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Tech finds its place at SXSWi (roundup) [New Window]
As the Web generation descends on the South by Southwest Interactive show in Austin, several location-based start-ups try to put themselves on the map.
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 21:49:00 -0500 Systems engineer deemed best job in America [New Window]
A deep and detailed survey by Focus.com concludes that the best job in the United States is a tech job: systems engineer. No. 2: physician assistant. No. 3: college professor.
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 20:21:00 -0500 Systems engineer deemed best job in America [New Window]
A deep and detailed survey by Focus.com concludes that the best job in the United States is a tech job: systems engineer. No. 2: physician assistant. No. 3: college professor.
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 20:21:00 -0500 Privacy is not dead, says SXSWi keynoter Boyd [New Window]
Recent PR debacles surrounding Google Buzz and Facebook's privacy settings have put the spotlight on basic misunderstandings by tech companies about how people use social media.
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 20:06:00 -0500 Privacy is not dead, says SXSWi keynoter Boyd [New Window]
Recent PR debacles surrounding Google Buzz and Facebook's privacy settings have put the spotlight on basic misunderstandings by tech companies about how people use social media.
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 20:06:00 -0500 A 257-degree panorama from the GDC floor [New Window]
A view of the expo floor from on top of the Sony booth at the Game Developers Conference in the South Hall of Moscone Center in San Francisco.
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 20:00:00 -0500 Why people really do care about privacy [New Window]
When Facebook changed its privacy settings, Zuckerberg took pictures off his Facebook pages. Google's Schimdt is reportedly trying to take down his ex-lover's blog. No one cares about privacy? Really?
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 19:02:48 -0500 Why people really do care about privacy [New Window]
When Facebook changed its privacy settings, Zuckerberg took pictures off his Facebook pages. Google's Schimdt is reportedly trying to take down his ex-lover's blog. No one cares about privacy? Really? Originally posted at Technically Incorrect
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 19:02:48 -0500 Why people really do care about privacy [New Window]
When Facebook changed its privacy settings, Zuckerberg took pictures off his Facebook pages. Google's Schimdt is reportedly trying to take down his ex-lover's blog. No one cares about privacy? Really?
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 19:02:48 -0500 Selling a car the iPod way [New Window]
Chevy is hoping to tap into the same sentiments that spark gadget fandom with its new Volt electric car. But is the crowd at the South by Southwest Interactive Festival the right audience?
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 18:24:00 -0500 Selling a car the iPod way [New Window]
Chevy is hoping to tap into the same sentiments that spark gadget fandom with its new Volt electric car. But is the crowd at the South by Southwest Interactive Festival the right audience?
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 18:24:00 -0500 AT&T's network up to SXSW iPhone onslaught [New Window]
After last year's network meltdown at the hands of thousands of iPhone-toting geeks at the interactive confab in Austin, Texas, AT&T promised it would do better. People were skeptical, but they've been won over.
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 17:47:00 -0500 AT&T's network up to SXSW iPhone onslaught [New Window]
After last year's network meltdown at the hands of thousands of iPhone-toting geeks at the interactive confab in Austin, Texas, AT&T promised it would do better. People were skeptical, but they've been won over.
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 17:47:00 -0500 Google '99.9 percent' sure to shutter Google.cn [New Window]
Now "99.9 percent" certain that it will close its Chinese search engine amid conflict over censorship, Google has detailed plans to do so, according to a Financial Times source. Originally posted at Webware
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 15:41:00 -0500 Google '99.9 percent' sure to shutter Google.cn [New Window]
Now "99.9 percent" certain that it will close its Chinese search engine amid conflict over censorship, Google has detailed plans to do so, according to a Financial Times source.
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 15:41:00 -0500 Behind the wheel of the Chevy Volt (photos) [New Window]
Eager to court fans of cutting-edge tech at the South by Southwest Interactive Festival, General Motors sends the e-car. And CNET's Caroline McCarthy gets a chance to drive it.
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 12:59:56 -0500 Social gamers accept marketing for virtual currency [New Window]
A ComScore-Offerpal Media survey shows that social gamers are willing to be marketed to in order to get free virtual currency. Avoiding scams will be key to making this trend last.
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 12:56:00 -0500 Social gamers accept marketing for virtual currency [New Window]
A ComScore-Offerpal Media survey shows that social gamers are willing to be marketed to in order to get free virtual currency. Avoiding scams will be key to making this trend last.
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 12:56:00 -0500 Apple loses key chip executive [New Window]
Sources say Dan Dobberpuhl, PA Semi's founder and pre-acquisition chief executive, has jumped ship to work at chip-related start-up Agnilux.
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 12:36:00 -0500 Apple loses key chip executive [New Window]
Sources say Dan Dobberpuhl, PA Semi's founder and pre-acquisition chief executive, has jumped ship to work at chip-related start-up Agnilux.
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 12:36:00 -0500 Work hard, play hard at GDC (audio slideshow) [New Window]
At the 2010 Game Developers Conference, artists, programmers, and designers are sharing their best ideas on the future of gaming.
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 09:00:00 -0500 Top-rated reviews of the week (photos) [New Window]
Here are a few of CNET Reviews' favorite items from the past week, including the 2010 Mini Cooper S, Falcon Northwest Mach V, and the Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZS7.
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 09:00:00 -0500 This week in Crave: The on-the-Move edition [New Window]
Too busy pulling together your Na'vi wardrobe to keep up with Crave this week? Here's what you missed while you were putting on your blue mask.
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 09:00:00 -0500 Wheelie robot brings dinner on the double [New Window]
Toshiba shows off a two-wheeled autonomous robot than can roll over ramps and balance a tray of food. Wheelie might make a decent waiter.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 21:53:00 -0500 Wheelie robot brings dinner on the double [New Window]
Toshiba shows off a two-wheeled autonomous robot than can roll over ramps and balance a tray of food. Wheelie might make a decent waiter.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 21:53:00 -0500 Hunch gets $10 million from Khosla Ventures, others [New Window]
Hunch, a buzzy start-up that answers questions using crowdsourced recommendations, has lined up at least $10 million in funding, according to sources.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 21:40:13 -0500 @ScrewYouSXSW vents at absent husband [New Window]
We might never know if a Twitter feed purporting to be by a woman left behind on her anniversary weekend by her SXSW-bound husband is real. But it's very funny stuff.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 21:40:00 -0500 @ScrewYouSXSW vents at absent husband [New Window]
We might never know if a Twitter feed purporting to be by a woman left behind on her anniversary weekend by her SXSW-bound husband is real. But it's very funny stuff.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 21:40:00 -0500 FCC chairman outlines broadband plan for kids [New Window]
Federal Communications Commission Chairman Julius Genachowski lays out a plan for 21st century digital access, citizenship, literacy, and safety.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 20:48:00 -0500 Adult content: Risque iPhone apps [New Window]
Who says you can't find naughty sex games and some females baring skin in iTunes? More than a few apps have made it past Apple's content filters. Here's a selection of adults-only apps, from the steamy to the downright absurd. Originally posted at iPhone Atlas
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 20:22:00 -0500 VoxOx now translates as you type [New Window]
VoxOx's claim on a robust feature set makes it a powerful, if slightly unstable, multi-protocol chat and VoIP client--now with free universal translation for all IMs and tweets.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 19:27:00 -0500 VoxOx now translates as you type [New Window]
Since it was introduced in late 2008, VoxOx has tried to cut a name for itself in the competitive multi-protocol chat client market by providing users with an aggressive feature set. These include VoIP, a "personal assistant" for managing incoming calls with more than a simple redirect, and SMS and Web-based callback to cut down on the cost of long-distance, transnational calls. The latest improvement is a universal translator that translates all text-based messages in real time, and with a reasonable amount of accuracy, for both the Windows and Mac versions of the program. It will work with all supported instant messaging services, including Facebook IM, Twitter, and SMS messages.The VoxOx Universal Translator will work on all supported IM networks, including Facebook IM, as well as Twitter and SMS messages.(Credit:Screenshot by Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)To activate the translator, click the Universal Translator button to the right of the text box; it looks like a grayed-out globe. Check the "translate" box and choose whether you want all messages translated, only incoming, or only outgoing. Next, choose your languages, hit OK, and start typing. For both incoming and outgoing messages, you will only see them in your preferred language. Click on one to view its translation.The feature supports 50 languages, from French, Spanish, simplified and traditional Chinese, and Hindi to more obscure languages such as Welsh, Icelandic, and Catalan. Some heavily-used languages, such as Tagalog, are not currently supported. In tests performed with several colleagues at CNET, we discovered that the translator works well in general. It works best when the selected languages are set as the defaults for the system users. This means that if I'm translating into Chinese, the person I'm chatting with should have his or her chat program's default language set to Chinese. While this may seem frustrating to some, it's important to remember that the program only requires one user to be using VoxOx to take advantage of the translation feature.The translator only requires one participant to use VoxOx. This is what somebody receiving the translated text might see.(Credit:Screenshot by Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)Somewhat annoyingly, the translation feature also lacks any kind of "nuance engine" to help determine the context of the words as they're being used in the conversation. In other words, there's no support for slang. It translates what you type more or less literally, so expect some broken translations along the way. For a free, on-the-fly text translation service that requires little effort from users, this seems like an acceptable trade-off and should be considered another feather in the VoxOx cap.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 19:27:00 -0500 Wii Fit Balance Board gets pushup help [New Window]
CTA Digital's pushup bar provides a pair of removable handles to improve grip and posture for performing deeper, more effective pushups.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 19:27:00 -0500 Magneat review: The end of tangled headphones? [New Window]
Magneat securely holds your headphones even when they're not in your ears. But that's not to say it doesn't create its own problems.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 19:12:00 -0500 'Runaway' Prius: Questions raised about driver [New Window]
The case of a "runaway" Prius in San Diego demonstrates how claims about electronic flaws requires investigators to look carefully at the human element too.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 19:01:00 -0500 'Runaway' Prius: Questions raised about driver [New Window]
The case of a "runaway" Prius in San Diego demonstrates how claims about electronic flaws requires investigators to look carefully at the human element too.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 19:01:00 -0500 Man fined for insulting ex-girlfriend on Facebook [New Window]
A court decides to fine a man for offensive messages sent to his former lover on Facebook. What kind of precedent might this set?
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 18:49:00 -0500 SXSWi: Emergency alarm evacuates convention center [New Window]
Was it a glitch or a mischievous prankster who pulled the fire alarm during the South by Southwest Interactive Festival? Or maybe a sign that it's happy hour?
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 18:25:00 -0500 A clipboard manager and 2D fighting at its best: iPhone apps of the week [New Window]
(Credit:CNET)Before we get to this week's apps, a news item over at AppleInsider indicates we may be getting a change to the iPhone operating system that many have been talking about. According to one AppleInsider's more reliable sources, the iPhone OS 4.0 could add multitasking support in the next OS update. This means you'll be able to run apps simultaneously making it possible to switch between apps without closing them.A lot of smartphones already have multitasking support, so it's been one of the bigger complaints for detractors of the iPhone. Frankly, I think it's a welcome change to the OS that might make it easier to do some tasks, but up until now I haven't really had any need for it. I'm sure there are plenty of readers who have been waiting for this rumored upgrade in the next iPhone OS, so please let us know in the comments how you think multitasking will change the way you use your iPhone.This week's apps include a powerful clipboard manager to store information and media, and an enormously popular arcade fighting game that is now on the iPhone.Store images or text and browse through your clips with a swipe of your finger.(Credit:Screenshot by Jason Parker/CNET)Pastebot Command Copy & Paste ($2.99) lets you take clips of information and save them for later in a slick-looking interface. When you're browsing the Web and come across interesting information or find an image you want to save, Pastebot lets you copy the image or information and save it to its own clipboard. Simply use the iPhone's copy tool to select the info or image you want to copy, hit copy, then launch Pastebot and the image or text will automatically show up in the app. From there you can edit text, give the clip a title, or run the clip through a filter to perform specific tasks such as converting all text to lowercase, straightening quotes, wrapping in HTML tags, and much more.Pastebot lets you store up to 99 clips through the normal clipboards, but you can store items in folders for long-term storage. This makes creating titles for clips extremely important because it will enable you to search for them later. If you're using a Mac, you also can download the Pastebot preference pane from the developer's Web site that allows you to wirelessly transfer clips to your Mac over Wi-Fi (the Windows sync tool is still in development). Overall, if you have the need to collect information and images you find on the Web, or need a good way to transfer info and images from your iPhone to your Mac, Pastebot Command Copy & Paste is a good choice.Street Fighter 4 ($9.99) is a 2D fighting game that needs little in the way of introduction, but is surprisingly fun even using the iPhone touch screen. In the iPhone version you can play with eight characters from the original game across seven environments. The graphics look great even on the iPhone 3G, and the touch-screen controls work surprisingly well with only a little bit of practice. There are a few different ways to play including a Tournament mode, where you fight multiple matches against each of the different characters; Dojo, which trains you on all of the different moves for your selected character; Free-Sparring, for when you want to fight a specific character to find his weaknesses; and a Training Room where you can practice your moves. You also can play against your friends in versus mode, but only over a Bluetooth connection.Though it may appear the controls get in the way of the action, once you start playing you won't even notice.(Credit:Screenshot by Jason Parker/CNET)I think the main question most people will have about Street Fighter 4 on the iPhone (before spending the money) is how well the controls work on a touch screen. You get a control pad on the left and buttons for Punch, Kick, and special moves on the right (though you can move the controls wherever you want using the settings). Capcom decided to leave out the low and medium punch/kick buttons, which may bother Street Fighter veterans, but even without them, the game offers an enormous amount of moves. When I first started playing, it was admittedly difficult to get used to the onscreen control pad and buttons to perform some of the more complex moves. But after a few fights, even the more difficult moves started to get much easier. Overall, if you're a fan of Street Fighter, the iPhone version is true to the original with great-looking graphics, surprisingly solid controls, and a challenging AI, making it easily worth the price tag.What's your favorite iPhone app? Are you happy to hear about the rumored addition of multitasking support? Do you have a better clipboard manager than Pastebot? What do you think of the touch-screen controls of Street Fighter 4? Let me know in the comments! Originally posted at iPhone Atlas
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 18:22:00 -0500 Opera Mini 5 beta for Android: First Look video [New Window]
loadUniversalPlayer({playerType: 'ces2010-small',lumiereQueryType: 'id',lumiereQueryValue: '50084839',useCurrentPageUrl: true,relatedVideo: false,preRollAd: true,hideLeftTab:true,wrapperFloat:'left'}); Earlier this week, Opera Software released Opera Mini 5 beta for Android, a vast improvement to the version 4.2 browser that had previously been available for Android. Opera Mini 5 beta isn't new to the scene--it's been out for some months on Java phones, BlackBerry, and interestingly, it just hopped on board Windows phones.In this First Look video, we take you on a hands-on tour of Opera's slick-looking browser alternative for Android smartphones, which is available for free in the Android Market or by downloading it from www.opera.com/mini/next/. Originally posted at Android Atlas
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 17:25:00 -0500 Opera Mini 5 beta for Android: First Look video [New Window]
We take you on a hands-on tour of Opera's slick-looking browser alternative for Android smartphones. Originally posted at Android Atlas
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 17:25:00 -0500 T-Rex time: Watch sports real dinosaur bones [New Window]
The Jurassic Tourbillon from Louis Moinet goes beyond bling; this watch contains fragments of dinosaur bones some 130 million years old.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 16:59:00 -0500 Drowning in ads at SXSWi [New Window]
Marketers are everywhere at the annual digital-culture fest. It sort of makes your face start to melt a little bit.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 16:43:00 -0500 Scenes from GDC 2010 [New Window]
With the 2010 edition of the Game Developers Conference winding down, we've put together a short photographic tour of our week, from Sony's PlayStation Move launch to the booth-filled expo hall.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 16:29:00 -0500 Bye bye, Vickie, Ford designs new Police Interceptor model [New Window]
Ford announces its new Police Interceptor model, replacing the outgoing Crown Victoria. Originally posted at The Car Tech blog
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 16:04:00 -0500 Ideal iPhone apps for frequent fliers [New Window]
CNET picks 10 good iPhone apps for frequent fliers. Originally posted at iPhone Atlas
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 15:51:00 -0500 Consensus emerges for key Web app standard [New Window]
