On June 19,
Office 2007 Serial, the U.S. Division of Justice was slated to release its most recent Microsoft antitrust compliance report. (It;s past 8 p.m. EST. Nonetheless no signal of it but.)Within the interim,
Microsoft Office 2007 Key, Reuters and Bloomberg are each reporting that Microsoft has agreed to alter Windows Vista in some method to appease Google, which complained last year that Microsoft;s desktop search facility — Instant Search — was interfering with the performance of Google Desktop Search when loaded on Vista systems.Final May,
Windows 7 Ultimate Key, federal regulators gave a thumbs up to Microsoft;s plans for its search-box plans for Internet Explorer 7 (which is part of Vista), but did not address Instant Lookup.If these new news reports are right,
Office Professional Plus 2010, I;ll be interested to see how Microsoft can alter a feature that;s already shipped with the more than 40 million copies of Vista that Microsoft has said it has sold.Could a patch — or perhaps Vista Service Pack 1 — include functionality that will aid third-party search indexers to work better with Vista?I asked the Vista team for comment. No word back Their statement, via a corporate spokesman: “Microsoft won;t be making any comment until the (DOJ) report is filed. ”Stay tuned.Update: 10 p.m. EST: The DOJ report isn;t expected until after midnight EST. The New York Times is reporting that Microsoft will be making changes to Vista. No real details on how/when,
Windows 7 64 Bit, on the other hand. The Times says:“Lawyers involved inside the proceeding said the changes to Vista would allow consumers to decide which desktop lookup program they want to use, and that selecting software from Google or some other company would no longer slow down the computer as it does now. They said that as part of the settlement, Microsoft would let Vista users know how to change their desktop lookup program. But the settlement would not require Microsoft to make all the changes that Google had sought.”