Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Inside The GPhone: What To Expect From Google's Android Alliance -- InformationWeek

Google appears to be on a major counter-FUD PR campaign this week; this InformationWeek article is a detailed overview of some key Android features.

If you think the Google Phone is all talk, you're wrong: Here are eight technologies--GPS, multimedia, mobile Web browsing, gaming graphics, and more--which Open Handset Alliance members will bring to the upcoming mobile handset.

Considering the broader market context, however, I'm still not convinced Google's mobile platform will be a success -- primarily because of its disruptive threat potential to incumbents in the mobile domain

Inside The GPhone: What To Expect From Google's Android Alliance -- InformationWeek

Wiki Maker Looks for 'Traction' in Software Market

Excerpt from a review of Traction TeamPage 3.8

A key to any wiki is its navigability. Accordingly, TeamPage 3.8 now makes linking accessible to techies and the not-so-tech-savvy users, offering an improved GUI (graphical user interface) to let anyone with TeamPage permissions forward links to new content as well as links to existing content or external sites.

The new GUI also makes it simple to link to Traction sections to files that are attached to article pages or stored in Traction's Web share folders.

Users now have a place to look when they discover that a new page has taken over an old page's name, thanks to a new forward-linking feature set with accurate referencing and name aliases across projects.

I continue to be very impressed with Traction and its track record for meaningful hypertext innovation

Wiki Maker Looks for 'Traction' in Software Market

I, Cringely . The Pulpit . Getting to Know You | PBS

Read the full post for some additional interesting projections...

Yes and no. Like Gmail, Google can sell a higher-end product probably minus the ads. People might find they actually LIKE the ads if Google does its job really well and isn't too intrusive. The ultimate result, of course, is near-total Google dominance of the mobile ad space and — this is REALLY big — transferring some significant portion of the market caps of all those mobile operators right onto Google's hips. Thanks to consumer parsimony and telephone number portability, Google over the course of a couple years would become the dominant U.S. mobile operator. And no matter what handset or protocol those customers use, the ads will be there and Google will be raking in the dough.

I, Cringely . The Pulpit . Getting to Know You | PBS

A First Look at the Google Phone - Bits - Technology - New York Times Blog

Check out these Google YouTube videos -- compelling demos.

For those curious about what the Android phones will look like, Google today has posted a couple of demos of their user interface and some applications. Remember these are demos, and no phones based on this software will be available for another eight months or so. But the demos are pretty slick, and they point to a class of phones that have the look and feel of the iPhone, with a touch-sensitive surface that allows users to scroll through Web pages by sliding a finger on the screen.

Also see an extensive CNet interview with Android creator Andy Rubin; excerpt:

Q: What do you think of the iPhone?
Rubin: I love it. I use it every day. That's my phone, and I think it's a great product. It's probably the best version 1.0 piece of consumer electronics that I've ever used.

Q: Do you think that the Android devices are going to be competing with the iPhone?
Rubin: No, I do not. I think it's a different business. Apple has a great business in building really, really high-quality consumer products, and the platform that we're building can go into a lot of different products.

A First Look at the Google Phone - Bits - Technology - New York Times Blog

Adobe's Chizen to Leave As CEO at Critical Time - WSJ.com

This is a major milestone for Adobe.  Chizen leaves on a high note, in any case. 

Adobe Systems Inc. announced a change to its top leadership at a critical time, as the software maker begins to adapt to new ways that people are using the Web.

The company said Bruce Chizen will leave as chief executive at the end of this month, to be succeeded on Dec. 1 by Shantanu Narayen, Adobe's president and chief operating officer. Mr. Chizen will serve the rest of his term on Adobe's board, until the spring of 2008, and will act as an adviser to the company until Nov. 28, 2008.

Mr. Chizen said in an interview that he told Adobe's board last week that he wanted to step down after seven years as CEO.

Adobe's Chizen to Leave As CEO at Critical Time - WSJ.com

Why Big Blue May Still Lag - WSJ.com

Interesting reality check 

Yet while this shift in software away from best-of-breed may present merger-and-acquisition opportunities for IBM, it isn't good news for the company's services business, which accounts for more than half of sales. As companies move toward one-stop shopping, there tends to be less need for consultants to integrate software and new systems. Sure, revenue at IBM's services businesses rose a healthy 14% in the latest quarter. Expected revenue from new contracts and its backlog have lagged behind revenue growth for several quarters, so growth is likely to slow.

Why Big Blue May Still Lag - WSJ.com

Oracle jumps into virtualization - The Boston Globe

Bad news for VMWare 

Oracle Corp. made a move yesterday to take on VMware Inc. in the market for virtualization software, unveiling a product that it says is three times more efficient than competitors' offerings.

VMware shares fell more than 8 percent after executives at Oracle, the world's second-largest software maker, demonstrated the product before thousands of customers at a conference in San Francisco.

Customers can download "Oracle VM" for free starting tomorrow, the company said. Oracle will sell service contracts for the product ranging from $499 to $999 per year.

Oracle jumps into virtualization - The Boston Globe

Monday, November 12, 2007

The iPhony: Dan Lyons turned a spoof blog into an internet phenomenon and a book - The Boston Globe

Timely FSJ snapshot; see the article for more details

As a senior editor at Forbes magazine, Dan Lyons has made a career out of observing businesses, not running them. And as an old print hand, he was a little behind the curve when it came to new media.

But the outraged reactions to a piece he wrote in 2005, calling blogs the platform of choice for an "online lynch mob spouting liberty but spewing lies, libel and invective," inspired him to experiment with blogging tools. And while he was at it, the Medford resident decided to adopt the reimagined personality of one of the tech world's most feared and admired CEO's.

Thus Fake Steve Jobs was born.

The iPhony: Dan Lyons turned a spoof blog into an internet phenomenon and a book - The Boston Globe

IBM to Acquire Cognos to Accelerate Information on Demand Business Initiative

The BI/performance management dance floor is emptying...

IBM (NYSE: IBM) and Cognos® (NASDAQ: COGN) (TSX: CSN) today announced that the two companies have entered into a definitive agreement for IBM to acquire Cognos, a publicly-held company based in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, in an all-cash transaction at a price of approximately $5 billion USD or $58 USD per share, with a net transaction value of $4.9 billion USD. The acquisition is subject to Cognos shareholder approval, regulatory approvals and other customary closing conditions. It is expected to close in the first quarter of 2008.

Bloomberg reports the price is a 9.5% premium over COGN's 2007/11/09 closing price.

From later in the acquisition press release:

Other strategic acquisitions in support of IBM's Information on Demand initiative include Princeton Softech (data archiving and compliance), FileNet (enterprise content management), Ascential Software (information integration), DataMirror (changed data capture), SRD (entity analytics), Trigo (product information management), DWL (customer information management) and Alphablox (analytics).

IBM to Acquire Cognos to Accelerate Information on Demand Business Initiative

ConsortiumInfo.org - Putting the OpenDocument Foundation to Bed (without its supper)

Interesting snapshot of a growing controversy about the utility of OpenDocument Format, which is not 1:1 with (or even closely aligned with, at this point) the OpenDocument Foundation.

So what is this CDF, and should it be considered to be an alternative to ODF? Here's what Chris Lilley had to say, reconstructed from my notes (in other words, this is not a direct quote):

So we were in a meeting when these articles about the Foundation and CDF started to appear, and we were really puzzled. CDF isn't anything like ODF at all – it's an "interoperability agreement," mainly focused on two other specifications - XHTML and SVG. You'd need to use another W3C specification, called Web Interactive Compound Document (WICD, pronounced "wicked"), for exporting, and even then you could only view, and not edit the output.

The one thing I'd really want your readers to know is that CDF (even together with WICD) was not created to be, and isn't suitable for use, as an office format.

I'm currently working on a Burton Group research document on ODF, Open XML, and related topics, and will share some perspectives in a few weeks.

ConsortiumInfo.org - Putting the OpenDocument Foundation to Bed (without its supper)

Cyber bullying bedevils Japan - Boston.com

Yikes

Schoolyard bullying has long bedeviled Japan and, as in other countries, has taken a high-tech twist in recent years.

Ten percent of high school students said they have been harassed through e-mails, websites or blogs, a recent survey by the Hyogo Prefectual Board of Education showed.

Cyber bullying is a global trend, but the anonymity it provides for perpetrators may have extra significance in Japan, where wariness of direct confrontation is a cultural norm, said Shaheen Shariff, principal investigator for the International Project on Cyber Bullying at McGill University in Canada.

