Sunday, December 30, 2012

iOS Apps From Google and Others Improve on Apple Defaults - Liz Gannes - Mobile - AllThingsD

Excerpt from a timely Apple/Google app reality check
"But what’s going on here is bigger than Google just devoting design and programming resources to make nice alternatives for users who prefer a competitor’s platform.
The reason these apps are so useful to me is because I’m already so invested in the Google platform as a longtime user. The apps remember my history and my most recent state, so they can sync from one place to the other. If I use Google apps, I spend less time retyping the same information on a smaller screen, which makes me safer and less annoyed.
So, in a way, it’s really more about Google being cross-platform than making something nice for iOS. The reality is, the iPhone is just one device I might pick up throughout the day."
iOS Apps From Google and Others Improve on Apple Defaults - Liz Gannes - Mobile - AllThingsD

Big Data Is Great, but Don’t Forget Intuition - NYTimes.com

Big opportunities
"Indeed, Big Data does seem to be facing a work-force bottleneck.
“We can’t grow the skills fast enough,” says Ms. Perlich, who formerly worked for I.B.M. Watson Labs and is an adjunct professor at the Stern School of Business at New York University.
A report last year by the McKinsey Global Institute, the research arm of the consulting firm, projected that the United States needed 140,000 to 190,000 more workers with “deep analytical” expertise and 1.5 million more data-literate managers, whether retrained or hired."
Big Data Is Great, but Don’t Forget Intuition - NYTimes.com

Thursday, December 27, 2012

One In Four Americans Owns A Tablet, Overtaking E-Readers, As Printed Book Consumption Continues To Decline: Pew | TechCrunch

Impressive stats
"According to Pew’s ongoing Internet & American Life survey, 25% of respondents — one in every four — now owns a tablet; while e-reader ownership is now at 19%. Biggest of all is the fact that now one in every three people owns some kind of device — tablet, e-reader or both — for e-reading. That’s more than a twofold rise for tablets over December 2011, when tablets and e-readers were level, with 10% of surveyed respondents said they owned one or the other. This most recent survey dates from November 2012 — meaning that the proportion is likely to rise even further after holiday sales shopping is taken into account."
One In Four Americans Owns A Tablet, Overtaking E-Readers, As Printed Book Consumption Continues To Decline: Pew | TechCrunch

Feds Requiring 'Black Boxes' in All Motor Vehicles | Threat Level | Wired.com

See the full article for related links, should you wish to object
"How the government finalizes rules about the black boxes might set scary precedent for other technologies, according to Jay Stanley, an American Civil Liberties Union policy analyst.
“Will devices serve the consumer/owner, or some other powerful interest such as the government or big companies?” he asked. “We don’t want to drift into a world in which our own possessions are riddled with computer chips acting in the interests of others — watching us, controlling us, and possibly snitching on us.”"
Feds Requiring 'Black Boxes' in All Motor Vehicles | Threat Level | Wired.com

Nokia's Lumia Offered at Discounts - WSJ.com

A good time to buy, if you're interested in a Nokia Windows Phone
"The 920 is still available directly through AT&T for the original $99 price, but it can be had at Amazon.com for $39 to buyers willing to take on an AT&T contract. Verizon's 822, meanwhile, is free with a contract.
T-Mobile USA Inc., which sells the Lumia 810, is also giving the phone away to buyers willing to take on a contract."
Nokia's Lumia Offered at Discounts - WSJ.com

Latest Netflix Disruption Highlights Challenges of Cloud Computing - NYTimes.com

Not a merry Christmas for Amazon (or its AWS customers)
"Social networks filled with complaints. Some customers also complained that Amazon’s own streaming service, Amazon Prime, was down. Amazon said it had fixed the problem completely by the afternoon of Christmas Day, and Netflix said it had restored its services to most of the affected consumers by late Christmas Eve. But the episode highlighted how consumers are increasingly using “the cloud.”"
Latest Netflix Disruption Highlights Challenges of Cloud Computing - NYTimes.com

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Twitter Is Already Winning The Social TV War, But It Will Soon Do More | TechCrunch

"Social TV" seems oxymoronic to me
"We’re already seeing the early signs of a shakeout in the social TV marketplace, as startups are being acquired or silently disappearing from the scene. Not too long ago, Socialguide was acquired by Nielsen. And last month, Viggle and GetGlue announced plans to merge (although those plans are contingent on Viggle securing more financing). At the same time, other competitors — like, for instance, Miso — are pivoting to try new things or moving into adjacent markets.
Much of the reason these new, TV-centric social networks are failing to catch on is that there’s already a place where people share their feelings about what’s on TV: Twitter. And while Twitter hasn’t been terribly aggressive thus far in taking advantage of that, you can expect to see it do more over the coming year."
Twitter Is Already Winning The Social TV War, But It Will Soon Do More | TechCrunch

Google's music matching reportedly replacing explicit songs with clean versions | The Verge

Growing pains
"Oddly enough, other people are seeing the exact opposite scenario: clean content is instead being swapped with the original, explicit source material in the cloud — a potential concern for parents. If this problem sounds familiar, that's because Apple experienced precisely the same issue soon after it debuted iTunes Match."
Google's music matching reportedly replacing explicit songs with clean versions | The Verge

The Future of LinkedIn and the Economic Graph | LinkedIn

Excerpt from a LinkedIn vision overview from LinkedIn CEO Jeff Weiner
"Our current long-term vision at LinkedIn is to extend this professional graph into an economic graph by digitally manifesting every economic opportunity in the world (full-time and temporary); the skills required to obtain those opportunities; the profiles for every company in the world offering those opportunities; the professional profiles for every one of the roughly 3.3 billion people in the global workforce; and subsequently overlay the professional knowledge of those individuals and companies onto the graph.
Once realized, we then want to get out of the way and allow all of the nodes on this network to connect seamlessly by removing as much friction as possible and allowing all forms of capital, e.g. working capital, intellectual capital, and human capital, to flow to where it can best be leveraged. In doing so, we believe we'll be able to help lift the global economy."
The Future of LinkedIn and the Economic Graph | LinkedIn

Tuesday, December 25, 2012

Google's Amit Singh: We want to poach 90 percent of Microsoft's enterprise users - Puget Sound Business Journal

Big Google enterprise plans for 2013; also see Google Moves Onto Microsoft’s Turf in Business Software (NYT)
"Amit Singh, a Google VP and head of its enterprise unit, spoke with AllThingsD about the company's efforts to beef up its cloud business tools to go after Microsoft users, many of whom Singh thinks don't need everything Office offers.
"Our goal is to get to the 90 percent of users who don’t need to have the most advanced features of Office," Singh said."
Google's Amit Singh: We want to poach 90 percent of Microsoft's enterprise users - Puget Sound Business Journal:

Monday, December 24, 2012

All the World’s a Game, and Business Is a Player - NYTimes.com

Win virtual badges for agreeing to have all of your activity micro-instrumented
"If this made-up award makes you feel good about yourself, then you are on your way to understanding gamification, a business trend — some would say fad — that aims to infuse otherwise mundane activities with the excitement and instant feedback of video games.
Many businesses are using these game tricks to try to get people hooked on their products and services — and it is working, thanks to smartphones and the Internet."
All the World’s a Game, and Business Is a Player - NYTimes.com

E-Book Price War Has Yet to Arrive - NYTimes.com

A paradox of abundance (especially when Kindle samples are included)
"Mr. Norris said Simba, which regularly surveys e-book buyers, has been noticing what it calls “commitment to content” issues.
“A lot of these e-book consumers aren’t behaving like lab rats at a feeder bar,” the analyst said. “We have found that at any given time about a third of e-book users haven’t bought a single title in the last 12 months. I have a feeling it is the digital equivalent of the ‘overloaded night stand’ effect; someone isn’t going to buy any more books until they make a dent in reading the ones they have already acquired.”"
E-Book Price War Has Yet to Arrive - NYTimes.com

Sunday, December 23, 2012

10 Energy Numbers To Remember From 2012 | ThinkProgress

Check the full post for some additional (encouraging and discouraging) energy trends
“A study by Opower in September revealed that charging the iPhone 5 costs just $0.41 per year, and charging the Droid Galaxy SIII costs just $0.53.
The collective energy demand of all those phones is nothing to sneeze at, but in the bigger picture, a global increase in smartphone usage is likely to cause lower overall energy consumption…
How so? Many consumers now use their smartphones to do things (e.g. internet, media, games) that they used to do on bigger, energy-hogging devices (e.g. computers, televisions, and game consoles).”

Source: Opower (September 2012)
10 Energy Numbers To Remember From 2012 | ThinkProgress

Prediction: Google will rename its giant Motorola division Nexus. | brian s hall

Excerpt from some Motorola musings; I suspect Google will retain its current Nexus business model, however, with which it can pick from the best devices from multiple Android hardware vendors and Nexus-brand them for a product cycle, as it currently does with Nexus 4 (LG), Nexus 7 (ASUS), and Nexus 10 (Samsung).  Double-bonus for Google if the former Motorola Mobility design team can create winning devices for one or more product categories, but I don’t expect Google to place an all-or-nothing bet on its Motorola team.

