| Bounty for Vista coders who squish bugs at home |
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| Saturday, 13 May 2006 | |
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A top Microsoft engineer has thrown out a weekend challenge to the Windows Vista team: Find and fix a bug in the current code and earn $100. The employee who installs the latest Vista build at home and squashes the most bugs before Monday will get an extra $500.
Brian Valentine issued the challenge Friday in an e-mail to members of the team working on Vista, the next update of the company's Windows operating system. The move comes as Microsoft is wrapping up work on a broad test version of Vista, expected by many Windows watchers to be released later this month. Microsoft has said it is on track to deliver a test version to roughly two million users this quarter. Microsoft is pushing to wrap up development of Vista this year, with a mainstream launch slated for January. The company had long hoped to release it this holiday season, but in March announced that the launch would be delayed. Valentine's e-mail was noted earlier Friday by Windows enthusiast site ActiveWin. As bug bounties go, it's small potatoes--though most others are for outsiders who report flaws. In February, VeriSign's iDefense offered to pay $10,000 for reports of flaws that end up with a "critical" severity rating in a Microsoft Security Bulletin. And Mozilla offers $500 and a Mozilla T-shirt to those who find critical security flaws in its products, which include the Firefox Web browser. CNET News.com's Joris Evers contributed to this report. |
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Bounty for Vista coders who squish bugs at home