Thursday, December 31, 2009

Evernote Passes Two Million Users - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

Some noteworthy milestones

Evernote, the popular memory collection and note-taking service, released its end-of-year user numbers on Wednesday and can now boast that it has “millions of users” — 2,062,015 to be precise.

The announcement on the company blog includes some interesting stats about those users. For example, 74 percent have logged in from the United States and 76.9 percent have accessed the service through at least two different platforms.

Evernote Passes Two Million Users - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

Phone Smart - Apps Promise Less-Costly Weight-Loss Resolutions - NYTimes.com

Congrats to the Lose It! gang 

Lose It!, from FitNow, is the top choice of calorie counters, with 3.5 million downloads in the 14 months since it became available. But more noteworthy is that 190,000 people have bothered to rate the app, usually with high marks, which suggests that the software has some staying power.

Based on a week or so of playing with it, the ratings are well-earned, and probably would be just as high if it cost a few dollars or more.

At its core, Lose It! is a calorie counter and weight tracker, with tools for logging and watching your food intake. Enter a few personal metrics into the program along with your weight-loss goal and deadline, and Lose It! sets a budget for your calorie intake.

Phone Smart - Apps Promise Less-Costly Weight-Loss Resolutions - NYTimes.com

Advertising - Coke Facebook Application Tries to Match Faces - NYTimes.com

Strange days indeed – somehow this (Facebook-based) application is supposed to convince you that Coke Zero tastes more like Coke. 

To use it, a visitor can gain access to the application through Facebook or by visiting cokezero.com and agreeing to let the application pull information from his or her Facebook account. The application examines the Facebook photographs of the visitor, then has the visitor add another photograph from his or her desktop or Web camera.

Using facial-recognition software developed by an outside company, the application analyzes attributes like skin color, face structure and angles on the face. “It basically takes your face and turns it into raw data, then runs your face and matches it through the database of all these different people,” Mr. Benjamin said.

Advertising - Coke Facebook Application Tries to Match Faces - NYTimes.com

YouTube’s Quest to Suggest More, So Users Search Less - NYTimes.com

See the full article for a detailed YouTube snapshot

“Our average user spends 15 minutes a day on the site,” he said. “They spend about five hours in front of the television. People say, ‘YouTube is so big,’ but I really see that we have a ways to go.”

To that end, Mr. Walk leads a team of about a dozen engineers, designers and project managers who are fine-tuning YouTube to give its users what they want, even even when the users aren’t quite sure what that is. The goal is to get them to spend a few more minutes on the site every day.

YouTube’s Quest to Suggest More, So Users Search Less - NYTimes.com

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

BBC News - The US virtual economy is set to make billions

Strange days indeed

Virtual goods such as weapons or digital bottles of champagne traded in the US could be worth up to $5bn in the next five years, experts predict.

In Asia, sales are already around the $5bn mark and rapidly growing.

For many, virtual goods are one of the hottest trends in technology and are fuelling huge growth in the social gaming sector.

BBC News - The US virtual economy is set to make billions

FT.com / Technology - Stage set for Google-Apple mobile duel

January is going to be interesting...

FT.com / Technology - Stage set for Google-Apple mobile duel: "By announcing a Google phone ahead of Apple’s tablet, the internet company had a chance to steal its rival’s thunder and build a following for its first Google-branded consumer device, Mr Kumar said.

However, some analysts warned that if it created a rival gadget, Google would alienate other mobile handset makers that have used its Android mobile operating system in their own products.

“If they’re doing their own phone, it’s really a dumb idea,” Ken Dulaney, an analyst at Gartner, said.

Rather than produce its own phone, Google was more likely to put its name on the device and have influence over its software, Mr Delaney said."

Information, not gadgets, seen as security solution - The Boston Globe

A timely reality check 

The attempted destruction of a Northwest Airlines jet over Detroit on Christmas Day has accelerated the search for technologies to detect explosives before they’re smuggled onto airplanes. But some security analysts see that pursuit as a waste. They say that the millions spent on high-tech gear such as the full-body scanner scheduled to be installed at Boston’s Logan International Airport next year would be better invested in improved intelligence sharing and training of airline employees and security personnel.

Information, not gadgets, seen as security solution - The Boston Globe

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Blio: Kurzweil Reinvents the Book | Gadget Lab | Wired.com

CES is going to be a milestone event for publishers and readers.  See the full Wired article for more on Blio.

Ray Kurzweil, who thought up pretty much everything, ever, has entered the e-book fray. Due to debut at CES in Las Vegas next week, Kurzweil’s Blio comes from a completely different angle than the current e-ink readers.

Blio is not a device. Rather, it is a “platform” which could run on any device, but would be most obviously at home on a tablet. The software will be free and available for phones, netbooks and so on.

[…]

On its own, Blio looks solid, but it signifies something much bigger: the end of the paper book. Right now, e-books are poor copies of paper books, with a single advantage: convenience. A book is just a container for text, not its natural home. We fully expect the upcoming rash of tablets to provide a better place for reading words than these old wads of paper, usurping print the way Gutenberg usurped hand-copied manuscripts.

Blio: Kurzweil Reinvents the Book | Gadget Lab | Wired.com

Nokia Files Complaint: iPod, iPhone and Macs All Infringe Our Patents

Looks like Apple intellectual property lawyer is a good near-term career path

Remember that lawsuit Nokia filed against Apple claiming that the consumer electronics giant was infringing its wireless patents with the iPhone? That alone might well have cost Apple a billion bucks, but today it gets even worse.

Nokia has filed a complaint with the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC), alleging that Apple infringes Nokia patents with almost every product it produces — from the iPhone to the iPod and all the way into its line of computers.

Nokia Files Complaint: iPod, iPhone and Macs All Infringe Our Patents

FT.com / Media - Google in YouTube video plug

This just in from the Googleplex...

FT.com / Media - Google in YouTube video plug: "Media companies would be better off handing their online video activities to Google’s YouTube video-sharing site than pursuing home-grown efforts such as Hulu.com and the US cable industry’s TV Everywhere initiative, according to senior Google executives.

“At some point in time it becomes an economic choice by the content owners. It’s a matter of core competences,” Nikesh Arora, Google’s president of global sales operations and business development, told the Financial Times."

Oracle sniffing around Citrix, HP around Rambus • The Register

2010 is likely to see a lot of major acquisition activity.  Weird to think that Citrix would likely cost more than Sun; see the full article for details.

According to the Briefing.com rumor mongering financial news site, software giant Oracle - not even finished with its $7.4bn acquisition of Sun Microsystems - is sniffing around middleware and virtualization maker Citrix Systems and may be interested in acquiring the company.

[…]

Oracle likes to be in control, as it soon will be with Java, so why not with x64-based server virtualization as well as application streaming and desktop virtualization? Oracle is a good fit for Citrix. But then again, Novell and Citrix could also merge. And as El Reg has pointed out more than once, IBM needs Novell and Citrix as much as Oracle might. Perhaps more.