“In my 2013 Smartphone Wars predictions column for Unwired View, #1 read simply and succinctly:

Google will rename its giant Motorola division Nexus.

That has not come true yet, though we haven't entered 2013. But we're getting close (to both).”

Prediction: Google will rename its giant Motorola division Nexus. | brian s hall

Nataly Kelly: Google, Kurzweil, and the Information Transformation Age [Huff Post Tech]

There may still be hope for parent/teenager communication...
"Indeed, useful is an important word to look at when trying to understand the importance of translation in Google's mission statement. What does it really mean for information to be useful to people? It means that they can understand it easily and readily, in their preferred communication styles, so that they can do something with it. The implications of this are vast and go beyond mere language translation.
One implication might be a technology that can translate from one generation to another. Or how about one that slows down your speech or turns up the volume for an elderly person with hearing loss? That enables a stroke victim to use the clarity of speech he had previously? That can filter out cultural taboos? That can automatically change the reading level to match the age or literacy level of the individual? That can convert legalese into plain language? That can pronounce using your favorite accent? That can convert academic jargon to local slang? These are just a sampling of the many ways that better language processing can change our lives in very useful ways."
Nataly Kelly: Google, Kurzweil, and the Information Transformation Age

Saturday, December 22, 2012

Google finds its design voice on iOS - The Next Web

Excerpt from a before-and-after review
"But Google doesn’t just make apps for Android and the web. It also makes them for Apple’s iOS — 25 different apps at last count. That’s more apps than Apple offers on its own store. Unfortunately, when it comes to design on the iPhone and iPad, its offerings have left a lot to be desired. That is until recently when, suddenly, its apps started getting very very good.
It all began with the release of a startlingly good iOS app for Google+. Clean, well put together on both iPhone and iPad, spare yet bold. Somehow very Google and very iOS at the same time."
Google finds its design voice on iOS - The Next Web

What Compsci textbooks don't tell you: Real world code sucks [printer-friendly] • The Register

Don't let your children grow up to be maintenance programmers...
"There’s a kind of cognitive dissonance in most people who’ve moved from the academic study of computer science to a job as a real-world software developer. The conflict lies in the fact that, whereas nearly every sample program in every textbook is a perfect and well-thought-out specimen, virtually no software out in the wild is, and this is rarely acknowledged.
To be precise: a tremendous amount of source code written for real applications is not merely less perfect than the simple examples seen in school — it’s outright terrible by any number of measures."
What Compsci textbooks don't tell you: Real world code sucks [printer-friendly] • The Register

iPhone snags its highest U.S. market share ever, says report | Apple - CNET News

Data points suggesting the conventional wisdom about Apple faltering, at least in the U.S., may be way off
"Looking at the 12 weeks ending November 25, the research firm pegged Apple's U.S. smartphone share at 53.3 percent, thanks in part to strong sales of the iPhone 5. That number was up from 35.8 percent a year prior. And it's likely to grow.
"Apple has reached a major milestone in the U.S. by passing the 50 percent share mark for the first time, with further gains expected to be made during December," Dominic Sunnebo, Kantar's global consumer insight director, said in a statement.
At the same time, Android's U.S. market share showed a drop to 41.9 percent from 52.9 percent a year prior."
iPhone snags its highest U.S. market share ever, says report | Apple - CNET News

Google Designing 'X Phone' to Rival Apple, Samsung - WSJ.com

Interesting Google/Motorola speculation
"Some Google executives have expressed fears the relationship could go sour if Samsung decided to use a "forked" version of Android, according to four people familiar with the matter. That means Samsung would create devices based on a version of Android that doesn't come with Google apps preinstalled.
Motorola is seen as a kind of insurance policy if Samsung shifts strategy, these people said, even though there is little evidence so far of such a move. Google could begin adopting an integrated approach of having its Motorola and Android units work more closely together, like Apple does with its hardware and software teams, they said.
A Samsung spokesman declined to comment."
Google Designing 'X Phone' to Rival Apple, Samsung - WSJ.com

Friday, December 21, 2012

Quora To Be Web 'Library Of Alexandria' - Business Insider

Aiming high

Quora CEO Adam D'Angelo is nothing if not ambitious.

He just announced plans to dramatically expand the site's goals beyond just asking and answering questions, declaring in a blog post that he hoped to build "an Internet-scale Library of Alexandria."”

Quora To Be Web 'Library Of Alexandria' - Business Insider

Microsoft killing off Expression suite of Web and design tools | Ars Technica

Expression Design 4 and Expression Web 4 can now be freely downloaded, but both are "end-of-lifed"
"With this move, Microsoft is essentially ending the development of any tooling that's oriented at design professionals rather than developers. In the light of the company's new, albeit uneven, emphasis on design, this is a rather surprising move to say the least. Adobe is dominant in this field, and it doesn't appear that Microsoft's products were making any real impact on the market (except perhaps for Blend). But now the company appears to no longer even be trying to court designers and have them integrate with its design ethos, such as it is."
Microsoft killing off Expression suite of Web and design tools | Ars Technica

E-Reader Market Shrinks Faster Than Many Predicted - NYTimes.com

Another unhappy dedicated "appliance" case study
"Meanwhile, e-book readers are losing momentum. This year, worldwide shipments of e-book readers will fall to 14.9 million units from 23.2 million units last year — a 36 percent drop, according to estimates by IHS iSuppli. The research firm eMarketer noted these trends in a report published on Thursday.
Forrester Research is seeing a similar trend. In the United States, manufacturers sold nine million e-book readers this year, down from 15.5 million last year, according to Sarah Rotman Epps, a Forrester analyst. Next year, the number of e-book readers sold will be 7.5 million units, and in 2014 that number will drop to 5.3 million and keep falling from there, Forrester predicts."
E-Reader Market Shrinks Faster Than Many Predicted - NYTimes.com

Salesforce May Go Shopping in Response to Oracle Deal - Arik Hesseldahl - News - AllThingsD

Advantage, Larry
"The point, Keirstead says, is that Salesforce will seek to build its own “marketing cloud” offering. Of course, Salesforce doesn’t have the financial flexibility that Oracle does. It has only $1.4 billion in combined cash and short- and long-term investments as of the close of its most recent quarter. That’s almost pocket change compared to Oracle’s $34 billion as of the quarter reported earlier this week."
Salesforce May Go Shopping in Response to Oracle Deal - Arik Hesseldahl - News - AllThingsD

IFTTT Raises $7M Led by Andreessen Horowitz - Liz Gannes - News - AllThingsD

The name originally stood for "if this then that," for simple action "recipes"
"IFTTT, the maker of handy tools that connect various Web and mobile apps together, has raised $7 million in Series A funding.
The San Francisco-based company provides connective tissue between services like Dropbox and Instagram, Twitter and Google Drive, and LinkedIn and Salesforce Chatter — and all sorts of similar combinations. Users can write rules to automatically archive their content, to receive notifications when something in particular happens or to aggregate and syndicate their own posts."
IFTTT Raises $7M Led by Andreessen Horowitz - Liz Gannes - News - AllThingsD

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Is IMS a NoSQL database? [IT-Director.com]

A timely NoSQL reality check, consistent with a quote in a recent Philip Greenspun post: "[...] 'well, it sounded really cool at first, until I realized that NoSQL is just another name for what people did before there were relational databases'."
"Frankly, this is daft. If VSAM, Adabas and IMS qualify as NoSQL databases then the term NoSQL has no useful meaning. As I have mentioned in previous articles, graph databases and triple stores are NoSQL databases. And since DB2 has a triple store, that technically makes it a NoSQL database!"
Is IMS a NoSQL database?