Browser makers, grappling with outmoded technology and a vision to rebuild the Web as a foundation for applications, have begun converging on a seemingly basic by very important element of cloud computing.That ability is called local storage, and the new mechanism is called Indexed DB.Indexed DB, proposed by Oracle and initially called WebSimpleDB, is largely just a prototype at this stage, not something Web programmers can use yet. But already it's won endorsements from Microsoft, Mozilla, and Google, and together, Internet Explorer, Firefox, and Chrome account for more than 90 percent of the usage on the Net today."Indexed DB is interesting to both Firefox and Microsoft, so if we get to the point where we prototype it and want to ship it, it will have very wide availability," said Chris Blizzard, director of evangelism for Mozilla. And standardization could come. Advocates have worked Indexed DB into the considerations of the W3C, the World Wide Web Consortium that standardizes HTML and other Web technologies. In the W3C discussions, Indexed DB got a warm reception from Opera, the fifth-ranked browser. Microsoft comes to the tableThe creation of the Indexed DB interface is notable for another reason: Microsoft.For years, Microsoft essentially sat out a lot of HTML discussions. Now, though, become closely involved, for example through detailed feedback from Pablo Castro, a Microsoft software architect. Castro not only praised Indexed DB on his blog, but also said that Microsoft is hiring staff to work on Indexed DB.Finally, Microsoft publicly endorsed Indexed DB on its IE blog: "Together with Mozilla, we're excited about a new design for local storage called Indexed DB. We think this is a great solution for the Web," said program manager Adrian Bateman.Microsoft's praise is important. For one thing, the company maintains a dominant, though diminishing, share of browser usage, so even Web programmers who've scorned the company's earlier lack of interest in advancing Web technologies should pay attention to what it says. They should pay even more attention when Microsoft and its longtime arch-rival Mozilla agree on something. Microsoft's cooperation makes it more likely Indexed DB will be a real tool for Web programmers, not just an academic concept with little real-world relevance.For another, Microsoft is working hard on the next generation of its browser, with IE 9 getting a starring role at the company's Mix conference next week. Though the company has been mostly mum about what new technologies will arrive in its updated browser, its activity signals that the company is very serious about the market. Local or on the Net?It may sound perverse, but the ability to store data locally on a computer turns out to be a very important part of the Web application era that's really just getting under way. The whole idea behind cloud computing is to put applications on the network, liberating them from being tied to a particular computer, but it turns out that the computer still matters, because the network is neither fast nor ubiquitous.Local storage lets Web programmers save data onto computers where it's convenient for processors to access. That can mean, for example, that some aspects of Gmail and Google Docs can work while you're disconnected from the network. It also lets data be cached on the computer for quick access later. The overall state of the Web application is maintained on the server, but stashing data locally can make cloud computing faster and more reliable."Building a database to store a line of text is like hitting metal screws into wood with a very big hammer--it works, but it probably isn't the best way. But for managing large-scale data in Web applications and widgets, a real database is more valuable," said Charles McCathieNevile, Opera's chief standards officer. That enables offline e-mail, better management of bookmarks, dictionaries, synchronized contacts, and other sophisticated abilities, he said.Web browsers have been able to store data locally for years in a primitive fashion through small text files called cookies. Browser makers have been casting about for a more powerful mechanism, though, resulting in a hodge-podge of possibilities.One newer method, appropriately enough called LocalStorage, is supported in Firefox and IE 8. But even as it becomes formally standardized through the W3C as Web Storage, browser makers have recognized its limits for modern browser designs.One problem is that LocalStorage stems from the days when browser computing took place in a single computing process, a design that meant programmers didn't have to worry about one browser task meddling with data that another browser task thought it was controlling. With multi-process browsers arriving--Chrome is an example today, and Firefox is moving in that direction--browsers get the ability to do more things in parallel, and LocalStorage can't keep up."Because more than one [browser] tab can access the same data, you have to make sure that what one tab does is seen by others at the same time," Blizzard said. "That's extra-hard with a browser that might have more than one process."The rise and fall of Web SQLAnother local storage method from Apple, Web SQL and sometimes called Web DB, offers more sophistication and enjoyed a start in the HTML standards process. It employed an ages-old standard for storing and retrieving data called Structured Query Language.Safari supports Web SQL, as does Chrome 4, and Opera is building support in since the technology is in use on the Web.Web SQL ran into problems, though. SQL has as many variations as there are databases that support it, and Web SQL used one from software called SQLite. That interface isn't standardized, though.Google, despite the fact that its Gears browser plug-in uses a SQL interface to provide offline access to Gmail and other services, shares the concern that "the dialect of SQL is currently not specified," spokesman Eitan Bencuya said. "There are ongoing conversations about specifying in greater detail the exact dialect of SQL that should be supported for this feature."Maciej Stachowiak, an Apple programmer, pointed out that there will be multiple shipping versions of Web SQL in a W3C discussion of local storage technologies. But his argument didn't prevail."I don't want to work on a spec without five out of five implementations," said Ian Hickson, the editor of the HTML5 specification and a Google employee, in the W3C meeting, referring to the lack of support from all the five top browser makers.And indeed, the draft specification now includes these words: "This specification has reached an impasse," because it uses the SQLite interface. Somebody interested in an independent SQL interface can "please contact the editor so that he can write a specification for the dialect, thus allowing this specification to move forward." Enter Indexed DBIndexed DB brings the database approach to browsers, but keeps the interface at a very low level.Microsoft and Mozilla are in agreement that this strategy is the right one. Programmers can choose to build a more sophisticated interface on top out of the raw materials of Indexed DB. They've done just that with browsers' JavaScript program technology, building libraries such as jQuery, Dojo, and YUI that are widely used to build sophisticated Web."What we've learned from the recent history of the Web is that putting out simple APIs [application programming interfaces] that push decisions and complexity to the edges is a strategy that works. The way that the Web works today is that programmers aren't using a lot of browser APIs directly. Instead they are using jQuery or Dojo or one of the other libraries that are out there for doing cross-browser and cross-version compatibility," Blizzard said. "We think that instead of delivering an API that's complicated and underspecified that will cause browser vendors and developers to have to struggle with incompatible APIs, that we can deliver something that is simple, well-specified and understood that developers and people building Web browsers can build on."It's not clear yet what Opera will do, but McCathieNevile had words of praise in the W3C meeting. "We found Nikunj to be more to our liking," he said, according to the meeting notes, referring to Indexed DB, which was written by an Oracle employee, Nikunj Mehta.Apple declined to comment about its support for IndexedDB.However, if IE, Mozilla, and Chrome support Indexed DB, and it becomes a W3C standard, it's likely Apple won't have much choice, because programmers will begin to use it.Happily for Apple, Google has detailed its approach in a Chrome design document and has begun checking Indexed DB code into WebKit, the open-source project that underlies both Safari and Chrome. That means Apple will be able to adopt a tested version of the technology relatively quickly.Indexed DB isn't a sure thing yet, to be sure, and the drawn-out history of LocalStorage shows that being established in the standards process isn't everything.But Indexed DB has powerful allies in the right places and is on its way to being technology Web developers can at least start trying. With time, it stands to become a key part of the Web application world.Updated 3:34 p.m. PST with Google comment. Originally posted at Deep Tech
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 15:44:00 -0500 Come see Paris--in 26 gigapixels [New Window]
Site, which offers a breathtaking view of Paris, enables you to pan around, see monuments, and get a high-def feel for what the City of Light is all about.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 15:40:05 -0500 EMC wants to distribute data [New Window]
EMC has unveiled a vision for globally federating data, essentially a cache for storage across wide area communication links.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 15:25:00 -0500 Three online contact managers compared [New Window]
The two free services — LinkedIn and Vision Pipeline Assistant — can't match the accuracy and versatility of the $60-a-year Plaxo Premium.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 15:13:00 -0500 'Cloud' vs. 'source' in the battle of bland corporate names [New Window]
Open source and cloud-computing start-ups have one thing in common: a tendency to wear their industry trend on their sleeves.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 14:43:41 -0500 ICANN postpones decision on .xxx domains [New Window]
Advocates for a .xxx designation for adult sites will have to wait until at least June after the ICANN board postponed a decision on the matter at its meeting Friday. Originally posted at Safe and Secure
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 14:27:00 -0500 Google ponders split decision on China [New Window]
Google appears close to deciding its future in China and might be eyeing a resolution that lets it stay in the country in some fashion even if it shuts down its search engine. Originally posted at Relevant Results
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 13:01:00 -0500 Beijing official warns Google to obey China's laws [New Window]
Minister of Industry and Information Technology Li Yizhong cautions that the search giant must adhere to China's laws on censorship.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 10:17:50 -0500 Too busy at SXSW to RSVP? No problem [New Window]
Maybe it's a sign of SXSW excess or perhaps it's a prank, but RSVP While You Sleep is advertising a $37 service that tasks overseas virtual assistants with responding to your party invites.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 09:00:00 -0500 IE 9, Windows Phone in the Mix [New Window]
At the annual Las Vegas event, Microsoft plans to show its latest browser and give developers the tools they need to write software for the forthcoming Windows Phone 7 series devices.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 07:00:00 -0500 Why no one cares about privacy anymore [New Window]
A backlash to the Google Buzz backlash indicates that people have grown comfortable relinquishing their privacy. Call it Generation X-hibitionist, developing on Web sites like Loopt, FriendFeed, Flickr, and Blippy.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 07:00:00 -0500 Apple says iPad pre-orders start Friday morning [New Window]
Company confirms that anyone who wants to order an iPad online can begin the quest early Friday--5:30 a.m PST, to be exact. You don't even have to get out of bed.
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 02:32:00 -0500 Tether for free via PdaNet [New Window]
Just because the Moscone Center in San Francisco hosts a veritable plethora of techie conventions, that doesn't mean it offers Wi-Fi. If your phone can pick up a 3G signal, you might not care--and you might not have to pay for it, either. Thanks to PdaNet's phone app and laptop drivers, and the unlimited data plan that you're already paying for, you can use many of the major smartphones as your Internet connection. After connecting your Android phone and running the PdaNet app, you'll need to finalize the connection from the PdaNet system tray icon.(Credit:Screenshot by Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)From the improbably-named software publisher June Fabrics, PdaNet is known for offering tethering solutions for PalmOS, but it also offers iPhone, Windows Mobile, and BlackBerry versions. (Note that the iPhone version requires you to jailbreak the phone.) We'll be focusing on the Android version, which is available for Windows 32-bit and Mac. Its installation is surprisingly simple and doesn't involve rooting your Android phone.There are two ways to install PdaNet. You can download it directly to your phone by connecting your phone to your computer, mounting the phone as a drive, and running the executable file from there. Or you can download it directly to your computer and run it. If you run it from your phone, the onscreen instructions will tell you when you need to disconnect your phone to complete the installation. You'll be prompted again to enable USB debugging on the Android, and then to connect the USB cable. Once connected, it will install the PdaNet app on your phone. To create the connection, you'll need to connect the USB cable, run the PdaNet app on the phone, and then complete the connection by choosing "Connect" from the system tray context menu. If the Windows driver warns you that it's unverified, install it anyway.PdaNet for Android has one limitation. After 30 days, it will require you to buy a license for $23.95, otherwise it will block access to secure HTTPS Web sites such as Gmail. That's a tempting carrot, but for those who don't need access to secure sites, the free version should be more than enough to satisfy.Making the connection was smooth and nearly flawless. Users can tether their Android phones with a USB cable, or they can connect their phones to their laptops via Bluetooth DUN. PdaNet warns users that Bluetooth connections can be hamstrung by baud rate, so browsing on your laptop can appear slower than on your phone. However, the company says that there should be no perceptible slowdowns if connected via USB. I noticed occasional connection hiccups when waking the laptop from hibernating, but otherwise there were no problems. To get around those apparent connection loss situations, I disconnected and then re-established the tether. The program is light on your system resources, and is a strong choice for those who want the benefits of tethering without the risks involved in rooting their phone.
Thu, 11 Mar 2010 21:31:00 -0500 Twitter 1, cowardly bike thief 0 [New Window]
The messenger community of New York is so active on Twitter that just one tweet leads to the recovery of a fellow messenger's stolen orange bike.
Thu, 11 Mar 2010 19:40:35 -0500 Thunderbird beta 'Lanikai' released [New Window]
Mozilla made public the first beta of Thunderbird 3.1 today. Code-named Lanikai and available for Windows, Mac, and Linux, the milestone makes few noticeable changes to the open-source and free desktop e-mail client. This is not surprising, though, as Mozilla Messaging announced that the goal of this release was to fix problems created by upgrading the Gecko engine that powers the program.Lanikai is the first semi-stable release of Thunderbird to use Gecko 1.9.2, which is the same engine that Firefox 3.6 uses. The changes made from Thunderbird 3 to the 3.1 beta test version include Mac OS X 10.6 upgrade path from Thunderbird 2 improvements, fixes for autocomplete, tabs, activity manager, minor interface improvements and corrections, and a spate of stability and memory corrections. One new security feature is that Lanikai requires extensions to come from a secure server using the HTTPS protocol or be digitally signed. Absent either of these, the extension won't install. The full list of bug fixes is available here.There are also several known issues that persist in Lanikai. These include a conflict with the Kaspersky Anti-Spam add-on, an occasional plain-text e-mail interface bug that forces buttons out of the pane, and an occasional offline bug that prevents e-mails written in Offline mode from being automatically sent when the Internet connection is restored. They must instead be sent manually from the Drafts folder.As noted when Lanikai entered the alpha phase of development, Mozilla Messaging is attempting to follow in the footstep of the Firefox release schedule. The final version of Thunderbird 3.1 is expected sometime in June, though that could easily change.
Thu, 11 Mar 2010 18:03:00 -0500 Apple Releases Safari 4.0.5 [New Window]
Check Software Update! Apple has released Safari 4.0.5, which brings a number of performance enhancements and bug fixes to Apple's browser. According to the updater, the following has been addressed:Performance improvements for Top SitesStability improvements for 3rd-party plug-insStability improvements for websites with online forms and Scalable Vector GraphicsFixes an issue that prevented Safari from changing settings on some Linksys routersFixes an issue that prevented some iWork.com users from commenting on documentsThe update is available for Windows and OS X, but on the Mac side the specific problems addressed are issues with RSS feeds setting values in cookies, even if you have blocked cookies, and potential problems with WebKit's loading of CSS, XML, and HTML scripts that could cause arbitrary code execution or crashing.For specifics on the issues addressed, see this Apple knowledgebase document: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4070The Safari update is 31.8MB, and does require a restart to fully install. Be sure to back up your system before installing, and also have an alternative browser available as a backup. Keep in mind that third-party add-ons may be affected by the update, so check their functionality after updating, and be prepared to remove or reinstall them if needed.Questions? Comments? Post them below or email us!Be sure to check us out on Twitter and the CNET Mac forums. Originally posted at MacFixIt
Thu, 11 Mar 2010 17:33:00 -0500 Mozilla aggressively asks older Firefox users to update [New Window]
By Mozilla's lights, Firefox 3.6 has been a runaway success. The publisher of the open-source browser says that more than 100 million users have downloaded Firefox 3.6 since its launch in the middle of January. However, not all Firefox users have upgraded from Firefox 3 or Firefox 3.5, and Mozilla wants to change that.Users of older versions of Firefox will start seeing this pop-up, asking them to upgrade.(Credit:Mozilla)As of Thursday, users of older Firefox versions will start seeing a pop-up encouraging them to upgrade. The window will come with three choices: Ask Later, No Thanks, or Get the New Version. The pop-up will appear after 60 seconds of keyboard inactivity, which Mozilla called a courtesy toward users and their workflows. Selecting "Ask Later" will defer the window for 24 hours. If a user has chosen No Thanks but decides later to upgrade Firefox, running the "Check for Updates" option from the Help menu will bring up the upgrade window. One reason that many users cite for not upgrading Firefox is a legitimate concern about add-on forward compatibility. In the press release announcing the push, Mozilla stated that more than 90 percent of Firefox add-ons are compatible with Firefox 3.6. Users can also try to force older add-ons to be compatible by using the MR Tech Toolkit or Nightly Tester Tools add-ons, which add a "force compatibility" option to the add-on context menu, but these tricks also decrease the stability of the browser.If you use an older version of Firefox, tell us why and which version in the comments below.
Thu, 11 Mar 2010 16:21:00 -0500 Man marries animated pillow [New Window]
A Korean man marries a pillow with the image of Fate Testarossa, a magical figure from a Japanese anime series, imprinted on it. Can this love last?
Thu, 11 Mar 2010 16:19:00 -0500 Airline Twitter promotion attracts huge crowds [New Window]
JetBlue said it had 1,000 free tickets to give away to New Yorkers who showed up at a location broadcasted via Twitter. The only complaint so far: Couldn't there be more?
Thu, 11 Mar 2010 13:40:00 -0500 Apple lovers, rejoice: iPhone magnets for the fridge [New Window]
Apple fans have a long history of buying anything and everything Apple. But will they pick up a set of magnets modeled after iPhone apps for $13?
Thu, 11 Mar 2010 13:26:13 -0500 What's in a title? For broadband, it's Oz vs. Kansas [New Window]
A push by Net neutrality advocates to reclassify ISPs as telecommunications providers has dangerous implications, argues Stanford Law Fellow Larry Downes. Originally posted at News - Wireless
Thu, 11 Mar 2010 13:00:00 -0500 Why Google Android is winning [New Window]
Google's open-source approach to Android is a key reason that it is quickly gaining ground on closed-source competitors like Apple's iPhone and RIM's BlackBerry. But challenges remain.
Thu, 11 Mar 2010 12:58:46 -0500 Sen. Reid helps win wind turbine plant for Nevada [New Window]
Production and assembly factory producing 1,100-megawatts worth of turbines annually will create 1,000 permanent jobs for the state.
Thu, 11 Mar 2010 12:32:19 -0500 Researcher publishes exploit for new IE hole [New Window]
Moshe Ben Abu announced his Internet Explorer exploit on Twitter.(Credit:Twitter)An Israeli security researcher has published exploit code for an unpatched hole in Internet Explorer that Microsoft disclosed two days ago. Microsoft had warned in an advisory that a new vulnerability in IE 6 and IE 7, which could allow an attacker to take control of a computer, had been targeted in attacks. Releasing the exploit code publicly increases the chances of attacks on the zero-day hole and could pressure Microsoft to issue a patch before its next scheduled Patch Tuesday in four weeks. Researcher Moshe Ben Abu announced his work in a blog post on Wednesday and said it was being included in the open-source Metasploit exploit database. He was able to create the exploit code after figuring out where an existing exploit was in the wild, based on information in a McAfee blog post, he told Ryan Naraine of the Zero Day blog at CNET sister site ZDNet. It took him about 10 minutes to de-obfuscate the exploit and pinpoint the vulnerability, he said.Ben Abu told CNET that he would have found the original exploit code sooner or later without McAfee's help. Asked how serious the zero-day hole is, he wrote in an e-mail to CNET: "The exploit covers Internet Explorer versions 6 and 7, which are not the latest version [IE 8] but many users still use it. In addition, the exploit is quite unstable, with about 60 percent to 70 percent success rate. So I guess it is critical, but not for users who update their Windows with the latest IE." Microsoft's advisory on the vulnerability includes information on workarounds but suggests that IE 6 and IE 7 users upgrade to IE 8 immediately. A McAfee spokesman said the company would be more careful about the details provided in its blog posts in the future. "McAfee Labs does not support the release of exploit code, particularly in advance of a security patch being made available. We regularly sanitize blog content to prevent providing information that might assist attackers, while at the same time providing a service to customers and the security community to help improve protection levels," the spokesman said in a statement via e-mail. "The post in question did not contain enough information to directly lead anyone to exploit code. However, we regret that in this unique situation the post did contain details that may have given exploit writers a starting point to hunt for exploit code. Future blog posts will be subject to additional sanitization."Updated at 11:44 a.m. PST with comment from McAfee and updated at 10:37 p.m. PST with comment from Ben Abu. Originally posted at InSecurity Complex
Thu, 11 Mar 2010 11:28:00 -0500 InstantAction to offer embeddable console games [New Window]
At GDC 2010, InstantAction follows rival OnLive in announcing a service that lets gamers quickly rent or buy console games over the Internet.
Thu, 11 Mar 2010 11:00:00 -0500 Wearing your Stickybit on your sleeve, or elsewhere [New Window]
One of the start-ups hoping to make a splash at this year's South by Southwest Interactive Festival is Stickybits, a set of bar code stickers that you can "tag" with anything.
Thu, 11 Mar 2010 08:00:00 -0500 Chasing Groupon, LivingSocial raises $25 million [New Window]
Despite the fact that Groupon dominates all of its smaller competitors in the daily-deals market, rival LivingSocial is trying to draw some blood by expanding with the help of a new infusion of venture funding.
Thu, 11 Mar 2010 07:30:00 -0500 Android phones get Opera Mini 5 beta [New Window]
loadUniversalPlayer({playerType: 'ces2010-small',lumiereQueryType: 'id',lumiereQueryValue: '10463991',useCurrentPageUrl: true,relatedVideo: false,preRollAd: true,hideLeftTab:true,wrapperFloat:'left'});All those Android smartphone owners who have been wondering when they can ditch the outmoded Opera Mini 4.2 browser in favor of the latest beta can now unfold their pouts, stop that kicking, and remove their pounding fists from the floor. Opera Mini 5 beta for Android has arrived. digg_url = 'http://digg.com/gadgets/CNET_Android_phones_get_Opera_Mini_5_beta';On Thursday, Opera Software pushed out the Android version of its Mini 5 browser that improves the browser experience for Java phones by leaps and bounds. The beta build is equipped with an updated interface that includes a new "speed dial" start screen featuring thumbnails of most-visited sites. The browser also supports tabs, a first for Mini but old hat on Opera Mobile.Opera Mini 5 beta (beta 2, actually) and the nearly identical Opera Mobile 10 beta (for Symbian and Windows phones) have been making the mobile rounds since September. We're fans of the latest advances to come to the free browser, and we're looking forward to Opera making those changes final and retiring Opera Mini 4.2 (and Opera Mobile 9.6, while they're at it.) We just wish that Opera had submitted Mini 5 beta to the Android Market sooner. Opera adds Android to its Mini 5 beta lineup.(Credit:Opera Software)There's no confirmation from Opera, but we're speculating that Opera could officially flip the switch on at least one of the Opera Mini 5 variants at the CTIA trade show later in March.To download Opera Mini 5 beta for Android, check the Android Market from your smartphone or point to mobile browser to www.opera.com/mini/next/.Related:Opera Mini now on Windows Mobile. Yeah, you read that rightOpera Mini browser for iPhone?Opera Mini and Mobile betas bestowed with sync Originally posted at Android Atlas
Thu, 11 Mar 2010 03:00:00 -0500 Intel debuts six-core gaming chip [New Window]
Chipmaker introduces its first desktop chip packing that many processing cores for gaming boxes.
