Tuesday, March 31, 2009

A Walk Through the Productivity Future Vision Video - Office Labs

Check out the videos referenced in this post (starting with this one) for a compelling vision of the future of information technology

There has been a lot of buzz around the Microsoft Productivity Future Vision video since it was unveiled by Stephen Elop, President of Microsoft Business Division. Many people have been asking for more information about the scenarios shown in the video, the underlying technologies, and how the video relates to Microsoft’s overall vision and ongoing product development roadmap.

In response to many of these questions, and in an effort to encourage more dialogue around the emerging technology explored in the video, we have created two additional videos. Each is designed to give you a deeper view into the story behind the Productivity Future Vision video and how Microsoft is working toward delivering these kinds of productivity scenarios in the years ahead.

A Walk Through the Productivity Future Vision Video - Office Labs

Duffbert's Random Musings :: OK... so perhaps Project Match didn't even appeal to expatriates, either...

Maybe IBM could also patent its strategy for obfuscating layoff details.   See the full post for more context-setting.

In The Industry Standard, there's an article about how IBM is trying to patent a "method and system for strategic global resource sourcing."  Gotta love that phrase.  But what I found interesting was this snippet further down in the article:
Project Match, an IBM offshoring initiative the Standard reported on last month, offers U.S. employees the chance to stay with IBM by relocating to another country, to work in an IBM regional division at local wage rates. IBM has roughly 400,000 employees in 170 countries. As of early February, fewer than ten employees had shown interest in the program.

Duffbert's Random Musings :: OK... so perhaps Project Match didn't even appeal to expatriates, either...

Yahoo! News - Website offers emotional rescue from economy by Reuters: Yahoo! Tech

Sign of the times

Stressed out by the economy? The U.S. government is offering an online emotional rescue kit.

The "Getting Through Tough Economic Times" guide at http://www.samhsa.gov/economy/ is meant to help people identify any serious health concerns related to financial worries, develop coping skills and find help, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration said on Tuesday.

Yahoo! News - Website offers emotional rescue from economy by Reuters: Yahoo! Tech

That Famous Twitter Feed Could Be a Lot of Baloney - washingtonpost.com

More fun with Twitter

Things have gotten a little confusing for fans. Thanks to the democratizing powers of the Web and the rapid rise in popularity of Twitter, the very famous and the only slightly famous are finding themselves with virtual doppelgangers.

Already, a Web site has been launched to try and resolve such important questions of online celebrity identity. The U.K.-based Valebrity.com seeks to verify that the famous folks you're following online really are who they say they are.

That Famous Twitter Feed Could Be a Lot of Baloney - washingtonpost.com

Technology Review: A Plan to Catch the Conficker Worm

Read the full article for more details

On April 1, a computer worm called Conficker, which has already infected millions of machines worldwide, is expected to do something bad, though no one knows exactly what. Some experts fear that an army of infected machines could be ordered to launch a coordinated attack or send out a barrage of spam. But a tool released today could help lessen the impact by allowing big companies and institutions to quickly weed out infected machines by scanning entire networks for signs of infection.

Technology Review: A Plan to Catch the Conficker Worm

Microsoft to Shut Encarta As Free Sites Alter Market - WSJ.com

More Encarta details

A spokesman for Microsoft declined to comment on whether Wikipedia contributed to Microsoft's decision to shut down Encarta. The spokesman said the move was "one piece of a broader strategy to continue to evolve our product offerings to address the next wave of people's search and research needs."

Jay Walsh, a spokesman for the nonprofit Wikimedia Foundation that coordinates Wikipedia, said he took no joy in seeing Encarta die and hopes that Microsoft releases its reference materials to other sites on the Internet that can keep them available. "We're not in a business where we're trying to put anyone out of business," Mr. Walsh said.

Microsoft to Shut Encarta As Free Sites Alter Market - WSJ.com

How can Encyclopaedia Britannica survive in a wiki world - The Boston Globe

See the full article for details.  On a related note, Encarta will be discontinued later this year.

The venerable Encyclopaedia Britannica is preparing for the most radical overhaul in its 241-year history, and it's recruiting its readers to do much of the work.

It's a bid by Britannica to remain relevant at a time when the world's most popular encyclopedia, the eight-year-old website Wikipedia, is written entirely by amateur experts. The new version of Britannica Online, set to debut this summer, will emulate the Wikipedia concept by letting subscribers make changes to any article, ranging from minor edits to near-total rewrites.

How can Encyclopaedia Britannica survive in a wiki world - The Boston Globe

Monday, March 30, 2009

Celebrity Twittering: Is That Really You, Shaq? - TIME

Interesting times

More than 6 million people mini-blog about their lives on Twitter, including a surprising number of celebrities. Sean (Diddy) Combs recently Twittered about a tantric sex session, a 48-hour juice fast and taking a bubble bath with an Oscar statue. John Cleese has written about his pet chickens, while MC Hammer has mused on the economy ("We just fed the nation 15 [years] of evil soup. Now we're throwing up"). Other celebrities, including Shaquille O'Neal, post actual information about where they are and what they're doing. And they encourage fans to meet them.

Celebrity Twittering: Is That Really You, Shaq? - TIME

Mark Cuban's Twitter Bill: $510 a Word | Peter Kafka | MediaMemo | AllThingsD

Classic Cuban

The latest: A $25,000 bill from the league for two messages, totaling 49 words, that he posted via Twitter on Friday night. Both tweets complained about the officiating in that night’s Mavericks-Denver Nuggets game.

Cuban’s response? This tweet, posted Sunday afternoon: “just found out got fined25k by nba.) nice.” And then, upon further reflection, he penned this beauty:

cuban-tweet

Mark Cuban's Twitter Bill: $510 a Word | Peter Kafka | MediaMemo | AllThingsD

Duffbert's Random Musings :: Book Review - Essential SharePoint 2007 by Scott Jamison, Mauro Cardarelli, Susan Handley

An interesting review from a longstanding member of the Notes/Domino community

I'm switching from developing applications in the Notes/Domino platform to doing the same in SharePoint.  But where Notes/Domino is somewhat self-contained, SharePoint has a ton of moving parts (Office, WSS, MOSS, SQL Server, etc.)  As such I was having a hard time trying to figure out how to group everything in my mind.  Essential SharePoint 2007 turned out to be the perfect way to start my journey.

Duffbert's Random Musings :: Book Review - Essential SharePoint 2007 by Scott Jamison, Mauro Cardarelli, Susan Handley

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Facebook at 5 - Is It Growing Up Too Fast? - NYTimes.com

A very extensive Facebook snapshot

By any measure, Facebook’s growth is a great accomplishment. The crew of Mark Zuckerberg, the company’s 24-year-old co-founder and chief executive, is signing up nearly a million new members a day, and now more than 70 percent of the service’s members live overseas, in countries like Italy, the Czech Republic and Indonesia. Facebook’s ranks in those countries swelled last year after the company offered its site in their languages.

All of this mojo puts Facebook on a par with other groundbreaking — and wildly popular — Internet services like free e-mail, Google, the online calling network Skype and e-commerce sites like eBay. But Facebook promises to change how we communicate even more fundamentally, in part by digitally mapping and linking peripatetic people across space and time, allowing them to publicly share myriad and often very personal elements of their lives.

Facebook at 5 - Is It Growing Up Too Fast? - NYTimes.com

Vast Spy System Loots Computers in 103 Countries - NYTimes.com

Yikes

A vast electronic spying operation has infiltrated computers and has stolen documents from hundreds of government and private offices around the world, including those of the Dalai Lama, Canadian researchers have concluded.

[…]

The malware is remarkable both for its sweep — in computer jargon, it has not been merely “phishing” for random consumers’ information, but “whaling” for particular important targets — and for its Big Brother-style capacities. It can, for example, turn on the camera and audio-recording functions of an infected computer, enabling monitors to see and hear what goes on in a room. The investigators say they do not know if this facet has been employed.

Vast Spy System Loots Computers in 103 Countries - NYTimes.com

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Collaborative Strategy Guild » The Fog of Cloud Computing

Another Google snapshot; see the full post for more details

Google Docs is a 2.5-year-old beta product, which should tip customers off to the fact that it’s all one big experiment still. It is one development model to continue to stumble along, make the same mistakes that companies like Lotus and Microsoft spent years learning, and to use its customers as guinea pigs. If the price point (free) is worth it, then customers of Google Docs can have little recourse when something goes terribly wrong. Customers need to consider all cloud services as carefully as they would consider in-house solutions. Checking out the technical facts as well as their risk tolerance before “buying” is likely to mitigate buyer’s remorse. Don’t count on users to be cautious once you bless the service. Users will not be concerned about how a system is implemented to ensure that the information they post is secure. If the tool makes their work easier you can be assured it will be used heavily. Therefore, it’s up to the people who understand IT to make sure that the cloud services that the company uses are satisfactorily implemented and is secure.

Collaborative Strategy Guild » The Fog of Cloud Computing

The iPhone Excuse - Gadgetwise Blog - NYTimes.com

A timely reality check

A couple of weeks ago, my colleague Matt Richtel — a handsome devil if ever there was one — spoke truth to power. He said the thing that no one was saying, yet needed to be said. Here it is in a nutshell:

For all its abilities and powers, the iPhone is a tremendous pocket computer, but a lousy phone.

The iPhone Excuse - Gadgetwise Blog - NYTimes.com

FT.com / Technology / Science - Tech rivals in cloud computing clash

It’ll be interesting to see how this plays out

Microsoft and Amazon.com have clashed with IBM and a group of other leading technology companies over an attempt to set some broad technology principles for the coming era of “cloud computing”.

The unusual public spat points to a deeper struggle under way between some of the world’s biggest technology concerns as they try to position themselves for what is expected to be the next big thing in the tech world.

The skirmish “is about personalities, and anxieties about perceptions of leadership” between some of the tech industry’s biggest rivals, said Frank Gillett, an analyst at Forrester Research.

FT.com / Technology / Science - Tech rivals in cloud computing clash

Curious at Amazon, but Not Idle - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

See the full article for more details

I’m struck by reports that Jeff Bezos, the chief executive of Amazon.com, spent last week working in one of the company’s warehouses in Lexington, Ken., according to The Lexington Herald-Leader:

Local Amazon employees say Bezos is working in the warehouse with the company’s hourly employees to see what they do and hear their comments about their work.

Curious at Amazon, but Not Idle - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

Netflix Is the New Relationship Battleground - NYTimes.com

Signs of the times…

With a nation in recession and households cutting back on nights out at the movies, and even canceling cable services, Netflix has thrived, with a growing number of subscribers looking for cheap escapist relief. The company announced in February that it had surpassed 10 million subscribers. The slim red envelopes are everywhere these days, each packed with a single DVD, pumping like platelets through the nation’s mail system.

But for many couples, the queue — the computer list of which films will arrive next in the mail, after those at home are returned — is as important as everything else that spouses and other varieties of significant others share, from pet names to closet space to the bathroom. For some, this is fine. For others, the queue is the new toilet seat that somebody left up.

Netflix Is the New Relationship Battleground - NYTimes.com

Friday, March 27, 2009

Mac vs. PC: Did Microsoft ad star 'Lauren' make the right choice? - TechFlash: Seattle's Technology News Source

An excellent TechFlash reality check – see the full post for more details.  Note that you could also throw in a copy of Office 2007 Home and Student Edition and still be paying less than 30% of the Apple price.

Does Microsoft have a point? Or is this comparison fair?

Mac vs. PC: Did Microsoft ad star 'Lauren' make the right choice? - TechFlash: Seattle's Technology News Source

Pattern Finder: Google Apps: The Latest, Latest Glitch

A GAPE reality check from Burton Group Research Director Guy Greese; see his full post for context-setting

This is yet another example of how Google--fundamentally--does not understand selling to the enterprise. First, during the entire two plus years of availability of Google Apps Premier Edition (GAPE), it looks like it never had a code walkthrough to ponder the possibility of this behavior. (Given Google's branding pitch of hiring only really really smart people, I find this hard to believe.) Or, if it did, it decided it wasn't a risk worth fixing. Second, rather than issuing a quick "Thank you, we're working on it" to Ade for doing their work for them, they ignored the issue until it started turning into a PR fiasco.

When I wrote my first 55-page report on GAPE back in August 2007, I was not kind to Google, saying GAPE was not ready for primetime in large enterprises. Although I didn't say so in the report, frankly, I was figuring Google would fix the issues over time (e.g., embedded e-mail distribution lists, administration by role) and by now it would have a competitive package. Now I'm inclined to think that's never going to happen.

Pattern Finder: Google Apps: The Latest, Latest Glitch

Google Watch - Google Strategy - Is Google Where Startups Go to Die?

An interesting Google reality check; see the full post for examples

Google is one of several angel investors with a stake in Pixazza, a startup making technology that is supposed to allow publishers of e-commerce Websites and other sites to display information about the contents of an image.

But if you set aside DoubleClick and Postini, which were hardly startups when Google picked them up to respectively dominate ad serving and shore up its e-mail offering, do the startups that Google buys just disappear?

Tangent: see this post for one that lived – Tonic Systems, acquired in 2007, and reintroduced this week as the Google Docs Insert Drawing feature

Google Watch - Google Strategy - Is Google Where Startups Go to Die?