A better, faster travel planning experience: 2012 updates - Inside Search

An overview of Google's travel-related updates from 2012
"Google aims to help people turn their intents into actions, lightning fast. For travelers, this means we’re helping to take the complexity out of planning a trip by making it fast and easy for users to find the information they need to plan their next journey. Whether you’re looking for information about flights, hotels, activities or destinations, we have tools to help you -- and they are easily accessible for people on the go. Some of our favorite new functionality is outlined below."
A better, faster travel planning experience: 2012 updates - Inside Search

Google Maps puts iPhone back on track - Business - The Boston Globe

A handy iOS Google Maps tip
"Apple’s map software also integrates nicely with the Siri voice-control system. Ask the iPhone how to get to Carnegie Hall, and it won’t tell you to practice; up pops an Apple map, along with the distance and estimated driving time. Google Maps isn’t directly accessible via Siri, though the blog Addictive Tips found a roundabout way to make it work. Just add the words “via transit” to your Siri query, and you get a list of possible travel apps. Tap Google Maps and you’re all set."
Google Maps puts iPhone back on track - Business - The Boston Globe

Runner-Up: Tim Cook, the Technologist | TIME.com

Excerpt from an extensive Time Tim Cook profile
"On the day Jobs died, Apple was valued at $351 billion; at press time its market cap stood at $488 billion, more than that of Google and Microsoft. That’s and as in plus: Apple is now worth significantly more than those companies combined. Apple’s cash hoard alone comes to more than $120 billion. It was news in 2011 when Apple passed Exxon Mobil to become the world’s most valuable company. Now Exxon Mobil can barely see Apple’s taillights in the distance, across an $83 billion lead."
Runner-Up: Tim Cook, the Technologist | TIME.com

Dropbox Acquires Snapjoy And Puts Photos Into Its Focus | TechCrunch

More Dropbox expansion-by-acquisition
"Less than one week after Dropbox aqui-hired Audiogalaxy to beef up its cloud music ambitions, today comes news of another acquisition, this time focused on another form of media, photos: the cloud-storage giant is buying Snapjoy – like Dropbox, a Y Combinator-alum — which lets users aggregate, archive and view all of their digital photos from their cameras, phones and popular apps like Flickr, Instagram and Picasa, and then view them online or via an iOS app."
Dropbox Acquires Snapjoy And Puts Photos Into Its Focus | TechCrunch

Instagram Does Damage Control. Can It Keep Its Core Users? - Businessweek

Facebook does Yahoo a favor
"This same issue comes up every time Facebook changes its user privacy settings. People threaten to leave and don’t, and Facebook doesn’t sell our vacation photos. (At least, it hasn’t yet.)
Here’s the difference: There isn’t a good alternative to Facebook right now. There is a good alternative to Instagram. It’s called Flickr. Even before the Instagram announcement, Yahoo’s (YHOO) Flickr service was starting to show signs of life for the first time in years, with an elegant new app and a renewed commitment to its users."
Instagram Does Damage Control. Can It Keep Its Core Users? - Businessweek

4 Out of 10 Americans Have Connected Internet to TV - Peter Kafka - Media - AllThingsD

Check the article link below for additional TV + Internet stats
"Four out of 10 Americans have connected their TV to the Internet, according to a new Forrester study. If you’re just talking about the whippersnappers in the 18-to-32 age bracket, the number shoots up to 6 in 10.
Forrester credits Microsoft’s Xbox 360 and Sony’s PS3 for most of that; it says 42 percent of connected TV watchers are hooked up via a game console."
4 Out of 10 Americans Have Connected Internet to TV - Peter Kafka - Media - AllThingsD

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Official Google Enterprise Blog: Quickoffice + Google Apps = better document conversion and an iPad app

Interesting to see Google doing more with Quickoffice, which it acquired in June; the suite is currently available for $2.99 for smartphones (regularly $14.99) and $7.99 for tablets (regularly $19.99; also free for the iPad, as noted in the excerpt below, for Google Apps for Business customers).  Check the full post for more details on Quickoffice/Apps integration.

Left: Old conversion of Excel to Google Sheets

Right: Improved conversion after integrating Quickoffice technology

“Using Quickoffice to edit Office files on your iPad
Converting old files to Google Docs, Sheets and Slides is the easiest way to share and work together, but perhaps not everyone you work with has gone Google yet. To complement what you can do with Google documents, we’re also making it easier for you to make quick edits to Microsoft Word, Excel and Powerpoint files without conversion. Starting today, the Quickoffice iPad app is available for free to all Apps for Business customers, and iPhone and Android versions are on the way. With the app, you can open and edit any Office files you’ve stored in Google Drive right from your iPad.”

Official Google Enterprise Blog: Quickoffice + Google Apps = better document conversion and an iPad app

Extract Insights Across Datasets with SumAll - Analytics Blog

A state-of-the-art snapshot from the Google Analytics App Gallery
"Businesses collect and rely on data that exists in silos across the web - from site analytics to inventory numbers, social media to sales data, there’s more important data available today than most are able to aggregate and analyze themselves.
SumAll is a connected data platform that enables business operators from companies of all sizes to visualize their mission-critical data through one centralized location.  Users of SumAll can extract insights across datasets by combining and analyzing the metrics that matter most to them.  “Put simply, our vision is to democratize information by making it beautiful, affordable and accessible to all.  In doing so, the visibility and insights that SumAll brings enables business operators to turn data into dollars,” says Catherine Gluckstein, President of SumAll.
Extract Insights Across Datasets with SumAll - Analytics Blog

Instagram privacy uproar: Why it's absurd, in three nearly identical sentences. [Slate]

Another timely information responsibility case study
"Systrom is right to apologize for the murky language. It would be fun to see tech blogs apologize in turn for misleading their readers by running with a sensational story before taking the time to make sure it's true, but that's not going to happen. On the bright side, by interpreting the confusing policy in the most alarming possible light, the tech press has forced Instagram to toe the line more carefully than it otherwise might have. That's a win for users—although perhaps not the ones who took time out of their day to download all their photos, delete all their accounts, and switch to another service. Their Instagram account names, photos, and followers are never coming back."
Instagram privacy uproar: Why it's absurd, in three nearly identical sentences.

Why Google Has Too Much Power Over Your Private Life - NYTimes.com

Excerpt from a multifaceted Google snapshot by a former FTC commissioner who is now a lawyer representing Microsoft and other companies "concerned about Google’s power as a data collector"
"That’s a worthy sentiment — though a bit surprising coming from the Web’s emperor.
For that, arguably, is what Google has become. Its search engine accounts for nearly 80 percent of all Web searches in the United States — and a remarkable 98 percent of searches from mobile devices. In that role, Google is not just an eponymous verb but perhaps the most central conduit of information in the nation — and, indeed, on the planet. No other search engine comes close."
Why Google Has Too Much Power Over Your Private Life - NYTimes.com

With Instagram, Facebook Spars With Twitter - WSJ.com

Of course, those numbers were before Facebook Responds to Anger Over Proposed Instagram Changes (NYT)
"Instagram has quickly become a formidable threat to Twitter. In August, Instagram reached 7.3 million daily active users, exceeding Twitter's 6.87 million for the first time, according to comScore.
Since then, the gap has widened. Last month, Instagram had 17% more daily active users than Twitter, according to comScore data. On average users spent 321 minutes on Instagram in November, versus 146 minutes on Twitter, according to comScore."
With Instagram, Facebook Spars With Twitter - WSJ.com

Google Maps for iPhone Returns Better Than Ever - Walt Mossberg - Personal Technology - AllThingsD

An awkward and probably brief platform/version skew dilemma for Google Maps
"However, the biggest news here is that the new iPhone version of Google Maps isn’t just better than Apple Maps. For now, at least, Google Maps is better in most respects on the iPhone than it is on Android phones. It has been redesigned with a cleaner, simpler user interface that makes it easier to use. Google officials say they took the sudden need to build a new iPhone version as an opportunity to rethink the popular app from the ground up."
Google Maps for iPhone Returns Better Than Ever - Walt Mossberg - Personal Technology - AllThingsD

Fresh Design Brightens Evernote 5 - Katherine Boehret - The Digital Solution - AllThingsD

Excerpt from an Evernote 5 review
"But like a ho-hum, reliable car that merely got you where you wanted to go, Evernote hasn’t always been a particularly delightful thing to use.
Meet Evernote 5, a revamped version of the service that purrs with fluid features and playful design elements. In place of a dull list view of notes and notebooks, a handsome Cards view shows better images and details for saved items; on iOS, each card spins around and floats toward you when it’s selected."
Fresh Design Brightens Evernote 5 - Katherine Boehret - The Digital Solution - AllThingsD

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

By Hiring Kurzweil, Google Just Killed the Singularity | MIT Technology Review

Not a charter member of the Singularity fan club

“Late last Friday, Google announced a jaw-dropping hire: Ray Kurzweil will join the company as a Director of Engineering. Has the world’s brainiest tech company suddenly bought into Kurzweil’s “rapture of the nerds” b.s. “technological singularity” ideas? Hardly. They’ve just signed The Singularity’s death warrant by putting its chief proselytizer to work doing what he does best: inventing better machines for the real world, not writing science fiction. For this, Larry Page should get some kind of medal.”