Thu, 11 Mar 2010 00:30:00 -0500 GDC 2010: Scaling the summits of gameplay [New Window]
roundup This week's Game Developers Conference brings together designers, programmers, publishers, and others for the latest from the world of video play.
Sat, 13 Mar 2010 22:13:00 -0500 TurboTax announces Glenn Beck ad pull via Twitter [New Window]
After feedback from its Twitter followers, the tax-preparation software company decides to remove its advertising from the show hosted by Fox's most entertaining presenter.
Wed, 10 Mar 2010 22:05:00 -0500 Sony unveils Move, its PS3 motion controller [New Window]
The motion-sensitive controller, shown off at GDC, is Sony's counter to Nintendo's Wii controller and Microsoft's Project Natal.
Wed, 10 Mar 2010 19:25:00 -0500 Net oversight board to consider .xxx domains [New Window]
ICM Registry is again urging ICANN to allow adult sites to add .xxx to their names, creating what some have called a red-light district in cyberspace. Originally posted at Safe and Secure
Wed, 10 Mar 2010 19:20:00 -0500 European Parliament slams digital copyright treaty [New Window]
Secret negotiations over a once-obscure draft treaty called the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement prompted an unusual rebuke from the European Parliament.
Wed, 10 Mar 2010 18:48:00 -0500 Woman, fearing apocalypse, tries to halt collider [New Window]
A woman appeals to the highest court in Germany to get the Large Hadron Collider stopped. The court decides she has no proof of any impending doom.
Wed, 10 Mar 2010 18:02:00 -0500 Microsoft Outlook makes friends with MySpace [New Window]
The software maker says it is ready with a version of its Outlook Social Connector that links the e-mail program with the youth-oriented social network.
Wed, 10 Mar 2010 16:50:00 -0500 Firm: Toyota, industry need more rigorous testing [New Window]
Latest problems linked to Toyota show the auto industry needs to fix the way it tests software, says company that specializes in software integrity.
Wed, 10 Mar 2010 16:20:00 -0500 In geolocation wars, SXSWi is mere skirmish [New Window]
The rivalry between Gowalla and Foursquare might seem to define the nascent geolocation market. Hold your horses: Let's see what Facebook is cooking up.
Wed, 10 Mar 2010 15:39:00 -0500 Change Word 2007's default paste-formatting option [New Window]
Make sure the text and graphics you paste into Word 2007 documents don't bring their formatting along for the ride.
Wed, 10 Mar 2010 13:33:00 -0500 Potential console killer OnLive to go live June 17 [New Window]
The company said it will launch with partners like Electronic Arts, Ubisoft, and THQ, and will begin unveiling its games lineup before E3. But will it work?
Wed, 10 Mar 2010 13:20:00 -0500 Microsoft looks to 'Elevate' California [New Window]
The software maker is bringing its free technology job training program to the Golden State, the company and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger are announcing on Wednesday.
Wed, 10 Mar 2010 13:10:00 -0500 Google-China resolution coming 'soon,' says CEO [New Window]
Talks between Google and Chinese government are ongoing, Google's Eric Schmidt says Wednesday, and he expects the matter to be resolved sooner rather than later. Originally posted at Relevant Results
Wed, 10 Mar 2010 12:30:00 -0500 What Apple's and Microsoft's patent threats mean for start-ups [New Window]
Given the likelihood that everyone violates the patents of everyone else, patent collectives like OIN may be critical to protecting the interests of start-ups against larger players.
Wed, 10 Mar 2010 11:34:00 -0500 Windows Live support via e-mail ends [New Window]
Starting Wednesday, users with problems will have to go to online forums to get answers to issues with Microsoft's consumer Web services.
Wed, 10 Mar 2010 11:24:00 -0500 Sims creator: Wii belongs in the 'toy market' [New Window]
Will Wright, best known for his creation of The Sims franchise, calls the Wii console a "toy" during this week's Game Developers Conference.
Wed, 10 Mar 2010 10:31:24 -0500 Why the explosion of social games excites veteran developers [New Window]
When simple games like Farmville snag 83 million users, designers who are used to working for years on a project have little choice but to embrace the era of Facebook titles.
Wed, 10 Mar 2010 07:00:00 -0500 SXSWi: Let the geolocation games begin [New Window]
The competition will be particularly fierce at the annual digital-culture bash between Foursquare and Gowalla, rival social-media services that want to own the location-based networking market.
Wed, 10 Mar 2010 07:00:00 -0500 Turning smartphones into air quality monitors [New Window]
Intel Labs is showing off technology that would allow consumers to collect and analyze environmental data and then share it over the Internet.
Wed, 10 Mar 2010 07:00:00 -0500 Lindsay Lohan sues E-Trade over Super Bowl spot [New Window]
The troubled actress is suing E-Trade, claiming that it mocked her in one of its cute baby ads. She is asking for $100 million.
Tue, 09 Mar 2010 22:21:00 -0500 Online dating finally recognized by restaurant guide [New Window]
A new restaurant guide has a section specifically dedicated to the difficult area of online dating. Its author believes only certain very specific places are suitable for an online date.
Tue, 09 Mar 2010 20:27:00 -0500 Analyst: PlayStation 3 to win console war in the end [New Window]
Sony's PlayStation 3 has suffered from poor sales over the past few years. But the console is making a resurgence and at least one analyst firm believes it will triumph.
Tue, 09 Mar 2010 18:30:00 -0500 Microsoft researcher wins Turing Award [New Window]
Chuck Thacker, who helped pioneer key aspects of the PC, gets an honor seen as the Nobel Prize of computing. In an interview, he talks about the award, his work, and why he's not retiring anytime soon.
Tue, 09 Mar 2010 14:42:00 -0500 Foursquare unveils its SXSWi arsenal [New Window]
In heated war with rival Gowalla for the geek seal of approval at the annual digital culture festival, Foursquare unveils new badges, new partners, and new promotions.
Tue, 09 Mar 2010 14:37:00 -0500 Foursquare gets down to business [New Window]
Location-aware social site Foursquare is introducing tools that make it easier for businesses to target users. This is a smart business move.
Tue, 09 Mar 2010 14:27:00 -0500 Is ad blocking the problem? [New Window]
Ad blocking is an easy scapegoat for the online media industry, but blocking ad-blocking will only stymie the evolution of the online media business.
Tue, 09 Mar 2010 12:32:00 -0500 MSN decides to keep its makeover [New Window]
Microsoft is making final a series of changes to the look of the MSN portal, hoping a cleaner page with more videos and fewer links will help give it a fresher look.
Tue, 09 Mar 2010 12:00:00 -0500 At Open Source and the Cloud, IT opportunities and challenges [New Window]
At the Open Source and the Cloud event next week we'll be discussing how open source and cloud work and play together. It's not as easy as you might think.
Tue, 09 Mar 2010 11:24:00 -0500 For SXSWi, Chevy plugs into social media [New Window]
An ambitious load of marketing initiatives from the GM division, which is preparing to launch its Volt electric car, emphasizes that brands increasingly see the digital-culture fest as a place to test campaigns.
Tue, 09 Mar 2010 10:19:00 -0500 Newegg probes shipments of fake Intel chips [New Window]
As the Newegg case of fake Intel CPUs demonstrates, typos are one of the big tip-offs.
Tue, 09 Mar 2010 00:47:45 -0500 8-Bit NYC is the coolest map--ever [New Window]
Map of New York City depicted in 8-bit gaming glory is a viable mapping tool too.
Mon, 08 Mar 2010 18:08:44 -0500 When TiVoing the Oscars, Twitter is not your friend [New Window]
It's nearly impossible to keep from finding out what happens at live events like the Academy Awards, the Olympics, or the Super Bowl if you're a Twitter or Facebook user.
Mon, 08 Mar 2010 17:40:00 -0500 If Novell gets bought, will Red Hat follow? [New Window]
Novell's proposed acquisition will likely drive Red Hat into the arms of VMware or Oracle, but will have minimal impact on the larger open-source commercial ecosystem.
Mon, 08 Mar 2010 15:07:21 -0500 Musings on the future of Microsoft, Windows [New Window]
Robert Scoble and Microsoftie-turned-Googler Don Dodge discuss Redmond's future with CNET's Ina Fried and Rafe Needleman. Also, Technologizer has more on what Microsoft needs to do with Windows.
Mon, 08 Mar 2010 13:00:00 -0500 Citysearch's new service to better target local ads [New Window]
The local-business directory is combining its extensive ad network with SEO services from OrangeSoda.
Mon, 08 Mar 2010 11:43:42 -0500 At GDC, iPhone game development breaks out [New Window]
For the first time, the leading game development conference will feature a summit devoted entirely to topics about iPhone games. But GDC is also changing in other important ways.
Mon, 08 Mar 2010 07:00:00 -0500 MacBook Pro sports Core i7 chip label at Best Buy [New Window]
MacBook Pro with an Intel Core i7 label: Though likely a mistake, it's probably enough to jump-start the rumor mill.
Sun, 07 Mar 2010 22:10:00 -0500 Apple A4 chip, iPad vs. the competition [New Window]
As the Apple iPad and its A4 chip get ready to ship, plenty of competing products are waiting in the wings.
Sun, 07 Mar 2010 12:45:00 -0500 Intel exec critiques PC graphics, phone market [New Window]
Executive Vice President David Perlmutter downplays the importance of laptop graphics performance and speaks about ARM chip rivals at an investor conference.
Sat, 06 Mar 2010 15:33:28 -0500 MIT Media Lab Complex ready to illuminate [New Window]
Architect Fumihiko Maki creates literal think tanks in the form of glass-encased labs for MIT's most famous interdisciplinary program.
Fri, 05 Mar 2010 20:57:00 -0500 A closer look at Windows Phone 7 Series [New Window]
CNET's Ina Fried talks to Microsoft's Charlie Kindel about writing software for the new phone and gets a look at Redmond's new-look Phone operating system.
Fri, 05 Mar 2010 18:38:00 -0500 Has business press lost touch with the tech industry? [New Window]
A new report shows that the business press writes little about enterprise IT--despite being the industry cash-cow--and instead focuses on gadgets and trends.
Sat, 06 Mar 2010 13:18:00 -0500 The home client is about simplicity [New Window]
We may have many devices in our homes but they can't require the same degree of "care and feeding" as traditional PCs.
Fri, 05 Mar 2010 13:24:00 -0500 Five ways to keep your PC free of viruses and Trojans [New Window]
Malware authors are finding sneaky new ways to separate you from your financial data and other sensitive information.
Fri, 05 Mar 2010 13:22:00 -0500 Office 2010 nearly ready; upgrade offer launched [New Window]
Microsoft says it will finalize the code next month, with plans to launch the software for businesses in May. Kicks off program giving free upgrade to Office 2007 buyers.
Fri, 05 Mar 2010 12:54:00 -0500 More details leak on Microsoft's 'Courier' [New Window]
Just as Apple announces iPad shipping plans, more information about Microsoft's rumored consumer tablet emerges. Device runs Windows CE and will be out later this year, says Engadget.
Fri, 05 Mar 2010 12:14:00 -0500 BlackBerry Storm 2 has issues too [New Window]
The first version of the BlackBerry Storm was widely panned for its shortcomings, but the Storm 2 has its own set of issues.
Fri, 05 Mar 2010 00:52:00 -0500 One-man show to depict Steve Jobs' career [New Window]
Monologist Mike Daisey will address the "rise and fall and rise" of Steve Jobs in a performance scheduled for next year at a repertory theater in Berkeley, Calif.
Thu, 04 Mar 2010 19:54:00 -0500 Microsoft's desktop future may look like a phone [New Window]
While Windows 7 offers a respite from advances by feisty rivals Apple and Google, the future for Microsoft likely looks a lot like it does for those competitors: mobile.
Thu, 04 Mar 2010 12:53:16 -0500 Valve games coming soon to a Mac near you [New Window]
Game developer Valve has teases out of images of its popular PC games to be ported to the Mac. Will the Steam cloud-service follow as well?
Wed, 03 Mar 2010 22:41:00 -0500 Porn Detection Stick seeks out salacious images [New Window]
Paraben offers what it calls a Porn Detection Stick that detects pornographic images hiding on a Windows PC's hard drive. The company claims 99 percent accuracy.
Wed, 03 Mar 2010 15:19:16 -0500 Lemelson-MIT prize goes to man of many talents [New Window]
Award winner Erez Lieberman-Aiden has developed breakthroughs in such areas as genetics, sensor technology, applied mathematics, and even evolutionary linguistics.
Wed, 03 Mar 2010 11:42:00 -0500 Novell's buyout and its effect on the industry [New Window]
Novell's Linux business didn't do it many favors, but it promises to be a critical component of a range of potential suitors' bids to displace Microsoft in the market.
Wed, 03 Mar 2010 10:44:36 -0500 Series Seed normalizes VC term sheets [New Window]
A new effort is under way to take the sting out of documenting early-stage venture financing. But that doesn't mean you don't have to pay attention.
Tue, 02 Mar 2010 23:01:00 -0500 Hypervisors are not commodities [New Window]
Hypervisors for server virtualization are being acquired today in two distinctly different ways.
Tue, 02 Mar 2010 11:21:00 -0500 PC, TV time linked to teen detachment, study finds [New Window]
Computers and televisions play a significant role in the lives of teens, though a new analysis links them to low attachment.
Tue, 02 Mar 2010 10:54:00 -0500 Open source: Still room for the little guy? [New Window]
Open source is increasingly a key strategy for the big enterprise-software vendors, but this doesn't mean there isn't still a place for small players.
Tue, 02 Mar 2010 09:08:49 -0500 Ranking the top game-design colleges [New Window]
Now college students can make video games for fun and profit. This list tells you where to go to learn about game design.
Tue, 02 Mar 2010 00:30:00 -0500 Open-source evolution hits overdrive [New Window]
Open source hasn't been kind to its proprietary forbears, but it's also not doing any favors to its kin, driving the pace of innovation up and some open-source competitors out.
Mon, 01 Mar 2010 17:42:00 -0500 When will MMOs captivate console owners? [New Window]
MMOs have long been successful on the PC. But in recent years, they have fallen flat on the console. At least one developer believes that will change going forward.
Mon, 01 Mar 2010 16:30:00 -0500 Hollywood's losing digital downloads battle [New Window]
The flattening out of its digital business has more to do with its heavy-handed approached than any lack of interest in its products. It's time to let go of the reins.
Mon, 01 Mar 2010 13:18:36 -0500 Pentagon OKs social-media access [New Window]
With new policy, the Defense Department acknowledges the impracticality of an either/or decision between network security and information sharing via the Web. Originally posted at News - Digital Media
Sat, 27 Feb 2010 12:58:00 -0500 A fix for Outlook 2007's failure to link to Exchange Server 2003 [New Window]
The inability to connect from a Vista PC to an Exchange Server may be due to a conflict with the Windows Firewall.
Fri, 26 Feb 2010 12:43:00 -0500 IBM BigSheets to preserve fleeting Web data [New Window]
Big Blue's new analytics software project will help extract, annotate, and visually analyze terabytes of Web information. Among its early adopters: the British Library.
Thu, 25 Feb 2010 01:01:00 -0500 HP launches new cloud efforts in Asia [New Window]
HP has announced the opening of a new development lab to support cloud initiatives, but is it coming too late to the party?
Wed, 24 Feb 2010 12:29:00 -0500 Need a job? Learn Drupal [New Window]
The demand for talent to support and develop open-source software like Linux and Drupal continues to grow. If you need a job, it's time to brush up on your Drupal skills.
Wed, 24 Feb 2010 08:01:00 -0500 Two free programs enhance Windows' clipboard [New Window]
M8 Free Clipboard and PasteCopy.NET make it easy to save and reuse multiple text entries and images.
Sun, 21 Feb 2010 22:54:00 -0500 Software lives forever [New Window]
Critical business systems modernize slowly. If it isn't broken, it's rarely fixed.
Thu, 18 Feb 2010 08:57:00 -0500 Make your desktop shortcuts work for you, not against you [New Window]
If you find yourself hunting for shortcuts amid a chaos of icons on your desktop, use these tips to restore order to the Windows backdrop.
Tue, 16 Feb 2010 12:52:19 -0500 Why Itanium still matters [New Window]
As the processor underpinning Hewlett-Packard's Integrity line, Itanium remains an important component that can't be easily replaced.
Fri, 12 Feb 2010 15:02:00 -0500 Airborne Laser zaps in-flight missile [New Window]
The proof-of-concept laser-equipped 747 takes out a ballistic missile in a bittersweet achievement for fans of directed-energy weapons. Originally posted at News - Cutting Edge
Fri, 12 Feb 2010 11:48:00 -0500 Porsche revs up 911 hybrid [New Window]
After the official debut of the 911 GT3 R at the Geneva auto show, Porsche plans to race the car to learn, not win, at 24 Hours of Nurburgring in May.
Thu, 11 Feb 2010 11:17:00 -0500 Fixes for five common Firefox problems [New Window]
Jump-start a stalled update, find the source of slow browser start-ups, get rid of add-ons that won't uninstall, prevent phantom update alerts, and keep autocomplete entries from disappearing.
Wed, 10 Feb 2010 13:37:34 -0500 Hacker 'Mudge' gets DARPA job [New Window]
A computer security expert who ran one of the early hacker spaces before launching several security start-ups will be a program manager at the Defense Department's DARPA. Originally posted at InSecurity Complex
Wed, 10 Feb 2010 07:00:00 -0500 Robonaut 2: The offspring of GM and NASA [New Window]
The humanoid handyman is expected to be equally comfortable working the assembly line in Detroit and puttering around a spacecraft headed far, far away.
Thu, 04 Feb 2010 11:43:00 -0500 Measuring the smart-grid effect [New Window]
Deployment of smart-grid systems would reduce U.S. carbon emissions from utilities 12 percent by 2030, according to DOE researchers.
Thu, 04 Feb 2010 09:52:00 -0500 Dig deeper to find the cause of Windows start-up delays [New Window]
Use Windows' own tools to determine why your PC seems to take forever to boot.
Wed, 03 Feb 2010 12:47:00 -0500 Ferrari set to unveil hybrid [New Window]
Iconic car maker plans to show off a hybrid version of its Ferrari 599 at the Geneva Motor Show in March.
Thu, 28 Jan 2010 11:23:00 -0500 Oracle lays out plans for Sun [New Window]
The big theme of a major presentation on Wednesday was integration of its $7 billion acquisition, both of technology stacks and of Sun Microsystems as a whole.
Wed, 27 Jan 2010 20:12:00 -0500 U.S. Naval Research: Gamers make better soldiers [New Window]
U.S. Office of Naval Research finds that gamers have more advanced cognitive functions that make them better soldiers. Games might be used more actively as training tools. Originally posted at The Digital Home
Wed, 27 Jan 2010 14:46:00 -0500 Think City EV promises 80 percent charge in 15 min. [New Window]
Deal with AeroVironment to result in quick-charge stations and an agreement with EnerDel will make it the exclusive supplier of batteries for the electric cars, Think says.