Oracle sniffing around Citrix, HP around Rambus • The Register

Nation & World | Police: Twitter used to avoid DUI checkpoints | Seattle Times Newspaper

Sign of the times…

Trying to elude arrest for drunken driving, young people use technology to tell each other about the location of sobriety checkpoints, said Sgt. Dave Gibeault, head of the Fresno Police Department's traffic unit.

Tools include Twitter, text messages and an iPhone application specifically designed to identify checkpoints, Gibeault said.

Meanwhile, in Texas

If you get busted for drunk driving in Montgomery County, Texas, this holiday season, your neighbors may hear about it on Twitter.

That's because the local district attorney's office has decided to publish the names of those charged with driving while intoxicated (DWI) between Christmas and New Year's Eve.

Nation & World | Police: Twitter used to avoid DUI checkpoints | Seattle Times Newspaper

Creative Solutions to iPhone Service Woes - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

Another happy Apple/AT&T customer

But iPhone users are essentially stuck with two options: switch to another network, waving goodbye to the iPhone and App Store, or keep the phone and deal with the shaky service. So far, I have chosen to stick with the iPhone — but this has forced me to make a stern warning before every phone call. I now begin my phone conversations with “Hi, I’m on AT&T, so this call might be dropped. If it is, I’ll call you right back.”

Creative Solutions to iPhone Service Woes - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

Monday, December 28, 2009

Google Watch - Google Apps - Google: All Your Government Data Are Belong to Us

Interesting times

If you're a fan of Google-is-getting-too-powerful-for-its-own-good conspiracies, this piece by independent security specialist Sherri Davidoff on her Philosecurity blog is a must read.

Davidoff explores how Google is gradually gaining greater access to government data by landing municipal contracts from the city of Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., and others who have "Gone Google."

Google Watch - Google Apps - Google: All Your Government Data Are Belong to Us

60,000 old books now online from Library of Congress: New digital collection | TeleRead: Bring the E-Books Home

Check the full post for more details

The Library of Congress’s new collection can be accessed through its website and also through the Internet Archive. Here is what LOC says about the collection:

Nearly 60,000 books prized by historians, writers and genealogists, many too old and fragile to be safely handled, have been digitally scanned as part of the first-ever mass book-digitization project of the U.S. Library of Congress (LOC), the world’s largest library. Anyone who wants to learn about the early history of the United States, or track the history of their own families, can read and download these books for free.

60,000 old books now online from Library of Congress: New digital collection | TeleRead: Bring the E-Books Home

Relax, You Can Still Buy An iPhone In New York City. Just Not Online.

More on the NYC iPhone scene (via Anne Thomas Manes)

So if you really want to buy an iPhone in New York City, go to an AT&T store, or an Apple Store. Or try Apple’s website. That seems to be taking orders for New York City residents just fine ( I got up to the checkout).

Also see Fake Steve’s take, to check out some flame-fanning…

Relax, You Can Still Buy An iPhone In New York City. Just Not Online.

FT.com / Technology - LG joins rush to e-reader market

Hmm…

LG Display, the world’s second biggest flat-screen maker, has joined the rush among Asian manufacturers to make e-paper displays – specialised flat screens used in the the fast-growing electronic reader market.

The Korean company on Monday signed agreements with two subsidiaries of Taiwan’s Prime View International, which supplies the key display component for popular electronic readers such as Amazon’s Kindle and Sony’s Reader.

FT.com / Technology - LG joins rush to e-reader market

Google makes its home page a Chrome page | Technically Incorrect - CNET News

A subtly significant marketing milestone for Google

Those nice people at Google, engineers at heart rather than craven, money-grabbing business people, seem to have suffered a sudden attack of commercialism.

The folks at the Silicon Alley Insider alerted me to this startlingly commercial ad on the Google home page. It can't be, I thought. So I went to Google.com myself and there it still was: a dry little thing in the right-hand corner suggesting that I should download Google Chrome.

When I first go to the main Google page, I see

image

A clean page… until I move the mouse or start typing, when I then see

image

(By default it also had my Google id, but I signed out before taking the screen clip.)

And clicking the Google Pack link, you’ll see

image

As the hierarchy/indentation above suggests, you can’t choose Google Apps unless you also choose Chrome.  I wonder how much more Adobe had to pay, to have Reader selected by default (unlike Firefox, Skype, or RealPlayer).

Looks like the marketing group has trumped the home page design group, inside the Googleplex. 

Google makes its home page a Chrome page | Technically Incorrect - CNET News

Media Outlets Prepare to Charge for Content Online - NYTimes.com

Sign of the Times…

Newspapers, including this one, are weighing whether to ask online readers to pay for at least some of what they offer, as a handful of papers, like The Wall Street Journal and The Financial Times, already do. Indeed, in the next several weeks, industry executives and analysts expect some publications to take the plunge.

[…]

People who have studied the problem argue that charging online would work only if consumers were offered a much-improved product with the convenience of access anywhere, on any digital device — the core idea behind the magazine consortium and its planned online store.

Media Outlets Prepare to Charge for Content Online - NYTimes.com

AT&T ceases online iPhone sales in NY area | Wireless - CNET News

More speculation on the no-iPhone-for-you NYC development

AT&T has stopped selling the Apple iPhone in the New York metropolitan area through its Web site, perhaps due to data congestion, credit card fraud, or routine sales strategy changes, depending on whom you believe.

Online sales of the phone were apparently suspended Sunday. Prospective customers attempting to buy an iPhone through the Web site and using a New York area ZIP code get a message saying, "We're sorry, there are no Packages & Deals available at this time. Please check back later." However, changing ZIP codes to other U.S. metro areas yields a bevy of iPhone choices.

AT&T ceases online iPhone sales in NY area | Wireless - CNET News

Sunday, December 27, 2009

AT&T Website Stops Selling iPhone in New York City [REPORT]

Amazing if true; check the full post for details

AT&T has come up with an ingenious solution to the congestion on its network in New York: stop selling the iPhone there!

The AT&T website has stopped offering phones to the New York metropolitan area, and entering a zipcode from there delivers the message that it is “unavailable” in that area, according to a blog report.

AT&T Website Stops Selling iPhone in New York City [REPORT]

Our Choice: A Plan to Solve the Climate Crisis

An excerpt from the book site press release:

Rodale Books is proud to announce the publication of OUR CHOICE: A Plan to Solve the Climate Crisis (Rodale Books; November 3, 2009; ISBN 978-1-59486-734-7; $26.99; 416 pages w/ 4-color illustrations throughout) by former Vice President Al Gore. OUR CHOICE is the pioneering follow-up to Gore’s bestselling An Inconvenient Truth, in which he unequivocally laid out the case for climate crisis. With OUR CHOICE, he gives us the tools to solve it.

During the three and a half years since the release of An Inconvenient Truth Al Gore has organized and moderated over 30 lengthy and intensive “Solutions Summits,” where the world’s leading experts (from fields as diverse as neuroscience, agriculture, economics, information technology, and more) have come to discuss and share their knowledge with the goal of finding the most effective courses of action. OUR CHOICE is result of the groundbreaking insights offered by these participants, whose expertise has made it possible to construct a fresh and unique approach not seen before.

