro apps today

Don’t wait for Windows 9: How to get a Start Menu, windowed Metro apps today

THE ALL NEW BUNCH OF CHANGES YOU ARE GOING TO LOVE

Between the release of the PC-friendly spring update for Windows 8.1 and the newfound introduction of universal “buy once, play anywhere” Windows apps, Microsoft is doing all it can to spur the One Microsoft vision while, well, letting a PC be a PC and a tablet be a tablet. But, sadly, the most anticipated improvements have yet to arrive.
At Build 2014, Microsoft operating system head Terry Myerson teased bringing the Start Menu to Windows 8, along with the ability to run universal Metro apps in desktop windows rather than the full screens they consume today. (See screenshot above.) Myerson didn’t say when the features were going live, however—only that they’d eventually appear in a later update for Windows 8.1 users. Does that mean later this year? The Windows “Threshold” update rumored for April 2015? Windows 9? No one knows.
But you don’t
have to wait to get those killer features. With the first universal apps hitting the various Windows Stores this week, here’s how to bring a Start menu and windowed Metro apps to Windows 8.1 today.

The return of the Start Menu

A slew of Start menu replacements hit the web the second the Start Menu-less Windows 8 hit the streets, but when it comes time to put your cash on the line, the decision boils down to just two programs: Stardock’s Start8 and Classic Shell.

THE START MENU

Those reviews have all the nitty-gritty details, but you’ll probably want to start with Classic Shell
since it’s donationware. Classic Shell includes options for both Windows XP- and Windows 7-style
Start menus, along with numerous customization options. You can tinker with what’s listed in the
Classic Shell Start Menu, or even change the look of its Start button to an icon of your choice. Cool
stuff, indeed.
Start8, meanwhile, offers either a Windows 7 Start Menu or a Modern UI-tinged Windows 8 Start
Menu that’s more in line with what Microsoft itself is cooking up. The $5 Start8 app is more polished
and easier to use than the open-source Classic Shell, which is chock full of ugly buttons. Start8 still
offers plenty of options and features, though, and you can’t go wrong with either program.

Windowed desktop Metro apps

Sure, the recent update to Windows 8.1 adds plenty of mouse-friendly features, but it still doesn’t let you use Modern apps in desktop windows. If you want that capability today, you only have one place to turn: The utterly superb ModernMix software.

NOW YOU CAN PIN YOU WIN8.1 APPS TO YOUR TASKBAR

Again offered by Stardock—do you get the feeling that the folks at Stardock weren’t impressed by Windows 8?—ModernMix exists solely to let you run Windows Store apps in desktop Windows. It’s wonderful if you use Windows 8’s native apps, such as email, calendar, and Music, all of which stick to the Modern UI.
ModernMix runs like a charm even with the updates recently introduced to Windows 8.1. It’s well worth the $5 admission price.

Bringing it all together

There you have it: For less than the cost of a pizza, you can have Windows 9’s most-anticipated improvements right now. And once you’ve welcomed a Start Menu replacement and ModernMix into your workflow—especially paired with the Windows 8.1 spring Update’s tremendous tweaks —you might just be surprised how well those newfangled Modern apps translate to the familiar desktop experience.

All Users Must Install Windows 8.1 Update Now;

If you have Windows 8.1, you have a little less than a month to install Windows 8.1 Update, or you will miss out on future security updates.

Microsoft announced a fairly large update for the most recent version of its Windows operating system, with the unoriginal moniker “Windows 8.1 Update” (Win8.1U), as part of its April Patch Tuesday release last week. Users who download and install the update (or have updates installed automatically), don’t have anything to worry about. They will continue to receive security updates going forward. Users who don’t install Win8.1U will Continue reading All Users Must Install Windows 8.1 Update Now;