Oracle and HP proposed joint Sun dismemberment deal • Channel Register

I kid you not: I had no non-disclosure/other vendor-supplied info in this context; it’s simply a pragmatic permutation, following Sun’s implosion – and I wouldn’t be surprised to see it come to fruition, if, as looks likely, increasing IBM scrutiny makes an IBM/Sun deal infeasible

Oracle and Hewlett-Packard are believed to have made a joint offer for Sun Microsystems in a deal totaling more than $2bn.

Under the deal, database giant Oracle would have taken Sun's software portfolio for $2bn, leaving HP with Sun's vast Solaris, Sparc, and x86 server products, manufacturing and distribution, and user base.

A potential deal between the three is understood to have been blocked by IBM, in the middle of talks to buy the whole of Sun for a reported $6.5bn.

See the full article for more details

Oracle and HP proposed joint Sun dismemberment deal • Channel Register

Microsoft | Microsoft ad: "I'm just not cool enough to be a Mac person" | Seattle Times Newspaper

Check the full article for the video and more details

"I would have to double my budget, which isn't feasible," Lauren, driving her Volkswagen, tells the camera reality-TV style. "I'm just not cool enough to be a Mac person."

It's one of the more aggressive digs Microsoft has made at Apple in a commercial. The implication is Apple's more expensive products won't fly with ordinary people in this economy.

Microsoft | Microsoft ad: "I'm just not cool enough to be a Mac person" | Seattle Times Newspaper

FT.com / Companies / Technology - Red Hat lifted by increased free use of Linux

Hint: if RHAT revenues are up due to growing use of Linux in data centers, its products are not free (as the headline asserts)…

The economic downturn is punishing the technology industry as much as many other sectors, but it is already proving a boon for companies distributing and servicing free open-source software.

Red Hat, the top commercial company devoted to the free operating system Linux, this week said revenue for the quarter ended February 28 had jumped 18 per cent to $166m.

FT.com / Companies / Technology - Red Hat lifted by increased free use of Linux

FT.com / UK / Business - Small businesses find big value in Twitter

More Twitter-herding…  (I suppose the small businesses can’t afford ghost Twitterers, however)

Small businesses are making more use of Twitter than larger companies, research has found.

Even large technology companies, which are typically early adopters of new technology, remain wary of Twitter, the social networking site, which allows users to post short messages.

FT.com / UK / Business - Small businesses find big value in Twitter

Sexting May Place Teens at Legal Risk - Gadgetwise Blog - NYTimes.com

A stark “sexting” reality check

Losing children could be imprisoned or made pariahs for life. Mark Rasch, a former cybercrime prosecutor for the Justice Department, and now an information security and privacy consultant, says that a 16-year-old with a standard story -– she took a bunch of pictures of herself and sent them to a boy electronically in the hopes of seducing him -– could get life in federal prison under current sentencing guidelines. If she does manage to get out, she may have to register as a sex offender.

Sexting May Place Teens at Legal Risk - Gadgetwise Blog - NYTimes.com

When Stars Twitter, a Ghost May Be Lurking - NYTimes.com

Read the full article – you’re not as connected to Britney Spears or Guy Kawasaki as you thought…

In its short history, Twitter — a microblogging tool that uses 140 characters in bursts of text — has become an important marketing tool for celebrities, politicians and businesses, promising a level of intimacy never before approached online, as well as giving the public the ability to speak directly to people and institutions once comfortably on a pedestal.

But someone has to do all that writing, even if each entry is barely a sentence long. In many cases, celebrities and their handlers have turned to outside writers — ghost Twitterers, if you will — who keep fans updated on the latest twists and turns, often in the star’s own voice.

Because Twitter is seen as an intimate link between celebrities and their fans, many performers are not willing to divulge the help they use to put their thoughts into cyberspace.

When Stars Twitter, a Ghost May Be Lurking - NYTimes.com

Google hit by largest round of layoffs - The Boston Globe

See the full article for more details

Google's fortunes are tied to ad spending that's dwindling as both marketers and consumers squirrel away more cash. Although Google's revenue has continued to rise during the 15-month-old recession, some analysts say they believe the company may finally be suffering its first quarter-to-quarter decline since it went public in 2004.

It's a guessing game because Google steadfastly refuses to offer financial guidance. But Google's recent actions have left little doubt that management is bracing for a possible downturn.

Once renowned for its free-spending ways, Google already has curtailed some employee perquisites, dumped outside contractors, and closed services that aren't paying off.

Google hit by largest round of layoffs - The Boston Globe

Thursday, March 26, 2009

I, Cringely » Blog Archive » Rise of the Machines - Cringely on technology

A timely Cringely reality check – read the full post 

Let’s start by looking back to the dot-com era, which also happened to be the era of the day trader. Remember them? A successful day trader in the late 1990s could gain a following over Internet chat then use that following to make money by becoming an alpha trader. He’d say “I’m selling this” or “I’m buying that” and copycat day traders would do the same. If enough of them acted they could influence the price down or up and – since the leader was leading – he could almost always liquidate his position with a profit. The quickest of his acolytes would make profits, too. Those who didn’t profit weren’t seen as exposing the inherent flaws of this system, they were just viewed as too slow.

To a certain extent, the heirs of day trading have taken the lessons of that earlier era and applied them with devastating effect in the Twitter Age.

I, Cringely » Blog Archive » Rise of the Machines - Cringely on technology

Collaboration and Content Strategies Blog: Microsoft’s Courtship of Open Source Developers

A timely snapshot from Burton Group’s Larry Cannell; see the full post for more details

Last week at the MIX ‘09 conference Microsoft announced the beta release of its Web Platform Installer 2.0. This is a framework and utility for downloading, installing, and maintaining web applications built for the Microsoft Web Platform. What I found interesting is the open source applications which can be installed by the tool and are available in the Web App Gallery. These include popular PHP-based open source applications like Drupal, Gallery, and Wordpress. This isn’t the first time Microsoft has offered downloads like this but it is probably slickest and more convenient packaging they’ve done so far.

Collaboration and Content Strategies Blog: Microsofts Courtship of Open Source Developers

BBC NEWS | UK | Education | Pupils 'should study Twitter'

I suspect this article may imply a stronger correlation than the final report will suggest – i.e., yes, it is useful to study social networking etc. tools, and perhaps it is time to be more flexible in terms of history topic/depth requirements, but it’s not clear if there’s a direct zero-sum game equation. Certain to be controversial, in any case…

Primary school pupils should learn how to blog and use internet sites like Twitter and Wikipedia and spend less time studying history, it is claimed.

A review of the primary school curriculum in England will be published in a final report next month.

But the Guardian newspaper says draft copies it has seen shows pupils will no longer have to study the Victorian period or the Second World War.

BBC NEWS UK Education Pupils 'should study Twitter'

Yahoo! News - Twitter to seek revenue from businesses by Reuters: Yahoo! Tech

Speaking of commercialization and deteriorating signal-to-noise ratios…

The company is preparing to offer commercial accounts in which corporations and other types of businesses pay a fee to receive an enhanced version of Twitter, a free service that allows people to send short, 140-character text messages to their network of friends.

"We think there will be opportunities to provide services to commercial entities that help them get even more value out of Twitter. If these services are valuable to companies, we think they may want to pay for them," Biz Stone, co-founder of Twitter, said in an e-mail sent to Reuters.

Yahoo! News - Twitter to seek revenue from businesses by Reuters: Yahoo! Tech

Obama turns to Web to bypass news media

Very wise, especially considering the ongoing deterioration and commercialization in the Fourth Estate (by that I mean traditional press/journalism)

Call it Round Two of the news conference, with a big Internet twist.

President Barack Obama took questions from the White House press corps on Tuesday in a prime-time, East Room session that represented the most formal and time-honored of president-and-reporter interactions. On Thursday, he is taking to that same room for another public grilling — this time by regular folks armed with questions submitted via the Internet and in person, as part of a political strategy to engage Americans directly.

Obama turns to Web to bypass news media

Microsoft criticizes secret drafting of cloud-computing manifesto - TechFlash: Seattle's Technology News Source

Looks like it’s political business-as-usual in the cloud…

An official with Microsoft's Windows Azure is speaking out against what he describes as a secret effort to create a "Cloud Manifesto" -- laying out principles for making the major cloud-computing services work smoothly together.

"Very recently we were privately shown a copy of the document, warned that it was a secret, and told that it must be signed 'as is,' without modifications or additional input," writes Microsoft's Steven Martin in a blog post tonight. "It appears to us that one company, or just a few companies, would prefer to control the evolution of cloud computing, as opposed to reaching a consensus across key stakeholders (including cloud users) through an 'open' process."

Martin adds, "An open Manifesto emerging from a closed process is at least mildly ironic."

Microsoft criticizes secret drafting of cloud-computing manifesto - TechFlash: Seattle's Technology News Source

Journal Articles Question Plan for Digital Health Records - NYTimes.com

Room for improvement…

Two articles, to be published on Thursday in the New England Journal of Medicine, point to the formidable obstacles to achieving the policy goal of not only installing electronic health records, but also using them to improve care and curb costs.

One article reports that only 9 percent of the nation’s hospitals have electronic health records, based on a survey of nearly 3,000 hospitals. The study, financed by the federal government and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, is the most definitive measure to date of the use of computerized patient records by hospitals. The government-backed study found a far lower level of use than some earlier, less rigorous surveys.

Journal Articles Question Plan for Digital Health Records - NYTimes.com

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

The rest of the story: Carbonite Lawsuit Reveals Data Loss « Data Center Knowledge

Check the comment from Carbonite CEO Dave Friend on my original post for more details

I would like to make sure that your readers understand two points with regard to Carbonite’s lawsuit against Promise Technologies:
1) This event happened over a year ago. We do not say this to minimize the matter. But we do want to point out that this has not happened in a long time and is not an ongoing problem.
2) The total number of Carbonite customers who were unable to retrieve their data was 54, not 7,500.

(See the original post for the rest of his comment)

Peter O'Kelly's Reality Check: Carbonite Lawsuit Reveals Data Loss « Data Center Knowledge

Mac OS X Top Target in Browser Beatdown - Security Fix

Hmm… (see the full article for more context-setting)

Both the Firefox and Safari vulnerabilities that he proved were exploited on a Mac OS X system. The German hacker said the latest versions of both Firefox and IE take full advantage of features built in to Windows Vista that make it far more difficult to reliably exploit than on the current version of OS X. Those features, including "data execution prevention" (DEP) and "address space layout randomization," (ASLR) don't appear to be properly implemented between OS X and versions of Safari and Firefox built for that operating system, Nils said.

"It's quite easy to write an exploit for Firefox on OS X compared to Firefox on Vista," he said.

[…]

"It's getting pretty hard to do a lot of this stuff on Windows Vista and Windows 7," Nils said. "Especially when a lot of people who stayed with [Windows XP] switch to Windows 7 because they didn't want Vista, the bad guys may start to figure out they can more easily exploit these bugs more reliably on a Mac."

Mac OS X Top Target in Browser Beatdown - Security Fix

Mark Logic CEO Blog: Oracle's Become Computer Associates (CA)

See the full post for more on this classic Dave Kellogg Oracle reality check

It's all happened so quickly.

  • I've become my parents,
  • SQL has become Cobol,
  • and Oracle has become CA

Things were different back in 1985, when I, fresh from Berkeley, VAX/VMS documentation in hand, rode the 51 bus to Alameda where my first real employer, Ingres, was based.
You see, back then, Oracle wasn't the establishment. Oracle was the rebel, a $50M-ish hyper-aggressive competitor trying to steal the relational database market out from underneath its lethargic inventor, IBM.

Read the rest of the post

(p.s. imho Java has become COBOL, and SQL remains essential – and complementary to rather than competitive with XQuery)

Mark Logic CEO Blog: Oracle's Become Computer Associates (CA)

BBC NEWS | UK | UK Politics | Social network sites 'monitored'

Read the full article for more details

Social networking sites like Facebook could be monitored by the UK government under proposals to make them keep details of users' contacts.

The Home Office said it was needed to tackle crime gangs and terrorists who might use the sites, but said it would not keep the content of conversations.

It is part of a plan to store details of all phone calls, e-mails and websites visited on a central database.

BBC NEWS | UK | UK Politics | Social network sites 'monitored'

Yahoo! News - Skype used in 8 percent of international calls in '08 by Reuters: Yahoo! Tech

See the full article for more details

Eight percent of international call traffic in 2008 used Internet calling company Skype, an increase of 41 percent on a year earlier, according to data from communications research firm TeleGeography released on Tuesday.

"Only five years after its launch Skype has emerged as the largest provider of cross-border voice communications in the world," TeleGeography analyst Stephan Beckert said. Skype is owned by eBay.

Yahoo! News - Skype used in 8 percent of international calls in '08 by Reuters: Yahoo! Tech

In Google We Trust

An interesting Google good-will-o-meter snapshot; read the full post for more details

This is a guest post from Fixer Dave, a Google user who's disappointed about the latest developments in the Google land.

[…]


Well, it was great; I'm not so sure anymore. Google has always been special to me, a "don't be evil" enterprise. They have wowed me, over and over again, with the cool free stuff they just keep pumping out. I mean, how can you not trust a company that gives you access to an amazing tool like Google Earth, for free? Google is, well, Google. You'd never equate them to the likes of RIAA, or Microsoft. But, a couple of things have come along to set me back, make me wonder about what's going on, and make me think again about this whole "don't be evil" thing.