Cyber bullying bedevils Japan - Boston.com

Will Success, or All That Money From Google, Spoil Firefox? - New York Times

More from the NYT Mozilla article; hardly an objective, outside observer, however; e.g., see this BusinessWeek article

To an outside observer like Tim Wu, a law professor at Columbia who focuses on the Internet, the alliance still makes a lot of sense.

“We’re living in a cold war between open and closed systems, and Google is happy to lend support to entities that it sees as allies,” he said.

While acknowledging that he does not know the secret terms of their contract, he said, by way of analogy, “No one is surprised that Turkey would get aid from the U.S. during the cold war.”

Will Success, or All That Money From Google, Spoil Firefox? - New York Times

Will Success, or All That Money From Google, Spoil Firefox? - New York Times

Timely Mozilla reality check; see the article for more details 

According to Mozilla’s 2006 financial records, which were recently released, the foundation had $74 million in assets, the bulk invested in mutual funds and the like, and last year it collected $66 million in revenue. Eighty-five percent of that revenue came from a single source — Google, which has a royalty contract with Firefox.

Despite that ample revenue, the Mozilla Foundation gave away less than $100,000 in grants (according to the audited statement), or $285,000 (according to Mozilla itself), in 2006. In the same year, it paid the corporation’s chief executive, Mitchell Baker, more than $500,000 in salary and benefits. (She is also chairwoman of the foundation.)

Will Success, or All That Money From Google, Spoil Firefox? - New York Times

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Google and mobile phones | What, no phone? | Economist.com

OHA reality check from The Economist 

In recent years there have been many grand alliances in the mobile-phone industry. These have often been formed in order to neutralise a market leader, but as often as not have failed to achieve anything. Google's new alliance includes some big names. But Samsung, the number three handset-maker, always joins everything; Motorola, the number two, is in trouble and could do with a helping hand from Google; the same is true of Sprint, an American wireless operator. The heavyweights—Nokia, Vodafone, AT&T, Verizon Wireless, not to mention Apple and Microsoft—are conspicuous by their absence.

Unusually for The Economist, however, the article concludes with a factual error:

Google is prepared to spend huge sums to make Android a success, since it hopes to pipe ads onto Android phones. This is the latest example of its strategy to make more money in its main business—online advertising—by opening up other markets. Recently it unveiled OpenSocial, a set of software standards for social networks, which is also intended to create more outlets for online ads (and to keep Facebook, a leading social network, from becoming a serious competitor for them). Will this strategy work? Investors seem to think so. This week Google's shares hit a new high, making it America's most valuable firm.

The error part: Microsoft is still worth > $100B more than Google at the moment.

Google and mobile phones | What, no phone? | Economist.com

Think big, green: Microsoft's mall-sized data centers

Interesting snapshot 

Google is building large data centers in areas where electricity is inexpensive, such as next to the hydropower-rich Columbia River in The Dalles, Ore., or in rural areas. But Chicago is not without its intrinsic advantages, said Manos, a Windy City native.

Microsoft will in fact be taking advantage of a natural Chicagoland feature to help cut energy costs at that facility. It’s called airside economization -- otherwise known as opening a window. From fall to spring, Chicago, “the air outside isn’t necessarily warm,” said Manos, and cooler air will be used to help chill the data center. Pacific Gas & Electric Co.,. has been advocating the technology in particular, and says doing so can cut cooling costs by 60%.

Think big, green: Microsoft's mall-sized data centers

Colligo Contributor for SharePoint® Sets Sales Record

Impressive...

Colligo Networks, a leader in desktop collaboration solutions, reported an 86% increase in revenues and an 84% increase in gross profits in Q3 2007 over Q3 2006. The main driver continues to be the success of Colligo Contributor™ for SharePoint® - sales of which have increased over 3000% year to date over 2006. Contributor is an easy-to-deploy .NET client application that extends the power of Microsoft Office SharePoint® to the desktop.

Colligo Contributor for SharePoint® Sets Sales Record

FAQ - Oracle Wiki

Oracle launches a wiki -- via Mike Gotta, with whom I agree that Oracle is perhaps "... the most interesting dark horse in the race regarding Enterprise 2.0".   The Oracle wiki is hosted by Wetpaint, an impressive hosted wiki++ service provider.

Excerpt from the Oracle Wiki FAQ:

1. What is the Oracle Wiki?
Oracle is providing this wiki so that customers and partners (and anyone else interested in Oracle) can collaboratively create and share content that is helpful to the community at large--whether installation guides and tips, project documentation, technical notes, or anything else (appropriate) that captures your imagination.

2. What isn't the Oracle Wiki?

The Oracle Wiki is not a platform for political views/opinions or shameless self-promotion (get a blog for that). It's not a bulletin board or Q&A forum (see a discussion forum for that). And it's not a place to seek or obtain support (visit MetaLink for that). (See the Rules of Conduct for more details.)

FAQ - Oracle Wiki

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Tim Wu, Freedom Fighter [BusinessWeek]

Another big Google influence

Google's brain trust was again trying to change the rules of the game. Behind the scenes, they owe a sizable debt to a man nearly unknown outside the geeky confines of cyberlaw. He is Tim Wu, a Columbia Law School professor who provided the intellectual framework that inspired Google's mobile phone strategy. One of the school's edgier profs, Wu attends the artfest Burning Man, and admits to having hacked his iPhone to make it work on the T-Mobile network.

Now, Wu's offbeat ideas are entering the mainstream. In February, he published a paper in the International Journal of Communication proposing a radical new vision of freedom for the U.S. wireless industry. He argued that the Federal Communications Commission should mandate that providers allow consumers to use any cell phone with any wireless operator, and install any programs they want on their phones as long as they were not illegal or harmful. "It would make a huge difference in the wireless industry," says Wu. "It will blow open the wireless market."

Tim Wu, Freedom Fighter

I Want My iTV [BusinessWeek]

Cover story snapshot of Internet TV dynamics

But what's holding up the transition from network TV to networked TV is that any company with a little piece of control in the way things work today is unwilling to jeopardize its power and revenues until it becomes clear how the new model will pay. Every time you hear about some product that sounds great but just has one strange limitation, follow the money to understand why. Hollywood worries digital downloads could lead consumers to stop buying $24 billion of DVDs annually, and broadcasters are nervous about the fate of the $185 billion-per-year TV advertising kitty. So studios and networks alike limit how long programs are available on Web sites or restrict the shows that play on various devices.

I Want My iTV

How to Talk About Books You Haven’t Read - Pierre Bayard - Books - Review - New York Times

I think I'll put this on my year-end holiday reading list; read the full review

Bayard’s critique of reading involves practical and theoretical as well as social considerations, and at times it seems like a tongue-in-cheek example of reader-response criticism, which emphasizes the reader’s role in creating meaning. He wants to show us how much we lie about the way we read, to ourselves as well as to others, and to assuage our guilt about the way we actually read and talk about books. “I know few areas of private life, with the exception of finance and sex, in which it’s as difficult to obtain accurate information,” he writes. There are many ways of relating to books that are not acknowledged in educated company, including skimming, skipping, forgetting and glancing at covers.

How to Talk About Books You Haven’t Read - Pierre Bayard - Books - Review - New York Times

Business & Technology | Clearwire, Sprint call off deal | Seattle Times Newspaper

Sprint's crisis cascades to Clearwire, but never underestimate (Clearwire founder) Craig McCaw... 

Clearwire's solid third-quarter financial performance was overshadowed Friday by the announcement that the company and Sprint Nextel had terminated an agreement to jointly build a nationwide wireless broadband network.

In July, Kirkland-based Clearwire and Sprint said they would pool resources to blanket the country with the next generation of high-speed wireless data networks, called WiMax. The deal was expected to be completed in two months, but after taking nearly twice as long, the venture was called off Friday.

[...]

Clearwire's stock plummeted, falling about 25 percent to close at $13.49 a share, or nearly 50 percent below its initial public offering price of $25.

Business & Technology | Clearwire, Sprint call off deal | Seattle Times Newspaper

E-Mail Scammers Ask Your Friends for Money - Bits - Technology - New York Times Blog

OpenSocial could make this sort of scam a lot simpler... 

Nigeria continues to develop and export the world’s most innovative Internet scams. In one bizarre variation that seems to have ramped up in recent months, the scammers are taking a page from Facebook and leveraging the power of social connections.