Wed, 27 Jan 2010 12:51:00 -0500 Customize Outlook's archive settings [New Window]
Though it's no substitute for a full backup, tweaking the archive options in Outlook 2007 and 2003 can have some real benefits.
Wed, 27 Jan 2010 12:27:00 -0500 Why cloud exchanges won't work [New Window]
A market exchange for cloud computing raises far too many thorny issues of interoperability, security, and compliance.
Fri, 22 Jan 2010 14:26:00 -0500 Gmail delivery errors divulge confidential information [New Window]
Having a common Gmail address is like a magnet for e-mail intended for people with similar names.
Thu, 21 Jan 2010 12:37:00 -0500 MySpace's first foray into Facebook Connect [New Window]
MySpace's "Fan Video" page is the first implementation of the long-rumored Facebook Connect adoption on the site.
Fri, 15 Jan 2010 01:37:00 -0500 Generator maker sees used motor oil potential [New Window]
Popular Science winner snags deal with company to develop a generator engine that runs on used motor oil.
Thu, 14 Jan 2010 12:01:00 -0500 HP, Microsoft enter integrated-systems era [New Window]
The significance of their deal is that Hewlett-Packard and Microsoft are calling each other "preferred partners," public favoritism that would once have been a shocker.
Thu, 14 Jan 2010 11:24:00 -0500 Ethanol alternative gains ground with new plant [New Window]
Cobalt Biofuels opens plant in California to produce biobutanol from wood waste as other big names also invest in the non-food based biofuel.
Wed, 13 Jan 2010 15:40:25 -0500 The yin and yang of system specialization [New Window]
Storage and networking devices increasingly leverage and repurpose server technology. But the trend towards generalization is more complicated than that.
Tue, 12 Jan 2010 13:02:00 -0500 Songza Sets streams music with a human touch [New Window]
The latest streaming start-up to challenge algorithms with real humans, Songza Sets offers up daily, themed music playlists, hand-picked by music experts.
Thu, 07 Jan 2010 20:16:44 -0500 Facebook iPhone app gets address sync, push [New Window]
Version 3.1 the social network's iPhone app brings welcome additions like push notifications and address book sync.
Wed, 06 Jan 2010 17:20:24 -0500 Self-service setbacks at the high-tech ATM? Check [New Window]
Replacing envelope stuffing with check scanning may save time for single deposits, but getting rid of the lower-tech option actually slows down multiple-check deposits.
Tue, 05 Jan 2010 18:00:00 -0500 Flixster buys Rotten Tomatoes from News Corp. [New Window]
User-generated movie review site Flixster has acquired critic-focused movie review site Rotten Tomatoes from News Corp. to compliment their offering.
Mon, 04 Jan 2010 19:38:00 -0500 Quark Promote lets novices make promo materials [New Window]
The new, easily approachable tools allow non-designers to create their own promotional materials.
Mon, 28 Dec 2009 16:39:00 -0500 Meebo Bar now available for all [New Window]
Previously only available to large blogs and businesses, the Meebo Bar, which features a variety of sharing and chat options, is now available to everyone.
Mon, 21 Dec 2009 17:12:22 -0500 YouTube shows what friends share on Facebook [New Window]
YouTube just rolled out a feature that keeps you up to date on the videos that your friends are sharing on Facebook.
Fri, 18 Dec 2009 18:59:00 -0500 Bitly.tv serves up the Web's most linked videos [New Window]
Popular URL shortener bit.ly debuts a new service, bitly.tv, which shows off the most-linked videos through their service.
Thu, 17 Dec 2009 20:15:00 -0500 Does Twitter mean business with 'Contributors' test? [New Window]
Twitter is launching a small test of a new business-oriented feature called "Contributors." Might this signal the impending launch of Twitter business accounts?
Mon, 14 Dec 2009 20:50:00 -0500 Norton Online Backup 2.0 hits the Web [New Window]
Updated version comes with new features such as support for Mac and Windows, 90-day file versioning, and the ability to send file download links via e-mail.
Wed, 09 Dec 2009 08:00:00 -0500 CROSSHAIRS to protect vehicles against bullets, RPGs [New Window]
DARPA contracts to mount threat detection and countermeasure systems on MRAPs designed to locate and engage enemy shooters.
Fri, 20 Nov 2009 18:26:00 -0500 Carbon nanotubes capture greenhouse gases, desalinate water [New Window]
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory licenses carbon nanotube technology to spinoff company for commercialization.
Wed, 18 Nov 2009 22:12:00 -0500 Army tests new special ops hybrid vehicle [New Window]
The hybrid "Clandestine Extended Range Vehicle" does 80 mph, climbs hills, and serves as a high-speed weapons platform--all while cutting fuel consumption, according to the Army.
Tue, 17 Nov 2009 19:26:00 -0500 Black Box keeps tabs on weapons [New Window]
FN Herstal product keeps track of rounds fired and gunner's location, transmits info allowing commanders to keep track of assets.
Mon, 16 Nov 2009 20:30:00 -0500 So long, and thanks for all the hits [New Window]
Peter Glaskowsky wraps up the Speeds and Feeds blog with the announcement that he has been hired by Intel.
Mon, 16 Nov 2009 10:29:00 -0500 Wrapping up Speeds and Feeds, part 5: Access [New Window]
It isn't enough that all our devices are efficient, reliable, rugged, and secure. They still need to learn to work together more conveniently. Here's how.
Fri, 13 Nov 2009 12:41:00 -0500 Wrapping up Speeds and Feeds, part 4: Security [New Window]
PCs and the Internet provide only fragmented support for secure storage and communications. Technology and standards are available to provide security by default. What are we waiting for?
Thu, 12 Nov 2009 11:01:00 -0500 Italian troops to button up against IEDs [New Window]
Italian Ministry of Defense orders remote controlled machine gun turrets, gunners aim and fire from within vehicle using a flat panel display and joystick.
Wed, 11 Nov 2009 18:51:00 -0500 Remote-control gun turrets, made for Italy [New Window]
Italian defense department orders Hitrole remote-controlled machine gun turrets to enable soldiers in Afghanistan to aim and fire without exposing themselves to attack.
Wed, 11 Nov 2009 16:19:00 -0500 Wrapping up Speeds and Feeds, part 3: Ruggedness [New Window]
Rugged laptops are available from several manufacturers, but they're too bulky and expensive for mainstream consumers. We need rugged consumer notebooks; here's how we'll get them.
Wed, 11 Nov 2009 09:10:00 -0500 Wrapping up Speeds and Feeds, part 2: Reliability [New Window]
Personal computers aren't as reliable as they could be. Creating truly reliable PCs will take a lot of work and a growing share of the system transistor budget, but it'll be worth the cost.
Tue, 10 Nov 2009 10:00:00 -0500 Wrapping up Speeds and Feeds, part 1: Efficiency [New Window]
Laptop battery life is increasing steadily, but what we really need is for laptops to work like cell phones: always on, always running, and able to stay awake longer than we do. It is possible.
Mon, 09 Nov 2009 12:10:00 -0500 Tilera's balancing act: 100 cores vs. market realities [New Window]
A new family of CPUs from Tilera with 16 to 100 cores per chip will set new complexity records for general-purpose microprocessors. It will also teach a lesson about what "general purpose" means.
Mon, 02 Nov 2009 08:45:00 -0500 The Gizmo Report: WikiReader--simple, singular [New Window]
Whoever heard of an Internet-based device with no Internet access? Or of a single-function electronic device in these days of the digital convergence? Enter the WikiReader.
Wed, 28 Oct 2009 11:01:00 -0400 Taking a look at Nook [New Window]
Nook, the new Barnes & Noble e-book reader, is a direct attack on Amazon's Kindle. What are its advantages and disadvantages, and how well will it do in the market?
Wed, 21 Oct 2009 11:01:00 -0400 Mulling mobile broadband options [New Window]
A query prompts a detailed review of several ways to connect a laptop to 3G mobile broadband networks and some of the potential gotchas associated with it.
Mon, 19 Oct 2009 11:01:00 -0400 Track business executives' tweets with ExecTweets [New Window]
Good news for Twitter users and aspiring CEOs alike: The free ExecTweets app brings to your iPhone the daily brain droppings of nearly 100 business bigwigs. Originally posted at iPhone Atlas
Tue, 19 May 2009 12:17:00 -0400 It's Coop's -30- column: Adios, sorta [New Window]
I'm outta here. But before signing off one final time, I did want to tip the hat to acknowledge you, the readers, for making it one very fun ride.
Wed, 22 Apr 2009 20:28:00 -0400 To catch a (cyber) thief: It's not easy [New Window]
Head of an FBI undercover sting operation explains how law enforcement cracked an ID theft ring and detailed the increasing influence of Russian organized crime.
Wed, 22 Apr 2009 18:19:00 -0400 I'm officially dropping out of the Twitter gab fest [New Window]
Don't know about you, but I'm thoroughly bored by the daily exegesis that attends even the smallest, most trivial "news" surrounding Twitter.
Fri, 17 Apr 2009 20:42:00 -0400 Telcos said testing plan to offer PCs to businesses [New Window]
Call it the second coming of the network computer, if you like, but major telecommunications companies have set up pilot outsourcing programs where they would supply access to virtual computers.
Fri, 03 Apr 2009 07:00:00 -0400 The world is flat. So what's our problem? [New Window]
Budgets are tight everywhere but take a lesson from one Indian outsource giant, where employee education and retraining remains a corporate priority.
Wed, 01 Apr 2009 20:45:00 -0400 First GM, now Silicon Graphics. Lessons learned? [New Window]
The optimist in me wants to believe that even the most raging egos must know that all glory is fleeting. What with Silicon Valley's famous chronic self-absorption, that's not a sure bet.
Wed, 01 Apr 2009 13:34:00 -0400 LotusLive Engage: IBM's cloud gets social [New Window]
Collaboration and communication in an innovative new package. The second coming of Lotus Notes? Not exactly but IBM is hoping it has the same impact in the enterprise.
Tue, 31 Mar 2009 20:00:00 -0400 LongJump to foster private clouds for corporate IT [New Window]
Company to license technology to help both IT and software developers build their own private clouds
Tue, 31 Mar 2009 03:01:00 -0400 Infosys co-chair: Mistake to erect protectionist barriers [New Window]
On the eve of the G-20 meeting near London, Nandan Nilekani urges continued free flow of labor and free trade as best remedy to the global economic crisis
Mon, 30 Mar 2009 18:23:00 -0400 How new tech standards wind up stillborn [New Window]
Appearance of the "Open Cloud Manifesto" immediately runs into a snag as Amazon and Microsoft opt out. What's needed now is the intervention of cooler heads who can rise above the fray to figure out how to heal the rift before it widens.
Fri, 27 Mar 2009 17:21:00 -0400 Wolfram Alpha: Next major search breakthrough? [New Window]
Stephen Wolfram has come up with a new and potentially revolutionary search paradigm for finding answers via the Web.
Sun, 08 Mar 2009 11:42:00 -0400 YouTube's new 'nocookie' feature continues to serve cookies [New Window]
A recently implemented "delayed cookie" privacy feature at YouTube begs the question: When is a cookie not a cookie?
Tue, 03 Mar 2009 10:18:00 -0500 Is the White House changing its YouTube tune? [New Window]
The White House has quietly moved away from the use of YouTube videos on the president's official home page.
Mon, 02 Mar 2009 09:00:00 -0500 Recovery.gov blocked search engine tracking [New Window]
update After Google seemingly ignored restrictive search engine-blocking code built into the Obama administration's new stimulus-related site, the robots.txt code is removed.
Thu, 19 Feb 2009 08:41:00 -0500 Obama's BlackBerry brings personal safety risks [New Window]
The U.S. president's insistence on keeping his RIM device creates a number of risks, chief among them: attacks against his location privacy and physical security.
Thu, 12 Feb 2009 10:27:00 -0500 White House expands use of search-blocking code [New Window]
Whitehouse.gov's administrators silently triple the number of Web pages that it forbids Google and other search engines from accessing. Is this a bad omen or much ado about nothing?
Fri, 30 Jan 2009 09:22:00 -0500 Activists call for a mashup-friendly Recovery.gov [New Window]
Transparency activists demand that the government provide data on the $825 billion stimulus package in a format conducive to user-generated mashups and remixes.
Tue, 27 Jan 2009 10:06:00 -0500 White House yanks 'YouTube' from privacy policy [New Window]
For the third time in six days, the Obama administration modifies its site's privacy policy--this time expanding a cookie exemption to companies other than the video-sharing site.
Mon, 26 Jan 2009 21:17:00 -0500 White House acts to limit YouTube cookie tracking [New Window]
Just 12 hours after I highlighted privacy problems with the White House's new Web site, the Obama team has deployed a fix that provides significant protection to many (but not all) of the site's visitors.
Fri, 23 Jan 2009 08:38:00 -0500 White House exempts YouTube from privacy rules [New Window]
The Obama White House has quietly granted YouTube an exemption from strict federal rules that prohibit the use of cookies to collect information from visitors to federal agency Web sites.
Thu, 22 Jan 2009 16:09:00 -0500 Microsoft's Live Mesh top innovation at the Crunchies [New Window]
A most surprising and deserving winner at the Crunchies was Microsoft's Live Mesh, which won in the category best technology innovation/achievement. Originally posted at News - Microsoft
Sat, 10 Jan 2009 11:55:00 -0500 Macintosh at 25: Still the innovation leader [New Window]
On January 24, 1984, the Macintosh came into the world, starting a revolution in personal computing. Now, all attention is turned to what Apple will introduce next.
Wed, 31 Dec 2008 16:31:00 -0500 Tech policy predictions for 2009 [New Window]
Surveillance State's predictions for 2009 include bad news for Net neutrality and privacy, but good news for AT&T and Comcast.
Mon, 29 Dec 2008 13:00:00 -0500 Print news is fading, but the content lives on [New Window]
According to a Pew survey, the Internet has overtaken newspapers as a main source of national and international news. But newspapers still supply much of the seed news content that's refactored by millions of bloggers.
Thu, 25 Dec 2008 11:43:00 -0500 Leaving Sinobyte [New Window]
After almost a year covering China's internet and technological scene for the CNET Blog Network here at Sinobyte, it's time for me to say goodbye.
Fri, 19 Dec 2008 12:54:00 -0500 End Game [New Window]
This is my 603rd and last column for pbs.org. If you want to continue reading my work, please visit http://www.cringely.com, which is also in this week's links. Thanks for your support. Everybody in my line of work writes prediction columns for the coming year, but I wonder how many we will see this time around? The world is unsettled. It's not just this damned financial nightmare we have to deal with but also a sense of between-ness, like something has just ended yet still lingers slightly though it is obvious that something new is about to arrive. But will it be a good something new? That's hard to tell. So for this reason I think the prognosticators will mainly keep their heads down this year. Except, of course, for me. I'm too stupid to shut up.So let's get on with this experiment in humiliation. You know the drill. We begin with a look at last year's predictions to see how I did then jump into my predictions for 2009. If you care to follow along you'll find last year's predictions column in this week's links. For a real laugh you can find my predictions from many previous years in the archive.I wrote a year ago that we'd see the beginning of a shift away from PC-centrism with other platforms beginning to supercede the venerable PC. This is a slow process as I said it would be but generally I think I was correct. Sales growth for PCs slowed in general while growth for smartphones and netbooks increased. I never said PC sales were going in the toilet but it seems clear that the action these days is elsewhere, so I'm going to claim this one.I said the Digital TV conversion would be a nightmare, though the greatest pain would be felt in 2009 when the analog transmitters are actually turned off. I think this is correct. Poll your friends and you'll find most are in denial. While everyone has seen a DTV commercial, there are millions of people who still don't know what's happening. Free converter boxes are sold out, which ought to be good, but expected DTV sales have not met forecasts, so I say there are 10-15 million people who are going to wake up mad as hell in February. So I got this one right and claim it for 2009, too. While it may seem quiet now, February and March are going to be ugly.I wrote that Cisco would acquire Macrovision, which didn't happen. Two right and one wrong. I still think Macrovision has to find a landing place somewhere or the company is doomed.I predicted that venture capitalists would sour on start-ups with revenue models based solely on advertising, citing Facebook as an example. This one is hard to call because the general tightening in the economy has led VCs to push all their companies toward multiple revenue models and much tighter books. Still, I probably got this one wrong, though I'd say it is still coming.I predicted that Google would bid and win the 700 MHz spectrum auction. They bid, true, and made a good effort at shaping the deals that resulted, but Google didn't win so this was wrong. I am not worthy.I predicted that IBM would have bad earnings, would try to sell Global Services, and failing that might fund the sale itself. Wrong, wrong and wrong. IBM's earnings were saved by the weak dollar or I would have been right. They couldn't sell Global Services because no company was stupid enough to buy. But they didn't have to finance anything because the credit crunch came and it was clearly not going to happen. I'm the loser here. If you are keeping score it is pretty dismal, down to two right and four wrong.I said Microsoft would indefinitely extend the life of Windows XP. I might well claim this one but -- like Wall Street -- I may as well take all my losses while I can. Yes, you can still get XP, but if you are an individual it requires downgrading from Vista so you have to buy Vista anyway. In the long run this strategy really hurts Microsoft because the made-for-Vista computers that are being downgraded to XP don't work as well and Microsoft's reputation suffers even further, if that's possible. Redmond sees this as a clever success on their part, too, which says a lot about the company.Of course I had to say that Steve Ballmer was going to retire, too, though now I see him not following Gates for another 2-3 years. In the long run, though, he's toast, simply because things are going to get uglier and uglier for Microsoft. Two right and six wrong. Maybe it IS time for me to retire.I said Apple would embrace multi-touch pointing in its computers. They did. Whew!I said a 3G iPhone was coming. Yes! And an Apple subnotebook/tablet. No! This latter device remains in the wings, however. Four right and seven wrong.Apple didn't license ANYTHING, much less its embedded OS X. Silly me.Let's get this over with quickly. Apple DIDN'T license the Windows API, DIDN'T dump Akamai for Google (ironically Google became an Akamai customer), and Season 2 of NerdTV never appeared.Final score four right and 11 wrong -- my worst outcome EVER and the first time I dropped below 50 percent. Obviously I have to start making vaguer predictions or move into pizza delivery -- probably the latter.So, having lost all credibility, let's just leap into my predictions for 2009. Who knows, I might see a miracle and actually get one or two right.These are in no particular order, by the way.The economy and its many problems will clearly dominate 2009. We're in a recession that will last at least through the middle of the year and maybe longer. They way we'll buy our way out of it will affect the nation for decades to come. It is NOT a happy time.1) The good news is that most recessions mean new IT platforms. The minicomputer hit its stride in the early '70s recession, the PC in the early '80s recession, client-server computing in the early '90s recession (notice these things happen every 10 years or so?), the Internet in the 2001 recession, and now we're about to see mobile take over in an even bigger way. Desktops will survive but most of the growth will be in mobile devices.2) This one isn't what you'd expect. In 2009 there will be several HUGE cyber thefts as well as companies admitting huge cyber thefts that happened in previous years but were kept secret. The former will happen because the security infrastructure on the Internet is more fragile than ever while the latter will happen because companies -- especially banks -- will want to get every write-off they can while the news is so generally bleak. Who will care if they report losing $1+ billion or so to some guys from Russia or Nigeria three years past?3) IT layoffs are going to happen, putting tens of thousands of technical people on the streets, yet STILL the big employers will be pushing for unlimited H1B visas to bring in technical people from South Asia. This mean-spirited and blatant age discrimination might be successful, too, unless the Obama administration does the right thing.4) Intel will continue to dominate while AMD slowly suffers, but I don't see AMD being acquired in 2009.5) Death of daily newspapers will accelerate and many papers will fail outright. When the Detroit Free Press announces it is ending home delivery on most days as they are expected to, well that's it. I thought this process would take longer but it is likely that half the daily newspapers in America will be gone in three years.6) The next Yahoo CEO will dismember the company and sell it piecemeal, made possible by the fact that only the Internet companies have much real cash. The Yahoo name will survive but the company will not.7) Microsoft will peak in 2009. By this I don't mean the company's shares will reach a peak value by any means, but its aggregate peak of wealth and influence will be reached and everything will be slowly downhill from here, accelerated primarily by the efforts of Apple. Microsoft hasn't been able to find a franchise to replace the PC. Games are big but not profitable enough. Mobile is too crowded. Content they simply aren't good at. That leaves Enterprise and Microsoft can dominate that only as a smaller company, so smaller it will become.8) The catalyst for Microsoft's decline will be when the world's most influential IT analyst, Walt Mossberg of the Wall Street Journal, writes sometime this spring that he can no longer see any reason to own Microsoft products. He could have written that story a year ago but it is taking Mossberg time to get up his nerve, but he eventually will.9) Not only will Microsoft peak, Google will, too! Oh Google will continue to grow for another decade or more, but as a technology leader Android is probably the peak. The company is too fat and happy to be a technical leader for much longer. It's still a good investment, though.10) If Microsoft and Google are down then what's up? Apple! This could play out a number of ways. Apple will certainly continue to grow its Macintosh market share. iPod growth may be softening but the iPhone will make up for that. Still, faced with Android I think Apple will drive its content business through an acquisition in the cheap-or-free networking space (remember it was Apple that came up with WiFi in the first place) to stake some claim on the last mile. But even more importantly, at some time next year Apple will take the gloves off and go head-to-head against Microsoft Office, driving margins down for Redmond and generally making trouble.11) My last prediction for 2009 has to do with venture capital. While investments in technology will continue, the really smart VCs will realize there is a much better and more certain way to make a ton of money in the short term: start a bank. Look for the rebirth of community banks, in this case backed by VCs. Work with me on this one. There is no credit available because the big banks won't lend. But it takes only about $20 million to start a very fine little bank that WILL loan money because the cash can be acquired from the Fed for almost nothing and lent at high rates to technology companies that can pay it back. By creating banks the technology industry will become self-funding. And when the big banks finally stop being frozen with fear and want to take back the lending business, they'll have to buy all those little banks for at least a 10X multiple. It's not like starting Cisco or Dell, but a 10-bagger business model that can be replicated over and over again while actually helping the nation can't fail.That last one was my gift to you, America and the world. Thanks for 11 good years.