In Google We Trust

FT.com / Companies / Technology - Google pre-empts Microsoft over relaunch

Sign of the times – some people apparently believe Google is now a reactive monopolist, and Microsoft an aspiring innovator

Google pre-empted Microsoft’s plans for a significant relaunch of its internet search service as it revealed on Tuesday changes to its own search results pages that echo some of the moves planned by its arch-rival.

The latest refinements by Google show how difficult it will be for Microsoft to create any significant differentiation for its search service, which still lags well behind Google and Yahoo five years after it was first launched, according to analysts.

In a direct echo of Microsoft’s plans, Google said it would give greater prominence to the “related links” section on its search results pages.

FT.com / Companies / Technology - Google pre-empts Microsoft over relaunch

Blockbuster and TiVo Join To Deliver Digital Movies - NYTimes.com

Interesting times – so Blockbuster becomes a TiVo retailer

With its lingering debt problems resolved for now, Blockbuster is pinning some of its hopes on a digital future.

The struggling video rental chain will announce a partnership with TiVo on Wednesday to deliver Blockbuster’s digital movie library over the Internet directly to the televisions of people with TiVo digital video recorders.

Blockbuster and TiVo Join To Deliver Digital Movies - NYTimes.com

Google Tries to Get Smarter, More Useful - Digits - WSJ

More on Google’s quest for meaning

Google took a step toward cracking that nut Tuesday, releasing an upgrade to its technology that better understands associations and concepts related to search. The feature is based on technology called Orion that was developed by Ori Allon while he was a Ph.D. student in Australia. Google acquired it in 2006.

Mr. Allon, who now works at Google, said in an interview that the technology–which seeks to understand the context around a query–is a key part of Google’s effort to provide more useful and trustworthy results beyond matching keywords with Web pages. Eventually, Google wants to be able to provide trustworthy answers to questions like “What is good pain medication after eye surgery,” he said.

Google Tries to Get Smarter, More Useful - Digits - WSJ

Open Source Comes Under Spotlight As IBM Eyes Sun - WSJ.com

I still think it’d make more sense for HP and Oracle to jointly acquire and split up Sun

"Larger vendors, such as Hewlett-Packard Co. (HPQ) and Oracle Corp. (ORCL), will be shopping around because the cloud and the technologies which support the cloud are what is going to enable them to plan for the future," said Theresa Lanowitz, founder of Voke Research. Lanowitz said open-source support firm Red Hat Inc. (RHT) and open-source server maker Novell Inc. (NOVL) could be acquisition targets.

Already Red Hat shares have begun to move like a potential takeover target.

On Monday, shares of the Raleigh, N.C.-based company soared more than 10% as speculation mounted Redwood City, Calif.-based Oracle might be interested in buying the company, which offers support services for the Linux open-source computer language. Linux has seen rapid growth in corporate computing and Oracle in 2006 issued its own version of Linux, saying it would undercut Red Hat's pricing, in a bid to win more of this market.

"It would make sense for Oracle to own Red Hat ultimately," Katherine Egbert, an analyst at Jefferies & Co., said in a research note. Egbert added that the timing might not be right yet for a deal.

Article - WSJ.com

Google adds new features to search engine - The Boston Globe

It’ll be interesting to see how well this works and scales

Google searches now make associations based on the meaning of words, and post on the bottom of search results pages key phrases related to the query. If someone searches for "principles of physics," for example, related phrases ranging from "special relativity" to "big bang" will be listed for people interested in those terms.

Lengthier snippets will be returned to provide better context when users type out longer or more complex search terms. The query "spice market review shrimp starter dessert," for instance, will yield three or four lines of text from restaurant reviews under the search results headline, rather than just a line or two of text for most shorter queries.

Google adds new features to search engine - The Boston Globe

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Collaborative Strategy Guild

The Collaborative Strategy Guild is a new endeavor by a group of former Burton Group industry analysts; see the Guild’s About page for more details, and track the Guild blog here.

Welcome to Collaborative Strategy Guild

Where insights are transformed into actions at the intersection of collaboration, information management, security, and business strategy.

The Guild is essentially a vehicle for several collaboration, information management, and security domain experts to swarm on topics and customer opportunities.

My involvement in the Guild will be somewhat constrained by my Microsoft role, but I plan to contribute content to the Guild blog and look forward to the discussion therein.

Collaborative Strategy Guild

vowe dot net :: If you lose the consumer, you lose the enterprise

A timely reality check from Volker Weber, tangentially related to the previous (Office Live Workspace) post

Steve Ballmer:

"Getting people hooked on using Office in a collaborative mode at home is super-important to getting them to use it that way at work," he said. "If you lose the consumer, you lose the enterprise."

IBM has lost this fight long ago, with Notes and with Smartsuite, against Outlook and Office. I am not too optimistic that they can win it with Symphony but they certainly should keep trying. I think that Google is making inroads with GMail but not so much with Docs & Spreadsheets.

vowe dot net :: If you lose the consumer, you lose the enterprise

Travel-challenged? Our workspace travel template to the rescue - Workspace Team Blog - Office Live Workspace Community

See the full post for details.  This reminds me of the early “nifty fifty” days for Notes, during the early 1990s, except Office Live Workspace is freely available and Web-centric, etc…

When I travel for business or for pleasure, one of my biggest worries is arriving at my destination without something I really need. And I know I’m not alone. That’s why I think the workspace travel template we’ve put together is such a great idea. It has checklists and itinerary logs and more – all designed to de-stress travel planning.

In case you aren’t familiar with our workspace templates, they are basically themed workspaces that we’ve pre-populated with documents and tools. The travel workspace template comes with the following items:

Travel-challenged? Our workspace travel template to the rescue - Workspace Team Blog - Office Live Workspace Community

OnLive could threaten Xbox, PS3, and Wii | Gaming and Culture - CNET News

I wouldn’t count on the game companies being willing to participate 

It's too early to tell how much danger, of course, but a start-up called OnLive announced a brand-new game distribution system Monday night that, if it works as planned, could change the games game forever.

OnLive, which was started by WebTV founder Steve Perlman and former Eidos CEO Mike McGarvey, is aiming to launch a system--seven years in the works--that will digitally distribute first-run, AAA games from publishers like Electronic Arts, Take-Two, Ubisoft, Atari, and others, all at the same time as those titles are released into retail channels. The system is designed to allow players to stream on-demand games at the highest quality onto any Intel-based Mac or PC running XP or Vista, regardless of how powerful the computer.

OnLive could threaten Xbox, PS3, and Wii | Gaming and Culture - CNET News

Netflix joins Facebook for film ratings - The Boston Globe

Another opportunity to over-share…

Netflix Inc. said it has linked with the social-networking website Facebook, allowing subscribers of the largest US mail-order movie service to share their film ratings with Facebook friends.

Ratings of one to five stars will show on a user's Facebook profile if a Netflix member has enabled the Facebook Connect function, Netflix said in a statement. Financial terms were not disclosed.

Meanwhile, a financial snapshot: at the moment, Netflix’s market cap is ~$2.55B, while Blockbuster’s is ~$141M.

Netflix joins Facebook for film ratings - The Boston Globe

Monday, March 23, 2009

Carbonite Lawsuit Reveals Data Loss « Data Center Knowledge

Candidate for biggest PR nightmare of the year: the SaaS back-up company that lost data for 7,500 of its customers – see the full article for details

Here’s a tough question: how do you balance the value of a problematic lawsuit against a vendor against the potential damage to your company’s reputation? Executives from Carbonite Inc. may be pondering that calculus this morning amid disclosures that the fast-growing online backup company lost data belonging to 7,500 customers.

Carbonite Lawsuit Reveals Data Loss « Data Center Knowledge

Real Dan Lyons Web Site » Blog Archive Recommended reading «

FFSJ on the NYT article referenced earlier today; see the full post for more insights

IBM views media relations as a form of advertising. If they’ve got some breakthrough in the labs, or some new product they’re hoping to hype, they’ll hand-pick a publication or two and tee up a story. They tell you what the story is; they set the agenda; they tell you which people at IBM you’re going to interview, and when; and every IBMer who gets interviewed has been scripted and rehearsed to death before you sit down with them. Nobody strays off message. Every interview is tape-recorded by IBM PR flacks. Those flacks write up a summary of every interview. That info gets used to prepare the subjects for the next interviews. If you’ve ever wondered why almost every story about IBM feels canned and pre-fabricated, that’s because it is.

Real Dan Lyons Web Site » Blog Archive Recommended reading «

Skype Now Means Business, Friends The SIP World

More on the Skype news; see the full post for details

The details on how this service will work are still fuzzy — Skype, continuing its habit of playing favorite in the press, hasn’t really bothered to get in touch with those who are likely to ask tough questions. The Journal story talks a lot of about the market and competition, without getting into the specifics, except that it will be targeted at small and medium-sized businesses.

How this new effort is supposed to work? A speech by Digium Founder and CTO Mark Spencer, the creator of Asterisk, at the recently concluded eComm conference, gives us a glimpse of what might this new effort might be. Mark announced that Skype was now going to work with Asterisk.

Skype Now Means Business, Friends The SIP World

D.C. Homeless People Use Cellphones, Blogs and E-Mail to Stay on Top of Things - washingtonpost.com

Sign of the times...

To the usual trappings that help many homeless people endure life on the streets -- woolen blankets, shopping carts or cardboard box shelters -- add the humble cellphone.

Today, it's not unusual for the homeless to whip out Nokia 6085 GoPhones (with optional Bluetooth and USB connectivity), stop at a public computer to check e-mail or urge friends to read their blogs.

D.C. Homeless People Use Cellphones, Blogs and E-Mail to Stay on Top of Things - washingtonpost.com

Don Dodge on The Next Big Thing: Facebook trumps Twitter and positions for Word Of Mouth advertising

Another perspective on the recent Facebook changes; see the full post for details

The recent Facebook design changes are more subtle than the Beacon experiment. But, you can easily connect the dots and see where this might go. If they implement this carefully it could be the biggest innovation to web advertising in 10 years, or perhaps ever. Facebook also duplicated most of what Twitter does now, and they are in a much better position to monetize the service. Facebook has 180 million users while Twitter has less than 10 million.

What appears to be a subtle Facebook design change is really a brilliant strategic move that trumps competitors like Twitter, and sets the stage for an advertising machine that could be much larger than Google. Strategy is a chess game. There are still many more moves to be made. But, this opening gambit by Facebook could turn out to be brilliant.

Don Dodge on The Next Big Thing: Facebook trumps Twitter and positions for Word Of Mouth advertising

Social Web sites face transparency questions - Boston.com

Another timely reality check – see the full article 

Transparency is an important question for social Web sites as they plot ways to grow and make money. How much of their copious amounts of user information should they make available to advertisers who want to reach certain types of customers? Already, for example, Facebook and News Corp.'s MySpace let advertisers target users by characteristics like gender, location or interests. The challenge will be how to please advertisers without creeping users out.

Of course, you can't please everybody all the time. Lee Rainie, director of the Pew Internet & American Life Project, thinks social media sites are in a trial and error phase, hoping to figure out what their various stakeholders will tolerate.

"Right now, it's much more of a free for all," he said, "because the rules aren't clear."

Social Web sites face transparency questions - Boston.com

BBC - Newsbeat - Technology - Users criticise Facebook update

More community feedback adventures for Facebook

More than a million people have now voted against changes to the social networking site Facebook.

The new look site puts more focus on status updates and has been likened to one of its rivals Twitter.

Users have voted overwhelmingly against the new format in an online poll on the site with 94% disliking the changes.

BBC - Newsbeat - Technology - Users criticise Facebook update

Rivals Accuse I.B.M. of Stifling Competition to Mainframes - NYTimes.com

An example of the sort of unwelcome scrutiny IBM will face as it moves forward with its Sun strategy; see the full article for more details

I.B.M. has dominated the mainframe computer business since the category was created four decades ago. And it still gets about one-quarter of its $100 billion in annual revenue from sales, software, services and financing related to the machines.

So when an upstart, Platform Solutions in Sunnyvale, Calif., developed software that turned standard servers into systems that mimicked I.B.M.’s expensive mainframes, Big Blue fought back. After legal action failed to fend off the pipsqueak, I.B.M. resorted to a bear hug: it bought Platform in July for $150 million. And then it promptly terminated the innovative product.

Rivals Accuse I.B.M. of Stifling Competition to Mainframes - NYTimes.com

Business Week Jumps on Twitter Bandwagon - Digits - WSJ

So now Twitter instead of XML syndication (i.e., Atom and/or RSS)?…

Business Week is syncing the comments on its social-networking site to Twitter, making it among the first major media companies to harness the popularity of the microblogging service.

Business Exchange is the community site Business Week launched in September that lets users build professional profiles. On Monday, Business Exchange will give users the option to send comments directly to a Twitter feed. The tweets, as Twitter posts are known, include a link back to the Business Exchange page.

Business Week Jumps on Twitter Bandwagon - Digits - WSJ

Skype Targets Businesses to Ring Up New Revenue - WSJ.com

A Skype snapshot

Now the company is hoping to appeal more directly to small and medium-sized businesses, which may be particularly receptive to lowering their phone bills during the recession. "Businesses want more than what we have been able to offer so far," said Stefan Oberg, the general manager of Skype for business.

