Microsoft might be releasing its Q1 2011 earnings on October 28 this week. And about the 28th and 29th,
Windows 7 Keygen, the firm will probably be keeping its 1st Redmond-based Expert Developers Conference. But there have already been lots of other Microsoft-related happenings more than the past couple of days (and it;s only Tuesday).Workplace 2011 for Mac goes on sale: On October 26,
Office Professional 2010 Key, Microsoft began promoting Office 2011, the new Office release for Mac OS X customers at retail. Microsoft launched to manufacturing Workplace 2011 on September 10. There are 3 SKUs, or variations: Office for Mac House & Student 2011,
Office 2010 Home And Stude/nt, Office for Mac Property & Organization 2011 and Workplace for Mac Academic 2011. Pricing ranges from $99 to $279, depending on the SKU and number of installs allowed.Mac Office 2011 replaces Entourage with Outlook and adds back Visual Basic for Applications support to the product. Mac Office 2011 gets a Ribbonized user interface, similar to the one built into the recent Windows versions of Office, and will likely be a 32-bit product only. The suite includes in-client integration with Workplace Web Apps, the Webified versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote. Microsoft officials also say the new suite might be faster to launch, scroll and perform calculations than previous versions of Workplace for Mac.The near-final Release Candidate of
Windows 7 Service Pack (SP) 1 is out: Microsoft has launched the official version of the
Windows 7/Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1 RC to testers on October 26. Microsoft officials are still saying to expect the final version of SP1 — which includes primarily a rollup of fixes,
Office 2010 Product Key, security updates (and, around the server side, a couple of new virtualization features – is next year, specifically in Q1 2011. (An unofficial leaked build of the SP1 RC slipped out more than the past few days.)Microsoft offers MSDN subscribers new Windows Azure offer: Microsoft execs hinted late last week that there;s some kind of Windows Azure pricing news coming at PDC 2010 this week (to compete better against Amazon;s just-announced free-tier offer). On October 26, Microsoft shared a couple of Azure subscription tidbits. The eight-month introductory Microsoft Developer Network (MSDN) benefits for Azure have already been extended to 16 months. And you'll find other new MSDN Azure benefits that will kick off in November, according to a new chart about the Microsoft Web site:New Zune Pass pricing deal: Microsoft is offering subscribers to its Zune Pass all-you-can-eat music service a new pricing option. Currently, Microsoft offers subscribers a $14.99 per month rate that allows them to access and stream music and keep ten tracks per month. For those willing to commit to Zune Pass for a year, Microsoft is now allowing them to get Zune Pass access (including the 10 tracks per month to keep) for $149.90, which is like getting 12 months of Zune Pass for the price of ten months. I;ve heard rumors that Microsoft also could be adding an even cheaper monthly Zune Pass option for individuals not interested in keeping the 10 tracks per month,
Office Professional, but when I asked was told “we have nothing else to announce at this time” regarding Zune Pass.