Highly recommended – buy the book, read it, and discuss the concepts with friends and family. 

All earnings for the book, as was the case with An Inconvenient Truth (book and movie) go to The Alliance for Climate Protection.

There’s also a “solutions wiki” on the book site, but it isn’t accessible at the moment.

Tangent: a Kindle edition would be less effective, as the book includes some great color photos and other images.  Maybe (Apple board member) Al Gore will release an Apple tablet edition early next year…

Our Choice — Press Kit

E-books spark battle inside the publishing industry - washingtonpost.com

Apparently book publishers have a lot in common with music publishers…

This doesn't need to mean the end of book publishing. Publishers can no longer be vast containers of intellectual property distributed in paper form to bookstores, supermarkets and warehouse clubs. But they don't have to be: They can become highly selective distributors to bookstores, supermarkets and price clubs. That's the lesson of the television, music and movie businesses.

But if the publishers want a role in the e-books business, they'll need to get over it and get on with it, embracing lower-priced e-books with higher author royalties. That seems unlikely. Because it's now clear that publishers just don't want to listen to what their customers are telling them.

E-books spark battle inside the publishing industry - washingtonpost.com

Jack Shafer reviews 'Googled' by Ken Auletta - washingtonpost.com

Excerpt from a Googled review 

But should Google itself be trusted? Yes, trusted to produce terrific search results, reliable e-mail service, videos aplenty on its YouTube site and economical venues for advertising. But no further. As Auletta probes the sophistry behind the Google slogan "Don't be evil" with his well placed sources in media and technology, the portrait he draws is of a rapacious, opportunistic company that seeks to disrupt -- in classic capitalist fashion -- whole industries. Its Android operating system -- and now a cell phone of its own design -- have targeted the mobile phone business. Google Voice has been assigned to conquer the telephony industry. The Chrome browser and the Chrome operating system are aimed at toppling Microsoft's grip on the computer desktop. The Google Books service is a cannon pointed at the heart of publishers. One of Auletta's top sources regards the company as a veritable "Googzilla" that intends to become a digital Wal-Mart for shoppers.

Jack Shafer reviews 'Googled' by Ken Auletta - washingtonpost.com

The $75 Future Computer - Forbes.com

Cool vision, but reading between the lines, the $100 laptop still costs $172, and the radical OLPC 2.0 is history.  Check the full article for details and more pictures.  (via Anne Thomas Manes)

image

That revamped machine, known as the XO-3 and targeted for release in 2012, is still more of a pipe dream than a product. But early designs for the PC reveal a minimalist slate of touch-powered electronics that drops practically every feature of a traditional computer except its 8.5-by-11-inch screen, a scheme that would shed all of the first XO's child-like clunkiness without losing its simple accessibility.

In Pictures: The $75 Future Computer

The $75 Future Computer - Forbes.com

Kindle is most gifted Amazon item, ever | Business Tech - CNET News

Amazon in overdrive

Amazon.com on Saturday released its annual post-Christmas statement on holiday sales, and made one thing clear: the Kindle was king, perhaps fueled by continued shifts in plans for shipments of Barnes & Noble's competing Nook e-reader.

"We are grateful to our customers for making Kindle the most gifted item ever in our history," said Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos.

In another milestone for the e-reader, the company noted that on Christmas Day, for the first time ever, Amazon customers bought more Kindle books than physical books.

Kindle is most gifted Amazon item, ever | Business Tech - CNET News

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Two-Wheeled Wonder: The glory of lungs, legs, and steel - Needham Bikes

Check the full post for some bike-related stats/factoids

Eric Sorenson's book, Seven Wonders for a Cool Planet: Everyday Things to Help Solve Glob..., is a short book with seven low tech ways to improve your carbon footprint. At the top of the list, is the bicycle; in fact, on the page on the Sierra Club website promoting the book, they allow readers to vote on "the coolest" of these devices, and so far the bicycle is leading the tally.

Two-Wheeled Wonder: The glory of lungs, legs, and steel - Needham Bikes

Apple Tablet to Offer Dynamic Tactile Keyboard [RUMOR] [Mashable]

Check the full post for more details.  I think it’s a pretty safe bet that the Apple tablet won’t simply be a super-sized iPod touch.

One significant item on many a wishlist (that won’t be under the tree this year) is the famed imaginary creature — cousin to the dragon, the phoenix and the sphinx — known as the Apple Tablet. According to a veritable smorgasbord of recent legends, a.k.a. rumors, we might not have much longer to wait — a 7-inch tablet could be revealed as early as January 26.

A brace of new patents unearthed this week by Apple Insider point to a curious probability in relation to the tablet’s screen. The patent speaks of an “articulating frame” that may be raised or lowered to provide both a tactile typing keyboard and a flat surface for pointing. The device would employ some system of intelligence to help determine which mode the user was in, and dynamically adjust itself to provide a physically ridged keyboard or a flat pointing surface as necessary.

Apple Tablet to Offer Dynamic Tactile Keyboard [RUMOR]

Gray Matter : What is "Custom XML?" ... and the impact of the i4i judgment on Word

Definitive word on the implications of the i4i judgment; see the full post for more details

We do not anticipate any interruption in the availability of Word or Office 2007. Additionally this ruling has no impact on the scheduled availability of the 2010 Office version which is planned for the first half of CY2010.

Current users are not affected. If you are using the custom XML tags in Word 2003 or 2007 (these show up in Word as Pink Tags around tagged content), you are free to continue doing so with the products you have already purchased.

Open XML standards (all ECMA and ISO versions) are not affected. Even if Word's specific implementation of custom XML support does infringe the i4i patent (which Microsoft does not believe to be the case), i4i has never claimed that its patent is essential to the OXML standard.

Content Controls of Word (screen shot below) are not affected. In Word 2007 and Word 2010, this is a common method of binding document content to data stored in a custom-defined schema within a document.

Gray Matter : What is "Custom XML?" ... and the impact of the i4i judgment on Word

Book Review - History of Darpa - 'The Department of Mad Scientists,' by Michael Belfiore - Review - NYTimes.com

A timely reality check

Two years ago, in his book “Rocketeers,” Michael Belfiore celebrated the pioneers of the budding private space industry. Now he has returned to explore a frontier closer to home. The heroes of his new book, “The Department of Mad Scientists,” work for the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, better known as Darpa, a secretive arm of the United States government. And the revolution they’re leading is a merger of humans with machines.

[…]

Belfiore traces the agency’s origins and exploits from the 1957 Sputnik launching (which shocked the United States government into technological action) to the 1969 birth of the original Internet, known as Arpanet, to Total Information Awareness, the controversial 2002 project that was supposed to scan telecommunications data for signs of terrorism. His tone is reverential and at times breathless, but he captures the agency’s essential virtues: boldness, creativity, agility, practicality and speed.