Its new product is called Skype for SIP. The acronym stands for Session Initiation Protocol, a technology used by many business phone networks. Skype plans to begin a test with a limited number of companies Monday, with the service available commercially later this year.

[skype and revenue ]

Skype Targets Businesses to Ring Up New Revenue - WSJ.com

Twitter changes the playing field - The Boston Globe

Sign of the times – see the full article for details

In what is considered a professional sports first, Milwaukee Bucks forward Charlie Villanueva posted a message on Twitter during halftime of his game against the Celtics:

In da locker room, snuck to post with my twitt. We're playing the Celtics, tie ball game at da half. Coach wants more toughness. I gotta step up.

Twitter changes the playing field - The Boston Globe

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Making the web pay | The end of the free lunch—again | The Economist

Another sensible snapshot from The Economist 

The idea that you can give things away online, and hope that advertising revenue will somehow materialise later on, undoubtedly appeals to users, who enjoy free services as a result. There is business logic to it, too. The nature of the internet means that the barrier to entry for new companies is very low—indeed, thanks to technological improvements, it is even lower in the Web 2.0 era than it was in the dotcom era. The internet also allows companies to exploit network effects to attract and retain users very quickly and cheaply. So it is not surprising that rival search engines, social networks or video-sharing sites give their services away in order to attract users, and put the difficult question of how to make money to one side. If you worry too much about a revenue model early on, you risk being left behind.

Ultimately, though, every business needs revenues—and advertising, it transpires, is not going to provide enough. Free content and services were a beguiling idea. But the lesson of two internet bubbles is that somebody somewhere is going to have to pick up the tab for lunch.

Making the web pay | The end of the free lunch—again | The Economist

Marc Fisher - A Twisted Case of Cyberharassment Reveals a 'Void in the Law' - washingtonpost.com

Sign of the times…

Later that week, men started showing up at Goddard's door in Reston, ready for an evening of random sex. "I'm here from Craigslist," they'd say. "You've been set up," Goddard would tell them. By that time, she'd figured out what was happening: Someone was posting offers in her name on online message boards, with her home address.

Goddard called Fairfax police, who tried stepping up patrols, even posting an officer inside Goddard's apartment. Still, the men kept coming. Both Goddard, 65, and the police say they had a good idea who was behind this cruel attack, but despite months of effort, nothing has been done.

Marc Fisher - A Twisted Case of Cyberharassment Reveals a 'Void in the Law' - washingtonpost.com

FT.com / Companies / Technology - FT Group launches ‘semantic search’ tool

Potential differentiation for the Financial Times 

The Financial Times Group is entering the field of semantic search with an online product aimed at bringing the business community more accurate information.

Newssift, which launched in beta version on Thursday, is the first project backed by an innovation fund of Pearson, the parent company of the FT news organisation.

It aims to differ from traditional search engines, which rely on the correct keywords being entered to return findings, by offering more relevant searches based on meaning and context.

FT.com / Companies / Technology - FT Group launches ‘semantic search’ tool

Why Is IBM, Not Cisco, Buying Sun? - IBM

Another permutation to ponder; see the full article 

While many are questioning the wisdom and validity of the purported IBM acquisition, the bigger question to ask is this: "Why isn't Cisco buying Sun?"

Cisco has made its intentions clear through its unified computing announcement that it wants in on the server market. And it's no secret that Cisco's road map will likely take it into storage next, and that would mean an expensive acquisition of either EMC or NetApp. So why not just bite down now and get deep into both servers and storage, as well as few other things, by picking up Sun?

Why Is IBM, Not Cisco, Buying Sun? - IBM

Digital Domain - For Palm, Some Tough Smartphone Acts to Follow - NYTimes.com

Read the full article for a stark Palm reality check.  My bet: Palm, best-case, gets acquired by a PC vendor seeking to accelerate its entry into mobile devices.

COMEBACK stories are irresistibly appealing, in business as well as in sports. But recovering from some strategic mistakes is awfully hard. A case in point is Palm’s failure to anticipate the threat that Apple posed to its core business.

Nearly two years since Apple introduced the iPhone, Palm has yet to release the Pre, the successor to its aging Treo. Much is riding on the Pre, which the company says will available before July 1: sales of Palm’s older smartphones have collapsed.

Digital Domain - For Palm, Some Tough Smartphone Acts to Follow - NYTimes.com

MySpace odyssey - The Boston Globe

An insightful MySpace book review by Michael Fitzgerald

As author and Wall Street Journal reporter and editor Julia Angwin tells us, MySpace rose because "the time was ripe for a new kind of Internet giant to emerge - one where human creativity was at the center of the experience, not technology." In fact MySpace succeeds despite its technology, and almost despite itself. Much of its early life, as detailed in the book, is filled with what, in a polite newspaper, can only be called twerpery.

MySpace odyssey - The Boston Globe

Friday, March 20, 2009

IBM Reviews Sun Micro's Contracts - WSJ.com

An interesting small world twist/excerpt:

One person said IBM also is likely to be examining closely Sun's 2004 agreement with Microsoft Corp., which settled a Sun lawsuit. Under that 10-year pact Microsoft paid Sun $700 million to resolve antitrust issues and $900 million to resolve patent issues. The companies also agreed on royalty payments to use each other's technology with Microsoft paying $350 million at that time. Sun agreed to make payments on the basis of technology used later. 

See the full article for more details

IBM Reviews Sun Micro's Contracts - WSJ.com

IBM, Sun and cloud computing | Gathering clouds | The Economist

More outstanding journalism from The Economist; see the full article for details

IT WAS the day Sun Microsystems was supposed to rise again. On March 18th the Silicon Valley computer-maker had planned to unveil a new online service to allow start-ups to manage with much less hardware, by buying computing capacity from a “cloud”, rather like electricity from the grid. But the event was overshadowed by the news, hours earlier, that IBM was in talks to buy Sun for at least $6.5 billion in cash, which would translate into a near-100% premium over the firm’s depressed share price in recent weeks.

IBM, Sun and cloud computing | Gathering clouds | The Economist

Cisco Flips Over Pure Digital - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

More on Cisco/Pure Digital

Cisco adores anything that pumps large volumes of data over the Internet, spiking demand for its routers and switches. And the company sees video, through things like TelePresence and online meetings, as one of the biggest creators of Internet traffic.

Exactly what Cisco can do to increase interest in these types of products that Sony or Pure Digital can’t do remains to be seen. Cisco has crept closer and closer to the consumer through set-top boxes, home routers and even digital stereos, but I don’t think people take it that seriously as a consumer electronics player just yet.

Cisco Flips Over Pure Digital - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

Cisco's consumer electronics dream | Cutting Edge - CNET News

See the full article for more details

But Pure is by no means the only major acquisition Cisco has made in the consumer market. In fact, the company so far has pretty much built this part of its business through acquisitions. In 2003, it got its start in the competitive CE market with the $500 million acquisition of the home-networking equipment maker Linksys. Then in 2005, it bought Scientific Atlanta, a quasi-consumer electronics company, for $7 billion. Scientific Atlanta makes set-top boxes that Cisco sells to subscription TV providers.

Since then the company has made a few, smaller consumer electronics purchases. In 2005, it spent $61 million in cash for a small Danish company called Kiss Technologies. Cisco never ended up selling Kiss' online video-on-demand boxes, but it has integrated the technology into some of its new products.

Cisco's consumer electronics dream | Cutting Edge - CNET News

Palm’s Quarterly Loss Is Larger Than Expected - NYTimes.com

Palm struggles with a combination of the economic downturn, intense competition, and the Osborne effect 

Sales in the period ended Feb. 28 fell 71 percent, to $90.6 million, from $312 million.

Palm is preparing to release its new Pre smartphone in June and hopes the model will revive plummeting sales by winning over fans of the Apple iPhone and BlackBerry, made by Research in Motion.

Palm has reported losses in the last seven quarters. The company, which introduced the pioneering Pilot device more than a decade ago, said on March 3 that sales declined because of dwindling orders for its older models.

Palm’s Quarterly Loss Is Larger Than Expected - NYTimes.com

Real Dan Lyons Web Site » Blog Archive Schwartz: We’ve got those bastards at IBM right where we want them «

Former Fake Steve Jobs on the IBM/Sun scenario – see the full post for more and a classic picture

Yes, the ultimate conquest is about to take place, as Sun launches a daring reverse takeover of IBM and completes its journey to rule the industry. This anyway is how I expect MLP might position the deal. Sure, IBM will try to describe it as buying up a weaker rival for a few billion dollars. But internally, the Kool-Aid drinkers at Sun will know better — what’s really happening is that IBM is finally waving the white flag of surrender, and Sun is just letting them save face.

Real Dan Lyons Web Site » Blog Archive Schwartz: We’ve got those bastards at IBM right where we want them «

Next Opponent for Cisco: Apple? - Digits - WSJ

A $590M bet, in the Pure Digital acquisition, and a much bigger series of bets, in terms of shifts in Cisco’s overall co-opetition stance this week.

With the addition of Pure Digital, Cisco now has several consumer products that target the living room: home networking systems it acquired from Linksys; cable boxes it got from Scientific-Atlanta; a wireless audio system that Cisco developed internally; and now Pure Digital’s Flip camcorder and related video software. Cisco has also said that it hopes to extend its high-end video conferencing technology into the home.

It isn’t a big leap to see Cisco developing a home-media hub that cobbles these pieces together—some sort of device that allows people to upload and watch videos and listen to music throughout their homes. In fact, it looks like a next logical step.

Next Opponent for Cisco: Apple? - Digits - WSJ

Thursday, March 19, 2009

FT.com / Companies / Technology - IBM in $6.5bn move for Sun

I can imagine the anti-trust review scene, with IBM explaining that both it and Sun have been losing server market share for years (especially when the System z and System i series are excluded from the analysis), and needing to be unshackled in order to respond to Cisco’s UCS etc…

Analysts said any deal would face intense antitrust scrutiny. The two companies account for two-thirds of the $25.5bn global market for high-end servers. “People have been speculating about this one for years,” one dealmaker said. “IBM can take out an enormous amount of costs and there are also great synergies in terms of technology.”

FT.com / Companies / Technology - IBM in $6.5bn move for Sun

Microsoft Announces Availability of Internet Explorer 8: New browser focuses on top customer needs, including security, ease of use and performance.

Check the full press release for highlights; there’s also a Walt Mossberg IE8 review in today’s WSJ.  With IE8 available today, it’ll be interesting to see detailed comparisons of the latest releases of the leading browsers on feature/function, security, performance, and other dimensions.

Today Microsoft Corp. announced the availability of Windows Internet Explorer 8, the new Web browser that offers the best solution for how people use the Web today. It can be downloaded in 25 languages at http://www.microsoft.com/ie8 starting at noon EDT on March 19. Internet Explorer 8 is easier to use, faster and offers leading-edge security features in direct response to people’s increasing concerns about online safety. A new study commissioned by Microsoft and the National Cyber Security Alliance and conducted by Harris Interactive Inc. shows that 91 percent of adults in the U.S. are concerned about online threats in the current economic climate, and 78 percent are more likely to choose a Web browser with built-in security than they were two years ago.

Microsoft Announces Availability of Internet Explorer 8: New browser focuses on top customer needs, including security, ease of use and performance.

Microsoft Web Technologies Unveiled at MIX09 Help Businesses Deliver Return on Experience

See the full press release for more details on ROE from RIA and related Microsoft updates

Organizations that create more intuitive, more engaging experiences on the Web are able to reduce costs and increase sales. Their visitors find the information they want faster, their customers make fewer calls to support help desks, and the number of impulse purchases made by customers generated grows dramatically. The integrated and interoperable offerings from Microsoft, composed of software and services for desktop, datacenters and the cloud, help organizations deliver richer, more compelling experiences that they require both in and out of the browser, and give them enhanced “return on experience” that the current economic climate demands.

Microsoft Web Technologies Unveiled at MIX09 Help Businesses Deliver Return on Experience: Microsoft announces Silverlight 3 Beta, new features in Expression Blend and continued progress in the cloud with updates to the Azure Services Platform.

I.B.M. Said to Be in Talks to Buy Sun for $7 Billion - NYTimes.com

Somehow I doubt being generous to competitors – e.g., acquiring Sun and giving up control of Java – is part of the plan

If it acquired Sun, I.B.M. “would unify those warring groups and make for a stronger front against Microsoft,” said Michael A. Cusumano, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Sloan School of Management.

Both I.B.M. and Sun boast sizable communities of third-party software developers who write programs using their technology. An estimated one million programmers use Sun’s technology, while I.B.M.’s vast software business claims eight million.

I.B.M. Said to Be in Talks to Buy Sun for $7 Billion - NYTimes.com

Sony and Google Announcing E-Book Partnership - NYTimes.com

More on Sony + Google for ebooks.  I’m wondering if there’s anything that would prevent Amazon from offering the same out-of-copyright content – i.e., if this deal is a leading indicator of something bigger or just an excuse to have a joint press release

Since 2004, Google has scanned about seven million books from major university and research library collections. For now, however, Google can make full digital copies available only of books whose copyrights have expired.

