Verizon to unveil next Droid device June 23
June 15, 2010

Well, well, well, look what just arrived in my in-box.
Verizon Wireless has just sent out invites for a press event on Wednesday, June 23, at which it will unveil its next Droid device, and judging by the speakers list–Google Vice President of Engineering Andy Rubin, Motorola CEO Sanjay Jha, and Adobe CEO Shantanu Narayen–it looks like it we’ll see the debut of the Droid 2 running on Android 2.2.
We’ll find out, though, on June 23, and CNET will be at the event, which starts at 10 a.m. PDT, so be sure to check back then for our coverage. And introducing the phone a day before the iPhone 4 launch? Verizon, you got some gumption.
Microsoft responds to Google’s Windows moves
June 4, 2010
Despite no official acknowledgement from Google that it’s ditching Microsoft’s Windows operating system, Microsoft felt compelled to respond Tuesday.
A report surfaced late Monday night that Google has started easing Windows PCs out of its internal network based on security concerns, related in part to the attacks on its infrastructure late last year. Google has so far declined to confirm that report, but Microsoft released a blog post Tuesday afternoon defending Windows security and pointing out that security concerns helped derail a Gmail deployment at Yale University.
“When it comes to security, even hackers admit we’re doing a better job making our products more secure than anyone else. And it’s not just the hackers; third party influentials [sic] and industry leaders like Cisco tell us regularly that our focus and investment continues to surpass others,” Microsoft said in its blog post.
For some reason Microsoft declines to use Google’s name directly in the post, preferring instead to discuss “whether or not one particular company is reducing its use of Windows.” The two industry titans are far from best friends, battling each other on any number of fronts from operating system and office productivity software to search and mobile devices.
Microsoft also made sure to take a shot at old rival Apple, highlighting reports Tuesday that spyware targeting Mac OS X machines is being downloaded along with some free applications.
“Microsoft makes the security of our customers a huge priority,” it said, going on to list a number of security features in Windows 7.
- Tom Krazit, Cnet.com