Tue, 16 Dec 2008 10:01:01 -0500 More speculation on Yahoo's CEO choices [New Window]
Kara Swisher continues her search for Jerry Yang's replacement, gathering picks from the raft of ex-Yahoo employees.
Sat, 13 Dec 2008 15:07:00 -0500 Window Snyder to leave Mozilla [New Window]
Popular chief security architect behind Firefox, Thunderbird, and other open-source projects is leaving to work on an undisclosed new project.
Wed, 10 Dec 2008 16:08:00 -0500 Google's 2008 Zeitgeist lists of most popular searches [New Window]
With 2008 coming to an end, the data miners at Google have compiled global lists of the most popular search terms and trends for the year.
Wed, 10 Dec 2008 06:57:00 -0500 Insanely Great [New Window]
Looking for improved business models for the personal computer business, Apple CEO Steve Jobs often used to cite automobile makers, though never American car companies. The examples were invariably German. Whether it was the design aesthetic of his Mercedes sedan or Porsche's success at selling high-margin cars as entertainment devices, Jobs could always point to farfegnugen as a way to sell a good car for a great price. So since he thinks about these things anyway, and because the U.S. automobile industry is on the skids and begging for help this week, I find myself wondering what would happen if Steve Jobs were put in charge of any of the Big Three car companies?It wouldn't be boring, that's for sure, and I'm fairly certain Steve could do a better job than the Detroit executives currently in charge.When Steve Jobs returned to Apple in 1997, the computer company was in worse shape than some of these car companies. Apple's share price was in the toilet, it had poorly conceived products it couldn't sell, the company was losing money, market share was dismal, and CEOs from John Sculley on had tried without success to find ANY company that would buy Apple. Steve himself had such low expectations for Apple under Gil Amelio that he sold all his new Apple shares shortly after Apple bought his NeXT Computer.What a difference a decade makes. Today Apple and Jobs are at the top of their game, taking market share from other computer companies while at the same time establishing game-changing new product concepts like the iPod and iPhone. Apple is America's largest music seller (who could have seen that one coming back in '97? Nobody), has no debt, and $22+ billion in the bank. Even at its currently depressed stock price, Apple is worth more than any of the car companies and for good reason: Apple has a future.What did Jobs do to make Apple such a business success and how would he translate these techniques to a car company? It's not really that hard to imagine.Back in 1997 Apple had a huge list of products it made or sold, many of them not for a profit. Here is a partial list of Apple products from 1997 courtesy of my friend Orrin, who brought this idea to my attention:PowerBookQuadraPerformaPower MacintoshWorkgroup and network serversLaserWriter laser printersStyleWriter inkjet printersNewton PDAsDisplaysExternal disk drivesModemsScannersLots of softwareAnd don't forget the Mac clones. Jobs killed the clones, dropped the Newton, and streamlined the Mac product line into what today are four ranges of computers -- personal and professional, desktop and portable. Yes, there are the Mac Mini and the xServe, I know, but nearly all Apple computer sales lie with the MacBooks, MacBook Pros, iMacs and Mac Pros.Apple quit the printer business entirely and, over time, got out of the business of manufacturing its own computers at all.The decisions Steve Jobs made in 1997 were that Apple's core competence was in making computers and its future then lay with graphics and desktop publishing professionals who loved the products. While these conclusions may seem obvious, they weren't reflected in the Apple product line at the time. Steve knew the value he had in his product development team, too, which was a clear difference between he and Sculley, Spindler, and Amelio, all of whom had come in varying degrees under the sway of the diabolical product development chief Jean-Louis Gassee.One advantage of my having written about this industry since dinosaurs roamed the earth is that there are columns about Apple in my archive dating from 1997 that give a sense of what the company, its products and lack of leadership were like at the time. Read them: they are in this week's links. They give a sobering look at how bad things were and show an eery resemblance to the positions of the automakers today.Look at the American car companies with their many brands that often compete with each other within a single company. It's bad enough competing with Chrysler and GM, but why should Ford be competing with itself? There has been some streamlining over the years (goodbye Plymouth and Oldsmobile) but not enough. There are simply too many models chasing too few buyers. So long Mercury.The first lesson Jobs learned was that he couldn't build a successful company selling products at a loss. While we can argue that Apple prices are higher than they might be, nobody can argue with Apple's quality or its success at selling those products. So the first thing Jobs would do as head of a U.S. car company would be to eliminate the lines that are showing -- and have long shown -- little or no profit, which today generally means the biggest and the smallest cars. Goodbye Hummer.Honda is an archetype for this sort of marketing, having a limited line of cars with nothing down at the bottom fighting it out with Kia and Hyundai. A Honda Fit may be inexpensive but it isn't cheap.There is a lot of conventional wisdom at work in the car business and some of it is completely outmoded. Why, for example, is it so important to have a complete line of cars for every customer age and financial circumstance? That made good sense at a time when America was being introduced to car ownership and a brand could grow with its customers as their financial circumstances and taste in cars changed over time. But the car market is beyond mature today and doing things primarily because it made sense to do so in the era of Henry Ford and Alfred Sloan, well that makes no sense at all.The business press loves to differentiate between two types of auto executives -- the financial types typified by GM CEO Rick Wagoner and the "car guys" personified by GM vice chairman Bob Lutz (who also did stints at Chrysler and Ford). When the companies periodically lose their way, it's attributed to too much finance and not enough car. But Steve Jobs is something in-between. No large American company in any industry has tighter financial controls than Apple, yet the strength of Apple is supposed to be its design. All this proves is that the finance-versus-car-guy scenario loved by Fortune and Forbes is simply bogus.It's not that there aren't smart executives at these car companies, but they are shackled with several bad ideas and exist in an unrealistic corporate environment.Their main delusion is the myth of the complete car line. Apple in 1997 had a tremendous advantage in being clearly a minority player. There was no hope that the Mac OS would topple Windows, but that made chipping away at Windows a tactical effort where significant advances could be made by Apple just concentrating on niche markets. The U.S. automobile makers can't (or won't) do that because again they think they have to make every type of car for every type of buyer. Yet each company IS a minority player; they just pretend that this condition is temporary, but it isn't.This corporate delusion of majority status has meant that it simply wasn't possible for any of the car companies to take truly radical actions. They can't take big risks on new technology because the downside is perceived as being too big. Yet the effect of this over time has been to virtually guarantee that downside as the companies die from inaction or, more properly, UNDER action.That's where Steve Jobs' second strength comes into play -- identifying important new technologies. He'd look at the car market and conclude a number of things: 1) it's a no-brainer to embrace dramatic design (no boring cars); 2) performance sells, and; 3) safety and fuel economy are co-equal secondary goals. So Steve's goal for his car company would be to make a limited line of vehicles that were dramatically styled with visibly different technologies from the competitors and were uniformly 20+ percent safer and 20+ percent more fuel-efficient.That's not so hard to do, either, as I showed last week with my DA-2A example. Or look at XP Vehicles, the company that will sell you an inflatable car that arrives at your house in a box. But embracing these ideas requires the companies do something else that Jobs came to embrace with Apple's products - stop building most of their own cars.There are two aspects to this possible outsourcing issue. First is the whole concept of car companies as manufacturing their own products. There is plenty of outsourcing of car components. Most companies don't make their own brakes, for example. Yamaha makes whole engines for Ford. Entire model lines are bought and rebadged from one maker to another. But nobody does it for everything, yet that's what Steve Jobs would do.All the U.S. car companies are closing plants, for example, and all are doing so because of overcapacity. But what would happen if just one of those companies -- say Chrysler -- decided that two years from now it would no longer actually assemble ANY of its own vehicles? Instead they'd put out an RFQ to every company in the world for 300,000 Chrysler Town & Country minivans as an example. Now THAT would be a dramatic move.And a good one, frankly, because with a single pen stroke most of the overcapacity would be removed from the U.S. car market. Chrysler would have to shut down all those plants and lay off all those people, true, but doing it all the way all at once would change the nature of the company's labor agreements such that there wouldn't be a whimper. When you are eliminating 8 percent of capacity the tussle is over WHICH 8 percent. When you are eliminating ALL capacity, there is no tussle.So Chrysler reaches out to contract manufacturers in this scenario and you know those manufacturers would fight for the work and probably give Chrysler a heck of a deal. For current models, for example, Chrysler could probably sell the tooling and maybe even the entire assembly plant for a lot more than they'd get from the real estate alone. But that particular advantage, I'd say, would be unique to the first big player to throw in the production towel.In this scenario, Chrysler becomes a design, marketing, sales, and service organization. What's wrong with that? They can change products more often and more completely because of their dramatically lower investment in production capital. They can pit their various suppliers against each other more effectively than could a surviving car manufacturer. It's what Steve would do.And Steve would also embrace one dramatic new technology, whether it is electric, hydrogen, natural gas, whatever, but he'd do it in a very Steveian fashion, which is to say exactly the way he did the iPod and iTunes. That is, he'd sell you the car and then sell you whatever is required to fill up the car. This has always been a barrier for the car companies because they couldn't imagine themselves in the business of running electric/hydrogen/LPG stations, while Steve would imagine his company MAKING A PROFIT running just those stations.Steve would take an existing operation that already had an ideal geographic distribution like McDonald's restaurants. He buy McDonald's or seduce the company into a deal. Then he'd embrace a propulsion technology like advanced electric capacitors -- batteries that could be recharged in less than a minute -- and put charging stations on the drive-through lanes. By the time the electric models were ready for sale he'd have 12,000 charging stations in place to serve them. Would you like fries with that charge? Is it too late for the Big Three? Ford is the strongest company from what I've seen, but I believe there may be some creative juices in GM, too. Their prototype car the Volt takes hybrid cars to the next level, I just wish they were selling them now because Toyota or Honda will probably beat them to the market with something similar. Another thing Apple does well is product introductions. They very rarely show their hand before they are ready to send you home with one. GM announced the Volt in January of 2007 yet it is still slated for sale by 2011. Stupid.
Sun, 07 Dec 2008 09:05:13 -0500 The information flow from Mumbai [New Window]
Internet sites like Twitter, YouTube, Flickr, and Global Voices are providing a very rough first draft of history in the accounting of the bloody attacks in India.
Thu, 27 Nov 2008 09:30:00 -0500 Saving Detroit [New Window]
My first car was an Oldsmobile, a red 1966 convertible I wish I still owned today. It was big and heavy yet somehow managed to average 18 miles per gallon in an era when gasoline cost 35 cents. Detroit and the U.S. automakers ruled the world when that car was built, yet now the companies say they are on the skids, bleeding money and headed for bankruptcy. What happened? And what can we do -- if anything -- to save an industry that for a century defined our nation as well as our youth? I have some ideas.Whatever the mechanism of their demise, the car companies did it to themselves. They love to blame labor agreements, pension plans, and health plans for their precarious financial situation, yet didn't the companies negotiate and sign those deals in good faith? Surely the down-the-road financial burdens were calculable at the time. Is it that we're living longer than expected, rather than expiring early like Pinto gas tanks? Maybe that's part of it, but to blame the unions for good negotiating is worse than forgiving the companies for bad. And what does it matter? The real issue at hand -- and the only one that really matters -- isn't who to blame or even whether or not to save these specific companies, but how to get me a really sweet ride. That's because the only way the U.S. auto industry is going to survive in any form is by making cars so cool that we'll stand in line to buy them even in a global financial crisis.It's the cars, stupid.My hobby is building small airplanes and one of my favorites is a Davis DA-2A, winner of the Outstanding New Design contest in 1966, the same year my Oldsmobile (and my current Thunderbird convertible) was built. That little Davis can teach us a lot about cars.I didn't build my DA-2A, but I am rebuilding it right now and know it intimately. My Davis is an all-aluminum two-seater with an 85-horsepower engine. The engine was built in 1946, the plane in 1982, and the whole thing cost under $4,000 at the time, though today I have more than that invested in the instrument panel alone. The plane weighs 625 lbs. empty, 1125 lbs. loaded, has a top speed of 140 miles per hour and can travel about 600 miles on its 24-gallon fuel tank.Why can't I buy a car like that?Imagine if we took the basic design parameters of my DA-2A and applied them to a modern automobile. The new design would have to carry two people and luggage, have an empty weight of no more than 625 lbs. and use an 85-horsepower engine. With a loaded weight of 1125 lbs., the car would have a power-to-weight ratio comparable to a Chevy Corvette and be just as quick -- probably even faster than the airplane's 140 mph. Driven only 20 percent over posted speed limits as God intended, the car would easily get 50+ miles per gallon.Who wouldn't want to buy one?At the heart of manufacturing is the simple concept of buying raw materials in volume at a low price per pound and selling manufactured products at retail for a high price per pound. The eventual retail price per pound is determined by the marketplace and ideally it ought to be high enough for the manufacturer to make a profit. The very light weight of our DA-2A car analog suggests that it ought to be inexpensive to buy, but maybe all that means is we have to look beyond the car industry to bicycles.Car buyers and bicycle buyers approach retail pricing from completely different directions. Car buyers, whether they think about it this way or not, traditionally try to buy cars that cost the least on a per-pound basis. Do some research on the Internet and you'll see that luxury cars, whether we are talking about a Cadillac SUV or a big Mercedes sedan, tend to cost about $10 per pound; mid-range cars cost about $6 per pound; and economy cars cost about $4 per pound. Manufacturers prefer luxury cars because, given the same profit margins, they make vastly more gross profit on a fancy car than they do on an entry-level car. This pricing bias is part of what is working against Detroit right now.Bicycles are different. Bicycle buyers, whether they are conscious of their behavior or not, try to pay the MOST per pound rather than the least. A lighter bike is always a better bike and a more expensive bike. Cheap bikes from Wal-Mart tend to cost about $2 per pound, nice bikes from a bike shop cost about $20 per pound, and top-of-the-line racing bikes cost about $200 per pound which, interestingly, is about the same per-pound cost as a top-of-the-line Ferrari or Aston-Martin.So the trick to turning around the U.S. auto industry is to make car buyers adopt the values of bicycle buyers, which implies the willingness to pay $20 per pound of final product. The way to achieve that goal is by building cars that are both affordable at $20 per pound and EXCITING TO DRIVE.Under this formula, the car version of my DA-2A would cost $12,500, making it broadly affordable. Yet with 6061 aluminum alloy selling in volume for around $1.60 per pound, there ought to be plenty of profit in there for the companies.Detroit doesn't understand that.Just as the price point bias tends to push manufacturers toward heavier cars, so do consumer buying habits and even government regulations. Trucks overtook cars in the 1990s as America's most popular vehicles and that wasn't some grand plan from General Motors or Ford, it just happened. The companies were grateful of course -- ecstatic even -- because trucks were already profitable on commercial sales alone so the consumer truck boom came with almost no additional fixed costs. Trucks were INCREDIBLY profitable and heavy.So were SUVs. When I was a kid there were Chevy Suburbans and Jeep Cherokees, but I didn't know anyone who owned one. SUVs grew out of the truck boom and were yet another Detroit windfall, this time finding a way to charge $10 per pound for a truck. Wow!Government regulations began pushing car companies down the path of inefficiency with the passage of the Clean Air Act in 1967. Cleaning the air was a legitimate goal but the way Detroit went about complying was not. First they installed air pumps to force complete combustion of exhaust gases IN THE EXHAUST, not in the engine where power could be produced. To make this work reliably they had to richen the fuel mixture to ensure that there was enough unburned gasoline in the exhaust to burn with the air introduced by the air pump.Am I the only one who sees problems with this approach? To lower exhaust emissions reliably over the average 100,000-mile life expectancy of a car, the companies deliberately used more gas, hurting gas mileage. What did they care, right? Gas was 35 cents per gallon. But the companies were already on a slippery slope. In 1972 the companies were forced to reduce compression ratios to accommodate unleaded fuel. Again the reason was laudable but the reaction was not. The lower-compression engines were less efficient, so to get performance back you had to buy a bigger engine -- paying the same amount per pound but buying more pounds. Detroit liked that.Catalytic converters came along in 1975, and again required richening the fuel-air mixture for proper operation over the 100,000-mile vehicle life.I'm not arguing here against environmental regulations but against the way they are frequently applied. This happens in other fields, too. Your cardiologist will recommend barbequing to reduce fat while your oncologist prefers frying to reduce carcinogen exposure. Either way you are still going to die.For 40 years we've had a succession of slight product modifications to accommodate new automotive regulations in generally the wrong ways. The car companies fought against airbags because of the cost, not because of any safety issue. Their safety bias was always toward the heavier vehicle even though statistics show big SUVs are actually less safe than smaller cars. This was simply because they wanted to sell more pounds of car to make more money.Technical innovations are a hard sell in Detroit because most of them fail. Even my idea of a light weight yet powerful car was tried before in the Crosley Hotshot of the late 1940s -- reason enough, many car execs would say today, to not revisit the concept.Detroit has made poor use of new materials because they tend to cost a lot per pound. The companies could use smarter designs that required fewer pounds, but then the door might not slam with that solid sound and what if people didn't buy. Remember the Edsel?Remember the Edsel indeed. All the Edsel had going against it was ugly design. In every other sense it was just another car with an engine in the front and drive wheels in the back. The Edsel didn't fail because it was too radical, yet that's how it is remembered.The leaders of the Big Three U.S. car companies have about six weeks to come up with a way to save their companies. THEIR jobs (the CEOs) are toast, but the companies can be saved. All it takes is a little smarts and a lot of guts to come up with faster, smarter, more efficient cars that are uniformly 50 percent lighter than the models they replace. I would have suggested they consult Leeon Davis, designer of the DA-2A and many other remarkable airplanes, but Leeon died earlier this year. He could have helped a lot, I know it.