Here’s how it works: The scammer somehow breaks into a victim’s Web-based e-mail account. He then impersonates the victim and sends an emergency plea for help to everyone in the account’s address book, asking them to wire money to Nigeria. The e-mail includes some variation on a story about getting mugged or losing a wallet while on a trip to Nigeria.

E-Mail Scammers Ask Your Friends for Money - Bits - Technology - New York Times Blog

Northeastern sues Google over patent - The Boston Globe

Maybe Google should simply acquire Northeastern University...  Of course, that would have been easier before GOOG lost ~$70/share in the last week.

Northeastern University and a start-up company cofounded by an associate professor have filed a patent-infringement suit against Google Inc., claiming that database technology patented in 1997 was misappropriated by the world's most popular Internet search service.

"This particular patent has to do with the fundamental database architecture, which they use to serve up every single result they serve to you," said Michael Belanger, president of Jarg Corp. in Waltham. Jarg is a privately funded developer of advanced search technology. The company was cofounded by Northeastern associate professor Kenneth P. Baclawski and holds an exclusive license to the patent, which is owned by Northeastern.

Northeastern sues Google over patent - The Boston Globe

Friday, November 09, 2007

Server OS Numbers at Issue

Interesting snapshot from eWeek:

During the past few fiscal quarters, Margaret Lewis has seen an interesting trend in the server space: Windows is garnering a greater share of the market, while growth in Linux systems appears to be slowing.

Lewis, director of commercial solutions at chip maker Advanced Micro Devices, said that in 2000, Windows constituted about half the server operating system market, followed by Unix and NetWare at about 17 percent each and Linux at about 10 percent. Today, Windows owns about 70 percent and Linux about 20 percent, with Unix below 10 percent and NetWare barely registering.

Meanwhile, in InformationWeek, an article titled "Mac Servers in a Windows World?"; an excerpt:

Apple says it wants to make Leopard a viable option for smaller companies and workgroups in larger organizations. To that end, the Leopard development team significantly overhauled OS X's mail server, named Mail. Leopard improves the client interface and offers ClamAV, SpamAssassin, and SSL/TLS to boost security on the server end. Setup and configuration are fairly straightforward when integrated with Apple's native Open Directory and LDAP, and Apple's directory services can mimic an NT domain controller via Samba 3 for Windows clients, and/or connect to an existing Windows Active Directory.

Interesting times.

BTW it's getting harder to blog articles I run across in dead-tree pubs; I had to use Google to find the eWeek article after the search service at www.eweek.com failed (as in error message, not just useless search results), and the InformationWeek reporters used different titles for the same article, in their print and on-line versions (the title of the Leopard Server article in the print version is "Leopard Server A Sexy Beast"; as you can probably imagine, I was apprehensive about searching Google for that phrase, after not finding it on the InformationWeek site...).

Server OS Numbers at Issue

PC World - Web Presentation Apps: Glide Outshines Google

Ran across this in the dead-tree version of PC World

Google's new presentation software, touted as a Web-based alternative to Microsoft's PowerPoint, is an easy-to-use product with a nifty interface and impressive collaboration features, but its omission of several important functions makes it a runner-up to Transmedia's Web-based application, Glide Presenter 2.0.

Hadn't heard of Transmedia before; from their web site (About Us page):

TransMedia is leading the emergence of rights and identity based, compatible and integrated multipurpose software and services for corporations and consumers. TransMedia’s device and network neutral solutions replace many single purpose software applications and web services enabling people to simplify and consolidate their digital lives. TransMedia’s goal is to advance Digital Human Interaction (DHI) by building integration deep in the core of the company’s multipurpose applications and optimizing compatibility between people -- supporting non-linear user impulses and actions and transcending technical and geographic boundaries. A culture of compatibility and integration empowers people to unleash the potential of technology in their personal lives and communities with mobile personal and social computing.

Hmm...

PC World - Web Presentation Apps: Glide Outshines Google

SD Times - Flash Makes Crystal Reports Dance in Newest Iteration

Interesting development for SAP/Business Objects/Crystal Reports

For the newest version of Crystal Reports, Business Objects has focused on improving the experience of both the developer and the end user. For the end user, the 2008 release includes new visualization options that can transform data into colorful Flash-based charts and graphs. The new ability to embed Flash into reports allows developers to make their charts move, become animated and morph into one another on the fly, during presentations or just inside of an e-mail.

SD Times - Flash Makes Crystal Reports Dance in Newest Iteration

Review: Windows Home Server is a powerful networking tool [ComputerWorld]

A much more extensive and, imho, objective WHS review (compared with the USA Today hit & run review I referenced yesterday)

The just-released Windows Home Server (WHS) from Microsoft Corp. is a surprisingly powerful networking tool that offers some of the sophisticated networking capabilities you would expect from big-boy servers, but aims them at the home "enthusiast" and power user markets.

In fact, some of WHS's capabilities are powerful enough that it's useful for the home office, not just home enthusiasts. In particular, its backup, file-sharing and remote access capabilities are ideal for users who run an office from their home, and possibly even for a small office of a half-dozen or fewer PCs. This should be no surprise: The software is based on the code of Microsoft Windows Server 2003.

There's also a companion troubleshooting article

Review: Windows Home Server is a powerful networking tool

Technology Review: Beleaguered Internet phone company Vonage in settlement talks with AT&T, adds customers in 3Q

Not dead yet... and actually working pretty well these days, in my experience 

Internet phone company Vonage Holdings Corp. on Thursday said it was in talks with AT&T to settle a patent suit, the last of several filed against it by traditional phone companies.

The Holmdel, N.J., company also said it managed to add subscribers in the third quarter, despite cutting back on its ad spending.

The news sent Vonage's volatile stock soaring 23 percent to $2.70 in premarket trading. On Sept. 26, the stock hit an all-time low of 89 cents. The company went public a year and a half ago at $17 per share.

Technology Review: Beleaguered Internet phone company Vonage in settlement talks with AT&T, adds customers in 3Q

Thursday, November 08, 2007

My Google phone hangup - Yahoo! News

Timely Infoworld reality check; read the article for more on how the Google phone plan could become an IT nightmare.

This news should be like ringtones to your ears -- except that Google is so wrong on this one, so wrong.

Google thinks that creating a developer-friendly platform for mobile applications and unshackling mobile devices from the micromanagers at AT&T and Verizon Wireless will deliver huge benefits to end-users, just as Internet protocols and standards did for PC users.

Get ready to duck and cover; it could get really ugly if Google makes this work. Your users will be calling you 24/7: "My cell phone crashed again!"

My Google phone hangup - Yahoo! News

HP server serves up lots of headaches - USATODAY.com

As a former product guy, it makes me wince every time I run across goofy reviews such as this one in USA Today.

If your experience with the first of these Windows Home Servers is as exasperating as mine, you may wish your employer's PC help desk were at your beck and call. The $750 Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) MediaSmart Server I've been testing is too pricey and complicated for all but tech-savvy consumers. I hit snags with everything from remote computing to password management.

If you read the full article, you'll find that the reviewer is holding Microsoft accountable for issues with his broadband service provider (Cablevision) and, for some reason that he doesn't explain, considers a consumer-oriented terabyte server at $750 too expensive. Overall, he gives the HP WHS box a rating of 2 out of 4 stars.

I guess I shouldn't be surprised, given the source; I rarely read USA Today -- although sometimes, as was the case today, I skim it when there's a copy outside my hotel room door.

HP server serves up lots of headaches - USATODAY.com

Wednesday, November 07, 2007

The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs: Mind-blowing refrigerators

Another interesting Google reality check; read the full post 

Just remember one thing. Google's basic goal in life is to drive the cost of everything in the world to zero -- except the one thing Google sells, which is incredibly overpriced advertising with super high margins that are fed by Google's refusal to share information with partners. Key algorithm for Google, the one that Larry and Sergey should have written dissertations on, boils down to this:
Opacity = profitability.

The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs: Mind-blowing refrigerators

Facebook Is Marketing Your Brand Preferences (With Your Permission) - New York Times

It'll be interesting to see what a spike in advertising from friends will do to trust relationships 

Facebook’s much-anticipated plan — which the company calls “social advertising” — was revealed yesterday at a gathering of advertising executives and reporters in New York. Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s chief executive, spoke in grand terms about of the death of mass advertising and said that in the future, ad messages would increasingly be conveyed from friend to friend through online networks.

“Nothing influences a person more than a recommendation from a trusted friend,” Mr. Zuckerberg said.