Book Review - History of Darpa - 'The Department of Mad Scientists,' by Michael Belfiore - Review - NYTimes.com

The Year in Style - Fashion Bloggers Horn In on Elle and Vogue - NYTimes.com

A weird example of traditional press disintermediation

As a relatively new phenomenon in the crowded arena of journalists whose specialty it is to report the news of the catwalks, fashion bloggers have ascended from the nosebleed seats to the front row with such alacrity that a long-held social code among editors, one that prizes position and experience above outward displays of ambition or enjoyment, has practically been obliterated.

The Year in Style - Fashion Bloggers Horn In on Elle and Vogue - NYTimes.com

New Crack for Amazon’s Kindle E-Books Emerges - Digits - WSJ

You know a platform is popular when…

A blogger who goes by the name i♥cabbages claims to have created software that removes the digital rights management (DRM) software embedded into Amazon Kindle e-books PC reading application.

The Kindle’s DRM software keeps a person from sharing his or her Amazon e-books with other people, or reading them on non-Amazon platforms. Hacks for it have existed since 2008, with at least some of the early work being done by a person going by the name “Dark Reverser.” (He didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.)

New Crack for Amazon’s Kindle E-Books Emerges - Digits - WSJ

Friday, December 25, 2009

Some Kindle resources and notes

Some handy links, via Kindle Nation Daily

Note that you don’t need a Kindle device to take advantage of the amazing assortment of free books – you can also download and read them via the free Kindle clients for the PC, iPhone, and soon Mac, Blackberry, and no doubt other device/platform types (Android, Apple tablet…).   I’ve also gotten into the habit of requesting Kindle samples, for non-free books – many of the samples are sufficiently extensive to provide a good sense of a book’s thesis and style.

An example of the sample download option – when you’re looking at a page for a Kindle edition of a book, look for the “Send sample now” button; if you have more than one Kindle client registered (I have a Kindle and have installed the Kindle PC client on two PCs), you’ll see options such as the following:

image

The latest Kindle Nation Daily links:

19,823 Free Kindle Books By Category

Fiction

Nonfiction

Advice & How-to

Arts & Entertainment

Biographies & Memoirs

Business & Investing

Children's Chapter Books

Cooking, Food & Wine

Fantasy

History

Humor

Lifestyle & Home

Mystery & Thrillers

Parenting & Families

Politics & Current Events

Reference

Religion & Spirituality

Romance

Science

Science Fiction

Sports

Travel

Some Kindle resources and notes

Video Interview: Blippy Co-Founder Philip "Pud" Kaplan | Kara Swisher | BoomTown | AllThingsD

See the full post for more details

Now in invitation-only private beta, the new service sends out messages about the type and amount of the transaction, every time you use your credit card–at least the one you designate your “Blippy” card–for others to see and comment on.

In other words, a kind of Twitter for spending.

The twist of Blippy–whose motto is: “What are your friends buying?”–is that it is more passive than the more active tweeting or texting.

Video Interview: Blippy Co-Founder Philip "Pud" Kaplan | Kara Swisher | BoomTown | AllThingsD

Apple stockholders get record high for Christmas | Apple - CNET News

Sign of the times

Apple's stock closed Thursday at an all time high of $209.04, up 6.94 points (3.43 percent) in a shortened day of trading on unconfirmed rumors that the company might unveil a long-awaited portable tablet computer next month.

The Apple blogosphere went wild Wednesday following several reports that the company told some of its key developers to prepare versions of their iPhone apps that will work on a device with a larger screen, in time for an event next month.

Apple stockholders get record high for Christmas | Apple - CNET News

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Vonage Offers Unlimited Int'l Calling for iPhone, Blackberry - Yahoo! News

Pretty amazing, for those old enough to remember when international phone calls were incredibly expensive

Vonage now offers an unlimited $24.99-a-month international calling plan for iPhone and BlackBerry users, the company said Wednesday. The new "Vonage World Mobile" VoIP service competes with a $12.95-a-month service from Skype.

Vonage, however, offers service 60 countries, while Skype offers unlimited service to only 40 countries. Current Vonage customers may qualify for a $10-a-month discount on the mobile service.

Vonage Offers Unlimited Int'l Calling for iPhone, Blackberry - Yahoo! News

FT.com | Tech Blog | Exclusive: Apple to host event in January

Yet more Apple tablet speculation

Yesterday we reported that Apple is working to solidify a new round of content deals with TV studios. Meanwhile, publishers have been working on new versions of digital magazines that would be viewed on touch screen computers.

Apple has explored making tablet style devices for years, only to back off. The company also has a history of scrapping products very close to their scheduled launch dates.

But momentum around the tablet has been building solidly. And Apple has refreshed its iPhone, iPod and computer lines within the last year, another indication that the January announcement will be for a new product.

FT.com | Tech Blog | Exclusive: Apple to host event in January

2010: The Year of the Tablet - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

See the full article for more observations and speculation

A former Apple employee, whose name appears on numerous Apple patents, worked on an Apple tablet five years ago and recently told me when the first version of the tablet was shelved by Steve Jobs, a lot of the technology made it into other devices. He explained that components of these early stage concepts are already out in the marketplace. If you have an iPhone, for example, you’re carrying around a mini version of an early Apple tablet. He also says that one of the barriers to producing the early tablets was the lack of software. The success of the App Store and the eagerness of the publishers show that this won’t be a problem for any new devices.

2010: The Year of the Tablet - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

Tablet hint? Apple developers supersizing apps for January event | Crave - CNET

Hmm…

The Apple tablet is threatening to approach Yeti status, but here's an indication that it will turn out to be real: the company has told some of its key developers to prepare versions of their iPhone apps that will work on a device with a larger screen, in time for an event next month.

Add that to the news that Apple has reportedly booked the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco "for several days in late January," according to the Financial Times, and it's pretty easy to connect the dots. It's a very good bet we're getting a look at this thing within the next 30 days or so.

Tablet hint? Apple developers supersizing apps for January event | Crave - CNET

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Climate Change: A Consensus Among Scientists? | Information Is Beautiful

Think about it…

Climate Change: A Consensus Among Scientists? 

Climate Change: A Consensus Among Scientists? | Information Is Beautiful

As attacks increase, U.S. struggles to recruit computer security experts - washingtonpost.com

A stark reality check 

The federal government is struggling to fill a growing demand for skilled computer-security workers, from technicians to policymakers, at a time when network attacks are rising in frequency and sophistication.

Demand is so intense that it has sparked a bidding war among agencies and contractors for a small pool of special talent: skilled technicians with security clearances. Their scarcity is driving up salaries, depriving agencies of skills, and in some cases affecting project quality, industry officials said.

As attacks increase, U.S. struggles to recruit computer security experts - washingtonpost.com

On Web, Workshops to Create One-of-a-Kind Gifts - NYTimes.com

A different kind of “mass customization”

Searching for meaning beyond a price tag, more holiday shoppers are giving custom-made gifts this year.

