| Here are today's daily Microsoft shorts: 
  
  
  
  The Insider: Bit of a lifestyle change looms for MicrosoftieThe Insider is the P-I business staff's weekly compendium of quips, quotes, observations 
  and asides, tidbits, weird facts and gossip.
  
  
  Microsoft Prepares for a Busy 2003After facing down the financially troubled year 2002 in fine form, software giant 
  Microsoft is looking ahead to 2003, a year in which the company will unleash an 
  unprecedented collection of
  
  desktop and server software and services.
  
  
  The Upper Hand in Handhelds? Dell Computer's pattern of attack is familiar by now: Find a product that enjoys 
  good margins. Then build it--or have it built--cheaply enough so that you can 
  underprice the competition and still be profitable. Ship the product, and watch 
  the market-share points stack up.
  
  
  Microsoft loses grip on universityMicrosoft's hold on Auckland University desktops is about to be challenged, with 
  the school of engineering offering students and staff a choice between Microsoft 
  Office and Sun Microsystems' Star Office. 3
  
  
  With Microsoft support, time may have come for tablet PCsThe basic design of laptop computers -- a screen and keyboard joined by a hinge 
  -- has been unchanged for years.
  
  
  Pocket PC Software ParodiesAre you good with PhotoShop and have some good ideas? If so, submit them to me 
  at ed at pocketpcthoughts dot com and I'll put together a column with the best 
  submissions.
  
  Lindows to hit retail shelvesWith Christmas just around the corner, the consumer-friendly Linux distribution 
  is readying its high street invasion
  
  Socket Brings 802.1X to PocketPC 
  Newark, CA-based Socket Communications 
  today unveiled that its
  Low Power Wireless LAN 
  Compact Flash card is getting support for 802.1X security. This move will 
  allow users of the company's Compact Flash 802.11b-enabled client card, usually 
  used in PocketPC-based personal digital assistants (PDAs), to use the authentication 
  of 802.1X.
  
  Microsoft Delivers Web Services Enhancements 1.0On the same day software tools group Eclipse
  announced 
  new projects and members, Microsoft Corp 
  unveiled
  Web 
  Services Enhancements 1.0 (WSE) to support the latest specifications to make 
  it easier for Visual Studio .NET developers to complete projects.
  Microsoft flaws 
  go from bad to verseA flaw in some Microsoft software has moved a security expert to try his hand 
  at poetry.
  
  Microsoft Struggling In The Wireless MarketSome have characterised this as a battle of the giants, with Nokia in one corner 
  and Microsoft in the other. If so, then the plucky little European contender is 
  fighting above its weight and giving the reigning champ all sorts of problems.
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