The books available to Reader owners were written before 1923 and include classics like “A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court,” by Mark Twain, and “The Awakening,” by Kate Chopin, as well as harder-to-find titles like “The Letters of Jane Austen.”

Sony and Google Announcing E-Book Partnership - NYTimes.com

Sony, Google Challenge Amazon - WSJ.com

This will likely expand the controversy surrounding Google’s digital books initiative

Sony Electronics Inc. is pairing with Google Inc. to battle Amazon.com Inc. in the growing digital books market.

In a strike against Amazon's Kindle electronic book reader, Sony and Google plan to launch a partnership Thursday that will give users of the Sony Reader device access to more than half-a-million public domain books from Google's ambitious book digitization project. The books will be offered to Sony Reader users free via the online Sony eBook store. The companies wouldn't reveal financial terms of the deal.

Sony, Google Challenge Amazon - WSJ.com

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Sun Microsystems Surges on Report of Takeover Talks With IBM - Bloomberg.com

JAVA is up ~66% at the moment – clearly some investors think Sun will soon set in acquisition.  I doubt this deal will close without a battle, especially considering that the winner will control Java, which is strategic to IBM and other key vendors – especially Oracle.

Sun Microsystems Inc. surged as much as 66 percent in early trading after the Wall Street Journal said International Business Machines Corp. may buy the computer-server maker for at least $6.5 billion.

[…]

The acquisition of Sun, which would be the biggest in IBM’s history, would help the company widen its lead over Hewlett- Packard Co. in the $53.1 billion market for servers, which run networks and Web sites. IBM Chief Executive Officer Sam Palmisano said last week that he plans to “go on offense” amid the economic slump, acquiring and investing in research.

Sun Microsystems Surges on Report of Takeover Talks With IBM - Bloomberg.com

Data Center Strategies: Unified Computing System: A Move Cisco Had to Make

An insightful snapshot from Burton Group Research Director Drue Reeves; see the full post for details on his perspective

Cisco's Unified Computing System announcement yesterday -- which was one of the worst kept secrets in the industry -- was a move Cisco probably had to make. Why? Several reasons. Let's take a look at some of them.

His final paragraph:

In the end, UCS was a move Cisco had to make to ward off competition AND increase shareholder value. Cisco has a strong brand, enterprise credibility, the technical chops and finances to pull it off. Is UCS a business risk? Sure. But the greater risk for Cisco is to do nothing.

Data Center Strategies: Unified Computing System: A Move Cisco Had to Make

Search and read Wikipedia articles offline on your Windows Mobile phone | WikiPock

An interesting Windows Mobile app, which I ran across via this blog post

WikiPock for Windows Mobile is the ultimate software putting all the information you need at your fingertips. Want to look up for an acronym while you're walking down the street? Want to pull up last year's academy awards results while you're out with friends? WikiPock lets you acquire and share knowledge anywhere you are, even without internet connection. The world's biggest encyclopedia is in your Windows Mobile phone!

See the product page for more details. And how do they accomplish this magic (the part about not needing an Internet connection, or even a wireless data plan)? They simply cache a huge chunk of “the wiki encyclopedia” (perhaps a lawyer told them they can’t say “Wikipedia” in all contexts, but it’s explicit on the FAQ page; the vendor also donates 10% of its net revenue to the Wikimedia Foundation) on a microSD card on your phone. For best performance, they recommend an 8GB card.

An interesting sign of the price/performance/etc. times: the app, preloaded on an 8GB card (i.e., delivered on a new 8 GB card), starts at around $25.

Search and read Wikipedia articles offline on your Windows Mobile phone WikiPock

Case, Leonsis Make AOL Appearance - washingtonpost.com

Must have been quite a meeting…

"The history of AOL has always been recognizing that there is a possibility even when everybody else was saying there wasn't," Case said. "Most people think AOL's best days are behind it," he said, "[but] the assets of this company are still phenomenal."

Leonsis, who is now better known as the owner of the Washington Capitals, kept things timely by making a comparison to St. Patrick.

St. Patrick was a missionary who had been sentenced to death three times and avoided it each time. Today's AOL, he said, needs to be like that lucky fellow and observe its own "trinity" of products, customers and people.

Case, Leonsis Make AOL Appearance - washingtonpost.com

Capitalism, Apple Style - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

Hmm…

But here is where Apple drew the line: if you offer a free application, you can’t interrupt users asking them to upgrade to a paid version. (Or if you do, Apple won’t process the transaction through its new system.)

That is a slap in the face of developers who want to profit from the “freemium” business model that lures paying customers by offering a free version first. It no doubt is leaving a fair bit of money on the table. But implicit is an insight about how developers would likely use such a feature to make applications that are more annoying than useful.

That seems to violate the company’s apparent philosophy that customers should be willing to pay a premium price for things that are aesthetically pleasing.

Later in the article:

Apple, it seems, does believe in competition and capitalism, but only the decorous sort.

Capitalism, Apple Style - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

IE 8, Silverlight 3 on tap for Microsoft's Mix | Beyond Binary - CNET News

See the full article for some previews and catch the MIX keynote live today at noon Eastern here

The expected release of Internet Explorer 8 is likely to be the biggest headline out of Microsoft's Mix conference this week, though the company is likely to spend at least as much time talking about Silverlight 3, the next version of its would-be rival to Adobe's Flash.

IE 8, Silverlight 3 on tap for Microsoft's Mix | Beyond Binary - CNET News

IBM in Talks to Buy Sun in Bid to Add to Web Heft - WSJ.com

I’m surprised this didn’t happen sooner --  see the full article for details.  What I believe will happen next: if IBM believes it has a green light for the acquisition, and puts a formal offer on the table, Oracle (perhaps in partnership with HP) will ultimately win a bidding war for Sun.  Either way, it’s the end of Sun as we’ve known it.

International Business Machines Corp. is in talks to buy Sun Microsystems Inc., people familiar with the matter said, a combination that would bolster IBM's heft on the Internet, in software and in finance and telecommunications markets.

The two companies have a common interest in that both make computer systems for corporate customers that aren't reliant on Microsoft Corp.'s Windows software, and their product lines are less dependant than rivals' on Intel Corp.'s microprocessor technologies. The two companies are also strong supporters of open-source Linux and Java software.

IBM in Talks to Buy Sun in Bid to Add to Web Heft - WSJ.com

Web-connected jurors jeopardizing trials - The Boston Globe

Interesting times…

Last week, a juror in a big federal drug trial in Florida admitted to the judge that he had been doing research on the case on the Internet, directly violating the judge's instructions and centuries of legal rules. But when the judge questioned the rest of the jury, he got an even bigger shock.

Eight other jurors had been doing the same thing. The federal judge, William J. Zloch, had no choice but to declare a mistrial, wasting eight weeks of work by federal prosecutors and defense lawyers.

Web-connected jurors jeopardizing trials - The Boston Globe

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Tim Berners-Lee is cybercrime victim

This brief Computerworld article is a stark reality check, on the 20th anniversary of the World Wide Web’s creation; see the full article for more details, with Sir Tim Berners-Lee commenting on the mixed blessing nature of the Web (e.g., finding information about curing diseases … or making bombs)

Tim Berners-Lee, who is known as the founder of the World Wide Web, has revealed that he was the victim of online fraud after purchasing a gift online.

Berners-Lee, who is credited with developing the idea of the World Wide Web 20 years ago, told the Telegraph: "The worst thing that has happened to me was when I tried to buy a Christmas present from a company that looked like a bona fide company on the Internet and then actually they were a completely fake company. I think I am yet to get the money back, but it wasn't a lot."

Tim Berners-Lee is cybercrime victim

Chuck's Blog: Brave New Thinking From Cisco

A snapshot from EMC’s Global Marketing CTO:

It's amazing what can be done with a clear vision, a clean sheet of paper and a serious R+D budget, no? 

Cisco doesn't have the decades-long legacy of historical server architectures and traditional operating systems holding it back.

Think about it.

No HP-UX and Itanium (Itanic?) base to feverishly defend. 

No Solaris/SPARC business to position.

And please don't get me started about IBM's plethora of different architectures.

Cisco had the freedom and the insight to design for what will be -- and not what was

Cisco also had the freedom to invest in what really mattered -- an entirely modern computing architecture -- and to partner freely with the rest of the industry for the technologies and competencies to complete the customer offering. 

Something the traditional server guys just weren't able to  do.

On a practical note, it'll take a while for all the UCS components to mature and prove themselves.  It'll also take a while for data center architects to fully appreciate what Cisco has done here.

See the full post for more details.

My $.02 for now:

While I sense it’d take some investigative reporting to understand some details, e.g., on when Cisco will lead with EMC/VMware virtualization versus Microsoft virtualization, it’s clear Cisco’s entry into the server market is likely to be very bad news for some already-struggling competitors, e.g., Sun.

I have a hunch we’ll be reading a lot about expanding competition between Cisco/EMC/Microsoft and HP/Oracle over the next few months.  While the HP/Oracle partnership seems to have largely fallen off the press/blogosphere radar since Oracle Open World 2008 (last September), I suspect it’s still going to become a data center game-changer.

Chuck's Blog: Brave New Thinking From Cisco

Yahoo! News - Apple Mac U.S. units down 16 pct in February: NPD by Reuters: Yahoo! Tech

Apparently price elasticity still matters – see the full post for more details

U.S. retail sales of Apple Inc's (AAPL.O) Mac computers fell 16 percent in February on a unit basis, even as low-cost netbooks helped Windows-based PCs sales rise 22 percent, research group NPD said on Monday.

Unit sales of Macbook laptops dropped 7 percent, while Windows laptops jumped 36 percent. Without netbooks, Windows laptops rose 16 percent, NPD said.

Yahoo! News - Apple Mac U.S. units down 16 pct in February: NPD by Reuters: Yahoo! Tech

Top Fifteen OneNote Tips - OneNote Tips & Tricks - iHeartOneNote Message Board - iHeartOneNote

Check out the list (from OneNote co-creator and Office Labs lead Chris Pratley) and replies for some handy OneNote tips

tried to do ten but couldn't stop myself.

15. Send to OneNote printer driver. Print anything to OneNote from any app. PDF, Word, web pages, AutoCAD, whatever! (currently not on 64-bit Windows - bummer)

14. Email these notes button (Ctrl-Shift-E). Click the button in the toolbar, choose recipients, and my notes are distributed without any retyping or hassle. Even sends ink. (you need Outlook 2007 for this to work best)

(See the rest of the list)

Top Fifteen OneNote Tips - OneNote Tips & Tricks - iHeartOneNote Message Board - iHeartOneNote

Microsoft Partners With Cisco on New Unified Computing System: Companies bring world-class datacenter solutions to enterprise customers.

See the full press release for more details and a Bill Laing video

Today, Microsoft Corp. announced its support of Cisco’s Unified Computing System entrance into the server datacenter market as an original equipment manufacturer (OEM). Through this agreement, Cisco will pre-package, resell and support Windows Server 2003, Windows Server 2008 with Hyper-V technology and Microsoft SQL Server 2008. In addition, Microsoft is working closely with Cisco to integrate System Center into this new solution.

Over the past five years Microsoft has built a strong alliance with Cisco, and Unified Computing System is a natural point of evolution for the relationship. These two companies that provide best-of-breed solutions are uniting network, compute and virtualization resources into one system.

Microsoft Partners With Cisco on New Unified Computing System: Companies bring world-class datacenter solutions to enterprise customers.

FT.com / Companies / Technology - Cisco plans to cross over to server market

Co-opetition or mutually assured destruction?…

An IBM executive had described earlier talk by Cisco of a move into servers as “crossing...the demilitarised zone between networking and data centres”.

But Tim Stammers, analyst with the Ovum consulting firm, said IBM and HP were already challenging Cisco on its networking territory, with HP’s Procurve switches and IBM’s co-operation with Cisco’s smaller rival Juniper.

Analysts say Cisco is entering a lower margin, more commoditised market, but would be able to charge more for its combination product.

FT.com / Companies / Technology - Cisco plans to cross over to server market

Hadoop, Analytical Software, Finds Uses Beyond Search - NYTimes.com

Check out the full article for more details, and the company’s about page for team bios – definitely not your average start-up.

Three top engineers from Google, Yahoo and Facebook, along with a former executive from Oracle, are betting it will. They announced a start-up Monday called Cloudera, based in Burlingame, Calif., that will try to bring Hadoop’s capabilities to industries as far afield as genomics, retailing and finance.

Hadoop, Analytical Software, Finds Uses Beyond Search - NYTimes.com

Cisco Pushes Into Server Computer Market - NYTimes.com

More on Cisco’s market expansion

With its Unified Computing System, Cisco bundles server, storage and networking systems in a single product. Cisco says it can run hundreds of virtual servers on a single machine.

Analysts said the product is the biggest strategic shift in the server market to occur in years. “This is definitely a transformative play,” said James Staten, an analyst at Forrester Research, who attended the Cisco news conference. “This is war and a direct frontal assault on I.B.M. and H.P.”

[…]

H.P. has already responded to Cisco’s actions by increasing its investment in networking equipment, Cisco’s core business, and refining its virtualization technology.

Cisco Pushes Into Server Computer Market - NYTimes.com

Monday, March 16, 2009

XBRL Tools for Financial Reporting (Altova)

This page includes an overview of Altova’s support for XBRL (the Extensible Business Reporting Language), including a technical white paper (pdf download) that provides an introduction to XBRL and how it’s supported in Altova’s tools.