By Hiring Kurzweil, Google Just Killed the Singularity | MIT Technology Review

Why You Should Want to Pay for Software, Instagram Edition - Alexis C. Madrigal - The Atlantic

Excerpt from a timely Facebook/Instagram reality check
"Truly, the only way to get around the privacy problems inherent in advertising-supported social networks is to pay for services that we value. It's amazing what power we gain in becoming paying customers instead of the product being sold. "
Why You Should Want to Pay for Software, Instagram Edition - Alexis C. Madrigal - The Atlantic

YouTube introduces Capture for easy recording and sharing | Internet & Media - CNET News

User discretion is advised...
"Google announced today a new iOS app called YouTube Capture that lets users film and upload a video in as few as three clicks. Users can post their videos simultaneously to YouTube, Google+, Facebook, and Twitter, or upload them privately. Advanced features let users perform color correction and stabilization, edit the video length, and even add music."
YouTube introduces Capture for easy recording and sharing | Internet & Media - CNET News

Monday, December 17, 2012

Facebook to Launch Its Own Snapchat Competitor App - Mike Isaac - Social - AllThingsD

Chasing ephemeral success
"Facebook is currently testing its own built-in-house version of a “Snapchat-like” application, a messaging app which allows users to send impermanent photo messages to one another, according to sources familiar with the matter.
Facebook plans to launch the app in the coming weeks, sources say, sometime before the end of the year."
Facebook to Launch Its Own Snapchat Competitor App - Mike Isaac - Social - AllThingsD

Sunday, December 16, 2012

Apple Doubles iPad Mini Display Orders - Hardware - Macintosh -

A small hit
"For 2013, NPD believes the iPad Mini may outsell the Retina Display iPad.
"In 2013, it is likely that Apple will adjust its product portfolio to meet the strong demand for the iPad Mini," noted Hsieh. "We believe that Apple is targeting total iPad shipments of 100 million in 2013, half accounted for by the iPad Mini, and 40 million new iPad and 10 million iPad 2, as production continues at least until the middle of 2013.""
Apple Doubles iPad Mini Display Orders - Hardware - Macintosh -

Saturday, December 15, 2012

How the UN's 'Game-Changing' Internet Treaty Failed - Megan Garber - The Atlantic

Final paragraphs of a useful recap
"What does this mean for the rest of us?
It means, basically, that we won't see much change in how the Internet is currently run, at least when it comes to international regulations. But the treaty's defeat as a matter of consensus might also have more far-reaching implications for how the world gets together to regulate (or not regulate) the Internet. Closed-door sessions are in some ways at odds with the ideal -- and, for the most part, the reality -- of a free and open Internet. The ITU debacle was, on top of everything else, a reminder of that. "
How the UN's 'Game-Changing' Internet Treaty Failed - Megan Garber - The Atlantic

Washington Post Moves Social Reader Off Facebook [Mashable]

See the full article for more on the Washington Post’s new social reading strategy

“After several rounds of adjustments to Facebook's News Feed, which have dramatically decreased the amount of traffic sent to most publishers' apps, as well as user complaints about privacy settings, news organizations are no longer so enthused about the apps they developed for Facebook's platform. On Thursday, The Guardian announced it would no longer display articles in its Facebook app; instead, it would redirect readers to its website after clicking on a headline in the app.”

Washington Post Moves Social Reader Off Facebook

Google Sync End of Life - Google Apps Help

tbd if Mark Penn will have something to say about this; the move hit a nerve for Paul Thurrott, who asserts "Google just declared war on Microsoft"
"Google Sync was designed to allow access to Gmail, Google Calendar, and Contacts via the Microsoft® Exchange ActiveSync® protocol. With the recent launch of CardDAV, Google now offers similar access via IMAP, CalDAV, and CardDAV, making it possible to build a seamless sync experience using open protocols. Starting January 30, 2013, consumers won't be able to set up new devices using Google Sync, however, existing Google Sync connections will continue to function. Google Sync will continue to be fully supported for Google Apps for Business, Government and Education users who are unaffected by this announcement."
Google Sync End of Life - Google Apps Help

Microsoft Battles Google by Hiring Political Brawler Mark Penn - NYTimes.com

A sign of the Redmond times
"Hiring Mr. Penn demonstrates how seriously Microsoft is taking this fight, said Michael A. Cusumano, a business professor at M.I.T. who co-wrote a book about Microsoft’s browser war.
“They’re pulling out all the stops to do whatever they can to halt Google’s advance, just as their competition did to them,” Professor Cusumano said. “I suppose that if Microsoft can actually put a doubt in people’s mind that Google isn’t unbiased and has become some kind of evil empire, they might very well get results.”"
Microsoft Battles Google by Hiring Political Brawler Mark Penn - NYTimes.com

Ray Kurzweil Joins Google In Full-Time Engineering Director Role; Will Focus On Machine Learning, Language Processing | TechCrunch

The singularity is nearer?…

“Famed inventor, entrepreneur, author, and futurist Ray Kurzweil announced this afternoon that he has been hired by search engine giant Google as a director of engineering focused on machine learning and language processing. He starts this upcoming Monday, according to a report issued on his website.”

Ray Kurzweil Joins Google In Full-Time Engineering Director Role; Will Focus On Machine Learning, Language Processing | TechCrunch

Friday, December 14, 2012

The world’s digital divide: U.N. telecom treaty passes without support of U.S., others | Good Morning Silicon Valley

So... remind me of the point of this organization; I think I missed something
"While the treaty passed, the lack of support of the United States and other big countries may mean not much will change. The nations that seek greater control will still do what they want, while those that say they’re all about Internet freedom will still support it when convenient. In addition, the ITU has pointed out its rules are non-binding."
The world’s digital divide: U.N. telecom treaty passes without support of U.S., others | Good Morning Silicon Valley

Dow Jones Moving to MarkLogic Platform; Factiva First [Information Today]

A big win for MarkLogic (and XQuery)
"Over the next 2 years, Dow Jones, a subsidiary of News Corp. (www.newscorp.com), will be moving the bulk of its online content to the NoSQL software platform of MarkLogic Corp. Factiva will be the first of three services on the Dow Jones digital network to shift; the others—WSJ.com and Dow Jones Financial Services—will follow. At present, no specific dates have been set for the moves, but Factiva should have moved over “well before the end of 2013,” according to Alisa Bowen, head of product at Dow Jones. The Factiva segment of Dow Jones services sees this as a significant investment in the future of a service begun late the last century as Dow Jones News Retrieval."
Dow Jones Moving to MarkLogic Platform; Factiva First

Patented Book Writing System Creates, Sells Hundreds Of Thousands Of Books On Amazon | Singularity Hub

A book-length Turing test?...
"Philip M. Parker, Professor of Marketing at INSEAD Business School, has had a side project for over 10 years. He’s created a computer system that can write books about specific subjects in about 20 minutes. The patented algorithm has so far generated hundreds of thousands of books. In fact, Amazon lists over 100,000 books attributed to Parker, and over 700,000 works listed for his company, ICON Group International, Inc. This doesn’t include the private works, such as internal reports, created for companies or licensing of the system itself through a separate entity called EdgeMaven Media."
Patented Book Writing System Creates, Sells Hundreds Of Thousands Of Books On Amazon | Singularity Hub

Why Google Just Made iPhone King: Ads | Wired Business | Wired.com

Lots of assumptions about Google means and ends in this article, but I believe it's clear that, to Google, the Internet is the platform (e.g., for Google search and other services), and different client operating systems are simply different Internet platform client run-time environment options
"The answer boils down to advertising. Google’s smartphone operating system, Android, has always been incidental to Google’s ad business, the source of virtually all the company’s profits, and Google’s Motorola handset division is, for now, a similar sideshow. Google doesn’t particularly care what operating system you use to view its ads or engage with its sites; it just wants to pull you in. Google pumps money into Android mainly to ensure that companies like Apple and Microsoft can’t push its properties off of smartphones."
Why Google Just Made iPhone King: Ads | Wired Business | Wired.com

New Google Maps App Restores Order to the Universe - Businessweek

And when Google Now is available for iOS, synchronized Google services will be used for personal predictive analytics so that you won't have to ask for directions; Now will simply tell you where to go, based on your search and other personal activity history; eventually, it'll just tell you when it's time to wake up and get into your self-driving Google car...
"You also lose Siri integration, so you can’t activate Google Maps by voice. That’s a bummer, but not a dealbreaker. Google Maps more than compensates for that by linking to your Google account, so any Maps search you’ve performed on your PC will be listed in the history of the Google Maps app. This is particularly helpful if you’re planning a trip: You can find your destinations on your laptop or tablet at home (which is easier than entering all that info on a tiny touch screen), and all your places will be a tap away on your phone when you get in the car."
New Google Maps App Restores Order to the Universe - Businessweek

IBM - Software – IBM Connect 2013

Likely not a lot of yellow at this event
"IBM Connect 2013. Familiar, yet with a whole new twist. We're connecting the long-standing Lotusphere and last year's Connect conferences — and making them one. IBM Connect combines the deep technical content that you’ve loved for 20 years with the learning you need to accelerate your move beyond social media to drive real business value with social and collaborative technologies."
IBM - Software – IBM Connect 2013

Former HP CEO Shifts Blame for Autonomy Deal to Chairman - Arik Hesseldahl - News - AllThingsD