But adding the personal touch doesn’t mean that gift-givers have to break out the knitting needles, haul out the scrapbook supplies or fire up the oven and start baking. A host of Web sites with names like Zazzle, Blurb and TasteBook are helping people quickly create one-of-a-kind products like clothing, books and jewelry. In some cases, making a custom gift can be as easy as uploading a photo or clicking a mouse. In others, the e-commerce tools shorten what would normally have taken hours of work.

On Web, Workshops to Create One-of-a-Kind Gifts - NYTimes.com

Cable Providers Move to Counter Apple’s TV Venture - Digits - WSJ

Think different…

“If Disney and CBS believe this is the model to embrace, it’s worth pondering whether they’ll embrace that for all distributors,” said Melinda Witmer, Time Warner Cable’s chief programming officer.

The Time Warner Cable comments underscore how much Apple’s possible subscription service threatens to fray the television ecosystem. TV companies make money by selling bundles of channels to Time Warner Cable, Comcast Corp., DirecTV Group Inc. and other distributors through which roughly nine out of ten American households watch TV.

Cable Providers Move to Counter Apple’s TV Venture - Digits - WSJ

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Google's 'Open' definition: Simply brilliant business, but is it evil? | Betanews

A timely reality check from Joe Wilcox; read the full post 

My decade 2010 prediction: Unchecked, Google's open approach and free business model will eventually disrupt most businesses that produce information. The news business is being disrupted now. Google will disrupt software products or Internet services, too. The RIAA, Hollywood studios and stock image companies should watch their backs for a Google knife. Google's power isn't so much the open philosophy as the free business model it empowers. Bill Gates asked the right question 33 years ago: "Who can afford to do professional work for nothing?" It's the question everyone should ask as Google's free business model expands.

Is this evil? If your worldview is in line with Gates' -- that he or she who creates something should own it and profit from it -- the answer is likely "Yes." Perhaps it is not, if your worldview is that all things -- all information -- belong to everyone.

Google's 'Open' definition: Simply brilliant business, but is it evil? | Betanews

For Google, The Meaning Of Open Is When It’s Convenient For Them

Check the full post for more details.   I think it’s actually more like “when it’s convenient for them” and inconvenient for Microsoft.

Google is only open when it is convenient for them. Google will never open up the source code to its search algorithms or its advertising system, or share the core data which gives it a competitive advantage in those areas because that is where it makes all of its money.

For Google, The Meaning Of Open Is When It’s Convenient For Them

Kindle for BlackBerry

I suppose this was inevitable, especially since Jeff Bezos is a Blackberry fan (via I Love My Kindle)…

image 

Kindle for BlackBerry

Time Your Attack: Oracle’s Lost Revolution | Magazine

A very timely reality check from Wired – read the full article 

Immediately after the Windows 95 launch, Ellison called one of his lieutenants, Farzad Dibachi, to his mansion in Atherton, California. For years, Dibachi — who was responsible for brainstorming new business strategies — had urged Ellison to think more broadly about his company’s potential. Now, the two discussed a vision for Oracle that would neutralize Microsoft’s main advantage: the dominance of its operating system. They imagined a simple machine that would eschew software installed on a hard drive in favor of accessing applications online. Data — videos, documents, pictures — would be stored in Oracle databases instead of on the computer itself. In place of a robust operating system, this machine would work with programs and files through browsers like Netscape Navigator. Ellison liked the idea, and he and Dibachi started working on a speech so the CEO could share it with the world. The device would be called the network computer.

An interesting comment from David Roux:

“Ellison is often time-dyslexic — right about the fundamental trend but wrong on timing, ” says David Roux, a partner at private equity firm Silver Lake and a former Oracle executive vice president. “It’s hard to look at a $299 netbook and not see the NC vision come to life.”

Time Your Attack: Oracle’s Lost Revolution | Magazine

The Customer Is Always Right: Jeff Bezos - washingtonpost.com

Fake Steve, in his day job, interviews Jeff Bezos 

LYONS: Have you been surprised by the Kindle's success?

BEZOS: Astonished. Two years ago, none of us expected what has happened so far. It is [our] No. 1 bestselling product. It's the No. 1 most-wished-for product as meas­ured by people putting it on their wish list. It's the No. 1 most-gifted item on Amazon. And I'm not just talking in electronics--that's true across all product categories. We've spent years working on our physical books business, and today, for titles that have a Kindle edition, Kindle book sales are 48 percent of the physical sales. That's up from 35 percent in May. The business is growing very quickly. This is not just a business for us. There is missionary zeal. We feel like Kindle is bigger than we are.

[…]

LYONS: So an Apple tablet would be a companion to the Kindle?

BEZOS: Absolutely. We've got Kindle for PC. And we're working on Kindle for the Mac. Our vision is that we want you to be able to read Kindle books wherever you want to read your Kindle books.

LYONS: Ultimately do you not even care about selling the physical Kindle itself?

BEZOS: No, we do care. Our goal with the Kindle device is separate from the Kindle bookstore. With the Kindle bookstore, wherever you want to read we're going to support you. And then for the Kindle device, we want that to be the world's best purpose-built reading device.

The Customer Is Always Right: Jeff Bezos - washingtonpost.com

BBC News - Trust gives green light to net TV

Meanwhile, outside the Apple galaxy; see this companion article for more details

Project Canvas is a partnership between the BBC, ITV, BT, Five, Channel 4 and TalkTalk to develop a so-called Internet Protocol Television standard.

It would see a range of set-top boxes available to access on-demand TV services such as iPlayer and ITVplayer.

BBC News - Trust gives green light to net TV

FT.com / Technology - Store set to be apple of master’s eye

A timely iTunes snapshot

There is a certain irony in Apple benefiting so much from what was essentially a missed business opportunity a decade ago. After sitting out the digital music explosion begun in 1999 by Napster and pirates everywhere, Apple decided it was better to be late at the party than not show up at all and introduced the iPod MP3 player in 2001.

Many thought the iPod was the best portable music player on the market and it sold well, helped by free jukebox software called iTunes. But the real breakthrough came two years later, when Apple introduced the iTunes Music Store, offering the first wide selection of digitised major-label songs for just 99 cents a song.

Best of all, from Apple’s perspective, was that the store kept iPod users coming back again and again. The iTunes store was a service, consumers became accustomed to using it frequently, and it kept on selling almost free intangible goods cheaply.

These were all traits which prefigured the App store.

 

image

FT.com / Technology - Store set to be apple of master’s eye

Who Walked, Google or Yelp? - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

Big stakes poker

It seems apparent, based on conversations with multiple sources, that after the two sides tentatively agreed on a deal, Yelp came back to Google saying it had received a higher offer from another party. Why Yelp didn’t take that offer, which the sources said was in the vicinity of $750 million, is a bit of a mystery. The people who said Yelp walked away from the deal implied that there wasn’t a good fit with the other company. However, as Anthony Alfonso, president of Trenwith Valuation, told Claire Cain Miller, some of Yelp’s actions may have been an exercise in brinkmanship.

Who Walked, Google or Yelp? - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

The Science of Managing Search Ads - NYTimes.com

A timely snapshot

For most people, Google and other search engines are essential tools to navigate the Web. But the workings of the text ads, the blurbs that peddle goods and services on the search results pages, are largely hidden from Web users.