Facebook Is Marketing Your Brand Preferences (With Your Permission) - New York Times

HP MediaSmart Server ex475 Desktop reviews - CNET Reviews

Very positive review of the new HP WHS box 

Microsoft's Windows Home Server is the best, easiest-to-use answer to backing up and corralling all of the disparate media files in a networked home. And delivered in this petite, relatively affordable MediaSmart Server ex745 from HP, you get plenty of storage in a well-designed hardware package. We recommend this system all the way to anyone looking to take full control of their data.

HP MediaSmart Server ex475 Desktop reviews - CNET Reviews

Tuesday, November 06, 2007

San Jose Mercury News - Microsoft to open $500 million data center in Ireland

 Another day, another $.5B data center...

Microsoft Corp. said Tuesday it will build a $500 million data center in Ireland to boost its services for tens of millions of customers, chiefly in Europe.

Microsoft said the 550,000-square-foot center, scheduled to open in mid-2009, will house tens of thousands of servers. These will be used to power Microsoft's Windows Live-branded products, including search engines, e-mail accounts and photo-storage facilities.

San Jose Mercury News - Microsoft to open $500 million data center in Ireland

Enterprise Search Virtual Pressroom

Many more details and screen shots on Microsoft's new search stuff; click here to review

The information explosion of the last decade has made enterprise search a critical need for companies of all sizes. It helps people find the business information they need, using a familiar Web-search experience. Microsoft Corp. is proud to introduce two additions to its Enterprise Search offerings: Microsoft Search Server 2008 and Microsoft Search Server 2008 Express.

Enterprise Search Virtual Pressroom

More from: Microsoft Expands Enterprise Search Offering, Introduces Search Server 2008 Express

More details...

Enterprise search has the greatest impact when it links companies to a variety of information. Today Microsoft announced two important search product portfolio enhancements that provide connectivity to a number of common customer information sources.

First, free connectors that index content from EMC Corp.’s Documentum and IBM Corp.’s FileNet are scheduled to be available across the portfolio of Microsoft search products in early 2008.

Microsoft has also added new federated search capabilities based on the OpenSearch standard. Many applications and services already support OpenSearch, and Microsoft is working with a number of partners, as well as with its own product groups, to create new connections based on the standard. Several companies — including Open Text Corp., Business Objects SA, Cognos Inc. and EMC — have already signed on to develop federated search connectors that will enable Microsoft’s enterprise search customers to easily connect to their information systems.

So... I guess Google won't have to create an "OpenSearch" alliance, as Fake Steve Jobs suggested; it already exists.

Also see this page for an interview with Microsoft GM Kirk Koenigsbauer for more on Microsoft's search strategy.

Microsoft Expands Enterprise Search Offering, Introduces Search Server 2008 Express: Free enterprise search product is quick, easy, powerful.

Microsoft Expands Enterprise Search Offering, Introduces Search Server 2008 Express: Free enterprise search product is quick, easy, powerful.

I think Google's week just got a bit more complex

Today at Enterprise Search Summit West in San Jose, Calif., Microsoft Corp. unveiled Microsoft Search Server 2008 Express, a new addition to its enterprise search lineup. Search Server 2008 Express, which will be available as a free download, combines simplicity of installation and ease of use with a powerful set of search features, including new security-enhanced capabilities that help businesses connect to a wide range of information. A release candidate of Search Server 2008 Express is available today at http://www.microsoft.com/enterprisesearch for download and evaluation.

[...]

In delivering Search Server Express, Microsoft has taken the enterprise class search capabilities of Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007 and made them available as a stand-alone server for free. Search Server Express is designed to be easy to configure and administer, allowing IT professionals to go from download to search in as little as 30 minutes. In addition, Search Server Express has no preset document limits, so it will scale to meet a company’s evolving needs. For users, Search Server Express provides advanced security and easy access to relevant, action-oriented results using a familiar Web search experience.

Microsoft Expands Enterprise Search Offering, Introduces Search Server 2008 Express: Free enterprise search product is quick, easy, powerful.

Google moves into mobile, and would-be rivals swoon - Nov. 6, 2007 [Fortune]

We're definitely not in Kansas anymore...

Maybe it is Google's $700-plus stock price, or the supremely confident tone Google director of mobile platforms Andy Rubin used to describe how Android would blow away competitors from the likes of Microsoft and Nokia (without actually disclosing any details of how Android works), but old-school telecom CEOs were lining up Monday to sing Google's praises -- and strut their own "open source" credentials.

"We've been one of the most vocal (companies) in developing on open platforms, and this is an accelerator to what we're doing," said Motorola CEO Ed Zander on a call with reporters Monday. "We applaud Andy and Eric" Schmidt, Google's CEO, who also was on the call.

It looks like Google won't have to invest any of its current ~$225B market cap in bribing the mainstream press; that'd be a superfluous gesture at this point.

Meanwhile, Zander's and Schmidt's former employer, Sun, seems to be having difficulties staying on the same growth vector as the overall hardware industry.

Google moves into mobile, and would-be rivals swoon - Nov. 6, 2007

Mark Logic CEO Blog: Mark Logic Redefines E-Mail Search: Introducing MarkMail

Very cool -- check out the full post for details

This weekend Mark Logic launched a new Internet service, called MarkMail (tm), that lets users search 4,000,000+ emails from over 500 Apache mailing lists, in order to analzye trends, locate experts, and get fast, precise answers to technical questions.
Put one way, MarkMail redefines what search means in the context of e-mail (think: what Technorati did for blogs.) Put another, MarkMail is a demonstration of the power of MarkLogic Server when aimed at e-mail content. (Think -- and I know the metaphor is risky -- AltaVista, the Internet search engine launched to demonstrate the power of DEC's Alpha chip.)

Mark Logic CEO Blog: Mark Logic Redefines E-Mail Search: Introducing MarkMail

Sony to launch new PlayStation 2 model in Japan | Tech&Sci | Technology | Reuters.com

Kinda reminds me of Lotus 1-2-3 releases 2.x and 3.x, about 20 years ago...

Sony Corp. said it plans to launch a lighter version of its PlayStation 2 game console later this month, in a bid to drive sales of the seven-year-old machine heading into the crucial holiday season.

The new model, which has a built-in AC adaptor, weighs 720 grams, down from a combined weight of 850 grams for the previous model and its external AC adaptor.

[...]

Maintaining brisk demand for the PS2 is just as important for Sony as shoring up sales of its latest game machine, the PlayStation 3, as the PS2, which has sold more than 120 million units worldwide, is a cash cow for the game unit.

Sony to launch new PlayStation 2 model in Japan Tech&Sci Technology Reuters.com

Looks Like The HP Medismart's Selling Fast... | We Got Served

Not bad for day 1...

Interesting to see that Amazon.com is now stating that the two HP Mediasmart Server models EX470 (500Gb) and EX475 (1Tb) are respectively the number 1 and 2 best-selling systems in their Computers range, on their first day of release.

HP has five of the items in the top-10 list at the moment -- impressive.  Apple and HP together represent 14 of the top 20.

Looks Like The HP Medismart's Selling Fast... | We Got Served

Google Teams Up With Cell Industry - washingtonpost.com

More superstitious projections...

Google's plans could threaten the mobile dominance of Yahoo's search platform and Microsoft's operating system, which enjoy lucrative arrangements with carriers and cellphone manufacturers, according to some analysts.

"This is the most direct challenge that Google has offered Microsoft to date," said technology analyst Roger Kay of Endpoint Technologies Associates. "Microsoft has to take a real deep breath and decide what it is going to do here."

Definitely the most direct challenge... for this week, so far...

Google Teams Up With Cell Industry - washingtonpost.com

Nearly 80 percent of U.S. adults go online | CNET News.com

Yow...

Four out of five U.S. adults go online now, according to a new Harris Poll.

The survey, which polled 2,062 adults in July and October, found that 79 percent of adults--about 178 million--go online, spending an average 11 hours a week on the Internet.

Nearly 80 percent of U.S. adults go online | CNET News.com

Top 100 Home-Based Businesses in the Nation Revealed: The StartupNation Home-Based 100

Interesting snapshot

A recent study by research firm Access Markets International (AMI) Partners Inc. reported that there are 16.5 million home-based businesses in the United States — an all-time high. Sloan said this is due in part to a number of trends, from baby boomers retiring from their primary jobs and starting their own businesses to parents who want to work from home to spend more time with their families. In fact, the AMI data reveals the top two motives for forming a home-based business are the freedom of running one’s own business and the desire to have more control over personal/family time.