The "I wasn't wrong alone" defense...
"There was more to call Apotheker’s competence into question that day — Aug. 18, 2011 — that contributed toward his stint as CEO being cut short. HP fell short on earnings, and he also launched the ill-fated effort to spin off the PC unit as a separate company and killed the Palm handheld and tablet unit acquired only a year earlier by his predecessor Mark Hurd.
Clearly Apotheker doesn’t like getting all the blame for the deal. Lane was certainly at the table and lent his support for it. And for that matter, so was Whitman.
Consider yourself reminded."
Former HP CEO Shifts Blame for Autonomy Deal to Chairman - Arik Hesseldahl - News - AllThingsD

Citing Internet Standoff, U.S. Rejects International Telecommunications Treaty - NYTimes.com

Interesting Internet times
"“The word ‘Internet’ was repeated throughout this conference and I believe this is simply a recognition of the current reality — the two worlds of telecommunications and Internet are inextricably linked,” said Hamadoun Touré, secretary general of the International Telecommunication Union.
The United States has consistently maintained that the Internet should not have been mentioned in the proposed treaty, which dealt with technical matters like connecting international telephone calls, because doing so could lead to curbs on free speech and replace the existing, bottom-up form of Internet oversight with a government-led model."
Citing Internet Standoff, U.S. Rejects International Telecommunications Treaty - NYTimes.com

Thursday, December 13, 2012

Google Maps iOS app released – Marco.org

Excerpt from a timely Google strategy reality check
"What this timing really shows is how much Google needs to be on iOS. They’re primarily in the business of reaching as many people as possible so they can build up as much data and advertise to as many bodies1 as possible. Android is an insurance policy against their profitable businesses being locked out of other platforms, not an important profit center itself."
Google Maps iOS app released – Marco.org

Google’s New Data Highlighter Lets You Add Structured Data To Your Sites Without Touching Any Code | TechCrunch

Point-and-click your way to Schema.org

“Google wants website owners to add as much structured data to their sites as possible in order to improve its search results and Knowledge Graph boxes with rich snippets like event listings, reviews and other information. Adding this kind of metadata to a site, however, isn’t always trivial, and many small businesses don’t really have the expertise to add microdata or RDFa markup to their sites.

Starting today, however, you won’t have to fiddle with your code to report this data to Google. The company’s new Data Highlighter now offers a point-and-click tool for tagging your site to its specifications without having to touch any code.”

Google’s New Data Highlighter Lets You Add Structured Data To Your Sites Without Touching Any Code | TechCrunch

Google Chairman Says Android Winning Mobile War With Apple: Tech - Bloomberg

For another perspective, see VC Roger McNamee slams Android's 'profitless prosperity' (CNet)
"“This is a huge platform change; this is of the scale of 20 years ago -- Microsoft versus Apple,” he said. “We’re winning that war pretty clearly now.”
Schmidt’s remarks reflect Google’s growing confidence in its ability to attract users and advertisers as more customers rely on handheld devices and shun traditional computers. By giving away Android, Google cedes revenue to hardware partners, such as Samsung Electronics Co. Schmidt is willing to make that sacrifice because it drives demand for ads and other Internet- based services that benefit Google over time.
“The core strategy is to make a bigger pie,” he said. “We will end up with a not perfectly controlled and not perfectly managed bigger pie by virtue of open systems.”"
Google Chairman Says Android Winning Mobile War With Apple: Tech - Bloomberg

Google Maps App for iPhone Goes in the Right Direction - Review - NYTimes.com

But you should still be careful in Australia...
"Along with driving directions, Google Maps gives equal emphasis to walking directions and public transportation options.
This feature is brilliantly done. Google Maps displays a clean, step-by-step timeline of your entire public transportation adventure. If you ask for a route from Westport, Conn., to the Empire State Building, the timeline says: “4:27 pm, Board New Haven train toward Grand Central Terminal.” Then it shows you the names of the actual train stops you’ll pass. Then, “5:47 pm, Grand Central. Get off and walk 2 min.” Then, “5:57 pm, 33rd St: Board the #6 Lexington Avenue Local towards Brooklyn Bridge.” And so on.
Even if public transportation were all it did, Google Maps would be one of the best apps ever. (Apple kicks you over to other companies’ apps for this information.)"
Google Maps App for iPhone Goes in the Right Direction - Review - NYTimes.com

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

HP Will Split In Two, And 9 More Calls On Tech In 2013 - Forbes

Excerpt from a list of 2013 predictions by Roman Stanek
"HP will be broken up into two pieces. This once-great company has had too many body blows (Mark Hurd’s purchase of EDS to chase on-premise consulting gigs, Hurd’s ouster, Leo Apotheker’s stint as CEO, Apotheker’s acquisition of Autonomy, Autonomy’s allegedly creative bookkeeping) to remain in one piece. I believe it will be broken into two parts, with the consumer half going to an OEM in Asia, and the enterprise side bought by a big Indian outsourcer."
HP Will Split In Two, And 9 More Calls On Tech In 2013 - Forbes

BlackBerry Phones Get Free Calls Over Wi-Fi - NYTimes.com

This just in, from the parallel universe in which everybody uses BlackBerry devices and nobody has heard of Skype or Google Voice...  Also unlikely that Evernote integration will lead to BlackBerry resurgence.
"RIM introduced an upgrade for BlackBerry phones that will allow their owners to make free calls to anywhere in the world through Wi-Fi connections. As with all things BBM, the catch is that the person on the other end of the call must also be a BlackBerry user, a group which is declining in the United States."
BlackBerry Phones Get Free Calls Over Wi-Fi - NYTimes.com

Exclusive: Microsoft Pressing Apple to Take a Smaller Cut on Sales - John Paczkowski - Mobile - AllThingsD

A lot has changed over the last 15 years:

  • 1997: Microsoft's commitment to support Mac Office (along with an Apple investment) was seen as pivotal to Apple's survival.
  • 2012: Microsoft Office for iOS will have to be feature-truncated (as with the Kindle client for iOS) to avoid Apple's iOS in-app purchase model.
"Sources familiar with the ongoing negotiations between Apple and Microsoft tell AllThingsD that the companies are at loggerheads not over the 30 percent commission Apple asks of storage upgrade sales made through SkyDrive, but over applying that same commission to Office 365 subscriptions sold through Microsoft Office for iOS, which is expected to launch sometime next year."
Exclusive: Microsoft Pressing Apple to Take a Smaller Cut on Sales - John Paczkowski - Mobile - AllThingsD

Google Now Becomes a Fitbit Competitor that can Track How Far You Walk or Cycle | MIT Technology Review

tbd if/when/how Google Now will appear on non-Android devices

“Google Now, a kind of reverse search engine for Android phones that offers useful information when it thinks you might need it, got an upgrade last week that quietly enabled it to track when a person is walking or cycling. Once a month, a notification offers a summary of those activities to give the user a sense of how much exercise they got.

Google’s official blog post announced other upgrades made at the same time, such as offering a user their boarding pass when they reach the airport, but omitted to mention the new activity tracking feature.”

Google Now Becomes a Fitbit Competitor that can Track How Far You Walk or Cycle | MIT Technology Review

Twitter, Instagram, And The Internet of (Disconnected) Things | MIT Technology Review

A timely Internet service integration (and disintegration) reality check

“You’ve heard of the “internet of things”: that just-over-the-horizon utopia in which our formerly dumb, disconnected physical appliances become “smart” and digitally networked. Here’s what I didn’t see coming: an ironically reversed “things of the internet” scenario, in which our formerly networked, interoperable apps and web services evolve into siloed products that can’t and won’t talk to each other. Welcome to the future: you can use gadgets like Twine and WeMo to make your air conditioner talk to your toaster, but you can’t make your Instagram photos show up on Twitter, or your iPhone work natively with Google Maps. (Well, technically there is a workaround for the Twitter/Instagram issue, but don’t expect it to work for much longer.)”

Twitter, Instagram, And The Internet of (Disconnected) Things | MIT Technology Review

Google eyes Evernote challenge with Drive features | ZDNet

Google Drive has a long way to go before it’s a serious note-taking alternative to Evernote, but save-to-Drive is a big step.  Also consider Google Notebook; the domain is familiar to Google.

In a Google+ post, the search giant said that it is launching a "save to Drive" extension to its Chrome browser. The general idea is that you can grab content from around the Web and store it. Images and links can also go to Drive.

The feature sounds a lot like Evernote to some degree. Evernote stores notes, pictures and other items to its cloud. Now that Drive is offering a clip service to go with its Docs, Google appears to be at least pondering a challenge to Evernote.”