Wed, 26 Nov 2008 21:37:06 -0500 Ray Ozzie's dream of connectivity [New Window]
In an in-depth profile, Steven Levy traces Ray Ozzie's journey from his undergrad days to his assumption of Bill Gates' software czar responsibilities at Microsoft.
Tue, 25 Nov 2008 09:12:00 -0500 Lifestreaming in Obamaland [New Window]
The technologies that helped Obama reach the White House are going to make the president-elect's life more transparent and scrutinized than any previous White House occupant.
Sat, 22 Nov 2008 02:59:00 -0500 How to handle ID fraud's youngest victims [New Window]
For one thing, you shouldn't enroll your child for credit monitoring, ID fraud experts say.
Fri, 21 Nov 2008 18:55:00 -0500 Is white listing going mainstream? [New Window]
One company, Bit9, is predicting that every desktop will soon only allow known good files to load, instead of using resources to block unknown files.
Thu, 20 Nov 2008 16:42:00 -0500 How Live OneCare changed the antivirus landscape [New Window]
Although it's not dominant, Microsoft has forced traditional antivirus vendors to make changes. With a free offering due next year, it may do so again.
Wed, 19 Nov 2008 11:14:00 -0500 Not Enough Indians [New Window]
There is no joy at Yahoo, for mighty Jerry has struck out.This week Yahoo cofounder Jerry Yang announced he was stepping down after 17 turbulent months as CEO of the big Internet portal -- a time in which the company rebuffed a buyout offer from Microsoft, flubbed an ad sales agreement with Google, and ended up being worth a third of its former self when the rest of the market is down only 40 percent.Jerry blew it.And rare in the annals of public companies, JERRY blew it, nobody else. There is no blame to be shared because the Chief Yahoo took his anti-Microsoft stand pretty much single-handed, having bounced Terry Semel from the job in June 2007. Semel, who was more Hollywood than Silicon Valley and never well suited for the job anyway, had backed the Microsoft deal. Freed from his duties at Yahoo, Semel also voted with his brokerage account, selling a large number of company shares while the selling was good.If there is a lesson to be learned here it is not so much that Jerry was wrong, but that Jerry was Jerry and that wasn't the right thing for Yahoo shareholders.There are three seminal ideas that guided Jerry Yang, who is, after all, a diverted graduate student who got on-the-job training in business. To understand these three ideas is to understand Yahoo under Yang:1) Microsoft is evil. Yang came of age in the Netscape era and saw Microsoft break the law to destroy that company and try to control the Internet. Whatever its motivation, Microsoft did all the bad things they were accused of and more and Yang could never forget or forgive that, even at the cost of his own company. He took it personally.2) The power of "no." There was a time in the 1990s when venture capitalists Kleiner Perkins and Sequoia Capital were trying to get Excite and Yahoo -- their respective portals -- to merge in a forced marriage designed to benefit only the VCs. It didn't feel right to Jerry, who put his foot down and scotched the deal. It worked that time, so saying "no" became for Yang the default position, especially after Broadcast.com.3) Don't get screwed. When Yahoo bought Broadcast.com for $4.7 billion and it became clear that Yang & Co. got almost nothing of value for their money, they resolved never to get screwed on another deal again. That was the moment Yahoo embraced bureaucracy. They never made a quick decision again and in many cases hardly made any decisions at all.Mix these three concepts together, add independent wealth and a personal golf course, and you get the Jerry Yang of today. He was inclined to say "no," couldn't embrace Microsoft's evil, and sure as heck wasn't going to be screwed by Redmond, which he knew could never be trusted. As long as Jerry was in command the deal would never happen -- and didn't.Given all this it's a wonder Yang can remain with the company as he says he will. I couldn't do it. He must feel like Ralph Nader. Or maybe that's exactly it; Jerry Yang, like Nader, still doesn't get it.The best thing Yang could have done for Yahoo shareholders was to sell the company to Microsoft. He chose, instead, to do what he thought was best for the Yahoo COMPANY, which is weird given that it no longer feels anything like it did back in those glory days. He threw away $20+ billion just to preserve a memory.Comcast's CapHey, I have been thinking about Comcast's new 250-gigabyte monthly download cap and what to do about it. Comcast, of course, is just trying to keep its top 2-3 percent of P2P gonzos from ruining things for the rest of us. If a tiny minority of users are taking half the available bandwidth, well they have to be somehow crushed (that's the theory). Comcast first tried slowing down the miscreants, you'll remember, denied the company was doing that, then got busted by the AP of all outfits. So now they'll try this new cap.As a guy who sees a GRAND PLAN nearly everywhere, of course I see one here. Comcast says the new cap will affect less than 5 percent of its users, but that's now. What happens in five years as connections get faster and faster, Internet movie and video distribution explodes and the cap doesn't rise comparably? Remember wholesale bandwidth costs are dropping by 50 percent per year and have been for the last decade, so Comcast's costs get cheaper and cheaper while at the same time more and more users will impinge on the bandwidth cap. If 5 percent are in violation today, that will be 10 percent a year from now, 20 percent two years from now and 40 percent three years from now, unless Comcast raises the cap.I think they won't raise the cap but will rather introduce paid bandwidth as an alternative tier and get us to start paying a la carte for those parts of our Internet experience that Comcast might presently view as under-compensated entertainment products. It's just a way for Comcast to benefit financially from third-party and user-generated content.So maybe a little civil disobedience is in order. That 250 gig bandwidth cap, while more than 95 percent of current users require, only comes down to 3-4 days of wide open bit-pumping on a cable modem. Why not build a utility that takes all participating users to 249 gigs per month? Even a 5 percent participation rate among Comcast users would take the network to its knees and possibly force a more respectful attitude from the cable company.But hey, it's just an idea.Cringely's FutureFinally, readers have been asking what I'll be doing after this gig ends on December 15th. Frankly, I have no idea, but as a guy with kids ages six, four, and two, I can assure you I'm not retiring. Guys like me don't retire, we just get lots of life insurance and work until we die.It might not make sense to hurl myself unemployed into the worst financial crisis in 80 years, but sometimes a guy just has to do what a guy has to do. Besides, as someone who has been fired from EVERY JOB I'VE EVER HELD, this might be my last and only chance to actually quit something.I'll land somewhere, you can be sure, probably with NerdTV and my Moon shot in tow. And I'm open to ideas. Just nothing very illegal, okay?
Tue, 18 Nov 2008 18:18:48 -0500 Now For Something Completely Different [New Window]
President-Elect Barack Obama has announced that when he's in office he'll appoint a Chief Technology Officer (CTO) for the whole darned USA. Though Google CEO Eric Schmidt already said he isn't interested in the job, I am. I accept, Mr. President. And while the idea of Cringely for CTO may seem lame to most everybody I know (including my Mom), I think I can make a strong case for why I am EXACTLY the right guy for the job. For one thing, unlike Eric Schmidt I don't have a lot of money. Schmidt can't afford to take the job because Google stock is down and he'd lose a fortune. Not so for me. I come encumbered only with debts, which is to say I am a true American. I'd be perfectly willing to put those debts in a blind trust ASAP. The U.S. CTO would have to be a dynamic leader capable of speaking his or her mind and holding his or her own against a tide of critics and special interests. Hey, that's what I do every week (sometimes twice)! Maintaining and defending technology opinions is my only business and some people think I do it too well, which I take as a compliment. Now we need to consider why President-Elect Obama thinks the country needs a CTO in the first place. The President has long had a Science Adviser, so why appoint a CTO? It's the distinction between adviser and officer that I'd say is the whole point; one simply advises while the other implements and leads directly. And I think there is plenty of room for new leadership in this area. America has always been tops in science, tops in research and development, tops in medicine, tops in industrial development, tops in technical infrastructure -- tops, tops, tops. But are we tops today? I don't think so, and I'd say we've been slipping steadily for the last eight years and probably for many years before that. The rest of the world has caught up and some other countries now lead the U.S. in many respects. Yes, we have technical traditions and deep institutions, but those traditions are weaker than they were and the institutions are, too. I think something can be done about that. My belief that something CAN be done is critical, because most of the usual suspects for this job probably think it can't. The reason I am so optimistic is because of the very financial disaster that is the current U.S. economy. Things are so bad right now that I am greatly encouraged. Huh? Sometime in February the new Obama Administration is likely to propose the mother of all economic stimulus packages. It won't be a $650 check that comes in the mail. It won't be a $700 billion equity injection in various financial institutions. It WILL be a public spending plan modeled after the New Deal of the 1930s, injecting $600+ billion primarily into infrastructure construction and reconstruction. The difference between this New New Deal and the first one is that while plenty of roads and bridges will be rebuilt, a lot of the money this time will probably go into information infrastructure. Well that's my bag. The U.S. CTO - at least this FIRST U.S. CTO - will be the buyer-of-cool-stuff-in-chief for the entire nation. I would make a better buyer-in-chief than almost anyone else because of two important characteristics in my warped personality: 1) I would be immune to special interest groups so this wouldn't turn into another National Information Infrastructure boondoggle, and; 2) yet as a true enthusiast I would buy with such reckless abandon that I'd easily fulfill the economic stimulus needs while spewing money widely enough to guarantee at least a few good technical investments for the nation. This latter point probably requires some explanation. As we can see from the current $700 billion bank bailout, the ranks of those actually benefitting are pretty small. We're $325 billion into the thing and consumers - the people paying for it -- have yet to benefit at all as far as I can tell. Most banks haven't even benefitted. And those that have benefitted have done little to share their wealth. To put things in the most positive light I can, let's attribute this to the very surgical nature of this process. To put it more honestly, nothing really changes except the rich get richer. Look at Al Gore's National Information Infrastructure program of the 1990s, which was intended to build for us all exactly the sort of data network enjoyed today by people in Japan and Korea. $200 billion in tax credits were distributed, primarily to telephone companies. That's $200 billion in government revenue foregone, which is just the same, it seems to me, as writing a check. And what did we get for it? Limited Internet service in schools and no Internet service in homes. The DSL we have today we paid for, believe me - phone companies sell that stuff at a profit. However well intentioned Al was, his system was gamed by the phone companies who took the money and ran. That can't happen again. If we are going to have a huge economic stimulus package that we'll pay-off as a people over the next 30+ years, I say we should get something for it. If we hire as CTO some slick-talker from IBM or GE this won't happen. If we hire Bill Joy it won't happen, either. Bill's too smart and too gentle and too darned rich for the job. We need someone with just enough savvy to know good technology, enough independence to make the right decisions, and crazy enough to do it all 24/7 right out in public so that vaunted "transparency" we keep talking about yet never see can be proved to be more than just a modern myth. I'm the man for that job. AND I can use the work. That's because December 15th will mark my last column for PBS. After 11 years and more than 600 columns I'll be moving-on, perhaps into that big CTO job in Washington, but then maybe not. This is my decision, not that of PBS, which has been nothing but good to me these many years. In the month I have left I will be filing many columns, trying in a breathless rush to put a cap on this part of my career and leave behind a few ideas of how things should be and where they can go if done right. Though it will be a couple weeks early, the last column will be my predictions for 2009.Stick around until then. I'm right most of the time, you know.
Fri, 14 Nov 2008 15:57:16 -0500 Express Scripts clients threatened with extortion [New Window]
Unable to collect money from data breach victim, criminals threaten clients whose members may have been affected. Originally posted at News - Security
Wed, 12 Nov 2008 16:53:37 -0500 Fixing bugs in the Flash Player yet again [New Window]
There is an update to Flash Player version 9 which fixes the bugs that version 10 has already fixed.
Wed, 12 Nov 2008 14:42:00 -0500 Getting more battery power for your computer [New Window]
Do external batteries make sense? Are knock-off internal batteries safe? A couple of recent articles address these questions.
Tue, 11 Nov 2008 18:07:00 -0500 Study: DDoS attacks threaten ISP infrastructure [New Window]
Arbor Networks finds that DDoS attack sizes doubled last year and were more diverse in nature, taxing the IT security resources at most Internet carriers. Originally posted at News - Security
Tue, 11 Nov 2008 13:20:00 -0500 Get an MSI Wind Netbook for only $349 [New Window]
A great price for well-reviewed Netbook that's missing only a couple minor features.
Mon, 10 Nov 2008 20:32:00 -0500 Not interested in a Netbook computer? Consider the Honda Fit [New Window]
If you're not interested in a small, underpowered laptop computer, the Honda Fit shows that small can be done well.
Sun, 09 Nov 2008 12:18:00 -0500 Beware emails linking to blogspot.com [New Window]
When it comes to email the message is always "buyer beware".
Sat, 08 Nov 2008 18:40:00 -0500 When Word documents break [New Window]
If a Word document won't open, you've got a host of repair and recovery options
Sat, 08 Nov 2008 08:54:00 -0500 Security expert talks Russian gangs, botnets [New Window]
Security researcher Joe Stewart talks about one botnet, Coreflood, that has been quietly sending bank account log-in information back to Russia since 2001.
Fri, 07 Nov 2008 17:14:00 -0500 Love-Hate [New Window]
Steve Jobs is not like you and me. He has millions of customers, 32,000 employees, and a board of directors who think he can do no wrong. Running a company that is immensely profitable, gaining in market share, has no debt and $20 billion in cash, he can afford to make bold moves, the most recent of which is his decision to replace Tony Fadell, until moments ago head of the division that produces Apples iPod. Like everything Jobsian, Fadells departure is part of an Apple GRAND PLAN.The variables at work here are (in no particular order) ego, competitive advantage, ego, management technique, ego, strategic thinking, and ego.To say that Steve Jobs ego can expand to fill any known space might be an understatement but Ill stand by it anyway. Fadells failing in this regard is his being hailed as the father of the iPod. What does that make Jobs? Who made THE BIG DECISION? Who committed the company? Who most importantly of all seduced all the record companies? That last guy would be James Higa, but since I dont want to get HIM fired, too, lets just attribute it all to Steve Jobs for all intents and purposes the REAL father of the iPod.All hail Steve.Apple exists solely as an extension of Steve Jobs. Remember that. Anything attributable to Apple is really attributable to Jobs. Other people work at Apple, of course, and excel at their positions, but that is primarily because they were chosen, anointed, or inspired by Jobs.Not that Jobs doesnt make the occasional mistake. Look at the Mac Cube, for example. But that was our mistake as consumers, not realizing that it really ought to have been worth an extra $500 to us to have a computer with no cooling fan.Steve Jobs makes very few such mistakes, in fact. That, and his total domination of Apple at every level allow the company to be literally the only PC vendor to have anything like a strategic plan. Dell and HP have the odd strategic initiative, like getting into or out of media players or TVs, but the idea of a comprehensive corporate strategy, well thats too much to expect from companies that are managed, not led.Steve Jobs is a leader 100 percent in the mold of General George S. Patton. Rent the movie and it will start to make sense. Heck, rent it on iTunes.So heres whats going on with Tony Fadell. First, he was vulnerable as a charismatic leader in his own right who has been talked about in the press as a possible heir to Jobs. That alone meant he had to die, but it wasnt enough to mean that he had to die just now. That decision required an external variable in the form of former IBM executive Mark Papermaster. Steve Jobs wants to give Tony Fadells job to Papermaster. Its not that Papermaster would be any better at the job than Fadell, but there are two over-riding factors here: 1) Jobs can only have so many direct reports, and; 2) he thinks putting Papermaster in Fadells job is the best way to get past any legal objections from Papermasters former employer, IBM.Papermaster most recently ran IBMs blade server division and in the mind of Steve Jobs blade servers and iPods couldnt be farther apart. One is an enterprise sale while the other is consumer. One is a clear IT sale and the other has nothing to do with IT, really, since iPods and iPhones arent arent computers or computer peripherals. Jobs thinks Apple can make this point stick with a judge and he might well be correct.Papermaster has to be gone from IBM for a year before he can take a job that clearly competes with his last position at IBM. But Jobs doesnt want Papermaster for blade servers, nor does he even want him for iPods. Jobs wants Papermaster for the expertise he showed two jobs ago at IBM running Big Blues PowerPC operation. Jobs wants Papermaster to lead Apples PA Semi acquisition and create a new family of scalable processors optimized for Snow Leopard and beyond.Having Papermaster run iPod hardware is a placeholder to let him get used to Apple and get ready to take over the Apple processor job, some of which will be used in iPods and iPhones, so the job isnt a total waste. But for the few months hell be running iPod hardware, Papermaster will mainly be overseeing the implementation of Fadells strategy.If that seems like a game of musical chairs in the Cupertino executive suite, well it is. Its also a game weve seen played over and over again.Back to point 1 from five paragraphs ago: Jobs can have only so many direct reports. Steve Jobs believes the key to his success is in finding, hiring, retaining, then firing the best talent in the world. He would maintain in the very moment hes firing Fadell that Tony is better at his job than anyone else on Earth. Yet still Fadell must go and thats because ego issues aside Jobs had to make room in his inner circle for Papermaster.Everyone close to Jobs is under continual analysis: is this person really (or still) the best in the world? If they arent, or if someone else is just as good but more important for some additional reason, then the incumbent has to go. Steve Jobs ultimately betrays all of his direct reports in this manner. Its just the way he is. And if it costs Apple a few million to remove one extra head from the room, well thats okay with a board that KNOWS (as we all do, to put it fairly) that Jobs really is the secret of Apples success. His system may be brutal, but it works.So Fadell was already in danger because he had become known as an individual. Remember that when PortalPlayer (now part of nVidia) was making the guts of every iPod the company was forbidden by Apple to acknowledge that. Even in its financial reports PortalPlayer was forbidden to use the A word and simply had to attribute to some unnamed company 85 percent of PortalPlayers revenue.Just as Jobs was scourging Fadell, though, he was seducing Papermaster. Jobs can be VERY seductive. And he was hardly going to seduce the IBM executive with a promise to put him two levels down. So as the most vulnerable person in Jobs inner circle, Fadell had to go. That Fadells wife was head of Human Resources for Apple and was forced, essentially, to terminate her own husband, well that was just gravy and yet another reason for Apple employees to take the stairs rather than risk sharing an elevator with Jobs.Fear can be a remarkable motivator.Dont feel bad for Fadell, though. His $8+ million golden parachute stock grant is coming at a time when Apple shares are depressed and could easily double by the time he can sell them in 2010. He gets $300,000 per year to advise Jobs (Id like one of those jobs, too, Steve) and then theres his wifes departure package, which hasnt been mentioned. Clearly out of the picture as an heir to Jobs, Fadell will next appear in 2010 as a CEO somewhere in the South Bay.Of course IBM with its largest corporate legal department on earth has filed suit against Apple, trying to block Papermaster from taking the Apple position. Apples legal department is fairly accomplished, too, and Cupertino is a much stronger company than Armonk, which will lead to the ultimate solution to this legal problem. Apple still hopes to convince a judge that it is correct about Papermaster. But if Apple fails in that, Steve Jobs will just pick up the phone and choose IBM Microelectronics as the fab to build the next generation of Apples PowerPC processors a contract worth billions, but ONLY if IBM drops all legal action.Apple will win in the end -- I guarantee it. And the way Jobs negotiates, Big Blue will probably end up losing money on the chip deal, too.