[...]

As the number of home-based businesses has grown over the years, so have technology needs. The AMI study — sponsored in part by Microsoft — revealed that 89 percent of home-based businesses have a PC. Among those with PCs, 84 percent have high-speed Internet access, and 28 percent have a Web site.

A target-rich environment for services such as Office Live Small Business and products such as Windows Home Server...

Top 100 Home-Based Businesses in the Nation Revealed: The StartupNation Home-Based 100, sponsored by Microsoft Office Live Small Business, ranks top performers among the nation’s often-unrecognized 16.5 million home-based businesses.

Monday, November 05, 2007

The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs: It's not a phone, it's an alliance

Read the full post (warning: FSJ is into crude mode over the last couple days...)

So I know Google's stock is popping and everyone thinks they're absolutely on fire but let me tell you something. We're not scared about this Google phone platform. Simple reason. Alliances don't work. They never do. The Open Handset Alliance is a joke. But it's classic Google. Announce some big piece of unfinished stuff that may or may not ever be this or that or whatever. Get loads of other idiots on board to say they're going to support this big piece of mish-mash code or platform or apps or whatever. Right now they're all pretending to go along because what the hell they get their names into the press release as being associated with Google and who cares if anything ever comes of it? It's called releaseware. Do you really think all those other companies are really going to come out with anything? You really think they're just dying to help Google come into their market and scoop up all the money for itself?

The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs: It's not a phone, it's an alliance

Robert X. Cringely® | InfoWorld | The great social networking swindle of 2007

Another timely reality check 

But do not be fooled by the 'open' rhetoric. Pay no attention to the nice man in the Google polo shirt. This isn't about freedom, this is about data. Social networks are really just rich deep pools of personal information, and everybody wants to cast out a hook and reel you in. Marketers are salivating at the chance to sell you something based on that silly profile you filled out in a drunken haze one night on Bebo.com. If they can get at it simply by having you complete a stupid movie quiz or play a silly game, so much the better.

The problem: If they can get at this data, what's to stop the next dumb-as-a-fence-post affiliate spammer from doing the same? Nothing more than a few bland assurances that "we take your privacy very seriously" and "the security of your personal information is our top priority." We know how well those policies work in the real world.

Robert X. Cringely® | InfoWorld | The great social networking swindle of 2007 | November 5, 2007 07:51 AM | By Robert X. Cringely

Business Technology : Google Phone: A Business-Tech Nightmare Waiting to Happen [WSJ]

 C'mon, like anyone would do anything evil on Google's platform?

Here’s the first thing that will happen when a phone with Google’s operating system hits the market: Information-technology departments will ban employees from connecting phones that run Google’s operating system to their computers or the corporate network. The reason is that Google’s operating system is open, meaning anyone can write software for it. That includes bad guys, who will doubtlessly develop viruses and other malicious code for these phones, which unsuspecting Google phones owners will download. Employees could spread the malicious code to the rest of the company when they synch their phones to their computers or use it to check email.

scream_blog_20071105162849.jpg

Your IT guy when you try to use a Google phone at work

 

Business Technology : Google Phone: A Business-Tech Nightmare Waiting to Happen

Official Google Blog: Where's my Gphone?

Ah, so it's a parallel universe strategy: assume for the moment that companies such as Apple, Microsoft, and RIM, and alliances such as Symbian, don't exist.  Wouldn't it be nifty if all handset manufacturers decided to forego substantive software and service feature-based differentiation and let Google provide a platform for them, one pegged to Google web services?

It's important to recognize that the Open Handset Alliance and Android have the potential to be major changes from the status quo -- one which will take patience and much investment by the various players before you'll see the first benefits. But we feel the potential gains for mobile customers around the world are worth the effort. If you’re a developer and this approach sounds exciting, give us a week or so and we’ll have an SDK available. If you’re a mobile user, you’ll have to wait a little longer, but some of our partners are targeting the second half of 2008 to ship phones based on the Android platform. And if you already have a phone you know and love, check out mobile.google.com and make sure you have Google Maps for mobile, Gmail and our other great applications on your phone. We'll continue to make these services better and add plenty of exciting new features, applications and services, too.

Yes, this would all be very nifty -- for Google, and perhaps no other vendor in the domain.

I can't wait to read the Fake Steve Jobs take on this...

Official Google Blog: Where's my Gphone?

BBC NEWS | Technology | Google pushes into mobile phones

So... we're not really sure what it is, but it's from Google, and one especially smart guy at Google (we know that because Google bought his company), and lots of vendors have signed up for it, and it's going to be free and "open", so ... even if it doesn't actually appear to do anything particularly new, and it's not clear when devices using it will appear, it's a "shot heard around the world" (a quote elsewhere in the article)

Adam Leach, principal analyst with Ovum, said: "It's an important announcement. That number of companies already committing to the service is very impressive."

Mr Leach said the danger was that the move would create "yet another" competing service and not a "truly open platform".

"We've seen collaboration of this sort before in the mobile industry and there's quite a number of platforms already out there professing to remove fragmentation, speed-up time to market and enable third-party innovation.

"The proposition from that point of view is not new." 

BBC NEWS | Technology | Google pushes into mobile phones

Google Unveils Cellphone Alliance - WSJ.com

Maybe Google should package all their recent "open" stuff  together and call it "Open Promise," as in they promise to deliver something, someday, but at the moment the details are still a bit open...  In the meantime it's interesting to see which vendors are willing to trade potential future power transfusions to Google for daily press release references -- sort of reminds me of the glory days of Netscape...

The company's announcement could prove a short-term disappointment for consumers who were eager for more details – and photos – of what some have termed the "Google Phone" or the "Gphone." The company didn't announce the creation of any single Google-powered device or show what one would look like. Indeed, it said it would take until the second half of 2008 before phones based on the Android platform come to market.

The initiative is a sign of Google's frustration with the way the cellphone industry works. Carriers and handset makers control what services customers can access and use operating systems that sometimes restrict software developers from accessing information like a user's Global Positioning System location, contact list or Web browsing. Google and its partners hope to spur greater innovation in areas like location-aware services and social networking, and to make cellphones more like the Web. The companies said they would release a set of tools for developers next week.

Google Unveils Cellphone Alliance - WSJ.com

Ross Mayfield's Weblog: CEO 2.0 and some funding news

Interesting to see Eugene Lee shift from Adobe to Socialtext CEO

Dan Farber blogs on how I've officially stepped down from the CEO role at SocialtextEugene Lee joins us as CEO 2.0 and we announced our $9.5M Series C.  From founding a collaboration company that he sold to Banyan, to being an executive there and at Cisco, and most recently at Adobe, he can certainly take us to the next level.

Ross Mayfield's Weblog: CEO 2.0 and some funding news

BBC NEWS | Technology | Britons sending 1bn texts weekly

Yikes

Britons are now sending more than one billion text messages per week according to the latest figures from the Mobile Data Association (MDA).

The figure is 25% higher than a year ago and is set to shatter forecasts for how many text messages have been sent to and from handsets this year.

That weekly total is the same as the number sent during the whole of 1999.

BBC NEWS | Technology | Britons sending 1bn texts weekly

» Microsoft delivers first test build of its online-offline sync platform | All about Microsoft | ZDNet.com

WinFS lives on, at least in terms of the vision, albeit through multiple delivery vehicles

Microsoft posted for download on November 4 a first test build of what it’s calling the Microsoft Sync Framework, technology that will allow developers to take their Web services and databases offline.

The new framework also provides P2P synchronization of “any type of file including contacts, music, videos, images and settings,” according to Microsoft’s download site. The framework provides built-in support for synchronizing relational databases, NTFS/FAT file systems and Simple Sharing Extensions for RSS/ATOM, according to Microsoft.

» Microsoft delivers first test build of its online-offline sync platform | All about Microsoft | ZDNet.com

Business & Technology | "Valley Boy" still smarts over HP | Seattle Times Newspaper

I was wondering why I saw a preview for a "60 Minutes" story yesterday with Perkins and his assorted toys... I have a hunch his book will read like a lot like oPtion$...

The venture capitalist has been relatively quiet since the effort by HP's hired security consultants to ferret out boardroom leaks by spying on employees, media and directors exploded last year.

Now, at 75, Perkins is returning to the spotlight with a memoir that starts with the HP scandal.

A week before "Valley Boy: The Education of Tom Perkins" goes on sale, Perkins marveled at how the affair still generates headlines even though most of the criminal cases have been settled and the company's business was largely unaffected.