Google eyes Evernote challenge with Drive features | ZDNet

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Fortune Exclusive: Larry Page on Google - Fortune Tech

Excerpt from an extensive Larry Page interview
"Google Plus was a big bet.
Is a big bet.
It is a big bet. What's most important to you? Is competitive with Facebook (FB)? Is it about weaving identity across all of Google's products? You've talked about adoption being higher than you expected. What's the measure of success going forward?
I think it's gone pretty well. I'm very happy if users of Plus are happy and the numbers are growing because that means that we're on to something. We've got a huge team actually in this building. If you walk around, you see everyone's excited and running around and working hard on it. I think that they're doing great stuff. They're making it better and better every day. That's how I'm measuring it
There's [another] part of Google Plus. I think in order to make our products really work well, we need to have a good way of sharing. We had 18 different ways of sharing stuff before we did Plus. Now we have one way that works well, and we're improving."
Fortune Exclusive: Larry Page on Google - Fortune Tech

Billions (of API requests) Served | Evernote Tech Blog

See the full post for an overview of Evernote big data analytics with Hadoop, ParAccel, and Jaspersoft
"Evernote stores hundreds of terabytes of online data in order to preserve our users’ memories. Over the last four years, 36.8 million people have created Evernote accounts, and together have uploaded more than 1.2 billion notes with more than 2 billion attachments.
The online application has generated a continuous stream of structured logs, which record high-level activity performed via our APIs from clients and web interfaces. These logs have grown with time and usage so that now we’re recording nearly 200 million events per day, with more than 66 billion events since our launch in 2008."
Billions (of API requests) Served | Evernote Tech Blog

Official Google Enterprise Blog: Chromebooks for classrooms: $99 for the holidays

Pricing otherwise starts at $429, according to the Samsung product link below

“To help budget-strapped classrooms across the country, we’re working with DonorsChoose.org, an online charity that connects donors directly to public school classroom needs. For the holiday season, teachers can request the Samsung Series 5 Chromebook—the most widely deployed Chromebook in schools—at a special, discounted price of $99 including hardware, management and support.
If you’re a full-time public school teacher in the U.S., visit DonorsChoose.org and follow the instructions to take advantage of this opportunity by December 21, 2012. Your request will be posted on DonorsChoose.org where anyone can make a donation to support your classroom. When you reach your funding goal, you’ll receive your Chromebooks from Lakeshore Learning, DonorsChoose.org’s exclusive fulfillment partner for this program.”

Official Google Enterprise Blog: Chromebooks for classrooms: $99 for the holidays

iMac’s nifty design does little, but guts are great - Chicago Sun-Times

Excerpt from an Andy Ihnatko iMac reality check
"Apple has the desktop Mac market all to themselves. They’re free to make exactly the sort of computers they want, to prepare their users for the future as Apple sees it. Still, I hope Apple moves past this “thinner is always better” mindset soon. Consumers with a clear preference for Mac won’t let the iMac’s lack of a built-in optical drive, or its zero expandability, change their allegiances. But for every one of those people, there are more folks who just want a terrific desktop that delivers clear value for money."
iMac’s nifty design does little, but guts are great - Chicago Sun-Times

After rapid growth, ebook readers set for collapse with shipments plummeting 36% in 2012 - The Next Web

Apparently dedicated e-reader devices can't compete with general-purpose tablets (including the Kindle Fire)
"The latest numbers come from iSuppli, which says the dedicated ebook reader market saw spectacular growth in the last few years, but is now on “an alarmingly precipitous decline.” In fact, the analytics provider says “the rapid growth—followed by the immediate collapse—of the ebook market is virtually unheard of, even in the notoriously short life cycle of products inhabiting the volatile consumer electronics space.”"
After rapid growth, ebook readers set for collapse with shipments plummeting 36% in 2012 - The Next Web

Microsoft balks at Apple’s 30% fee, leaving SkyDrive and apps that integrate with it in the lurch on iOS - The Next Web

Check the full article for some allegedly dubious Apple merchant modus operandi
"Microsoft does not appear keen to pay Apple the 30% cut, as it lasts in perpetuity, regardless of whether a user continues to use an iOS device or not, as the billing is through their Apple account.
Therefore, if a user signed up for a few additional gigabytes on their iOS device, and then moved to Android or Windows Phone or not phone at all, for the length of their account, Apple would collect 30% of their fee for storage. This hasn’t sat well with Microsoft."
Microsoft balks at Apple’s 30% fee, leaving SkyDrive and apps that integrate with it in the lurch on iOS - The Next Web

Antivirus guru John McAfee sells rights for movie about his life | Internet & Media - CNET News

Surreality TV
"It's still a mystery where John McAfee will eventually land, but his life story is destined for the small screen.
Currently in custody in Guatemala and fighting deportation efforts that could return him to Belize to face questions about a murder, the antivirus-software pioneer has signed a deal that gives the rights to his life story to a Montreal-based TV producer."
Antivirus guru John McAfee sells rights for movie about his life | Internet & Media - CNET News

Russia abandons proposal for U.N. governance of Internet | Internet & Media - CNET News

Cancel red alert
"The proposal, supported by China, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and others, would have called on the U.N. to help member states seize control of key Internet engineering assets, including domain names, addresses, and numbering. The United States, Canada, France, Sweden, and others opposed the proposal, fearing that it could do grave harm to the current free and open Internet."
Russia abandons proposal for U.N. governance of Internet | Internet & Media - CNET News

Gmail Goes Down, Office Workers Panic - NYTimes.com

Disconcertingly, I also had a Gmail conversation thread index corruption yesterday -- two conversation threads were somehow combined.  Perhaps it was a new predictive analytics service I don't yet understand; first time I'd seen that feature...
"Some Gmail users had trouble starting the work week on Monday.
Google’s e-mail service was inaccessible for many users on Monday morning, for both personal and business accounts. Google said it was a global service disruption. Chrome, Google’s browser, was reported to be crashing frequently in some instances."
Gmail Goes Down, Office Workers Panic - NYTimes.com

Sunday, December 09, 2012

The enduring Apple TV Fantasy | Monday Note

Excerpt from another timely Jean-Louis Gassée Apple perspective
"Why bother? In 2014, Apple’s revenue could exceed $250B. Even if Apple TV sales were to grow by ten times, they would still represent no more than a 2% fragment of the total.
The answer is that Apple TV isn’t meant to generate revenue but to enhance the value of the more muscular, profit-making members of the ecosystem: iPhones, iPads and, to a lesser extent, Macs. In a similar, grander, and now well-understood way, iTunes isn’t in the business of making money by itself. iTunes made the iPod larger than the Mac in 2006, and it made the App Store possible — and the iPhone and the iPad as profit engines."
The enduring Apple TV Fantasy | Monday Note

ReadWrite – Apple's Thermonuclear Patent War Is A Farce

From a Dan Lyons Apple reality check (along with a case study in comment thread cyber-polarization)

“The news: The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has declared a huge Apple multi-touch-screen patent - the so-called "Steve Jobs patent" - to be invalid. As CNET adds, this is the second Apple patent to get a smackdown. The previous one was about Apple's "rubber band" effect. Neither ruling is final, but still.

The best analysis: Groklaw, which has been doing amazing coverage of Apple's legal war, writes: "If you want to know why people now hate Apple for its legal swashbuckling, this is Exhibit A."

The conclusion: This whole notion of Steve Jobs launching his "thermonuclear war" on Android is a farce. A sham. A joke. It has been from the start.”

ReadWrite – Apple's Thermonuclear Patent War Is A Farce

Microsoft Meets Its Timely Demise—and Other Tech Fantasies - Businessweek

Excerpt from an accentuate-the-positive Microsoft perspective
"I like to refer to periods such as these as The Microdeath Dream Fantasy. It’s the five months or so that follow a launch of Windows in which all manner of experts celebrate Microsoft’s imminent demise due to lackluster Windows sales. It’s a result of the massive pent-up desire for Microsoft to fail. The company behaved in horrible, anticompetitive ways years ago and did so while foisting a series of uninspiring products on the citizenry."
Microsoft Meets Its Timely Demise—and Other Tech Fantasies - Businessweek

Friday, December 07, 2012

Google+: Communities and photos | Official Google Blog

Some big additions to Google+
"Today Google+ is the fastest-growing network thingy ever. More than 500 million people have upgraded, 235 million are active across Google (+1'ing apps in Google Play, hanging out in Gmail, connecting with friends in Search...), and 135 million are active in just the stream.
This enthusiasm, we think, stems from our building tools that build real relationships—in a live hangout, around a breathtaking photo, or with an inner circle of friends. So today we're launching two new improvements that help bring the nuance and richness of real-life sharing to software."
Google+: Communities and photos | Official Google Blog

Facebook And Microsoft Are Working On A Deal, And It Could Change Everything About Advertising - Business Insider

Speculation about a salvage operation that could make the Motorola/General Instrument ROI look good
"Since then, Facebook and Microsoft employees have reached out to other ad tech companies to do research for the deal. A source at one of these companies briefed us on the details of those conversations.
Though acquiring Atlas was the main reason Microsoft bought aQuantive for $6 billion in 2007, it seems like Facebook will pay a much lower price. One source says that prior to Facebook's negotiations with Microsoft, the highest bid for Atlas was $30 million. Microsoft has already written off most of that $6 billion."
Facebook And Microsoft Are Working On A Deal, And It Could Change Everything About Advertising - Business Insider

