Google and Microsoft in the Clouds

Software has been purchased in a box, or through a download, or businesses purchasing license packs. Just about all this software runs on desktops and on-site servers. These happens until very recently.

Software has been purchased in a box, or through a download, or businesses purchasing license packs. Just about all this software runs on desktops and on-site servers. These happens until very recently.

Google and Apple may look similar when people see them at a glance, judging them from the surface. Both are certainly companies that move through the same industry that creates many fans and products that had changed the world as we know it.
The social giant Facebook, along with the search titan Google, have dominated the advertising market worldwide. But Facebook has another strategy in the making.
JavaScript is a familiar programming language to developers and its one of the languages that developers can use to make Windows 8 apps. In October 1st, 2012, Microsoft announced a new programming language it calls TypeScript that is designed to extend the features of the familiar JavaScript.

The PC world is revolutionizing. The traditional large PCs and laptops are starting to get old. Many well-known manufacturers have raced in creating an alternative to the traditional computers, but more usable than a smartphone.

Google held its annual developer conference: Google I/O, on June 27th, 2012 in San Francisco. It is showing the key new developments in Google products from Android to Google+.

In June 18th, 2012, at Milk Studios in Los Angeles, Microsoft unveiled its first ever tablet, the Microsoft Surface Tablet.
Mozilla released the first numbered alpha released of Rust compiler in January 20th, 2012, after the work done by its lead developer Graydon Hoare since 2006.

Google introduced a new algorithm change for its search engine ranking. The change is aiming to lower the rank of "low-quality sites", and return higher-quality sites near the top of the search results.

In October 10th, 2011, Google unveiled its new web programming language Dart. The search giant described it as a "class-based optionally typed programming language for building web applications." Dart has a native virtual machine and can also be compiled into JavaScript, allowing it to run on current browser.