Microsoft Lowering Prices on Older Xboxes

Microsoft apparently held a media roundtable Monday night after its Xbox press event, confirming that it will eventually phase out its existing models in favor of the new “slim” model.


Best Microsoft MCTS Training – Microsoft MCITP Certification at Certkingdom.com

My colleague Dean Takahashi at VentureBeat reported:

“The new Xbox 360 with a 250-gigabyte hard drive and the smaller black design will sell for $299,” Takahashi wrote. “The older Xbox 360 Elite console with a 120-gigabyte hard drive will sell for $249. And the Xbox 360 Arcade console, which does not have a hard drive, will sell for $149. The Elite and Arcade consoles will be sold until existing
Microsoft has not said if it will release versions of the Elite or Arcade models with the new design. The latest Xbox costs $299, and will be available this week.

To date, Microsoft still has not released a price for the Xbox Kinect peripheral; Aaron Greenberg, an Xbox product manager, denied reports that the Kinect’s price had been set. Gamestop reportedly posted a Web page claiming that it would be priced at $149.

“No Kinect price announced yet, retail price estimates are purely speculative, final price & pack-in details are not yet determined,” Greenberg tweeted.

Microsoft’s own official Twitter account, however, has revealed that Kinect will go on sale on Nov. 4, backed by 16 launch titles. Microsoft will begin selling the new slim Xbox in Europe on July 16.

Antivirus Protection Varies Widely Between Windows Versions

German antivirus test lab AV-Test.org started a new series of tests this August aimed at certifying antivirus products for use on specific operating systems. The August test used Windows 7 while a just-completed test challenged the same vendors under Windows XP SP2. A comparison of results from the two tests reveals some surprising disparities in protection.


Best Microsoft MCTS Training – Microsoft MCITP Certification at Certkingdom.com

Researchers rated each product on protection, repair, and usability. “Protection” encompasses both static and dynamic malware detection, including zero-day attacks; while “repair” refers to the product’s ability to remediate malware infestation and remove rootkits. The “usability” assessment includes a rating of the product’s effect on system performance and any false positives. Each test used the most recent products, meaning that some products changed version between or during the tests.

Products received a rating from 0 to 6 in each of the three categories, with a total score of 12 points required for certification. Click on the link below to see comparative results from both tests.

Antivirus product ratings from AV-Test.org

Quite a few products scored significantly lower under Windows XP than they did under Windows 7. For Microsoft Security Essentials 1.0 that meant the difference between achieving certification and missing that goal. The fact that many of these products upgraded to a newer version before or during the XP-based test didn’t seem to help them.

On the flip side, PC Tools scored significantly better under the Windows XP test. Trend Micro has significantly updated their protection, but both of these tests used last year’s Trend Micro suite. This product was much more successful under XP, so much so that it received certification for XP but not for Windows 7.

Kaspersky, Panda, and Norton Internet Security 2011 shared the top score in the Windows 7 test, each with a total of 16 points and no score below 5. Only Norton stayed on top in the Windows XP test. Kaspersky’s total dropped to 14 points and Panda’s to 13. F-Secure stayed totally consistent, receiving the exact same scores in both tests for a near-the-top total of 15.5 points.

It seems clear from these results that Windows XP is more vulnerable to malware attack than Windows 7 and hence more difficult to protect. PCMag’s own testing regimen for antivirus programs uses Windows XP exclusively, both because it’s more vulnerable and because the numerous virtual machines involved can be much smaller when Windows XP is the operating system. If you’re still using Windows XP, check the chart above to make sure you’ve got appropriate security protection.