For more than one million businesses, Google’s search advertising system is like a hose inundating Web sites with traffic. Managing it effectively, though, is as much art as it is science. It requires a mix of analytics and gamesmanship, a combination of skills that has become vitally important in the Internet age.

The Science of Managing Search Ads - NYTimes.com

A Proposal From Apple to Offer Online TV Subscriptions Stirs Network Interest - NYTimes.com

Somehow I suspect AT&T Wireless isn’t thrilled to see this

Apple is eliciting tentative interest from some networks in its proposal to offer a TV subscription package via the Internet.

Theoretically, customers would be able to tune in online, allowing them to cancel their cable or satellite subscriptions.

ABC and CBS are among the networks that are considering joining the Apple venture, people close to the talks said Monday night

A Proposal From Apple to Offer Online TV Subscriptions Stirs Network Interest - NYTimes.com

Monday, December 21, 2009

Newspapers and technology: Network effects | The Economist

Another timely reality check from The Economist 

The internet may kill newspapers; but it is not clear if that matters. For society, what matters is that people should have access to news, not that it should be delivered through any particular medium; and, for the consumer, the faster it travels, the better. The telegraph hastened the speed at which news was disseminated. So does the internet. Those in the news business use the new technology at every stage of newsgathering and distribution. A move to electronic distribution—through PCs, mobile phones and e-readers—has started. It seems likely only to accelerate.

The trouble is that nobody knows how to make money in the new environment. That raises questions about how much news will be gathered. But there is no sign of falling demand for news, and technology has cut the cost of collecting and distributing it, so the supply is likely to increase. The internet is shaking up the news business, as the telegraph did; in the same way, mankind will be better informed about his fellow humans than before. If paper editions die, then Bennett’s prediction that communications technology would be the death of newspapers will be belatedly proved right. But that is not the same as the death of news.

Newspapers and technology: Network effects | The Economist

Facebook Moves to Standardize and Own Customer IDs - BusinessWeek

Check the full article for more on Facebook’s identity services aspirations

To help Facebook establish ID standards that are even more universally accepted, the social network in August hired engineer David Recordon, co-founder of OpenID, a nonprofit foundation that maintains a set of open standards for Web identity. "Standards are the plumbing layer of the Internet," says Recordon, 23. "In order for them to be successful they have to be freely shared." OpenID was created in 2005 as a way to let people use a single name and password when they leave comments on multiple blogs, and it's currently offered by major Web sites, including Google (GOOG), AOL, NewsCorp.'s (NWS) MySpace, and even Facebook. Yet it's still not widely used, in part because of Facebook's easier-to-use system. "The open community has not met the challenge to provide a better alternative to Facebook Connect," says Chris Messina, an OpenID board member.

Facebook Moves to Standardize and Own Customer IDs - BusinessWeek

Ford to Enable WiFi Hotspots in Some Cars: BoomTown Rejoices | Kara Swisher | BoomTown | AllThingsD

Have you surfed in a Ford lately?  See the full post for more details

While there are a lot of in-car wireless solutions, this one seems as if it is one of the easier ones, allowing you to use any USB modem to connect to the automobile, which then provides access to anyone in it with a password (yes, you can stop that snotty BMW next to you in traffic on 101 to stop stealing your signal).

Ford’s SYNC cars are a lot like many other digitally souped up ones, with lots of data, voice-operated info and hands-free calling, but this is a welcome new innovation.

Ford to Enable WiFi Hotspots in Some Cars: BoomTown Rejoices | Kara Swisher | BoomTown | AllThingsD

Open house? Google has also been eying Trulia | Digital Media - CNET News

Google and/or Google-tracking press/blogosphere in overdrive…

According to sources close to the situation, along with its pending bid for Yelp, Google has been in on-again, off-again acquisition talks with Trulia, the real-estate search engine.

It is unclear what price Google would pay, but sources estimate that Trulia's valuation ranges between $150 million and $200 million, although there could be a big premium on that.

Rumors about Google's interest in the real-estate search market--and specifically in Trulia--have been rebounding around Silicon Valley for the last year.

Open house? Google has also been eying Trulia | Digital Media - CNET News

Driven to Distraction, Some Teenagers Unfriend Facebook - NYTimes.com

Sign of the times

The two are among the many teenagers, especially girls, who are recognizing the huge distraction Facebook presents — the hours it consumes every day, to say nothing of the toll it takes during finals and college applications, according to parents, teachers and the students themselves.

Some teenagers, like Monica and Halley, form a support group to enforce their Facebook hiatus. Others deactivate their accounts. Still others ask someone they trust to change their password and keep control of it until they feel ready to have it back.

[…]

On the other hand…

In October, Facebook reached 54.7 percent of people in the United States ages 12 to 17, up from 28.3 percent in October last year, according to the Nielsen Company, the market research firm.

Driven to Distraction, Some Teenagers Unfriend Facebook - NYTimes.com

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Google To Acquire DocVerse; Office War Heats Up

Busy times in the Googleplex…

Google, which is currently on one heck of a spending spree, is closing an acquisition of San Francisco based DocVerse, a service that lets users collaborate around Microsoft Office documents, we’ve heard from a source with knowledge of the deal. The purchase price is supposed to be around $25 million.

Google To Acquire DocVerse; Office War Heats Up

Ping - Google Goggles, Searching by Image Alone - NYTimes.com

A Google Goggles snapshot

It’s not hard to imagine a slew of commercial applications for this technology. You could compare prices of a product online, learn how to operate that old water heater whose manual you have lost or find out about the environmental record of a certain brand of tuna. But Goggles and similar products could also tell the history of a building, help travelers get around in a foreign country or even help blind people navigate their surroundings.

It is also easy to think of scarier possibilities down the line. Google’s goal to recognize every image, of course, includes identifying people. Computer scientists say that it is much harder to identify faces than objects, but with the technology and computing power improving rapidly, improved facial recognition may not be far off.

Ping - Google Goggles, Searching by Image Alone - NYTimes.com

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Watch out, Amazon.com? Google Editions stocking up now for 2010 consumer debut | TeleRead: Bring the E-Books Home

Sign of the times – apparently Google is poised to save everyone from evil and monopolistic Amazon.com.  Of course, other traditional publishers and retailers may have to be sacrificed along the way, but such is the price of progress…

So much for e-books in the “clouds.” It’ll still happen at Google. But a new service called Google Editions will do an Amazon.com, sort of—and sell e-book files rather than just let you read public domain books or preview commercial ones online.

The link contains info for authors and publishers interested in offering their books this service within Google Book Search. News about Google Editions has already made the press, but it’s good to see Editions cranking up to balance out Amazon.com’s Kindle-based dominance of the e-book retail scene.

