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Microsoft Expands exFAT Multimedia Licensing

alphadogg writes "Microsoft Thursday announced a broadening of its licensing program around its exFAT file system, which is designed to handle large multimedia files. Microsoft hopes companies making devices such as cameras and smartphones will adopt the Extended File Allocation Table (exFAT) technology to support the sharing of audio and video files. The technology is available on Windows 7, Vista SP1, Windows Server 2008 and Windows Embedded CE."

7 of 181 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Why? by hitmark · · Score: 4, Insightful

    simple, the only non-microsoft formats that windows supports out of the box are cd and dvd media.

    i wonder how long it will take before microsoft gets a slap on the wrist over this...

    new microsoft, same as old microsoft...

    --
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  2. Re:I smell DRM by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why do you always look at Microsoft will "all" the disdain?

    Experience.

    Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice ... umm... you won't get fooled again.

    Snide comments aside, it's simply that it's been too many times the case. Of course MS is in the business to make money. But to that end, vendor lock-in is one of the golden tickets to cash cows. If you can monopolize, you can charge whatever you want and nobody can undercut you. You can dictate price, conditions and format, what your user may or may not do with your tools and so on.

    Yes, MS is in the business to make money. And doing what we "accuse" them to do is the easiest, most profitable and most sustainable way. So I guess we might be correct?

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  3. Just great... by MojoRilla · · Score: 5, Insightful
    And the best news...

    The SD Association has adopted exFAT for its SDXC memory card specification.

    So a mediocre but patent encumbered technology gets adopted as a standard because it runs out of the box on Windows. As Microsoft itself puts it, "exFAT is relatively simple". Hello, antitrust regulators? Hello, patent office?

  4. Re:Why? by Renegrade · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Almost every computer available? Hardly. From the article: "The technology is available on Windows 7, Vista SP1, Windows Server 2008 and Windows Embedded CE". That's it. The Win 98, 2000, and XP systems you'll find in the wild won't support it. Some of the older systems (ie, XP) can be patched with an update from Microsoft, but are you going to carry a second removable media device with FAT16 or FAT32 around with you and install this patch everywhere you go? And bring XP or later as well for those machines running 98/NT4/2K? I don't believe there's Apple support either, and Linux support is still experimental.

    I haven't seen the spec for exFAT (I'm not paying some fee to see a spec for some microsoft cruft), but I imagine it's another vendor-lockin, poor-performance-substitute abomination like NTFS was, or WinFS will be.

  5. Re:Microsoft and Making Money by peppepz · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Since exFAT apparently is referenced in the SD standard, people will be forced to use it, if they buy any consumer electronic device containing an SD slot. They can't choose not to use it. It's a hardware standard.

    So after exFAT, they won't be able to do what they do today, that is, freely exchange their media among their devices at their will. That's evil, and once again, it comes from Microsoft.

  6. Re:Why? by A+Friendly+Troll · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well, the CD-ROM standard they support is "Joliet". Which is their own extension.... I wonder how long until they are going with patents after others implementing it.

    ISO-9660 doesn't support Unicode. Believe it or not, some languages use characters that aren't part of ASCII.

    ISO-9660 doesn't support lower case letters, spaces and multiple dots in file/directory names.

    There's nothing wrong with naming a directory "Family Photos 25.12.2009." - if Joliet didn't exist, we'd have to burn that to CD as "FAMILYPHOTOS25122009".

  7. Re:I smell DRM by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Microsoft is in the business of making money and licensing of its wares is just part of the game. What's wrong with that? Did you want Microsoft to go the Linux way and "donate" the software for "free?"

    Get a life...Have some faith.

    Well, what is wrong in the customers resisting the profit motivated actions of their vendors? Customers have as much right to protect their money as does Microsoft have for making their profits.

    Some actions of the vendors, including Microsoft, enhances the productivity and competitiveness of their customers. Rightfully the vendors, including Microsoft, are entitled to a share of the extra profits generated. But some other actions by the vendor, does not enhance the productivity or competitiveness of their clients, and the customer would be better served by switching to a competitor of the current vendor. Actions by the current vendor that prevents this switch by vendor lock would hamper the clients from employing their money, maximizing their profits etc. And we have as much right to highlight to potential long term danger and make everyone aware of it.

    Why is Microsoft and its apologists are so against people making informed decisions? Vendor lock is real. Companies are hurting from it.

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