Fri, 07 Nov 2008 14:48:12 -0500 More about printer ink rip-offs [New Window]
PC World tests a bunch of printers and finds that some left almost half of their ink unused.
Fri, 07 Nov 2008 08:48:00 -0500 Some computers are too important to be networked [New Window]
Computers that store your most sensitive files should be kept off-line
Thu, 06 Nov 2008 20:23:00 -0500 Extortion used in Express Scripts database breach [New Window]
After receiving an extortion letter, a health care services company goes public, saying its customer database has been breached.
Thu, 06 Nov 2008 19:32:00 -0500 WPA wireless encryption cracked [New Window]
At upcoming conference, researchers will detail how key encryption feature used in securing wireless systems can be cracked.
Thu, 06 Nov 2008 15:37:00 -0500 Where's Vista? [New Window]
The list of the 25 most popular laptop computers at Amazon.com shows very few run Vista.
Thu, 06 Nov 2008 15:35:00 -0500 Campaign PCs of Obama, McCain cyberattacked [New Window]
Newsweek reports that the FBI and Secret Service told the presidential candidates that their files were accessed by criminal hackers over the summer.
Wed, 05 Nov 2008 14:46:47 -0500 Choosing a Netbook--a picture can be worth a thousand words [New Window]
Is a 9 inch Netbook too small? How well does a mat finish reduce glare? See them side by side.
Thu, 30 Oct 2008 17:18:00 -0400 Azure Blues [New Window]
It isn't very often I get to apply Moore's Law to a non-Information Technology business and rarer still that I can then relate the whole thing back to Microsoft, so I'm going for it. Here's what the solar power industry can teach us about Microsoft:The wonderful thing about Moore's Law is what the lady at the bank called the "miracle of compound interest." That halving of manufacturing cost every 18 months (the OTHER way of looking at Moore's Law that we generally don't use) has little apparent impact in the first few years, but eventually the halving and re-halving takes a real bite out of the cost side until substantial performance is very, very cheap. That explains why there is more computing power -- a LOT more -- in your iPod than was required for the Apollo Moon missions. Well this applies to ALL silicon-substrate photolithography applications, not just computer chips. It applies equally well, for example, to silicon solar cells.There are many types of solar cells. Some solar cells involve crystalline silicon just like computer chips and others use amorphous silicon, but all types benefit from Moore's Law. In fact one especially good aspect of solar cells is that they can make use of older process technologies that are obsolete for computer work. So every time Intel or AMD builds a new fab there is a market in the solar industry for their old machines. Look at those round solar cells used in many arrays today and you'll notice the smaller wafer sizes favored in Silicon Valley 15-20 years ago. That's no coincidence. The result of this relentless application of Moore's Law to the solar industry is that we can see a time in that near future when the cost of producing a watt of electricity from a solar cell on your roof will be approximately the same as the cost of delivering that same watt over a power line from an electric utility. And of course that means that 18 months after that point the solar watt will cost HALF of what the same power would cost from the electric company, which will completely change the game.The time when that electricity cost parity will be reached, I'm told, is seven years from now. Just think of the impact that will have on electric utilities! Why would any of us continue to buy our power from them? We might use them as a giant storage battery and possibly for backup on cloudy days, but why would we use them at all for power if we can generate it cheaper at home? You can bet that's a question the electric power generating industry is asking itself.The whammy for the power companies is two-fold, because not only will power be cheaper but, by definition, the cost of building and installing solar panels will be substantially cheaper, too, than it is today. If it costs $40,000 on average to refit your house today, a lot of homeowners can't afford that, but what if it becomes $10,000? That's what worries electric companies that are used to having easier access to capital than do their customers. But once installing solar power costs relative chump change (the cost of a nice Ski-Doo or remodeling a bathroom), we'll see massive conversion and the power companies know that.So what can they do? They can find ways to get us to use more power than can possibly be generated from the roof of a typical American home. And that's why this week the Electric Power Research Institute proposed that we all get plug-in hybrid cars. It would save billions of barrels of oil, they say, lower greenhouse gas emissions, clean the air, oh and by the way require more electricity than your solar cells can produce, thanks.And it will work -- for a while. But Moore's Law is relentless, you know, and the role of electric utilities will change dramatically over the next decade as a result. As far as I can see, this is all for the better.But what does it have to do with Microsoft?Well that brings us to Windows Azure, which was still called Windows Cloud when I first mentioned it a couple weeks ago. Like all Microsoft strategies, Windows Azure is a reaction to external competitive pressures. And it is important, VERY important. Here's how a source of mine at Microsoft put it a few days ago, before the Azure announcement: "The cloud stuff isn't just another enterprise product. It is going to impact everything we do -- all of the product groups -- consumer and enterprise -- are going to have to figure out where they fit in to the cloud paradigm. The shift to cloud-based computing is analogous to our shift to the Internet in the late '90s. It changed the direction of the company and impacted everything we did."Wow, that's a big deal! Yet based on the Microsoft announcement this week, all Windows Azure looks like to me is Microsoft's effort to sell web services or maybe cut the sticker shock for smaller businesses adopting SQL Server. But more properly, it likely means Microsoft's acceptance that computing clients may eventually be free or nearly so. In short, Windows Azure is an insurance policy against the possible Vista-like failure of Windows 7.Last week, for example, I wrote about Microsoft's Windows Mobile technology, predicting that it would die simply because Redmond would realize that it could never be first or second in market share. That was no big scoop from me, though some news people took it as one -- it was just common sense. And so what happened this week? Well here's a report from a reader attending Microsoft's Professional Developer Conference, where Windows Azure and Windows 7 were introduced this week."Windows Mobile has (a) near zero presence at MS PDC," wrote the reader. "Their Live Mesh platform has Windows Mobile as an integral component but otherwise no mention, no sessions. There was one session scheduled but it was cancelled at the last minute. Hmmm."When the body is under stress, it eventually sacrifices entire limbs to keep the internal organs working. Windows Mobile is just an appendage to Microsoft and always has been. Yet mobile is clearly the client of the future, so what's to be done? Windows Azure. Control the back end through industry standard -- even open source -- protocols. Make money from subscriptions and ads -- make money any and every way in the hope of leveraging a global infrastructure investment into a continuing business strategy.Can you see the connection here? There is almost no difference between Microsoft trying to become our computing utility and the electric company trying to power our next-generation cars. Both are coping strategies, both are risky, but neither Microsoft nor the electric utilities see that they have any real choice. And maybe they don't.For Microsoft, at least, it could be a strategy with legs. While the utilities will be undercut more and more by Moore's Law, Microsoft as a computing utility won't be. But that doesn't mean they'll be any good at the job. It means fighting a war on two fronts -- with Google as a provider of applications and with Apple as a provider of content. MAYBE Microsoft has a shot against Google, which is becoming more Microsoft-like itself by the day, but to compete with Apple as a content provider? Forget it. Microsoft simply isn't the class act it needs to be to dominate that space, so look for acquisitions to (maybe) fill that void.And all this means that Windows 7 had darned well better hit a home run or Microsoft is in BIG trouble.
Thu, 30 Oct 2008 15:21:28 -0400 Collateral Damage [New Window]
I am not a very sophisticated mobile phone user. I don't use most of the bells and whistles on my phone, probably because I don't know what they even are. But just because I'm an idiot about USING mobile phones doesn't mean I don't understand the emerging mobile market, to which I have been paying a lot of attention of late. And why not? As personal computers fade from what Al Mandel called "ubiquity to invisibility," something has to take over. And everyone I respect thinks the new dominant platform will be mobile. So it's my job to tell you, then, that Windows Mobile is probably doomed.Interestingly, this conclusion isn't based on any personal preference or subjective analysis. I'm not saying that Windows Mobile is bad, just that it is probably doomed. It's a simple matter of market economics.There is generally room in any technology marketplace for three competing standards. Notice I say "standards," not "brands." There can be many brands of road vehicles, but they generally come down to cars, trucks, and motorcycles -- each a standard. In personal computers we have Windows, Macintosh, and Linux (or similar Unix workstation variant). In HVAC systems, just to stretch the point, there are radiant, forced air, or evaporative systems -- again three standards.And among those three standards there tends to be a market-share distribution that is more or less 85-10-5. These numbers can jump around a bit and one can argue that the Mac is now more than 10 percent of recent sales, though not of the installed PC base, so I hope you get my point. This magic 85-10-5 distribution also happens to mirror what happens at the racetrack or in the casino, where 85 percent of gamblers lose, 10 percent break-even, and 5 percent are winners, which explains all those big buildings in Las Vegas.The mobile phone marketplace shows a similar distribution, though that now appears to be in some transition. One could argue that the old 85-10-5 came down to basic or dumb phones (85), smartphones (10), and specialized or vertical phones like the old Nextel (5). Moore's Law now seems to be inexorably turning all phones into smartphones, so we're probably moving toward an 85-10-5 based on programming platform.Let's consider this smartphone migration for a moment, first with Samsung in mind. Last week Samsung announced that it would no longer be making high-end phones and would stick to basic phones in the future -- going for higher volumes at lower cost. This makes a lot of sense given that sophisticated phones must cost more to develop yet tend to be more expensive as a result and therefore have lower sales numbers. So why bother? This was the message Samsung sent out and everyone bought, but I really think that if you look at it in the context of a dynamic market the announcement means something else altogether.Deconstructing the Samsung announcement we'd have to wonder how the company sees itself and its competitors. That answer is pretty simple: Samsung sees itself as a global electronics company competing with outfits like Sony. Samsung has been for 40 years all about copying and eventually crushing Sony. Now given that's how Samsung sees itself (nobody I know contests this vision, by the way), how can the company possibly afford to let Nokia, Motorola, Sony, and Apple make high-end phones, which is to say smartphones, without Samsung competing in that space? That would be giving up a lifelong dream and Samsung just won't do it.So were they lying?No, Samsung wasn't lying, they were just doing what my old friend, PR man Martin Quigley, called "dissembling." Samsung probably has no intention of abandoning the smartphone market because ALL phones are becoming smartphones. What they truly intend to do, however, is make smartphones that are generally inexpensive, hoping to gain market share as a result. We'll see this trend from Apple, too, which will push iPhone prices down and introduce cheaper models next year and beyond.While there are many ways for Samsung to make smartphones less expensive, the easiest way to do so and yet remain competitive on features is by no longer using software that costs money.In the smartphone space there are, at present, only three operating systems that are being broadly licensed on an OEM basis -- Android, Symbian, and Windows Mobile. Of those three, two are free -- Android and Symbian. Symbian didn't used to be free but times change and now it is.So Samsung was announcing that it would be ending development of Windows Mobile devices at some point, though they never said that directly.Sticking with Samsung for a moment, then, which of the two free software platforms is the company likely to endorse? That's a good question. Symbian has a very strong presence in Japan, which is an important market for Samsung, so I don't see them abandoning Symbian immediately. But in the longer term I think Samsung WILL abandon Symbian, as will most of the rest of the world.Here's why (donning flameproof clothing): Symbian is simply too old. The OS is getting slower and slower with each release. The GUIs are getting uglier and are not user-friendly. The development environment is particularly bad, which wouldn't hurt if there weren't others that are so much better. Symbian C++, for example, is not a standard C++. There is little momentum in the Symbian developer community, maybe because coding for Symbian is a pain. Yes, there are way more Symbian phones in circulation, but those phones will be gone 18 months from now, probably replaced by phones with a different OS. Lately, Symbian's success has been primarily based on the high quality of Nokia hardware, on the loyalty of NTT DoCoMo, and now on the lure of being recently made open source and therefore free. But if open source developers don't flock now to Symbian (they aren't as far as I can see -- at least not yet) then the OS is doomed.My guess is that in time Samsung, like Motorola, will devote its smartphone development 100 percent to Android.Maybe, but what about Apple and RIM, what will happen there? This is not a time to bet against the iPhone, which is changing the entire landscape of not just smartphones but mobile phones in general. For all its teething problems, there is a new sheriff in town and his name is iPhone. We'll see nothing but progress and market-share gains there for at least another two product cycles or three years.RIM is another story altogether. What RIM has going for it are loyal users, good keyboards, and push mail. Most mobile phone users still think RIM is the only platform that has push mail. But given that push mail will soon be everywhere and the market will eventually figure that out, RIM is facing a huge challenge. I'm not saying they won't meet that challenge, I simply don't know.If I had to bet right this moment on the mobile 85-10-5 of 2011 I'd say iPhone, Android, then RIM, Symbian, or something completely new from behind Door Number Three.Why iPhone over Android? For exactly the same reason why the iPod holds that approximate 85 position among music players, including ones using open source software. iPhone has a really great SDK (light-years ahead of any other right now). The App Store distribution platform is great, but locked on too many points. This is a careful timing issue for Apple. If they open the APIs too quickly they risk being blocked. They need to open an API once they are perfectly sure it is the right one and the right way to export that function. Apple is going to relax the restrictions progressively when they better understand the use cases and what are the best APIs. In the meantime it is giving an advantage to Android, but one that I think a year from now Apple will have reclaimed. And where will Windows Mobile be in 2011? There way things are headed now, given that Microsoft can't really afford to be anything but first or second on the platform that supplants Windows, I'd say Windows Mobile will be dead.
Thu, 23 Oct 2008 14:23:10 -0400 Ctrl-Alt-Del [New Window]
Apple last week introduced a pair of very nice notebook computers that, not at all surprisingly, looked like riffs on the MacBook Air. The company in a separate announcement released 600 high-definition television episodes through the iTunes Store. This week Apple will reportedly release new 20-inch and 24-inch iMacs, also for the Christmas season. Two weeks, three announcements, but what strikes me (and apparently only me at this point) is what won't be announced -- the big surprises that are missing. What happened?A MacBook and a MacBook Pro are nice, but not overwhelming. I like the dual GPU in the Pro and I hate the lack of a FireWire port in the MacBook, but beyond that there is little to say about these products except that the glass screens (on the iMacs, too) are better for houses like mine filled with LCD screen-destroying pre-school boys. These new products don't appear to break any price or performance barriers and sure as heck don't allow time travel or make me more handsome. We were led to expect more -- a lot more. And I am not talking about rumors.Back on July 21st in his regular conference call with industry analysts, Apple Chief Financial Officer Peter Oppenheimer said that Apple's profit margin would likely shrink from 34.8 percent in the just-concluded quarter to 31.5 percent in the quarter ending in September. "We've got a future product transition that I can't discuss with you today," Oppenheimer said as he spelled out the reasons for the anticipated profit reduction. "One of the reasons that we see gross margin being down sequentially is because of a product transition."What kind of Apple product could be expected to come along, taking a $244 million profit hit for the company? It certainly isn't any of the products we've discussed so far, nor is it the iPhone 3G or the new iPod Touch, which have both been publicly dissected and found to have gross margins in the 56 percent range.It's something else that was probably intended to be announced this week but wasn't.The change of plan could have come for many reasons. Maybe the revolutionary product wasn't ready in time. Maybe introducing an aggressive, low-margin product in the middle of a global financial crisis was considered a bad risk. Maybe some strategic alliance had to be in place and wasn't ready. Whatever it was, the same analysts will ask about it this Tuesday when Apple has another such conference call scheduled.But of course none of this keeps me from speculating about what's missing from Apple's announcements and the reasons it might be missing.I think the delayed product has everything to do with Apple's desire for Blu-ray DVDs to die as a standard. Apple CEO Steve Jobs took a swipe at Blu-ray in last week's announcement -- a swipe that felt out of sync with the rest of the program. Steve has no difficulty at all NOT talking about subjects he wants to avoid, so leaning into Blu-ray was not at all offhand or without strategic importance. Don't expect Blu-ray drives on Apple computers, Steve said, yet he didn't offer a clear alternative.The alternative Jobs would like to offer, of course, is full 1080p HD video distribution on iTunes, but that's not currently possible. It will happen in time, of course, but certain prerequisites have to be in place. Apple hardware has to support it in a practical sense, for one.Interestingly, users of the new Apple notebooks began reporting that CPU utilization for H.264 decoding on their new machines dropped from 100 percent on an earlier model with the same processor to sub-20 percent on the new aluminum MacBooks. Though it wasn't announced, Apple seems to have (finally) enabled H.264 decoding on the Nvidia GPUs in these new machines.Equally significant is the fact that ONLY H.264 appears to be accelerated. HD content using the MPEG-2 or VC-1 codecs seem to be not accelerated, which means this improvement is aimed specifically at Apple (iTunes) content, NOT physical media.This is something we might have expected Apple to trumpet, but they don't offer any 1080p content yet other than movie trailers. Maybe it is better, Apple might imagine, to pre-seed this capability so more machines can take advantage of it when Apple 1080p content finally does appear.What's yet to come, I'm guessing, is Apple's next OS X release, Snow Leopard, with QuickTime X -- the first version of QuickTime supposedly optimized for H.264 hardware decoding.Snow Leopard is late, but then operating system updates are always late, no matter the vendor. This delay could be for any number of reasons and there are probably several, but one of them I can guarantee you has to do with H.264.More than a year ago I made a big point of predicting that Apple would go to H.264 hardware acceleration, though I pinned it on a specific chip from NHK and NTT in Japan. This was after the usual evening of drinking with Japanese executives that typically reveals such information. Oh the sacrifices my liver makes for journalistic integrity!So what happened to that NTT chip? I don't know. Maybe it was too expensive and fell out of the plan. Maybe it's in there still and Nvidia licensed technology from NHK and NTT to enable the new hardware acceleration (this is just a speculation -- I'm not at all saying they did). Maybe -- and this is the one I believe -- the discrete NTT chip was overtaken by a snowballing Apple strategy involving PA Semi, Apple's recently acquired division that designs microprocessors.Here's the reasoning, which isn't all mine by any means. I have the smartest readers in the world and they are constantly giving me new things to think about.First we see Apple moving away from Intel chipsets with these new MacBooks and probably with the iMacs to be introduced this week. Apple has always been involved in its own chipset design and giving up that capability to Intel until now didn't make much sense, especially considering the crappy Intel integrated graphics. It is logical to assume that Apple would reclaim its right to design or at least specify the chipset as soon as its internal engineering capability could support that.Turning to Nvidia isn't the same as doing the chipset itself, but you can bet Apple's fingers are all over the chipsets in these new machines and that they are significantly different from those in notebooks from companies like Dell and HP.There is a reason to be different here that goes beyond performance. That other reason is Psystar, the would-be seller of Mac clones with which Apple is now locked in a legal battle that could go either way. What if Psystar comes out on top and has the right to sell Mac clones based on the Hackintosh model? Then Apple will have to break that model by becoming more proprietary and therefore harder to emulate. Enter the third-party chipset, which is just the first step in Apple's effort to become immune to Psystar-type clones no matter what the court decides.Second is Snow Leopard, itself. Apple has suggested that Snow Leopard won't have many new features but will be Apple's effort to more fully take advantage of multi-core processors. This harkens back to my parallel computing column of a couple weeks ago.Snow Leopard, I'm told, will make seamless use of as many cores as are available. It isn't clear whether applications will have to be rewritten to take advantage of this capability, but I'm guessing they will have to be. This is just a guess, mind you, but is consistent with the sort of demands Apple likes to place on developers. Apple's own applications will be Snow Leopard-compatible you can bet, and will set a daunting performance standard in iMovie and Final Cut Pro.Where PA Semi fits in is by providing to Apple a modular, Intel-compatible multi-core architecture that can scale to cover entire future Apple product lines. By dishing out more responsibility to the GPU, Apple can enable a much simpler CPU with as many cores as needed. Imagine a single core in an iPhone, two cores in an Apple TV, 2-4 cores in a notebook, 4-6 in an iMac, and 8+ in a Mac Pro. Wait a year then refresh all those platforms by doubling the number of cores with no change in software.Moving to its own microprocessors would maintain Windows compatibility (though possibly at some lower performance level), cut hardware costs by $200 or so, and make it that much harder for others to build Mac clones in the future.And what about the jump to 1080p video distribution on iTunes? That will require faster hardware, especially on the Apple TV, which really needs a refresh. It would have been nice to introduce all of this for Christmas, but I'm not surprised it slid. And maybe January MacWorld is better, anyway, if Apple can also introduce new Mac Pros for content creation and those rumored giant Apple displays (HDTVs) with their built-in Apple TVs.