Business & Technology "Valley Boy" still smarts over HP Seattle Times Newspaper

WSJ.com hits 1 million subscribers | CNET News.com

What's a ~hundred million dollars here and there, when you're Rupert Murdoch?...  

The Wall Street Journal said on Sunday that its Web site now has 1 million subscribers, a milestone for a site that charges for access even as other sites are throwing themselves open for free. It also comes as News Corp chief Rupert Murdoch, who is buying the Journal's parent company Dow Jones & Company, contemplates scrapping the Journal's subscription model in favor of free access supported by advertising.

WSJ.com hits 1 million subscribers | CNET News.com

Windows Home Server Available Now to Help Families Protect, Connect and Share Their Digital Experiences

Check out the specs, prices, hardware vendors, and software solutions -- WHS is a new category unto itself...  FYI Amazon.com also has the HP WHS boxes for ~23% off SRP; see this page for the 1TB HP box at $679.

Windows Home Server, a new solution to help families easily protect, connect and share their digital media and documents, is generally available today. The HP MediaSmart Server, powered by Windows Home Server software, is now available for pre-order on Amazon.com, Best Buy.com, Buy.com, Circuit City.com and CompUSA.com. It will be shipped to customers and available via other leading retailer Web sites later in November. Additional Microsoft hardware and software partners are also delivering new consumer products and solutions designed to work with Windows Home Server.

“Digital devices and content are everywhere in our day-to-day lives and they are more important all the time,” said Bill Gates, chairman of Microsoft. “With the launch of Windows Home Server, Microsoft and its partners are creating a new consumer product category that will help people keep their digital media safe and make it easier for them to enjoy it with friends and family.”

[...]

The HP MediaSmart Server, powered by the AMD LIVE! solution, was designed for the Windows Home Server platform. It provides consumers with easy, more secure access to all their movies, photos, music and documents through any broadband Internet-connected PC. The product also includes HP Photo Webshare software for consumers to easily and more securely share photos with select friends and family. The MediaSmart Server is offered in a 500GB version for $599 (U.S.) and a 1TB model for $749 (U.S.).*

Windows Home Server Available Now to Help Families Protect, Connect and Share Their Digital Experiences: The HP MediaSmart Server is now available for pre-order and will be shipped to customers this month; new hardware and software partners announce Windows Home Server products and solutions.

Sunday, November 04, 2007

And what does Mr. Gates think? - November 12, 2007 [Fortune]

This is a companion/sidebar article to a much longer article about Cisco ("Cisco's Display of Strength") in the latest issue of Fortune

With Cisco touting its own approach to unified communications, is there a Betamax-VHS battle looming?

[Bill Gates:] There's plenty of room for both Cisco and Microsoft to be very successful in this space. There will be some ways that our things can work together, because we've worked with Cisco on a lot of the network and security initiatives. But there's very direct competition here too. Cisco has offered an IP phone system for some time, and our Office Communications Server uses Internet telephony to let you track what's going on with your colleagues and makes it easy to set up a screen-to-screen-type call. Cisco acquired WebEx, and that competes directly with what we call Live Meeting, which is our screen-sharing piece that allows people to talk and work on a document at the same time. But I think we should have the advantage, because we can create the overall user experience.

See the article for more Q&A

And what does Mr. Gates think? - November 12, 2007

Amazon.com: Options: The Secret Life of Steve Jobs, a Parody: Books: Daniel Lyons

Recommended reading -- click here to order a copy from Amazon.com. "oPtions$" reads a bit like "The Catcher in the Rye", except told by a billionaire sociopath CEO. It's a breezy, fun read, and it even manages to make some subtly serious points.

Amazon.com: Options: The Secret Life of Steve Jobs, a Parody: Books: Daniel Lyons

How to... Install Sharepoint Services 3.0 on Windows Home Server | We Got Served

Hmm...

Tom Z has published a detailed, step by step guide to installing Sharepoint Services 3.0 on Windows Home Server. If you’re a big Sharepoint fan, and have been wondering how to get it to run on WHS, check it out.

Download: Tom’s Blog

How to... Install Sharepoint Services 3.0 on Windows Home Server | We Got Served

Googling Google (November-December 2007)

Interesting take on Google and its trajectory, via The Googlization of Everything (again...) -- the quote below is from Harvard Magazine

Searls suggests that Google will also lose its dominance, and thinks the concept he’s developing at the Berkman Center may play a role in that process. He believes the Internet is ripe for a consumer revolution that will empower individuals to define the terms of their relationships with companies, rather than let the companies dictate the terms. His name for the idea—Project VRM—stands for “vendor relationship management,” as opposed to the established corporate jargon of “customer relationship management.” In Searls’s utopian vision, companies that insist on collecting all kinds of extraneous information will lose out to those firms willing to provide the same services for a “lower information cost,” so to speak, as customers refuse to relinquish any more information than is absolutely necessary to provide the services they desire. Searls sees sizable unmet demand in this arena, and believes that every company will be forced to adapt—including Google.

Googling Google  (November-December 2007)

Why Google Turned Into a Social Butterfly - New York Times

Imagine all the time wasted, sharing a web of noise...

Suppose, however, that you could leave the island compound of a social networking site and take your network of friends, and friends of friends, anywhere on the Web? This is what makes Google’s announcement last week of a new alliance of companies so enticing — the possibility that social networking will become ubiquitous.

Google’s vision — “Social Will Be Everywhere” — is more compelling than anything Facebook could possibly devise. Who wouldn’t prefer the unlimited freedom to take one’s own trusted circle anywhere on the Web, as opposed to the cramped confines of island life?

Why Google Turned Into a Social Butterfly - New York Times

Google Phone - New York Times

Interesting bio/background piece

The Google Phone — which, according to several reports, will be made by Google partners and will be available by the middle of 2008 — is likely to provide a stark contrast to the approaches of both Apple and Microsoft to the growing market for smartphones. Google, according to several people with direct knowledge of its efforts, will give away its software to hand-set makers and then use the Google Phone’s openness as an invitation for software developers and content distributors to design applications for it.

If the effort succeeds, it will be the most drastic challenge to date of the assertion by Microsoft — the godfather of the desktop PC — that Google and other members of the so-called open-source world can imitate but not innovate.

A timely snapshot:

 

Google Phone - New York Times

Saturday, November 03, 2007

So Many Ads, So Few Clicks [BusinessWeek]

 Hmmm...  See the full article for more details.

The truth about online ads is that precious few people actually click on them. And the percentage of people who respond to common "banner ads," the ubiquitous interactive posters that run in fixed places on sites, is shrinking steadily. The so-called click-through rate for those ads on major Web destinations such as Yahoo! (YHOO ), Microsoft (MSFT ), and AOL (TWX ) declined from 0.75% to 0.27% during 2006, according to Eyeblaster, a New York-based online ad serving and monitoring firm. It says that last March the average click rate on standard banner ads across the whole Web was 0.2%. This reflects a surge in new ads and Web pages, fueled by the rise in social networks.

So Many Ads, So Few Clicks

Widgets Become Coins of the Social Realm - washingtonpost.com

Timely snapshot

It's all the rage on the Web these days: Design a program that creates a slide show, or shows on a map what countries you've visited. Then allow people to post these little add-on services to their online social-networking profiles, free.

Advertising companies are thinking of ways to use those programs to make money, a few cents at a time.

[...]

To a consumer, the process is essentially a quid pro quo. In exchange for using a widget, which might be a game or an interactive tool, a user must agree to allow the designer of the widget access to the information on their social-networking profiles. Ad companies can then mine personal data from the profiles and target their messages. So, for example, if someone says his or her favorite band is the Shins, that person is considered likely to buy a Shins T-shirt and music by similar bands.

I'm all for beyond-the-basics hypertext and compound/interactive document models, e.g., Traction TeamPage (this is getting deeply nested -- I just Googled "o'kelly traction" to find a link to a session I presented at the Traction User Group a couple months ago... and discovered I'm quoted in the Wikipedia entry on Traction), but the tulip-mania gadget meme-fest is getting annoying.

BTW you can find my hypertext and compound/interactive document model presentation from the 2007/09 Traction User Group meeting here (pdf). It doesn't contain any advertising-magnet gadgets :)

Widgets Become Coins of the Social Realm - washingtonpost.com

Onward and Upward with the Arts: Future Reading: Reporting & Essays: The New Yorker

Timely reality check on Google Book Search and similar initiatives; read the entire article. I found this via The Googlization of Everything.