When combined with Altova’s support for other XML standards such as Open XML, it’s possible to do some pretty amazing things, e.g., advanced financial reporting and analysis using XBRL and Excel, without having to write code or become an expert in all XBRL details.

A couple screen shots from Altova – XBRL in XMLSpy:

image

And in StyleVision:

image

See the Altova white paper for more details and examples.

XBRL Tools for Financial Reporting (Altova)

Computer Makers Prepare to Stake Bigger Claim in Phones - NYTimes.com

Another timely convergence reality check – see the full article for details

With smartphones and PCs taking on many of the same functions, there is certainly a fear among PC makers that if they do not get into cellphones, cellphone makers will start building PCs. Acer has characterized the smartphone business as a volatile battlefield, saying it needs to fire first and go after the cellphone makers before they come after it. Indeed, Nokia, the world’s largest cellphone maker, has said it is weighing whether to get into the PC business.

Computer Makers Prepare to Stake Bigger Claim in Phones - NYTimes.com

As Growth Slows, Ex-Allies Square Off in a Tech Turf War - WSJ.com

Extensive WSJ article on the Cisco shift

But that has been changing in recent years. The maturing tech industry has set giant companies on a collision course, as once-disparate technologies take on new capabilities in a "convergence" of computers, software and networking. With the recession expected to shrink sales across the industry, tech companies are turning on each other in their search for growth.

Since Cisco's core networking markets began slowing in 2005, it has taken on the likes of H-P, Microsoft Corp. and International Business Machines Corp. It is also picking new fights as it expands into home electronics and entertainment systems for sports stadiums.

As Growth Slows, Ex-Allies Square Off in a Tech Turf War - WSJ.com

Sunday, March 15, 2009

BBC NEWS | Technology | Social networks 'are new e-mail'

if that’s the case (i.e., if social networks are new e-mail), does it mean people will hate social networks in the future as much as most people hate email today?…

With more than 175 million users Facebook is the dominant platform for status updates.

Ari Steinberg, an engineering manager at the firm, told BBC News: "It's been interesting to see the way people change the way they communicate.

"You used to e-mail content to people and you had to choose who you wanted to e-mail it to and you didn't know if your friends even wanted to see it.

"Now you can passively put something out there and let people engage with it."

The simplicity and ubiquity of some of these services is beginning to see activity feeds and status updates replace many of the uses to which e-mail was once put.

FWIW I’m already seeing a jumped-the-shark curve with many Twittering people, reminiscent of a common blogging pattern over the last decade as well – big initial enthusiasm, followed by an activity drop-off, perhaps an occasional note about being busy but with the best of intentions to resume regular activity “real soon now,” and then silence…

BBC NEWS | Technology | Social networks 'are new e-mail'

Yahoo! News - Cisco expected to present servers Monday by AP: Yahoo! Tech

A milestone day for Cisco tomorrow

Chief Executive John Chambers is scheduled to present the company's vision of "Unified Computing" at a morning press conference.

Quite a few details of Cisco's plans have leaked out already. Cisco talked about its server plans for the first time in January. It's a big step for a company that has so far focused on networking equipment, and could bring it into conflict with the companies that sell the computers connected by Cisco equipment.

Analysts have noted that margins in the server market are far lower than those in Cisco's core business.

Yahoo! News - Cisco expected to present servers Monday by AP: Yahoo! Tech

Yahoo! News - Deaths of gamers leave their online lives in limbo by AP: Yahoo! Tech

Sign of the times…

When Jerald Spangenberg collapsed and died in the middle of a quest in an online game, his daughter embarked on a quest of her own: to let her father's gaming friends know that he hadn't just decided to desert them.

It wasn't easy, because she didn't have her father's "World of Warcraft" password and the game's publisher couldn't help her. Eventually, Melissa Allen Spangenberg reached her father's friends by asking around online for the "guild" he belonged to.

Yahoo! News - Deaths of gamers leave their online lives in limbo by AP: Yahoo! Tech

Ping - Just Don’t Compare Kosmix to Google - NYTimes.com

Competition not directly in search, but in finding…

By scouring the Web, the company has built a huge taxonomy, a set of nearly five million categories on topics from people and locations to car models, music groups and types of cheese.

The taxonomy includes millions of connections mapping the relationship among those categories. That allows Kosmix to recognize that Kauai is not only a place, but also a popular travel destination, a tropical island and a beach resort. Based on those and other categories, it chooses the types of content sources most relevant for a query on Kauai and organizes them by using a proprietary algorithm. It draws that content not only from Web sites, but also from more than 1,000 specialized Web services, search sites that focus on single topics, and databases connected to the Internet.

Ping - Just Don’t Compare Kosmix to Google - NYTimes.com

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Appeal says juror sent 'tweets' at trial - The Boston Globe

Sign of the times…

A building materials company and its owner have appealed a $12.6 million verdict against them, alleging that a juror was posting related messages on Twitter.com while hearing the case.

The motion filed Thursday seeking a new trial claims juror Jonathan Powell of Fayetteville sent eight messages - or "tweets" - to the micro-blogging website via his cellular phone. One read in part: "oh and nobody buy Stoam. Its bad mojo and they'll probably cease to Exist, now that their wallet is 12m lighter."

Appeal says juror sent 'tweets' at trial - The Boston Globe

Friday, March 13, 2009

Google Executive to Replace Two Fired From AOL - NYTimes.com

Why do I get the sense this could be a Google scouting mission?…

Time Warner abruptly fired the two top leaders of its struggling AOL unit Wednesday and replaced them with one of the top executives from Google.

AOL’s new chairman and chief executive will be Tim Armstrong, who joined Google in 2000 to start a sales operation for the then-tiny search engine. Since then, Google has grown to sell more advertising than any newspaper, magazine or television network. Mr. Armstrong, who was the president of American operations, looked after both advertising sales and relationships with publishers.

Google Executive to Replace Two Fired From AOL - NYTimes.com

When Computers Rule the World - WSJ.com

See the full interview for more on Daemon; also see Charles Fitzgerald’s review 

WSJ: Should we be afraid?

Mr. Suarez: When you write a high-tech thriller and then people in the defense establishment start calling you -- people I can't name -- you feel you've hit a nerve. There are people looking out for national security who found the book's scenario troubling. That was one of the reasons I wrote it. We should be concerned. Parts of the book talk about economic meltdowns that could happen based on databanks being penetrated. The idea of a black box paradigm is used in many industries. People do what the screen tells them. And that's one of my concerns.

When Computers Rule the World - WSJ.com

World Wide Web at 20 holds sway over most business, communications - The Boston Globe

See the full article for a recap of an amazing 20 years

Twenty years ago this month, Tim Berners-Lee, then a researcher at Conseil Européen pour la Recherche Nucléaire, or CERN, in Switzerland, handed in his proposal for a new kind of computer network. That paper and the technology it envisioned would spawn such giant enterprises as Google, Facebook, MySpace, Yahoo, Amazon, and eBay. At the same time, the Web "has replaced countless other services and resources," said Ted Schadler, an Internet analyst at Forrester Research in Cambridge. Newspaper circulation dwindled as readers turned to the Web instead; travel agents shut down as tourists book their trips online. And millions of us started to watch our favorite shows on computers instead of TV sets.

World Wide Web at 20 holds sway over most business, communications - The Boston Globe

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Dan Bricklin on AlertRank

An interesting snapshot of Grazr – see the full post for more details and examples/screen shots

When you sign up for Grazr's AlertRank service, you get a unique alertrank.com email address. You then change your Google Alerts to be sent to this new address. (Google lets you switch the email target easily.) When AlertRank receives the email from Google, it adds additional information before forwarding it on to you. That additional information gives you an indication of how "important" that alert is. It does this by showing the "AlertRank Quality Score" of the web site where the found page resides. The rank is a combination of Google Page Rank, Alexa Rank, and more.

AlertRank: Managing Google Alert

Yahoo! News - Google preparing to steer more telephone traffic by AP: Yahoo! Tech

More Google connecting-the-dots

"Google is all about helping you manage your information and one of the big holes right now is in the management of voice communications," [Vincent] Paquet [a GrandCentral co-founder who is now running the service for Mountain View-based Google] said.

This isn't Google's first attempt to become a bigger player in the telecommunications market. The company has also built a software platform for mobile devices, called Android, that's designed to ensure that people on the go can easily access Google's services when they are away from home or the office.

Yahoo! News - Google preparing to steer more telephone traffic by AP: Yahoo! Tech

An iPod So Small Its Controls Are Found on the Cord - Pogue’s Posts Blog - NYTimes.com

I’ve already seen two references this morning to the classic SNL Jobs/iPod Invisa skit (which, FWIW, I couldn’t find from a quick search – hmm…)

Yet incredibly, even though this Shuffle is even smaller than the previous one, it’s actually more useful. No iPod Shuffle has ever had a screen, and therefore you’ve never been able to identify the song or band you’re hearing. You’ve also never been able to work with playlists, since there’s no user interface with which to navigate them.

Now there is. You can tell all this stuff not by looking, but by listening; according to Apple, the new Shuffle is the world’s first talking music player, thanks to a new feature called VoiceOver.

(It’s not the first, actually. Older iPods have had talking menus to help blind people. But anyway.)

An iPod So Small Its Controls Are Found on the Cord - Pogue’s Posts Blog - NYTimes.com

Google Voice: A push to rewire your phone service | Webware - CNET

Ah – so your voicemail messages become part of “the world’s information,” which Google will organize etc.

But I thought Google Voice's most promising aspect is voice mail transcription.

Today, voice mail is a something of black hole for me. It's a pain to check, and I just tell people to send me an e-mail if they get my voice mail. When I'm on the road or at home, I check my e-mail much more frequently than my voice mail. And e-mail means I have their contact information and a record that they contacted me, all in a handy form that shows up through search.

Transcription brings some of these advantages to voice mail.

Google Voice: A push to rewire your phone service | Webware - CNET

Google Voice May Threaten Other Phone Services - NYTimes.com

Maybe someday what this service has to do with Google’s overall mission will become clear

Google stepped up its attack on the telecommunications industry on Thursday with a free service called Google Voice that, if successful, could chip away at the revenue of companies big and small, like eBay, which owns Skype, telephone companies and a string of technology start-up firms.

[…]

Google Voice allows users to route all their calls through a single number that can ring their home, work and mobile phones simultaneously. It also gives users a single and easy-to-manage voice mail system for multiple phone lines. And it lets users make calls, routed via the Internet, free in the United States and for a small fee internationally.

Google Voice May Threaten Other Phone Services - NYTimes.com

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Pattern Finder: Google Apps: The Latest Glitch--Marking Private Documents Public

A timely reality check from Guy Creese; see his full post for more details

Google, of course, is soft-pedaling the issue, estimating that it affected less that 0.05% of the documents stored in Google Apps. However, if you do the math, the number of affected documents runs into the hundreds of thousands. As of September 2008, Google was saying 500,000 companies were using Google Apps, with 3,000 companies signing up per day. That comes out to roughly 800,000 companies now (500,000 + 300,000 [3,000 x 20 business days in a month, times five months (October-February)]. Assuming each company has 50 documents stored (a conservative number), that comes out to 40 million documents. 0.05% of that number is 200,000 documents: not a small number. In addition, I would argue the scenario Google describes is the one you would take with laid off employees--as employees, they would have had access to the documents; after you laid them off, you would have stopped their access to the whole set of documents in a library. So while the percentage of affected documents is low, the scenario is one that could do you damage.

p.s. the post title is now out-of-date; the latest (publicized) glitch was yesterday’s Gmail failure

Pattern Finder: Google Apps: The Latest Glitch--Marking Private Documents Public

Mark Logic CEO Blog: Top Resources for Understanding The Google Book Settlement

A useful resource round-up from Dave Kellogg; see the full post for links

We've had big-time interest in our upcoming webinar on the Google Book Settlement and unprecedented downloads of the related white paper, Google's Settlement with the Publishing Industry: Opportunites and Strategies for Publishers, written by Bill Rosenblatt of Giant Steps Media and available for download without giving contact details here.
Given all the interest, I thought I'd share a list of what I consider the top resources for helping publishers and other information industry stakeholders understand the Google Book Settlement, its implications, and the opportunities and threats associated with it.

Mark Logic CEO Blog: Top Resources for Understanding The Google Book Settlement

EMC Tightens Its Embrace of VMware - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

See the full article for details on the EMC/VMware relationship

During the precious few moments not dedicated to talk of virtualization, Mr. Tucci also discussed EMC’s intentions to grow its flash-based storage business. EMC has been aggressively pursuing flash memory systems, which bring higher prices and deliver higher performance than traditional spinning disks.

When EMC first started selling flash systems, the disk drives cost 40 times as much as standard drives while running 30 times faster. About one year later, the price of the flash drives has fallen by 76 percent, Mr. Tucci said.

“They’re still 30 times faster but now it’s only 8 times the cost,” he said. “In the last two quarters, we sold every flash drive we could get our hands on.”

EMC Tightens Its Embrace of VMware - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

About New York - A New York Police Officer Who Put Too Much on MySpace - NYTimes.com

Sign of the times

“You have your Internet persona, and you have what you actually do on the street,” Officer Ettienne said on Tuesday. “What you say on the Internet is all bravado talk, like what you say in a locker room.”