Planning His Legacy, Cisco Chief Maps an Expansion - NYTimes.com

Those "boxes" being central to Cisco's last big and bold redefinition, which apparently didn't work out well
"Cisco, the chairman and chief executive says, will shift toward customers in government and large businesses, handling projects like designing and managing systems for efficient traffic and clean water across entire cities. Cisco’s plan is to create networks of sensors and data analysis systems, working closely with government officials and civil engineering companies. And it will work with companies to set up efficient mining, manufacturing and distribution systems.
“It’s a $4 trillion market,” he said. “The days of boxes are over.”"
Planning His Legacy, Cisco Chief Maps an Expansion - NYTimes.com

Bids for Google's Motorola Set-Top Box Business Due Soon - WSJ.com

That would be for what remains of the General Instrument business for which Motorola paid $17B (not inflation-adjusted) in early 2000
"Cable-equipment maker Arris Group Inc. and private-equity firms are expected to bid, these people said. Set-top box maker Pace  and Technicolor SA, a video-technology company, could also bid, they said.
Two people involved in the process said they expected bids to be between $1.5 billion and $2 billion, while another said they could go as high as $2.5 billion. One of the people said that Google has indicated it could help finance a deal."
Bids for Google's Motorola Set-Top Box Business Due Soon - WSJ.com

HEARD ON THE STREET: Apple's Soft Core Is Its Strength - WSJ.com

From an Apple hardware/software value assessment

“And that is largely due to the secret sauce inside the iPhone, which isn't really a handset so much as a computer with software that makes calls—and plays music, offers games, gives directions, takes photos, provides Web access and more. Wrapped in a svelte yet sturdy hardware shell stamped with Apple's powerful brand, the iPhone 5 commands an average price well above $600 when excluding the subsidies some wireless carriers provide to customers. And the iPhone's gross profit margins are huge: about 50% for the fiscal year ending next September, estimates analyst Rob Cihra of Evercore.”

image

HEARD ON THE STREET: Apple's Soft Core Is Its Strength - WSJ.com

Cloudera Raises $65 Million in Round Led By Accel - Arik Hesseldahl - News - AllThingsD

For the NoSQL meme-bust watch: not a single instance of "NoSQL" in this article
"Hadoop has become a big thing, and in fact there are numerous flavors of it and numerous companies offering their own version of it, while others are building things to work with it.
The biggest and best known company in the Hadoop world is Cloudera. Started in 2008 by a trio of engineers from Facebook, Google and Yahoo (Jeff Hammerbacher, Christophe Bisciglia and Amr Awadallah) plus CEO Mike Olson, a former Oracle exec, it has in four years gone from the start-up that few really understood to the company you have to talk to if you want to stand a chance wrestling your data challenges to the ground."
Cloudera Raises $65 Million in Round Led By Accel - Arik Hesseldahl - News - AllThingsD

Why Breaking Up H.P. Makes Sense - NYTimes.com

A stark HP reality check

“H.P.’s market capitalization is about $27 billion. That’s scarcely more than half the price its parts would fetch as standalone entities. At least that is the conclusion from a new Breakingviews calculator that compares revenue multiples at each of its divisions with similar publicly traded companies.

This isn’t a precise valuation method, but it’s a way to assess the worth of troubled businesses since profitability can be swamped by inefficiencies or flattered by aggressive accounting.”

Why Breaking Up H.P. Makes Sense - NYTimes.com

Apple Data Center Fuel Cell | MIT Technology Review

Leading by example
"Using fuel cells at this scale potentially changes how data center operators use grid power and traditional back up diesel generators. With Apple’s combination of its solar power and fuel cells, it appears the facility will be able to produce more than the 20 megawatts it needs at full steam. That means Apple could sell power back to the utility or even operate independently and use the grid as back up power—a completely new configuration."
Apple Data Center Fuel Cell | MIT Technology Review

Amazon’s Appstore Suggests the Fire Is Blowing Up | MIT Technology Review

Tangentially, the BW Tim Cook article includes an MP3 market share chart indicating Amazon has 16% share, second only to Apple's 64%
"But the fact that the application store is growing so rapidly is rather interesting. There seems to be a general sense in the marketplace that because the App Store comes bundled in the iPad and iPhone, and the Google Play store is readily available on Android products, Amazon’s Appstore, which comes bundled in just a handful of devices, should be ignored.
But if Amazon’s figures are to be believed, that’s no longer the smart move. Amazon has found a way, despite all of the odds, to carve out a portion of the application market for itself. Developers are increasingly finding that the company’s store is worth trying out, and as more Kindle Fires are sold, Amazon customers are finding things to like, as well."
Amazon’s Appstore Suggests the Fire Is Blowing Up | MIT Technology Review

Tim Cook's Freshman Year: The Apple CEO Speaks - Businessweek

A deep and broad Tim Cook interview
"Though it hasn’t yet expanded into new product categories (still no Apple TV set), the company has changed in significant ways, largely because of Cook’s calm and steady influence. In his most wide-ranging interview as CEO, Cook explains how Apple works now, talks about the perception that he’s “robotic,” and announces the return of Apple manufacturing to the U.S."
Tim Cook's Freshman Year: The Apple CEO Speaks - Businessweek

Thursday, December 06, 2012

Social Media as the Next Web - Brian Solis

Excerpt from a survey of the latest Nielsen social media report

“The next web is mobile.

Proof is in the numbers of course. As we can see, consumers access social media from PCs mostly at 94% (down from 97% in 2011), mobile phones at 46% (up from 37%) and tablets at 16% (up from 3%). Surprise is an understatement when I think about how I felt when I saw the incorporation of toilets in the report. But, you can read more on that gem here.”

Social Media as the Next Web - Brian Solis

New Google Now: the perfect travel companion for the holidays | Official Android Blog

tbd when Google Now will have your self-driving Google car waiting for you outside, when it’s time to head to the airport; see the full post for some additional new Now features

“As you head off this holiday season, the latest update to Google Now makes it even more useful for traveling. Before you even leave your house, Google Now will tell you what the weather will be like at your destination (just in time to make sure you remember to pack those mittens). At the airport, your boarding pass is automatically pulled up, helping you breeze through to the gate (launching shortly for United Airlines, with more to come). And once you've arrived at your destination, Google Now can help you uncover some great activities, by showing you events happening around you, suggesting websites for you to explore as you research things to do, or allowing you to learn more about specific pieces while you’re at a museum (using Google Goggles).”

New Google Now: the perfect travel companion for the holidays | Official Android Blog

Apple loses $34.9 billion in market cap in its worst trading day in 4 years, but why? - The Next Web

Sign of the times: Apple loses ~125% of HP's market cap in an off trading day, for no apparent reason
"However, the gist to the situation is that Apple’s core businesses are strong, and the market is pricing Apple as if its every ounce of future growth is spent. If you think that Apple will grow its earnings by more than 12% of so in the next year, you are all but implying that it has been overcorrected.
At the same time, something in motion tends to stay in motion unless acted upon. Heading up, Apple was a rocket, and now in the other direction it has been carrying weight, despite the firm having an incredibly strong set of products heading into the lucrative holiday season."
Apple loses $34.9 billion in market cap in its worst trading day in 4 years, but why? - The Next Web

All-in-One PCs From Vizio, H.P. and Apple - State of the Art - NYTimes.com

Final paragraphs of a David Pogue all-in-one round-up
"All of these machines are successful in their goals. The iMac has the best screen you’ve ever seen on a computer, the finest craftsmanship and ridiculously fast response. The Vizio’s touch screen and low price give it a charm all its own. And the H.P. is competent, tidy and unimposing.
All of them represent ingenious steps forward in miniaturizing the innards of a computer. Each costs more than your standard plastic black box, of course. But sometimes, beauty, elegance and satisfaction are worth a few bucks."
All-in-One PCs From Vizio, H.P. and Apple - State of the Art - NYTimes.com

Samsung and Google master cut-rate computing - Business - The Boston Globe

The newest Chromebook converts Hiawatha Bray into a believer
"Instead, the Chromebook delivers 11.6 inches of video real estate and a big, comfy keyboard. It comes with 16 gigabytes of flash memory for data storage, eliminating the need for a noisy, bulky hard drive.
It’s also got a low-end but serviceable webcam for videoconferencing, surprisingly decent stereo speakers, a flash memory card slot, a couple of USB ports, and an HDMI connection that will pump videos to a big-screen TV.
It’s all packaged in a sleek plastic case that’s roughly as thin as Apple Inc.’s $999 MacBook Air, and only a few grams heavier."
Samsung and Google master cut-rate computing - Business - The Boston Globe

Wednesday, December 05, 2012

Evernote CEO Phil Libin talks Evernote Business | PCWorld

From an Evernote update and CEO interview
"Most of Evernote's 45 million users already put the app to work at work. Now Evernote is tailoring its service to small and midsize companies with the launch of Evernote Business for Mac, Windows, iOS and Android.
The new tool lets users share information within a company or with clients, while IT controls permissions. You can join Evernote Business with your existing personal account, which remains invisible to the company, and you keep your own data if you leave at any time."
Evernote CEO Phil Libin talks Evernote Business | PCWorld