Watch out, Amazon.com? Google Editions stocking up now for 2010 consumer debut | TeleRead: Bring the E-Books Home

10 Reasons Why Google Will Never Release a Netbook - IT Infrastructure from eWeek

Sure, just like Google would never be willing to risk the potential partner-oriented opportunity costs in releasing its own browser, client operating system, voice service, social software services, music service, dictionary, hypertext encyclopedia…

Rumors are starting to swirl around the Web to the effect that Google might be planning to make a netbook. The idea is simple: By offering a netbook, Google can get its software out to those who want it, while taking in some of the revenue that it would otherwise lose by partnering with third-party vendors. At first glance, it might make some sense. After all, why would Google want to leave what could be major cash on the table?

But a more thorough analysis of the market reveals that Google will never release a netbook. If Google is to be successful with Chrome OS, it will need to work well with third-party vendors. And it certainly can't step on any toes as it attempts to increase the popularity of its online operating system. The company simply can't afford to offer a netbook.

10 Reasons Why Google Will Never Release a Netbook - IT Infrastructure from eWeek

Paris Court Rules Against Google in Copyright Case - NYTimes.com

How the French saved civilization?…

The court in Paris ruled against Google after a publishing group, La Martinière, backed by publishers and authors, argued that the industry was being exploited by Google’s Book Search program, which was started in 2005.

The court ordered Google to pay over 300,000 euros, or $430,000, in damages and interest and to stop digital reproduction of the material. The company was also ordered to pay 10,000 euros a day in fines until it removed extracts of some French books from its online database.

Paris Court Rules Against Google in Copyright Case - NYTimes.com

Major Online Attack on Twitter Is 3rd This Year - NYTimes.com

Hmm…

No user information appears to have been stolen in the attack. But the security breach — the third major one at Twitter this year — underscores the continuing weakness of the company’s systems as its micro-blogging service is becoming more important to business and even global politics.

The incident also highlights a basic vulnerability in the way life is lived as it becomes increasingly digital: With so much vital information stored on the Web, people are only as safe as their passwords.

Major Online Attack on Twitter Is 3rd This Year - NYTimes.com

Friday, December 18, 2009

Twitter briefly blocked by hackers - Yahoo! News

Sign of the times

Hackers briefly blocked access to the popular Internet messaging service Twitter, steering traffic to another Web site where a group reportedly calling itself the "Iranian Cyber Army" claimed responsibility.

[…]

Twitter later Friday posted a message on its blog that said its Domain Name Systems' records "were temporarily compromised but have now been fixed." The site says it will update with more details "once we've investigated more fully."

Twitter briefly blocked by hackers - Yahoo! News

Oracle: Delivers strong quarter; Outlines plans for Sun | Between the Lines | ZDNet.com

More Oracle/Sun details – again suggesting Oracle wants to become the Apple of enterprise infrastructure

CEO Larry Ellison spent his time on the conference call talking about Sun. He added that he expects Sun to improve market share and margins when the deal closes. That would be a good move considering Sun is being targeted by IBM and HP and losing share.

Ellison also gave some insight to his Sun strategy. In a nutshell, he’s staying out of the high-volume, low margin game that IBM and HP play. Simply put, Ellison is taking Sun upmarket with hardware-software devices like the Exadata database machine. Exadata has been a hit, said Oracle executives, who noted that orders have tripled sequentially and the biggest problem right now is manufacturing enough systems.

The future of Sun will rest with high-value systems, said Ellison, who added the computer industry is focused on selling components instead of complete packages. Ellison, who is modeling Oracle-Sun after T.J. Watson’s IBM, added that Exadata can be a multi-billion-dollar business “not including maintenance.”

Oracle: Delivers strong quarter; Outlines plans for Sun | Between the Lines | ZDNet.com

FT.com / Media - Sony pushes content deals to win e-reader race

Sony’s bold spin on the latest e-reader news

Sony on Thursday vowed to win the e-reader device wars by offering content owners a better deal than Amazon’s Kindle.

“We’ll win the hardware war,” Sir Howard Stringer, Sony’s chairman and chief executive, told the Financial Times on the fringes of an event to unveil the first in a series of publisher partnerships. “Hardware is our stock-in-trade.”

“We feel we’re riding to the rescue of all of you,” he told reporters as Sony announced an agreement to carry content from three News Corp-owned news brands on its Reader devices.

FT.com / Media - Sony pushes content deals to win e-reader race

Oracle’s Profit Rises More Strongly Than Forecast - NYTimes.com

Santa comes early to Redwood Shores…

The Oracle Corporation said Thursday that its profit jumped 12.5 percent in the latest quarter and that it expected the European Union to approve its $7.4 billion purchase of Sun Microsystems next month.

Oracle and Sun shares both rose in extended trading.

Oracle’s Profit Rises More Strongly Than Forecast - NYTimes.com

Google Is in Talks to Buy Yelp - NYTimes.com

Interesting times

In a sign that Google is interested in broadening its reach among local businesses, the search giant is in acquisition talks with Yelp, the review site for local businesses, according to three people with knowledge of the deal.

The two companies have had conversations for several years, but a more serious round of acquisition talks began two months ago, one of the people said late Thursday. The companies have discussed a price and are negotiating the details, but have not yet signed an agreement.

Google Is in Talks to Buy Yelp - NYTimes.com

Sony E-Reader to Offer Journal Subscriptions - WSJ.com

Here’s an interesting case study in journalistic integrity (or lack thereof, perhaps) – the WSJ attempting to write objectively about its parent company’s difficult choices

Sony Corp. said it will offer subscriptions to The Wall Street Journal and the New York Post on a new version of its electronic reader, the latest in a series of moves by publishers and consumer-electronics makers to loosen Amazon.com Inc.'s hold on the fledgling e-reader market.

Sony said Thursday it will sell subscriptions to the digital edition of the Journal, as well as a daily news summary available only on the Sony device. It also said users will be able to subscribe to a daily summary of news and columns from MarketWatch.com, which like the Journal is owned by News Corp.

Sony E-Reader to Offer Journal Subscriptions - WSJ.com

2 newspapers offer Sony e-reader deals - The Boston Globe

Rupert Murdoch places another bold bet

The Wall Street Journal and the New York Post are offering exclusive subscription deals through the latest electronic reader from Sony Corp.

Sony’s new Reader Daily Edition, which sells for about $400, will be the only e-reader that carries the Post. Readers will have to pay $9.99 a month. And the Journal, which is available for $14.99 a month as it is on Amazon.com Inc.’s Kindle device, will have an optional aftermarket update for Sony subscribers for $5 more.

2 newspapers offer Sony e-reader deals - The Boston Globe

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Mobile Phones Become Boon to Holiday Shopping - NYTimes.com

Check the full article for some state-of-the-shopping-art examples, and ponder these market dynamics in the Google Nexus One context; it’s all intertwingled

One in five shoppers said they intended to use their cellphones to shop for the holidays, according to an annual survey by Deloitte, the accounting and consulting firm. Of those, 45 percent said they would use their phone to research prices, 32 percent said they would use it to find coupons or read reviews and 25 percent said they would make purchases from their phones.

“We are at the cusp of this technology really driving a lot of activity during the shopping season,” said Stacy Janiak, United States retail practice leader at Deloitte. “It is both an opportunity and a challenge for a retailer, because you can have a consumer who can cross-shop your store with other bricks-and-mortar stores or online, all from the convenience of your aisle.”