Except that trash talk in locker rooms almost never winds up preserved on a digital server somewhere, available for subpoena. The man on trial, Gary Waters, claimed that Officer Ettienne and his partner stopped him, beat him and then planted a gun on him to justify breaking three of his ribs.

Suddenly, Officer Ettienne was being held to the words that he wrote in cyberspace.

About New York - A New York Police Officer Who Put Too Much on MySpace - NYTimes.com

Google to Offer Ads Based on Interests - NYTimes.com

See the full article for more details

Perhaps to forestall objections to its approach, Google said it planned to offer new ways for users to protect their privacy. Most notably, Google will be the first major company to give users the ability to see and edit the information that it has compiled about their interests for the purposes of behavioral targeting. Like rivals such as Yahoo, it also will give users the choice to opt out from what it calls “interest-based advertising.”

Google to Offer Ads Based on Interests - NYTimes.com

Wal-Mart Plans to Market System for Digital Health Records - NYTimes.com

Interesting times…

Wal-Mart Stores is striding into the market for electronic health records, seeking to bring the technology into the mainstream for physicians in small offices, where most of America’s doctors practice medicine.

[…]

Dell will be responsible for installation of the computers, while eClinicalWorks will handle software installation, training and maintenance. Wal-Mart is using its buying power for discounts on both the hardware and software.

Wal-Mart’s role, according to Mr. Osborne, is to put the bundle of technology into an affordable and accessible offering. “We’re the systems integrator, an aggregator,” he said.

Wal-Mart Plans to Market System for Digital Health Records - NYTimes.com

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

BBC NEWS | Technology | Social sites eclipse e-mail use

Interesting times

Social network sites such as Facebook and MySpace are now more popular than personal e-mail, finds a report.

The Nielsen survey of users' habits found that 67% of all those going online were spending time at social network and blogging sites.

BBC NEWS | Technology | Social sites eclipse e-mail use

Real Dan Lyons Web Site » Blog Archive Alley Insider closes the gap — today only 9 minutes behind AllThingsD «

Another FFSJ information-value-add reality check; see the full post for more insights

Check it out, people. My man Dan Frommer of Alley Insider is slowly gaining on his Apple-watching nemesis at AllThingsD, John Paczkowski. This morning at 7:16 a.m. PT, Paczkowski was the first to re-report the non-news coming out of some Chinese publication that Apple is preparing an oversized iPod Touch, aka a netbook. Just nine minutes later, at 10:25 a.m. ET, Frommer struck, re-reporting Paczkowski’s own re-report. It’s an amazing performance by Frommer, who last week was running a full ten minutes behind AllThingsD. Watch out, Kara Swisher! Can you hear the footsteps getting closer?

Real Dan Lyons Web Site » Blog Archive Alley Insider closes the gap — today only 9 minutes behind AllThingsD «

Slashdot | IBM Wants Patent For Lotus Notes-Free Meetings

This just in from the irony department…

"Over at IBM, the Lotus Notes team has 'invented' preventing the use of their own product during meetings. Self-described patent reformer Big Blue has asked the USPTO for a patent covering Suppressing De-Focusing Activities During Selective Scheduled Meetings by forcing meeting attendees to 'submit to the computing system suspension requirements.' What's next — a patent for Verizon for blocking cellphone usage during movies?"

Slashdot | IBM Wants Patent For Lotus Notes-Free Meetings

Monday, March 09, 2009

About IHeartOneNote.com

Check out this site for a community-driven set of OneNote resources.  I believe OneNote is an incredibly powerful and yet also very accessible tool for managing and sharing collections of information items, and this site will likely be very helpful for sharing OneNote resources and learning more about how OneNote can be used for information management and collaboration.  If you’ve never tried OneNote, the site also has links for a free 60-day trial download.

About Us
IHeartOneNote.com is an exciting new destination for existing and new fans of OneNote. To put it simply--we LOVE OneNote and we don't think we are alone. We want to harness the existing enthusiasm for the product and raise awareness for its many uses. We've created a site that offers current and future fans the ability to share new notebooks, exchange tips and tricks, and exercise their marketing chops. With our fictional persona (Marcus) we also hope to entertain along the way.
Who we are
IHeartOneNote.com was built by Blue Rain Marketing, LLC (www.bluerainmarketing.com) with as little help from Microsoft as humanly possible, as a response to users' desires to exchange ideas, usage tips, and new notebooks around OneNote. Our site is built for these categories, and the passionate fans who want to explore this product.

About IHeartOneNote.com

Wolfram Alpha: Next major search breakthrough? | Outside the Lines - CNET News

See the full article for more details

In May, Wolfram will unveil his latest creation, now called Wolfram Alpha. It applies his work with Mathematica and NKS (A New Kind of Science) to Web search. "All one needs to be able to do is to take questions people ask in natural language, and represent them in a precise form that fits into the computations one can do," Wolfram said in a recent blog post. "I'm happy to say that with a mixture of many clever algorithms and heuristics, lots of linguistic discovery and linguistic curation, and what probably amount to some serious theoretical breakthroughs, we're actually managing to make it work...It's going to be a website: www.wolframalpha.com. With one simple input field that gives access to a huge system, with trillions of pieces of curated data and millions of lines of algorithms," he added.

Wolfram Alpha: Next major search breakthrough? | Outside the Lines - CNET News

Technology Review: Blogs: TR Editors' blog: Tune In to Radio Twitter

Interesting times…

Mark McKeague, a student at Queen's University Belfast, has invented a radio that tunes in to and broadcasts messages posted on the social-networking site Twitter. In addition, the tweets are sorted by sentiment, such as happy or sad, based on their content. McKeague, who studies music technology, has created an interactive version of this radio twitter that allows people to listen to messages posted on the website in real time.

Technology Review: Blogs: TR Editors' blog: Tune In to Radio Twitter

Could Customized Newspapers Bring Readers Back? - NYTimes.com

Strange days indeed…

Of course, through automated feeds and customized Google and Yahoo pages, consumers can already tailor their news consumption to their own tastes.

But MediaNews’s experiment, which it has named “individuated news” — it has trademarked the phrase — or “I-news,” for short, has an old media twist: dead trees and a new piece of hardware for your home.

“I-News is really about choice,” said Peter R. Vandevanter, vice president for targeted products at MediaNews. “We’ll let the reader decide what they want to read and on what platform.”

Could Customized Newspapers Bring Readers Back? - NYTimes.com

Big Blue’s Contrarian Manifesto - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

Prophetic words from IBM; see the full article for more context-setting

“The coming era will not be kind to enterprises or institutions that have failed to step up to unresolved issues in their core models, strategies or operations,” Mr. Palmisano writes. “In our view, this is not simply a cyclical downturn, but a major shift in the global economy and society.”

Big Blue’s Contrarian Manifesto - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

Sunday, March 08, 2009

Mobile telecoms in the recession | Boom in the bust | The Economist

Another timely snapshot from The Economist 

Makers of handsets, which consumers are replacing more slowly, will be hard hit: unit sales are expected to fall by at least 10% this year, having increased by 6% in 2008 to 1.2 billion. But at the same time the industry is going through a transformation that promises to fuel rapid growth in the years to come. To draw a parallel from computing, it is as if the personal computer (PC), its graphical user-interface, high-speed internet access and open-source software had all taken off at the same time.

Or, in a picture:

Mobile telecoms in the recession | Boom in the bust | The Economist

The boom in mobile broadband | Priming the pipe | The Economist

A key trend – mobile broadband + netbooks + … not-for-profit service providers?…

In Western Europe alone, the number of mobile-broadband users will grow by 50% to 27m this year, according to IDC, an analyst firm. Worldwide, there are thought to be around 100m.

What explains this unexpected boom in such troubled times? Operators have been cutting their prices for data-only connections: in Britain, 3, a subsidiary of Hutchison Whampoa, charges as little as £10 ($14) per month for one gigabyte of data. Prices for dongles are falling, too. Connection speeds are improving as operators upgrade their networks. And then there is the surprising success of netbooks—cheap laptops that are small enough to take everywhere. Operators have even started giving away netbooks with some mobile-broadband contracts.

The boom in mobile broadband | Priming the pipe | The Economist

Brewster Kahle, archivist and idealist | The internet's librarian | The Economist

Read the full article for more details on an important initiative that appears to be on a collision course with Google’s Book Search strategy

But all these things are steps towards Mr Kahle’s wider goal: to build the world’s largest digital library. He has recruited 135 libraries worldwide to openlibrary.org, the aim of which is to create a catalogue of every book ever published, with links to its full text where available. To that end, the Internet Archive is also digitising books on a large scale on behalf of its library partners. It scans more than 1,000 books every day, for which the libraries pay about $30 each. (The digital copy can then be made available by both parties.)

Some 200 people work for the Internet Archive, which has an annual budget of $10m-14m. Initially funded by Mr Kahle, the archive now gets much of its income from grants made by foundations and from libraries that pay it to digitise their books. It also runs a variety of one-off projects, such as a collaboration with America’s space agency, NASA, to make available photos and films relating to the history of the space programme, and a “print on demand” system to turn digital files into physical books in minutes.

Brewster Kahle, archivist and idealist | The internet's librarian | The Economist

Twitter Has Potential Buyers Atwitter - BusinessWeek

Yet more Twitter – interesting that the value creation in this article is more about acquisition fodder value rather than, e.g., an actual revenue-producing business model

As the microblogging service explodes in popularity, the suitors are lining up. Facebook has already made a play—others will likely follow

Twitter Has Potential Buyers Atwitter - BusinessWeek

The Boss - For Twitter C.E.O., Well-Orchestrated Accidents - NYTimes.com

A snapshot from Evan Williams – see the full article for more details on how he created Twitter

When people ask me when Twitter will make money, I tell them, “In due time.” They forget that we’re only 30 employees who have just gotten started. Right now, anything we would do to make money would take our time away from acquiring more users. We have patient investors.

My life has been a series of well-orchestrated accidents; I’ve always suffered from hallucinogenic optimism. I was broke for more than 10 years. I remember staying up all night one night at my first company and looking in couch cushions the next morning for some change to buy coffee. I’ve been able to pay my father back, which is nice, and my mother doesn’t worry about me as much since I got married a year and a half ago.

The Boss - For Twitter C.E.O., Well-Orchestrated Accidents - NYTimes.com

Digital Domain - When Everyone’s a Friend, Is Anything Private? - NYTimes.com

On Facebook and over-sharing

FACEBOOK does let members create customized subsets of friends. Members can selectively restrict access to some items, such as photo albums and videos. But customizing permissions for this or that, via multiple clicks, is no one’s idea of a good time.

For many members, “friends” now means a mish-mash of real friends, former friends, friends of friends, and non-friends; younger and older relatives; colleagues and, if cursed, a nosy boss or two. Everyone accepted as a “friend” gets the same access.

When the distinction blurs between one’s few close friends and the many who are not, it seems pointless to distinguish between private and public.

Digital Domain - When Everyone’s a Friend, Is Anything Private? - NYTimes.com

Slipstream - Police Take the Fight Onto the Web - News Analysis - NYTimes.com

Sign of the times…

Like unhip adults late to adopt a fad, police departments and other law enforcement agencies are jumping on the social networking bandwagon. They hope to break down bureaucratic boundaries between departments and jurisdictions and further the fight against crime.

A few companies in the field are developing promising businesses, and supporters have given the trend a slightly cringe-inducing name: Law Enforcement 2.0.

Slipstream - Police Take the Fight Onto the Web - News Analysis - NYTimes.com

All atwitter - The Boston Globe

Another Twitter reality check; see the full article for more details.

For entrepreneurs striving to figure out how to get their companies to profitability, there's a fair bit of skepticism Twitter will ever develop into an independent, sustainable business. "It's more likely that someone like Google or Microsoft will say, 'Let's buy this company and then figure out how to make it something that's valuable for our customer base,' " says Prasad Thammineni, a Twitter user who is also CEO of the Waltham start-up Pixily.

The company has already passed up one such offer, from Facebook. "Our feeling was that it was just too early, even though it was a pretty interesting offer," says Sabet, who was involved in the negotiations. The company still has much of the $55 million it has raised in its bank account, and it still has yet to hire its 30th employee.

All atwitter - The Boston Globe

Saturday, March 07, 2009

Business & Technology | Newspapers make move to online only | Seattle Times Newspaper

More from the newspaper morph watch; see the full article for details

If the Seattle Post-Intelligencer stops publishing in print but stays alive in some form online — as now seems likely — it won't be the first daily newspaper to make the move.

Over the past 15 months, two failing Midwest papers have taken similar leaps.

Business & Technology | Newspapers make move to online only | Seattle Times Newspaper

How to Twitter - WSJ.com

Another Twitter snapshot; I confess I still don’t see the appeal…

When I first joined Twitter, I felt like I was in a noisy bar where everyone was shouting and nobody was listening.

Soon, I began to decode its many mysteries: how to find a flock of followers, how to talk to them in a medium that blasts to lots of people at once and how to be witty in very tiny doses.

[…]

There are thousands of third-party applications built to enhance the Twitter experience -- these are just a few of the popular ones.

Twitpic: Post a photo on Twitpic, and then share the Twitpic link via Twitter.