Google's Knowledge Graph tripled in size in seven months | Internet & Media - CNET News

Not a bad start, compared to, e.g., Wolfram Alpha's "10+ trillion pieces of data"
"At launch, the Knowledge Graph was a database of the relationships among 500 million objects, and contained 3.5 billion facts. Less than seven months later, the graph covers 570 million entities and 18 billion facts -- as well as three times as many queries as it did when it started.
Whenever the Knowledge Graph recognizes a query it understands, the results show up in a box on the right-hand side of the page. The fact boxes resemble Wikipedia entries, and draw from a variety of publicly available and licensed data sources."
Google's Knowledge Graph tripled in size in seven months | Internet & Media - CNET News

NoSQL: The Love Child of Google, Amazon and ... Lotus Notes | Wired Enterprise | Wired.com

Excerpt from an interesting NoSQL history lesson
"“If you look at every NoSQL solution out there, every one goes back to the Amazon Dynamo paper or the Google BigTable paper,” says Jason Hoffman, the chief technology officer at cloud computing outfit Joyent. “What would the world be like if no one at Google or Amazon ever wrote an academic paper?”
Well, the world would still have CouchDB, one of the oldest NoSQL databases. CouchDB creator Damien Katz wasn’t inspired by Google or Amazon or any other web giant. He was inspired by Lotus Notes, an online collaboration platform originally developed in the 1970s and ’80s."
NoSQL: The Love Child of Google, Amazon and ... Lotus Notes | Wired Enterprise | Wired.com

Amazon brings one of its flagship Kindle features, X-Ray for books, to its iOS app - The Next Web

Mainstreaming beyond-the-basics hypertext
"One of Amazon’s flagship features, X-Ray for Books, has finally arrived in its iOS version. This is enormous  as it’s one of the main reasons I love reading books on my Kindle and the Kindle Fire so much better than my iPad.
The X-Ray feature is one of the coolest selling points of the Kindle devices including e-ink and HD models. The ability to get a breakdown of characters on a page and where they appear in a book is super neat. Amazon calls it seeing the ‘bones of the book’."
p.s. if you're using the latest iOS Kindle client and want to explore X-Ray, touch in the middle of a book page to pop-up the Kindle menu and then touch the open-book (Go to) icon in the center of the icon row at the bottom of the screen (iPhone; it's in the top icon bar, on the iPad Kindle client, to the right of the home icon); note that not all Kindle books have X-Ray content, so the X-Ray menu option may be grayed-out
Amazon brings one of its flagship Kindle features, X-Ray for books, to its iOS app - The Next Web

Google's Explainer-in-Chief Can't Explain Apple - WSJ.com

Another looming nightmare for wide-area wireless service providers
"WSJ: Is Google looking at owning a wireless network?
Mr. Schmidt: I'm sure we will discuss this, but at the moment we're busy working on wireline [Internet]. This Kansas City stuff [where Google is rolling out a high-speed fiber network] is extraordinarily exciting, and we're focusing on that.
The current spectrum shortage [currently facing the mobile industry] is real, but it's an artifact of a licensing and regulatory error. New technology allows there to be lots of spectrum, far more than you could use."
Google's Explainer-in-Chief Can't Explain Apple - WSJ.com

Apple's iTunes Gets an Upgrade Without Missing a Beat - Walt Mossberg - Personal Technology - AllThingsD

Walt Mossberg reviews the new iTunes
"Apple’s iTunes is the world’s most popular computer program for playing, managing and buying music, movies and TV shows. The company estimates the number of copies in active use to be in the high hundreds of millions. Now, Apple has given iTunes its biggest overhaul since 2003, when the software — originally just a jukebox for Macs — was made available for Windows computers and the built-in iTunes store was added."
Apple's iTunes Gets an Upgrade Without Missing a Beat - Walt Mossberg - Personal Technology - AllThingsD

The iPad Mini, Perfect for My Desert Island - NYTimes.com

Another happy iPad mini customer
"Not the iPad Mini. Because of its size, the iPad Mini, like paperback books or magazines that roll-up, can fit in most jacket pockets. As a result, just as I used to with print books, I now find myself throwing the iPad Mini in my pocket when I’m heading for lunch, coffee, or out for the evening.
So, for now, I have a new Desert Island Device: a 7.9-inch tablet. And yes, I’d even leave my smartphone at home in place of it."
The iPad Mini, Perfect for My Desert Island - NYTimes.com

Free-Messaging Apps Siphon Profits from Cellular Providers - NYTimes.com

More strategic challenges ahead for wide-area wireless service providers
"Standard texting is still popular. CTIA, the wireless industry trade group, said that in the first half of this year, Americans sent 1.107 trillion text messages. But that was down 2.6 percent from the 1.137 trillion messages sent in the first half of last year. Ovum, a mobile communications research firm, estimates that by 2016, Internet-based message services will have eaten up $54 billion in revenue that carriers could have made from text messaging.
For years, text messages have been a source of pure profit for carriers because it costs nearly nothing to deliver them. In response to the rise of Internet services, they have been overhauling their pricing plans to stay profitable."
Free-Messaging Apps Siphon Profits from Cellular Providers - NYTimes.com

Tuesday, December 04, 2012

The Database Billion | ServicesANGLE

Excerpt from a Postgres market snapshot (written by the CEO of EnterpriseDB, a Postgres vendor, so definitely in the accentuate-the-positive category, but still a timely snapshot)
"The PostgreSQL database has already begun to benefit significantly from this perfect storm of circumstances. PostgreSQL, or Postgres for short, is the enterprise-class open source database used by some of the largest companies in the world to handle all types of workloads. Companies like VMware, Microsoft (through its acquisition of Skype), Apple and Facebook (through its acquisition of Instagram) are all PostgreSQL users. So too are the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), Fujitsu, NTT, Sony-Ericsson, Sony Online Entertainment, the US State Department and Yahoo."
The Database Billion | ServicesANGLE

Mary Meeker 2012 Internet Trends Year-End Update - Business Insider

An excerpt from Mary Meeker’s latest Internet trends stat-o-rama

Kleiner Perkins

Mary Meeker 2012 Internet Trends Year-End Update - Business Insider

Hackers Behind Tumblr Worm Say They Warned Tumblr of Vulnerability Weeks Ago [Gawker]

On the importance of being responsive to constructive criticism
"Why did you do it?
We contacted Tumblr about this weeks ago and nothing came of it. This was a serious issue that needed to be fixed. Someone would have done a lot worse than just posting a message over and over if they didn't fix it right away..."
Hackers Behind Tumblr Worm Say They Warned Tumblr of Vulnerability Weeks Ago

Did Mark Penn Swiftboat Google? - Businessweek

Sign of the times
"The attempt to undermine consumers’ trust in Google by taking a strategic swipe at a competitor’s roots (the “Don’t be evil” slogan dates back to Google’s birth) is likely to trigger a bit of déjà vu for anyone who has followed Penn’s career in politics.
In 2008, Bloomberg Businessweek’s Joshua Green (then at the Atlantic) revealed a series of memos Penn wrote during the 2008 presidential campaign, suggesting to his candidate Hillary Clinton, among other things, that she could undermine voters’ trust in Barack Obama by digging into his roots."
Did Mark Penn Swiftboat Google? - Businessweek

Monday, December 03, 2012

Keep the Internet free and open [Google Official Blog]

Excerpt from a Vint Cerf call to action

“You can read more about my concerns on CNN.com, but I am not alone. So far, more than 1,000 organizations from more than 160 countries have spoken up too, and they’re joined by hundreds of thousands of Internet users who are standing up for a free and open Internet. On an interactive map at freeandopenweb.com, you can see that people from all corners of the world have signed our petition, used the #freeandopen hashtag on social media, or created and uploaded videos to say how important these issues are.

If you agree and want to support a free and open Internet too, I invite you to join us by signing the petition at google.com/takeaction. Please make your voice heard and spread the word.”

http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2012/12/keep-internet-free-and-open.html#!/2012/12/keep-internet-free-and-open.html

Tim Berners-Lee’s Open Data Institute Gets Its First Outside Investment, $750K From The Omidyar Network To Top Up UK’s $16M | TechCrunch

Open for business

“The Open Data Institute, a UK-based incubator and promoter of open-data businesses that was first conceived by Tim Berners-Lee and artificial intelligence pioneer Nigel Shadbolt, is today announcing its first international investment. The Omidyar Network, the investment firm co-founded by eBay’s Pierre Omidyar and his wife Pam, is putting $750,000 towards the ODI. The money comes on top of the £10 million ($16 million) that the UK government, via the Technology Strategy Board, has already committed over the next five years for the project.”

Tim Berners-Lee’s Open Data Institute Gets Its First Outside Investment, $750K From The Omidyar Network To Top Up UK’s $16M | TechCrunch