In fact, the Internet will not bring us a universal library, much less an encyclopedic record of human experience. None of the firms now engaged in digitization projects claim that it will create anything of the kind. The hype and rhetoric make it hard to grasp what Google and Microsoft and their partner libraries are actually doing. We have clearly reached a new point in the history of text production. On many fronts, traditional periodicals and books are making way for blogs and other electronic formats. But magazines and books still sell a lot of copies. The rush to digitize the written record is one of a number of critical moments in the long saga of our drive to accumulate, store, and retrieve information efficiently. It will result not in the infotopia that the prophets conjure up but in one in a long series of new information ecologies, all of them challenging, in which readers, writers, and producers of text have learned to survive.

On a related note... I subscribe to a ridiculous number of magazines. I've always found it useful to forage in different domains, so I subscribe to most of the leading business magazines, a bunch of others focused on politics and world events, and, of course, a forest-felling set of technology-related pubs.

I periodically get determined to reduce my magazine list, to save money, better optimize my time and attention, reduce paper waste, etc. The New Yorker is currently on my not-be-renewed list; although I've always considered it to be a great read, it's a weekly, and I often feel guilty about merely skimming it before putting it into my recycle pile.

Then I see articles like this one, and I'm reminded of the importance and influence of excellent journalism. So my first reaction this morning... was to renew my print subscription, even though I just discarded my "Final notice..." renewal letter last week. And then I reconsidered, because, after all, I can simply read the occasional great New Yorker article on-line instead -- or maybe I should make a point of going to my local library with my kids every couple weeks, and have joint explorations of the magazine racks therein...

Onward and Upward with the Arts: Future Reading: Reporting & Essays: The New Yorker

IBM, Novell Move To Block SCO's Unix Sell Off -- SCO Group -- InformationWeek

Playing for keeps...

IBM (NYSE: IBM) and Novell (NSDQ: NOVL) on Thursday asked a bankruptcy court judge to block The SCO Group's sale of its Unix technology to a private equity firm, which the software vendor has proposed as part of its Chapter 11 reorganization effort.

IBM, one of SCO's creditors, said in a court filing that SCO shouldn't be allowed to sell off its assets in part because Chapter 11 protection is meant to give cash-strapped companies a chance to reorganize -- not liquidate their assets.

IBM, Novell Move To Block SCO's Unix Sell Off -- SCO Group -- InformationWeek

Embarcadero Press Release: Embarcadero Introduces Universal Data Models for ER/Studio

Entropy reduction in data modeling...

Embarcadero Technologies, Inc. today announced the availability of Universal Data Models for its ER/Studio data modeling tool. These comprehensive data models improve quality and reduce data model development and maintenance time by an average of 60 percent. They also make sophisticated data models more accessible to small- and medium-sized businesses that previously had to forego them due to budget or IT constraints.

[...]

"On average, at least 60 percent of a data model or data warehouse design consists of common constructs that are applicable to most enterprises," said Silverston. "This means that most data modeling or data warehouse design efforts are at some point re-creating constructs that have been built many times before. By leveraging the standard Universal Data Models, Embarcadero ER/Studio customers can more quickly develop data models and save on maintenance by using the agile modeling constructs."

Embarcadero Press Release

I, Cringely . The Pulpit . The Next Microsoft | PBS

Timely reality check; read the full post

Google shares rose above $700 this week, making the search giant worth more than Cisco, Intel, Apple, or IBM, but still less than Microsoft and General Electric, if just barely. Is the company really worth that kind of money or is this just the effect of a bubble market? Google is on a tear, that's for sure, but I see a few potholes ahead that the company could avoid but probably won't. Part of this stems from Google starting to look, in some ways, a bit like Microsoft. Uh-oh.

I think Google has in the works a global strategy so sweeping and audacious that it is breathtaking, but that's for a future column. This week I want to point out where Google is screwing up, why, and what they should do about it.

One aspect of this type of "the next Microsoft" theme I find interesting: in most cases, the writers describe Microsoft modus operandi of 15 - 20 years ago, not the way Microsoft operates today.

I, Cringely . The Pulpit . The Next Microsoft PBS

Friday, November 02, 2007

Paul Thurrott's SuperSite for Windows: Windows Home Server Review

Read the entire review... 

Windows Home Server is the ultimate stealth product: You almost certainly need it but don't realize it yet. While most of the feature set of this product is available elsewhere, I'm not aware of any single products out there that offer all of this functionality in a single place, and at such a reasonable cost. The PC backup and restore functionality is an extension of work that went into the Vista Backup and Restore Center and Windows Live OneCare, but it's automatic and network-based, and doesn't require any expert set-up. Sharing documents, files, and digital media content from a Windows-based file share is hardly new, but getting it onto a dedicated server, and potentially replicated across two physical drives, is a huge advantage. One-stop PC and network health monitoring is priceless, as you're likely the in-home "network administrator" just as I am in my own house. And while I'm currently paying $100 a year for a remote access solution that works with only one PC or server, WHS gives you this for free, plus throws in access to all of your PCs as well as the server, and adds a custom domain on top of that for Web-based sharing. The whole of WHS truly exceeds the sum of its parts.

BTW WHS boxes will apparently be available for sale next week.

Paul Thurrott's SuperSite for Windows: Windows Home Server Review

Platformonomics - Pulling Out the Old Playbook

Charles Fitzgerald (Microsoft strategist) shares some OpenSocial perspectives; read the full post... 

Google hopes to either 1.) see Facebook eclipsed in popularity by any and all other social networks they can actually crawl (not necessarily their own - this strategy is driven by the search business, not Orkut) and thereby make the problem go away or 2.) somehow shame Facebook into opening up their crown jewels for the greater convenience of Google's business model.  Neither outcome seems likely.  These kind of industry efforts have a very poor track record because they are primarily about competitive positioning as opposed to significant customer benefit.  Nevertheless, they remain an almost reflexive impulse if you have UNIX genetic material.

Platformonomics - Pulling Out the Old Playbook

Google’s OpenSocial Is Not a Facebook Killer - Bits - Technology - New York Times Blog

A timely OpenSocial reality check

The frenzy about open platforms misses an essential truth: no one will go through an open door if there isn’t something worthwhile on the other side. The best example of the sort of platform that works is Google Maps. It is a powerful, flexible way to display geographic information. When combined with interesting data, the results can be compelling. (Here is the Los Angeles Times’s wildfire map. Here is a blog with many more examples.)

Social networks do have interesting data that could be used in a mashup application: Profiles of members, and links that define the relationships between members. But this data is only useful if the network has deep penetration of the people users care about. I can see why Marc Andreessen’s Ning, which helps create custom social networks for little league teams and such, might find OpenSocial useful.

Google’s OpenSocial Is Not a Facebook Killer - Bits - Technology - New York Times Blog

Will Google's OpenSocial API Program Kill Ning? - Mobile Blog - InformationWeek

Interesting take, and certainly at odds with Marc Andresseen's euphoric OpenSocial  posts

As I see it, OpenSocial potentially gives Facebook and MySpace the ability to beat Ning at its own game. Assuming Facebook and MySpace integrate OpenSocial and these APIs give users the ability to create and integrate new kinds of applications and functionalities, why not give users the ability to create their own standalone networks in these respective platforms? Why not launch custom networks on both of these platforms and skip Ning all together?

As I see it, all Facebook, MySpace, Orkut, etc. have to do is add an additional level of interface customization and they can easily take Ning's market right out from under it. Why use Ning when you could build a professional network for a large company on Facebook or a custom network for a movie or TV show on MySpace?

Will Google's OpenSocial API Program Kill Ning? - Mobile Blog - InformationWeek

OpenSocial - Google Code

The official info page is up.  Hmm -- 

OpenSocial is built upon Google Gadget technology, so you can build a great, viral social app with little to no serving costs. With the Google Gadget Editor and a simple key/value API, you can build a complete social app with no server at all. Of course, you can also host your application on your own servers if you prefer. In all cases, Google's gadget caching technology can ease your bandwidth demands should your app suddenly become a worldwide success.

Nice of the everybody-but-Facebook gang to give this power transfusion to Google.

OpenSocial - Google Code

Technology Review: How to Organize the Web

See the article for more details  

[Microsoft] Listas is, put simply, about making lists. Users can make their own lists, by either typing in original content or taking clippings from Web pages, or they can read or edit public lists. The lists can include almost any type of content, including images and videos. They can be designated either public or private, and they can be tagged to make them easier to search.

