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Current DateTime: 03:51:19 12 Oct 2008
LinksList Documentid: 19836971
Expiration DateTime: 10/12/2008 3:54:11 PM
    • Become a Dividend Investor 

        Look at the financial health of companies to make sure that their dividends can be paid next year, advised Wouter Weijand from Fortis Investments. Weijand is overweight telecoms, seeing a lot of good dividends there, as well as in some Japanese companies.

    • Battle Of The Bear 

        An outlook on Google and Apple, with Gene Munster, Piper Jaffray analyst and the Fast Money team.

    • Your Digital Life 

        You can say goodbye to the mess of cables to charge your cell phone and Blackberry, reports David Pogue, NY Times tech columnist & CNBC contributor

    • Reinventing Radio 

        A look at how one company has reinvented radio for the digital age, with Paul Krasinski, Ando Media executive vice president

    • Investing in the Tech Sector 

        The rest of the world has got too much debt. But the tech sector has none -- it is the only sector globally that has net cash, says Stuart O'Gorman, director at Technology Investment Henderson Global Investors. He tells Graeme Maxton of The Insight Bureau & CNBC's Amanda Drury where the best buys lie in the tech space.

    • IBM Shares Rally 

        IBM shares rally five percent after preannouncing Q3 results, with CNBC's Tyler Mathisen

Microsoft's Gates Sees Windows Update in Next Year
By Reuters | 04 Apr 2008 | 02:26 PM ET
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Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates said on Friday he expected the new version of Windows operating software, code-named Windows 7, to be released "sometime in the next year or so." The software giant has been aiming to issue more regular updates of the operating system software that powers the majority of the world's personal computers.

Microsoft Windows 7
Nevertheless, Gates' comments suggested that a successor to the Vista program might be released sooner than was generally expected.

Microsoft [MSFT  Loading...      ()   ] has said it expected to release a new version of Windows approximately 3 years after the introduction of Vista in January 2007.

A company spokeswoman said Gates' comments are in line with a development cycle that usually releases a test version of the software before its official introduction.

"I'm superenthused about what it will do in lots of ways," Gates said in a seminar on corporate philanthropy held during an annual meeting in Miami of the Inter-American Development Bank.

"That'll be sometime in the next year or so that we'll have a new version," Gates said in response to a question from the audience.

Gates, who is due to leave his day-to-day functions at Microsoft and dedicate himself to the philanthropic efforts of the Gates Foundation in June, said the company aimed through its $6 billion annual research and development budget to take the products running on its software to "the next level." He said new versions of Windows would help revolutionize mobile phones and run the desk of the future, which would have a touch surface display allowing users to call up items using their hands.

Copyright 2008 Reuters. Click for restrictions.

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