The December update to my Microsoft Codename Tracker chart is done and prepared for download.There are a lot of new codenames during this month;s update, which includes one I;ve been chasing for the whilst: “Thunderbay.” Thunderbay isn;t a product codename; it;s an Entertainment and Devices strategy codename. I provide more details on Microsoft Thunderbay in the introduction to this month;s Codename Tracker. (You'll find several other new Microsoft codenames,
Office 2010 Standard Key, plus updates to many of the existing ones, in the Tracker, as well.)The Codename Tracker PDF is the same chart I use myself to keep up with the codenames of products and technologies coming from Microsoft. This newest version adds a number of new database- and cloud-specific codenames, plus updates to a number of the already-existing entries.If you’ve already registered on ZDNet,
Windows 7 Home Basic X64, you could just grab the latest version. If you haven’t,
Office 2010 Home And Business Key, registration info will be requested before you download it. Whether you’re a Microsoft customer, partner, analyst, competitor (or even employee), you might come across the Tracker useful.If there’s a Microsoft codename missing from my chart that you’d like me to check out and ultimately add,
Office Standard Product Key, please don’t hesitate to contact me via e-mail. I’m working on fleshing out several new reader suggestions and hope to be adding them to the next update of the tracker. Just so you know: All e-mails I receive are treated as confidential — unless you want a mention/credit line,
Office Home And Student, of course.Meanwhile, if you’d like to obtain posts from “All About Microsoft” in e-mail form (hourly, daily or weekly), you’re able to subscribe here. And if you are all about Twitter, you're able to follow me there, as well.