Mobile Phones Become Boon to Holiday Shopping - NYTimes.com

Amazon.com Bestsellers: The most popular items in Kindle Store. Updated hourly.

I decided to check the Kindle bestsellers after running across a post about Kindle items on sale for $.01; at the moment, 15 of the top 20 best-selling Kindle items on Amazon.com are free. Hmm…

Amazon.com Bestsellers: The most popular items in Kindle Store. Updated hourly.

The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs : Another brief chat with Randall Stephenson#more-15906

This is easily the most target-rich topic zone to date, for Fake Steve; read the full post (but do it someplace where laughing out loud won’t cause disruption…)

This time he [AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson] put the call through himself, on his own, and the first thing he said when I picked up was, “Buddy, are you out of your goddamn mind?” I was like, Dude, I’ve got a bionic liver and I’ve been using psychedelic drugs on a regular basis since the early 1970s. Of course I’m out of my goddamn mind. I’m crazy as a loon. He started shouting, but just then — I’m not kidding — the call got dropped, because, see, I was on my goddamn iPhone and the damn thing can’t hold on to a call in downtown Palo Alto.

The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs : Another brief chat with Randall Stephenson#more-15906

Will Google's Nexus One phone be subsidized by advertising? | ITworld

Some intriguing analysis (via The Raw Feed).  Tangentially, I’m surprised none of the Nexus One coverage I’ve seen thus far has mentioned variables such as Google’s mysterious fiber network and its wifi endeavors, and the possibility that Google might eventually seek to completely circumvent the wide-area wireless carriers. 

It could then partner with carriers to offer the phone for free — half the price paid by the carrier, and half by Google.

Free is a very popular price. This would benefit the Android ecosystem by radically ramping up Android market share, which would provide an incentive for developers to write apps for it, which would incentivize handset makers to create phones.

What this means, by the way, is that the Nexus One wouldn't compete with the iPhone at all — or any other high-end handset. An advertising supported Android phone would be a high-end phone for a low-end crowd — a discount smart phone.

The phone wouldn't appeal to the fancy phone snobs, because the advertising would be locked down, and forced upon the user.

So my radical proposal is that Google isn't doing anything radical. They're doing what they always do: Selling advertising and growing market share by giving away free what others are selling.

Will Google's Nexus One phone be subsidized by advertising? | ITworld

Platformonomics - It’s Microzilla Time

A timely reality check from Charles Fitzgerald; read the full post 

In yet another eerie Richard Nixon parallel, Microsoft has a history of surprise rapprochements with once bitter foes (Apple, Novell, Sun, arguably China and they’ll probably end up bailing IBM out one of these days…).  Why not add Mozilla to the list?  It not only costs little to let the wookie win, but it helps on multiple fronts of the new competitive landscape.  And maybe more importantly, is a powerful demonstration to the world just how much that landscape has shifted, all to Microsoft’s advantage amidst its metamorphosis from Evil Empire to benign-by-comparison former Evil Empire.

Platformonomics - It’s Microzilla Time

Twitter / John Rymer: Big concerns expressed on ... [IBM + Lombardi]

A succinct snapshot from Forrester’s John Rymer

Big concerns expressed on #BPM call about complexity of IBM's several BPM products -- Lombardi, FileNet, WebSphere Process Server, Webify.

Twitter / John Rymer: Big concerns expressed on ...

Stephen's Lighthouse: Evolution of Reading

A useful graphic (via Dave Kellogg)

It doesn't show the overall increases reading but it does show the changes in the mix.

500x_evolutionofreading.jpg

From the UC-San Diego study "How Much Information?"

Stephen's Lighthouse: Evolution of Reading

The Times and Bit.ly Roll Out ‘nyti.ms’ Short Links - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

Interesting times… (er, nyti.ms…)

Eagle-eyed fans of Twitter and The New York Times may have noticed a change in the Web addresses used to share some articles from The Times’s Web site on Twitter. Beginning Wednesday, the links are compressed into a custom New York Times URL that begins with “nyti.ms.”

The customized links are powered by Bit.ly, a New York-based start-up that has become the de facto service for trimming unwieldy Web addresses into bite-sized, easily shareable links.

The Times and Bit.ly Roll Out ‘nyti.ms’ Short Links - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

IBM closes lackluster M&A year with buying spree | Software, Interrupted - CNET News

A recap of key IBM Software Group acquisitions for 2009

IBM decided to close 2009 with a bang by acquiring Lombardi, a privately held provider of business process management (BPM) software. Big Blue racked up a number of acquisitions this year including: data discovery software firm Exeros, database security firm Guardium, security provider Ounce Labs, and analytics provider SPSS.

Lombardi marks IBM's 90th acquisition since 2003.

IBM closes lackluster M&A year with buying spree | Software, Interrupted - CNET News

Ford Seeks iPhone-Like Apps for Its Cars - WSJ.com

Sign of the times

Ford Motor Co. is working to offer drivers a way to upgrade the electronics in their vehicles, much the same way they can add applications to their iPhones and BlackBerrys.

The car maker hopes to persuade software developers to tap the Internet service, GPS location-finding capability and digital-music setup already found in its Sync entertainment-and-communications system, which it developed with Microsoft Corp.

Such applications, or "apps," might do such things as give directions to every espresso shop along a highway open after 9 p.m., or allow friends to follow one another to a location through a GPS process called "breadcrumbing."

Ford Seeks iPhone-Like Apps for Its Cars - WSJ.com

Insurgents Hack U.S. Drones - WSJ.com

Disconcerting in many ways…

Militants in Iraq have used $26 off-the-shelf software to intercept live video feeds from U.S. Predator drones, potentially providing them with information they need to evade or monitor U.S. military operations.

Senior defense and intelligence officials said Iranian-backed insurgents intercepted the video feeds by taking advantage of an unprotected communications link in some of the remotely flown planes' systems. Shiite fighters in Iraq used software programs such as SkyGrabber -- available for as little as $25.95 on the Internet -- to regularly capture drone video feeds, according to a person familiar with reports on the matter.

[…]

The potential drone vulnerability lies in an unencrypted downlink between the unmanned craft and ground control. The U.S. government has known about the flaw since the U.S. campaign in Bosnia in the 1990s, current and former officials said. But the Pentagon assumed local adversaries wouldn't know how to exploit it, the officials said.

Insurgents Hack U.S. Drones - WSJ.com

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Get the Most Out of Google Voice - Wired How-To Wiki

Some tips on one of Google’s other disrupt-telephony offerings (see the full post for some interesting tips)

There are also some things your can do with Google Voice that might not be apparent at first glance, but can make the service even more powerful.

After trying Google Voice's speech-to-text translation service for "This page is a wiki article. Feel free to edit it now," I got the following translation: "MySpace oracle reset. Is it now?" Is it the result of my mumbling, or is Google Voice just another tech pundit?

Get the Most Out of Google Voice - Wired How-To Wiki