Twhirl: Desktop software to help you manage your Twitter account, find your @replies and shorten URLs so they can be shared on Twitter.

Tipjoy: A service that lets you send small amounts of cash across Twitter, and then tweet about your donation.

Twibs: A list of businesses on Twitter with links to their Twitter accounts.

TweetDeck: Desktop software that lets people split their tweets into columns, such as @replies, direct messages, groups and keyword searches.

Twitterholic: Ranks Twitter users by number of followers.

Twitturly: Tracks which URLs are most popular on Twitter, based on how many times they've been shared by Twitter users.

Monitter: An easy way to keep tabs on multiple searches on Twitter at the same time.

How to Twitter - WSJ.com

Friday, March 06, 2009

Simulating crowd behaviour | Model behaviour | The Economist

Complexity theory + decision sciences (and more…) in another fascinating Economist article 

THE warmongering orcs depicted in the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy are evil, unpleasant creatures that leave death and destruction in their wake. But if you find yourself in a burning building a few years from now, they might just save your life. That is because the technology used to make hordes of these menacing, computer-generated monsters move convincingly on screen turns out to be just what is needed to predict how crowds of humans move around inside buildings. Engineers and architects hope that they will be able to improve building safety by modelling how people behave in the event of a fire.

Simulating crowd behaviour | Model behaviour | The Economist

Gallery of Downloadable Webslices for IE8 | Sarah In Tampa | Channel 10

See the full post for more details on a beyond-the-basics hypertext capability in IE8

There’s a new site called Liveslices.com where those of you running the IE 8 Release Candidate can browse through and install Webslices from an online gallery. Webslices are a new way to keep up with frequently updated webpages using the new version of IE. When you subscribe to a Webslice (look for a green button), the “slice” is added to your Favorites bar sort of elike a bookmark. You can click on the Webslice/bookmark anytime to see a dynamic window appear with relevant info about that web page – all without leaving the page you’re currently browsing.

The new Liveslices site is not a Microsoft-owned property, but the look of its design has a similar feel to those sites we’re seeing in the Microsoft family of websites, including the one for IE 8.

Gallery of Downloadable Webslices for IE8 | Sarah In Tampa | Channel 10

Advertising - A Meeting Place for Tech Managers - NYTimes.com

An interesting IT social software sign of the times

“We wanted to create a wonderful software product for I.T. managers that was simple, quick to download, and easy to learn and use, and with a fun social networking twist,” said Jay Hallberg, a Spiceworks co-founder. Spiceworks created downloadable software that helps technology professionals manage, track and report on the software and hardware on their company’s network, all under one application.

Spiceworks has become a popular destination for corporate tech people — more than 600,000 information technology managers — to help one another with problems, and share their favorite products and services.

Advertising - A Meeting Place for Tech Managers - NYTimes.com

New CIO wants more citizen participation on Web | Politics and Law - CNET News

Another refreshing change at the federal government level

President Obama's new federal chief information officer has been charged with the daunting task of saving the government money while helping to institute the president's vision for a Web 2.0 government. Vivek Kundra, appointed Thursday to the position that will report to the White House, says he can not only save the government money by embracing Web-based approaches, but potentially spur entirely new waves of economic development.

New CIO wants more citizen participation on Web | Politics and Law - CNET News

Breaking Apple's Grip on the iPhone - WSJ.com

A new challenge to Apple’s brazen monopoly strategy

Apple Inc. faces a growing threat to its iPhone business, as renegade stores spring up online to sell unauthorized software for the device.

The developer behind some popular iPhone software on Friday plans to open a service called Cydia Store that could potentially sell hundreds of iPhone applications that are not available through Apple's official store. Users must download special software that alters their iPhones before they can run these programs.

Breaking Apple's Grip on the iPhone - WSJ.com

Sheriff sues Craigslist over sex ads - The Boston Globe

A different type of social networking…

Cook County's sheriff filed a federal lawsuit against Craigslist yesterday, saying the popular online classifieds site promotes and facilitates prostitution on a massive scale.

Sheriff Tom Dart wants Craigslist to end its "erotic services" section, saying that many of the section's ads are blatant solicitations for prostitution.

Sheriff sues Craigslist over sex ads - The Boston Globe

Thursday, March 05, 2009

From the Desk of David Pogue - Amazon’s E-Book Service - NYTimes.com

Amazon is definitely well positioned, especially when super-sized iPod touch-class devices and other larger form-factor mobile Internet devices are introduced

The true brilliance of Amazon's move is that you no longer need a Kindle anymore to read current bestsellers in e-book form. Amazon, like thousands of businesses before it (see also: iTunes store, console games), has shifted into selling the razor blades, not the razors. Those $10 downloadable books—800K software files, with no physical material costs, shipping costs or warehousing costs—are surely where the profit is.

In other words, Amazon, having ignited new interest in the whole e-book concept with its $360 Kindle reader, is already steering itself from hardware back to software, to e-books as a service, to the skills where it already excels.

See the full article for more context-setting and details

From the Desk of David Pogue - Amazon’s E-Book Service - NYTimes.com

New Safari Browser Succeeds at Speed, Flops on Features | Walt Mossberg | Personal Technology | AllThingsD

See the full review for some disruptive (and possibly Chrome-copying) Safari user experience changes

Safari 4 also catches up to its rivals by offering suggestions of what you are looking for when you type in a Web address or search term. This worked well, but not any better than it does in other browsers.

Finally, the Windows version of Safari now looks and works much more like a standard Windows program than a Mac program. It has traditional Windows-style buttons and behaviors, which Safari lacked before.

Overall, Safari 4 is a mixed bag. The speed is great, but the design changes range from mildly interesting to downright annoying.

New Safari Browser Succeeds at Speed, Flops on Features | Walt Mossberg | Personal Technology | AllThingsD

Technology Review: The Best Way to Leap China's Great Firewall

Check the full article for a snapshot of current circumvention software themes

In a related ongoing effort, the OpenNet Initiative--a project involving Harvard, the University of Toronto, Oxford University, and Cambridge University--is studying the spread of Internet censorship and surveillance worldwide. A forthcoming report will show a sharp rise in global filtering activity. Analyzing new data from 71 countries, OpenNet researchers have so far confirmed filtering in more than three dozen--up from 25 nations found to be filtering in a 2006 report, which looked at 46 nations in total. The new analysis, which will not be concluded for several more weeks, will also show greater blocking of social-networking sites such as Facebook and YouTube; increased filtering of blogging platforms, especially in the Middle East and North Africa; and an increase in examples of Western nations trying to block pornography, hate speech, and terrorism sites.

Technology Review: The Best Way to Leap China's Great Firewall

Business & Technology | Facebook's getting a makeover | Seattle Times Newspaper

Tracking activities among more than 5,000 “friends”?…

The new product changes, which began to roll out at noon Wednesday, would over time enable user "Profiles" to serve more as individual Web pages that could convey messages far beyond the current 5,000 "friend" limit, executives said.

Perhaps taking a cue from Twitter, the rising service for letting people express themselves in 140 characters or less and keep up with what celebrities have to say, Facebook said Wednesday it will let users follow public figures, such as President Obama and swimmer Michael Phelps, bands like U2 and even institutions like The New York Times.

Business & Technology | Facebook's getting a makeover | Seattle Times Newspaper

Prostitution Site Cuts Ties With Founder After Charges - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

A very weird sign of the times

In part because of David Elms, the business of prostitution is moving from street corners and hotel bars to the Internet. Mr. Elms founded The Erotic Review, a Web site where patrons of prostitutes go to rate their experiences. It’s a bit like Amazon ratings for prostitutes, except of course that paying for books isn’t illegal in most jurisdictions.

Prostitution Site Cuts Ties With Founder After Charges - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

Wednesday, March 04, 2009

The Pre will be Palm's downfall | The Toybox | ZDNet.com

A new chapter in the Osborne effect story?  See the full article for more details.

Palm said yesterday that sales will be well below expectations because customers are waiting for the company’s fabled Pre to launch.

The wait may be the company’s downfall.

To be more precise than the story headline: Palm’s awkward handling of the Pre launch may be its downfall; the device still looks fairly compelling.

The Pre will be Palm's downfall | The Toybox | ZDNet.com

InternetNews Realtime IT News - Microsoft: SharePoint Picks Up Office's Slack

A timely snapshot; see the full article for more details

But as enterprises cut costs, Stephen Elop, president of Microsoft's (NASDAQ: MSFT) business division, still sees plenty of reason for optimism despite slowdowns in sales of his division's flagship product, Office 2007.

Instead, other offerings in the company's business portfolio, notably SharePoint, are still performing well, Elop said during today's Morgan Stanley Technology Conference.

"SharePoint is doing fine with double-digit growth, even in these hard economic times," he told the audience of financial analysts.

InternetNews Realtime IT News - Microsoft: SharePoint Picks Up Office's Slack

Google’s Digitized Book Project Hinges on a Retro Kind of Search - NYTimes.com

See the full article for details on how Google is spending $7M on a print advertising campaign to inform authors about its book digitization plans

The almost comically sweeping attempt to reach the world’s entire literate population is a reflection of the ambitions of the Google Book Search project, in which the company hopes to digitize every book — famous or not, in any language, published anywhere on earth — found in the world’s libraries.

Under the proposed settlement, reached on Oct. 28 and still subject to court approval, there must be an effort the court finds “reasonable and practicable” to find authors and publishers — especially copyright holders of so-called orphan books, which are still in copyright but long out of print. So the task means placing at least one advertisement in every country in the world.

Google’s Digitized Book Project Hinges on a Retro Kind of Search - NYTimes.com

Three MySpace execs depart for new venture | The Social - CNET News

Apparently they needed their own space

Three executives from social network MySpace, including Chief Operating Officer Amit Kapur, are departing the News Corp.-owned company to create a new venture.

The two execs leaving with Kapur are Jim Benedetto, senior vice president of engineering, and Steve Pearman, senior vice president of product strategy.

Three MySpace execs depart for new venture | The Social - CNET News

Amazon to Sell E-Books to Read on the iPhone and iPod Touch - NYTimes.com

I doubt it

Unlike other forms of media like music and video, which Apple sells itself to iPhone owners through its iTunes store, Apple appears to be ceding the e-books market to Amazon and other companies that offer e-book applications.

“Apple is consciously skipping the e-book market,” said Evan R. Schnittman, vice president for business development and rights at Oxford University Press. “I think it’s pretty significant.”

Amazon to Sell E-Books to Read on the iPhone and iPod Touch - NYTimes.com

Google’s Schmidt Speaks Up About Twitter - Digits - WSJ.com

See the full article for more details

For those wondering what Eric Schmidt thinks of Twitter, the Google chief executive made his views clear on Tuesday. It’s “a poor man’s email system,” said Schmidt at an investor conference in San Francisco.

[…]

Schmidt plugged Google’s own Twitter feed, which the company recently launched to share bits about life at the company’s headquarters, known as the Googleplex. But he didn’t say whether Google would or wouldn’t ever want to acquire the company, which he praised for its success. It remains to be seen, he said, whether Twitter can evolve beyond a “note phenomena” and keep up with more sophisticated email systems, which contain more advanced features like personal identity and storage. He also noted that Google’s own instant-messaging software is a similar real-time communications tool.

Google’s Schmidt Speaks Up About Twitter - Digits - WSJ.com

Amazon Extends Book Sales Beyond Its Kindle to iPhone - WSJ.com

Pretty cool…  Tangentially, and related more to Netflix than Amazon, from today’s Boston Globe: Blockbuster may explore bankruptcy 

Amazon's software application, which can be downloaded free of charge, allows iPhone and iPod Touch users to read books or periodicals purchased on the Web or through their dedicated Kindle device, usually for $9.99. Using a service that Amazon calls whispersync, the program keeps track of a readers' latest page in any given book across both a Kindle and iPhone.

"There are times when you're going to be in a place where you happen to have your iPhone but not your Kindle," said Ian Freed, an Amazon vice president. "If I get stuck in line at the grocery store, I can pick up where I was reading with my iPhone."

Amazon Extends Book Sales Beyond Its Kindle to iPhone - WSJ.com

Tuesday, March 03, 2009

Microsoft Online Services Available Worldwide: Microsoft signs agreement with GlaxoSmithKline to deploy Exchange Online, SharePoint Online, Office Communications Online and Office Live Meeting for employees worldwide.

See the full press release for more details

Furthering its commitment to deliver communications and collaboration software as enterprise-class services, today at CeBIT 2009 Microsoft Corp. announced that the Business Productivity Online Suite, part of Microsoft Online Services, is now available for trial to businesses of all sizes in 19 countries. In addition, Microsoft will release Microsoft Office Communications Online, for instant messaging and presence, and the Business Productivity Online Deskless Worker Suite, an extremely economical e-mail, calendaring and collaboration service for the occasional user.

“These services open up new possibilities for businesses to control costs while continuing to enhance the productivity of their employees,” said Stephen Elop, president of the Microsoft Business Division. “Customers can save between 10 percent and 50 percent in IT-related expenditures as a result of deploying Microsoft Online Services.”

Microsoft Online Services Available Worldwide: Microsoft signs agreement with GlaxoSmithKline to deploy Exchange Online, SharePoint Online, Office Communications Online and Office Live Meeting for employees worldwide.