Like other social-networking sites, Listas also allows users to acknowledge each other as "friends." A user's lists, lists made by his or her friends, and public lists that the user has linked to are all collected on a single page on the Listas site.

Technology Review: How to Organize the Web

MySpace Joins Google Alliance to Counter Facebook - New York Times

This is starting to look pretty ridiculous, imho 

The alliance now presents a powerful counterweight to Facebook, which, after opening up its site to developers last spring, has persuaded thousands of them to create programs for its users. The addition of MySpace, the world’s largest social network with 110 million active members, and Bebo, the No. 1 site in Britain with 39 million active users, could also put pressure on Facebook to drop its own standard and join the alliance, called OpenSocial.

“OpenSocial is going to be become the de facto standard for developers right out of the gate,” said Chris DeWolfe, chief executive of MySpace, in a press conference at Google’s headquarters in Mountain View, Calif. “It will have access to 200 million users, making it way bigger than any other platform out there.”

MySpace Joins Google Alliance to Counter Facebook - New York Times

Thursday, November 01, 2007

The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs: We're not scared of the gPhone

Another classic FSJ rant; see the post for more on the rumored gPhone and its implications

Another piece of food for thought. In all these years Google has spent millions, maybe billions, trying to create an Act II for the company, some way to go beyond search and advertising. They've done the classic Valley thing -- hire nerds, turn them loose to dream up wacky ideas, put some of those ideas out into the market, throw them against the wall and see what sticks. Only, um, in their case so far nothing sticks. Nothing. Zilch. Nada. Sure the stock is at almost 700 bucks and the dopes on Wall Street are lapping it up but the truth is that out in the Valley people are starting to snicker. And if you look very closely at their quarterly results in the last couple of quarters you can see the cracks in the facade. Eric's slapping financial patching plaster over them as fast as he can but there's only so far you can go with that kind of stuff. Unless you're IBM in which case apparently you can do it forever and nobody ever catches on.

The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs: We're not scared of the gPhone

Rough Type: Nicholas Carr's Blog: Mugr: from facebook to mugshotbook

Classic Nicholas Carr commentary; see the full post for context

Mugr notes that "face recognition, particularly face recognition that can be carried out over the web or with a cameraphone, invites immediate questions of privacy." But the company has an immediate answer: "the technology that powers mugr.com is not so terribly different as that possessed by many governments and law enforcement agencies. As such, there is no reason that the public should not have the ability to do what it will with such technology. In the end, the technology at mugr.com is only frightening if its users make it so." Kind of like assault rifles, I guess.

Rough Type: Nicholas Carr's Blog: Mugr: from facebook to mugshotbook

Mitch Kapor’s Blog » Blog Archive » Benefit for Film about ENIAC’s Women Programmers

Cool -- I wish I could go to this, and I look forward to the film

A number of years ago, I helped support early work on a documentary film about the first modern computer programmers, the team of women who programmed the ENIAC computer during World War II. This is an untold story which deserves much wider exposure.

There’s going to be a documentary fundraiser on Thursday, November 8 at Google with Kathy Kleiman, the film’s executive producer, and Jean Bartik, an original ENIAC programmer.

Tickets are $100, and the location is:

Google Headquarters
1600 Amphitheatre Parkway
Mountain View, CA 94043

Mitch Kapor’s Blog » Blog Archive » Benefit for Film about ENIAC’s Women Programmers

John Battelle's Searchblog: Uh oh

Yep, uh oh...

Watch this space, Google, Facebook, Microsoft, Yahoo, aw hell, everyone:

NEW YORK (AdAge.com) -- Privacy advocates are expected to propose the creation of a do-not-track list, a sort of internet version of the Do Not Call Registry, at a news conference tomorrow.

John Battelle's Searchblog: Uh oh

Groundswell (Incorporating Charlene Li's Blog): Google OpenSocial will (hopefully) make social apps more relevant

Sometimes I feel like I'm living in a parallel universe.  For example, I just don't see the big deal in Open Social -- sure, it could remove a few annoying proprietary API hurdles etc., if it's broadly adopted, but where's the huge value-add potential?  And why do some many in the press and blogosphere appear to believe Facebook and MySpace will shun Open Social?

Google and a slew of partners announced the formation of OpenSocial (URL will be live late Thursday), which Google's Joe Kraus, in a briefing earlier this week with me, described as "a common set of API's for building social applications across multiple sites." There are three specific sets of APIs that tap into 1) member profiles, 2) the social graph, and 3) member activities.

The idea is that developers would have to learn only one set of social app APIs and create apps that will work on any partner's platform. Moreover, the OpenSocial API is written in HTML and javascript (and supports Flash), compared to Facebook's proprietary API. Initial partners in the new API include social networking sites Friendster, hi5, Ning, Orkut, Plaxo, and Viadeo, as well as application companies Oracle and Salesforce.com.

I also have yet to see compelling "social platform" apps, despite playing along with all the app junk people have thrown at me in Facebook.

Groundswell (Incorporating Charlene Li's Blog): Google OpenSocial will (hopefully) make social apps more relevant

blog.pmarca.com: Open Social: screencast and screenshots

Hey, here's a surprise: Marc Andreessen using the pretense of an Open Social post to flaunt a bunch of Ning (of which he is co-founder) screen shots...

In yesterday's post, I described the new Open Social API, sponsored by Google and supported by a wide range of Internet companies including my company Ning.

In this post, I present a screencast and a series of screenshots that show Open Social in action.

blog.pmarca.com: Open Social: screencast and screenshots

Business & Technology | Microsoft stock at highest point in 6 years | Seattle Times Newspaper

Meanwhile, somewhere outside the Bubble 2.0 twilight zone... 

Microsoft stock climbed to the highest in six years after a Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. analyst said the shares were undervalued based on the company's growth potential.

Microsoft rose $1.24, or 3.5 percent, to $36.81 Wednesday, the highest since June 2001. It has advanced 23 percent this year.

Microsoft "is well positioned strategically versus its traditional competitors and in a reasonably solid position to fight off its newer rivals," analyst Charles J. Di Bona wrote in a note. He boosted his share-price forecast by $4, or 11 percent, to $41.

Business & Technology | Microsoft stock at highest point in 6 years | Seattle Times Newspaper

The First-Grader's First PC - WSJ.com

Hmm... 

Overall, U.S. sales of laptops costing $499 and below more than doubled to around 835,000 in 2006 from some 306,000 in 2005, according to market researcher IDC. According to surveys conducted by NPD Group Inc. in March, the age at which children begin using consumer electronic devices such as videogame players declined to 6.7 years in 2007 from 8.1 years in 2005.

[Computer Jr]

The First-Grader's First PC - WSJ.com

Google's Clout Grows With Price - WSJ.com

 Strange days indeed

Google Inc. shares skipped past $700 Wednesday amid investor enthusiasm for its wireless and social-networking initiatives, extending a run since mid-September that has made it one of the world's most valuable companies.

[Google]

The Mountain View, Calif., Internet giant's $220 billion market capitalization as of Wednesday ranks fifth among U.S. companies, ahead of titans such as Bank of America Corp., Procter & Gamble Co. and Citigroup Inc. That's more than an eightfold increase since its August 2004 public offering, as the company has parlayed the small text ads it displays alongside Web-search results into a business whose revenue is expected to top $15 billion this year.

A Boston Globe article on Google this morning notes:

While it gets 99 percent of its sales from advertising, Google has made acquisitions and developed software to offer more products to advertisers.

The 99% part is the primary reason why I think Google will be trading for a lot less than $700 (assuming no splits etc.) in the not-too-distant future.  That could change, e.g., if Google used its currently ~cheap money to buy something of more substance and sustainability.

Google's Clout Grows With Price - WSJ.com

Technology Review: Wal-Mart carries $199 computer with free Linux operating system in stores and online

Interesting times 

Linux, the free operating system that's a perpetual underdog in the desktop market, is showing up in computers in Wal-Mart stores this week for the first time.

About 600 Wal-Mart stores will carry the $199 Linux-powered ''Green gPC'' made by Everex of Taiwan, Wal-Mart said. It was available online on Wednesday.

[...]

The gPC has a low-end processor from VIA Technologies, plus 512 megabytes of internal memory, an 80-gigabyte hard drive and a combination DVD drive and CD burner.

Read the full article for more details, e.g., on a comparably equipped Windows Vista Home Basic PC for $99 more.

Technology Review: Wal-Mart carries $199 computer with free Linux operating system in stores and online