Mon, 20 Oct 2008 16:21:49 -0400 Beijing Net cafes to take mug shots, scan IDs [New Window]
To cut down on "ID sharing," the Chinese government requires first-time visitors have their picture taken and ID scanned before being allowed online. What are the privacy ramifications?
Sun, 19 Oct 2008 15:12:00 -0400 Coming in 2009: Yourname@somewhere.中国 [New Window]
The era of online domination by the Roman alphabet will come one step closer to its end next year when a new top-level domain for China, .中国, is deployed.
Thu, 16 Oct 2008 14:50:00 -0400 The court of bus riders: Why it's faster than driving in Shanghai [New Window]
Shanghai blogger Wang Jianshuo points out a less-than-expected reason why riding the bus is faster than driving on his commute: ad hoc protest against traffic enforcement.
Tue, 14 Oct 2008 09:20:00 -0400 Cool Threads [New Window]
A couple of columns ago we touched on the practical rebirth of parallel computing. In case you missed that column (it's in this week's links), the short version is that Moore's Law is letting us down a bit when it comes to the traditional way of increasing the power of microprocessors, which is by raising clock speeds. We've hiked them to the point where processors are so small and running so hot that they are in danger of literally melting. Forget about higher clock speeds then; instead we'll just pack two or four or 1000 processor cores into the same can, running them in parallel at slower speeds. Instantly we can jump back onto the Moore's Law performance curve, except our software generally doesn't take advantage of this because most programs were written for single cores. So we looked back at the lessons of parallel supercomputers, circa 1985, and how some of today's software applies those lessons, such as avoiding dependencies and race conditions.But we didn't really talk much in that column about the use of threads, which are individual processes spun off by the main CPU. Each time the microprocessor adds a new task, it creates a thread for that task. If the threads are running on the same processor they are multiplexed using time-slicing and only appear to run in parallel. But if the threads are assigned to different processors or different cores they can run truly in parallel, which can potentially get a lot of work done in a short amount of time.Most traditional PC applications are single-threaded, meaning the only way to make them go faster without a completely new architecture is to run the CPU at a faster clock rate. Single-threaded apps are simpler in that they are immune to the dependencies and race conditions that can plague true parallel code. But they are also totally dependent on tasks being completed in a quite specific order, so in that sense they can be dramatically slower or dramatically more resource-intensive than multi-threaded apps.For an example of where single-threaded applications are just plain slower, consider Eudora, which is still my favorite e-mail client (I'm old, you don't have to tell me). Until not very long ago Eudora still couldn't send mail in background, so everything (and everyone, including the user -- me) had to wait until the mail was sent before completing anything else, like writing a new message or replying to an old one. I KNOW THIS IS NO LONGER THE CASE, SMARTY-PANTS -- THIS IS JUST AN EXAMPLE. The program was single-threaded and, since sending mail is a very slow activity, users were generally aware that they were waiting. Today Eudora sends mail in background, which is the same as saying "in another thread."Multithreading has been great for user interactivity because nothing should ever stop the input of data from typing, mouse movements, etc.There are many ways to use threads and before we consider some let's think about scale -- literally how many threads are we talking about? To run at true clock speed we'd have only one thread per CPU core, but a fast processor can multiplex hundreds or even thousands of threads and multi-core processors can do even more. So the EFFICIENT shift to multi-threaded programming requires a significant change in thinking on the part of developers.Here's an example: A hard problem with programming games is when you want something to happen every so often. That's not very efficient to code because it traditionally requires a program loop that spins as fast as the CPU will let it (making the CPU go to 100 percent) and keeps checking the time to see if it is time to do that thing. But threads are different: With threads you can very easily put them to sleep for any period of time, or even put them to sleep indefinitely until some event occurs. It's not only easier for the programmer, it takes nearly no CPU power compared to the looping system.How do you use threads to write an e-mail server that handles thousands of simultaneous incoming e-mails? Well, you write it as if you were writing a server that can only handle ONE e-mail at a time. Just write very simple code that knows how to accept e-mail, then test it by sending in an e-mail. It works? Cool. Now send 1000 threads into that same piece of code. Each thread has its own state as to what e-mail (FROM, TO, SUBJECT, etc.) it is receiving, but despite the fact that that the content is different, the process is exactly the same. Now you have an e-mail server capable of serving a thousand simultaneous connections.See, writing multi-threaded apps may require a different approach but the benefits from doing so can be fantastic.A new area of multi-threaded programming that is REALLY hard (hard even for developers who do normal multi-threaded programming really well) is the use of optimistic concurrency. Two columns ago I alluded to this in my example of Appistry's decision to forego using a database for a credit card processing application. I said I would show a hack that was yet another approach to the same problem. Well here comes the hack.Let's consider this problem: My wife (the young and lovely Mary Alyce) and I happen to be in different parts of town, each of us standing in front of a bank ATM machine. I am a thread, Mary Alyce is a thread, and the ATM is main memory. Contrary to our usual behavior in which we only take money OUT of the bank, we are paradoxically planning near-simultaneous bank deposits. Our balance starts at $1000. I am depositing $200 while Mary Alyce is depositing $300. The ATM does the process like this:Retrieve existing balanceAdd new deposit to that balanceUpdate new total balanceThe trick is that we are both doing this same thing at the same time. What if this happens:Bob starts deposit transactionMary Alyce starts deposit transactionBob's ATM grabs the balance ($1000)Mary Alyce's ATM grabs the balance ($1000)Bob deposits $200 (his ATM updates the balance to $1200)Mary Alyce deposits $300 (her ATM updates the balance to $1300)Bob's ATM updates the main database with the new balance ($1200)Mary Alyce's ATM updates the main database with the new balance ($1300)This is a race condition. Mary Alyce updated the balance last so my deposit is lost completely. There are many ways for this to work out still, but also many ways for it not to work out OK. And any traditional solution requires a LOT of back-end reconciliation and computation. We need something simpler.Classic concurrency control would basically LOCK the database. This is called, not surprisingly, "pessimistic concurrency." So I go up to the ATM and my ATM requests the database to be locked for me. If Mary Alyce then went to another ATM it would tell her she has to wait because the database was being updated elsewhere. This ensures that the race condition can't happen, but it also holds up Mary Alyce, who does not like to be kept waiting.Optimistic concurrency control says, "We KNOW there could be a race condition, but we'll add a very cheap way to detect if it occurred. And if so, we'll pay the very expensive cost of restarting one of the transactions from the beginning."The only changes from the above sequence are in the last two lines:Bob's ATM updates the main database with the new balance ($1200)Mary Alyce's ATM updates the main database with the new balance ($1300)These become:Bob's ATM updates the main database with the new balance ($1200) so long as the current balance is still $1000.Mary Alyce's ATM updates the main database with the new balance ($1300) so long as the current balance is still $1000.That's easy to write but trickier to implement. The check of the balance and the update of the new balance must occur within the microprocessor as an atomic action. It all must happen basically as one single operation. Some processors have had these instructions for a long time, but they're pretty common now and called "test-and-set" or "compare-and-set" instructions.If the "so long as" part fails, the whole transaction must be restarted from scratch. In our example, Mary Alyce's $300 would pop back out of the machine and she'd have to start over.That's very expensive for Mary Alyce, but the actual occurrence of the race condition is very rare. So although the redo is expensive it hardly ever happens, so no one has to wait for another person doing an update operation.Apply this to 25,000 ATMs and suddenly the database is decoupled from transaction processing and the system is additionally controlled for internal race conditions such that it can run with less code and at full speed, which is saying something. Suddenly the system can be 100 times faster (cascading 10X improvements) or run 10 times faster on one tenth the hardware (take your pick), all thanks to the timely embrace of clever multi-threaded programming.
Mon, 13 Oct 2008 20:50:04 -0400 MIT: Dirty coal to blame for China pollution [New Window]
In a rare independent study of China's energy sector, researchers have found that the problem with China's coal power generation is not that its power plants lack cleaner technology.
Sun, 12 Oct 2008 16:23:00 -0400 Off With Their Heads! [New Window]
My promised column on threads will appear in this space on Friday. It would have appeared here today but the crumbling global financial system suddenly seemed a more appropriate topic.We're in trouble and by "we" I mean the whole darned planet. What started as a mortgage problem in the U.S. has blown into global financial paralysis that threatens us all with recession and maybe even with depression. I know I'm feeling depressed, how about you? The crisis seems immune to any and all efforts to fix or end it. NOT passing a $700 billion mortgage bailout can send Wall Street into a tailspin, for example, but then finally passing the bailout didn't seem to improve things, either. The Federal Reserve and Treasury Department are running out of tools and time yet still the system flirts with suicide. So I say it is time to take a completely different view of the problem and to look to a new leader to solve it, in this case Jack Welch.Jack Welch is the retired chairman and CEO of General Electric who took the company during his 23-year tenure from being worth about $14 billion to about $410 billion by really MANAGING the business and concentrating on creative use of capital. I've written columns and columns deriding managers as a profession but none of that applies to Jack Welch and GE, where managers really manage -- they manage the heck out of the place and to generally good effect. Jack Welch built that system, he has time on his hands, I say let's give him a new job.There is very little difference, in fact, between the global financial system and General Electric. Welch saw GE entirely in terms of cash flows and the application of capital to those parts of the business where it would do the most good. Welch also thought in terms of continuous quality improvement, which is virtually unknown on Wall Street OR in Washington, where such things aren't even talked about, much less measured.I've been thinking about this crisis and a lot of it comes down, I believe, to a fear of failure especially on the part of the banks. There is no credit available to anyone, anywhere, no matter what the credit rating or score. This is because the banks are frozen by fear to the point where they won't even lend to each other much less to customers. This fear of failure seems to be pretty much guaranteeing failure. And the regulators are now throwing what will soon be trillions of dollars at trying to break these bankers out of their paralysis. But I think there is a better way: use this very fear of failure as a motivator.Before we get to Jack let's deconstruct this current psychological crisis on the part of the banks. They aren't lending money because they are afraid it won't be repaid. They won't lend even to each other because banks seem to be failing all over yet there hasn't been an instance yet when an overnight loan has resulted in default. So what's the problem? More properly, what is the outcome the banks fear?They fear going out of business either through honest failure or through being forced to merge or having their deposits taken away by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). In short it comes down to fear of losing their licenses, because as a highly regulated industry the banks can only do business at all with the permission of government. Right now they are totally fixated on the idea that if they lend money and it isn't repaid the government will pull their licenses. Yet the government has made it clear that the most important thing is to LEND MONEY, breaking this credit paralysis. All the banks know this but none of them want to be the first to take the big risk of lending money.You do it! No, you!!Enough of this crap. What if Jack Welch was the U.S. banking czar? We know the result of all such crises these days in the U.S. is the appointment of a czar -- a new government official drawn from industry and charged with cutting across agency lines and streamlining an ultimate solution. We did it in energy and terrorism and I'm sure we'll do the same thing now so let's just think ahead a bit. Let's assume that's the case here and that whatever President is in office names Welch. What would Jack Welch do?If Welch ran the U.S. banking system like he ran GE, he'd kill the bottom 10 percent of banks every year and fire the lowest 10 percent of bankers.What impact would that have on the system? Would it make it better or worse? Well it couldn't be worse, could it?Doctors have a way of measuring pain. It seems our brains can only focus on one pain source at a time, so if you have a pain in your gut you really don't notice the pain in your ankle. So there is a device called a palpometer that goes on your arm or leg and is calibrated to produce standardized and replicable levels of pain. Put this gizmo on, turn up the pain, and when you get to the point where the patient suddenly goes from saying, "My head hurts," to "My leg hurts," then you know how much pain they are in. This was all pre-waterboarding mind you.Right now all the bankers are afraid to lend money because they are afraid of failure. As the new banking czar Jack would much rather have them be afraid of HIM. If the bottom 10 percent of bankers were fired every year and the bottom 10 percent of banks had their branches and deposits redistributed, wouldn't they be more afraid of THAT than of making bad loans? Their motivation would still be to make GOOD loans, but the penalty for making NO loans would be there, too.Our problem then is that we're throwing money at something we should be handling using a different regulatory tool -- licensing.U.S. bank regulators should go to all the banks this afternoon and say, "You aren't making loans, which is part of the definition of what it is to be a bank. If you aren't acting like a bank by tomorrow we'll take away your banking license and transfer your deposits to another bank that WILL make loans."Problem solved overnight.It's only one part of the problem, of course, but this solution will cost a lot less than $700 billion. It will cost nothing.And if you think it won't work, then you don't know Jack.
Wed, 08 Oct 2008 12:56:08 -0400 Will Beijing's sustained driving restrictions maintain clear skies? [New Window]
Much has been made of Beijing's decision to keep a lighter version of its Olympics traffic restrictions, not least because whatever the city did to clean the air seemed to have worked in August.
Tue, 07 Oct 2008 16:34:00 -0400 Skype's Chinese version left the surveillance door wide open [New Window]
Security researchers recently found that IM conversations on the Chinese Skype program were not only filtered, but also recorded on a massive, nonsecure, server.
Mon, 06 Oct 2008 12:35:00 -0400 Data Debasement [New Window]
Last week I was in Boston to moderate a panel at the MIT Technology Review’s Emerging Technologies Conference — one of those tech shindigs so expensive I can only attend as hired help. My panel was on parallel computing and it produced this column and another I’ll file early next week. This week is about databases and next week is about threads. Isn’t this a grand time to be a nerd?Thanks in part to Larry Ellison’s hard work and rapacious libido, databases are to be found everywhere. They lie at the bottom of most web applications and in nearly every bit of business software. If your web site uses dynamic content, you need a database. If you run SAP or any ERP or CRM application, you need a database. We’re all using databases all the time, whether we actually have one installed on our personal computers or not.But that’s about to change.We’re entering the age of cloud computing, remember? And clouds, it turns out, don’t like databases, at least not as they have traditionally been used.This fact came out in my EmTech panel and all the experts onstage with me nodded sagely as my mind reeled. No database?No database.Parallel computing used to mean scientific computing, where hundreds or thousands of processors were thrown at technical problems in order to solve them faster than Moore’s Law might otherwise have allowed. The rest of us were relying on rising clock rates for our performance fix, but scientists — scientists with money — couldn’t wait so they came up with the idea of using multiple CPUs to solve problems that were divided into tasks done in parallel then glued back together into a final result. Parallel computing wasn’t easy, but sometimes that was the whole point — to do it simply because it was so difficult. Which is probably why parallel computing remained a small industry until quite recently.What changed was Moore’s Law put an end to the clock rate war because chips were simply getting too hot. While faster and faster chips had for the most part linear performance increases along with cost and power consumption decreases, the core temperature inside each microprocessor chip was going up at a cubic rate. Back in 2004 Intel released a chart showing that any clock speed over 5 GHz was likely to melt silicon and Moore’s Law would, by 2010, make internal processor temperatures similar to those on the surface of the Sun!For those, including me, who think that’s pretty darned hot I’ll point out one of my astronomer readers immediately had to mention that the Sun’s chromosphere is actually much hotter than the surface. Forgive him, he means well.Faced with this absolute thermal performance barrier, Intel and AMD and all the other processor companies had to give up incessant clock speed increases and get us to buy new stuff by putting more than one CPU core in each processor chip can. Now chips with two and four processor cores are common and Intel hints darkly that we’ll eventually see hundreds of cores per chip, which brings us right back into the 1970s and ’80s and the world of parallel computing, where all those principles that seemed to have no real application are becoming very applicable, indeed.And that’s exactly where databases start to screw up.Bob Lozano, chief visionary, evangelist, father-of-eight (same woman) at Appistry came up with the first database example I’d heard and it was eye opening. Appistry (I’ve written about them before — it’s in the links) specializes in distributing what would normally be mainframe applications across tens, hundreds, or even thousands of commodity computers that act as one. If a government agency wanted to do meter-scale analysis of very high-resolution images from spy satellites, it might use Appistry, I’d imagine (just a guess, of course). The database example Bob used at MIT was of an unnamed customer that is a credit card transaction processor. Their core application — the processing of credit card transactions — was happening on IBM Z-series mainframes (the biggest of big iron) and the client wanted to port the whole mess to commodity PCs. Google did it, why not them?But the first time they tried it at Appistry, it didn’t work.“We hired a technical team that had done similar applications before so they started with replicating the mainframe architecture on the commodity computers, database and all,” Lozano recalled. “But when they finished it wasn’t appreciably faster than the mainframe it replaced. Even worse, it wouldn’t scale. So we fired the team and started over.”The problem, it turned out, was in the database. The way the original mainframe application functioned was by first receiving transactions, writing them to the database, reading them from the database, then doing the actual processing before writing them again back to the database. That’s read-write-read-process-write.The second time through the Appistry team tossed the database, at least for its duties as a processing platform, instead keeping the transaction — in fact ALL transactions — in memory at the same time. This made the work flow into read-process-write (eventually). The database became more of an archive and suddenly a dozen commodity PCs could do the work of one Z-Series mainframe, saving a lot of power and money along the way.If this sounds like a risky way to do business — not writing the data to disk until things slow up enough — remember that’s the way Google runs its search engine and why it is so darned fast. Google has THE ENTIRE INTERNET IN MEMORY AT ONCE. If the application slows down they just add more hardware.This is good news for cloud computing and bad news for mainframes, because systems like Appistry and its competitors (there are several) are going to eventually bury the mainframe by putting the “cloud” into cloud computing. Suddenly a Storage Area Network with a relatively weak database controller is good enough for archiving while the parallel or even massively parallel cloud does the real work.Later this month Microsoft will announce a cloud version of Windows Server and it will be very interesting to see how it handles database integration and dis-integration.The database problem is much more than just slow reads and writes. Relational databases also create false dependencies between pieces of data. Dependencies of any kind break parallelism, and therefore make an application hostile to commodity platforms. That is, if one chunk of data (A) is dependent on another chunk of data (B), then no work can be done on A until all work on B is complete. If the dependency is real, like when A and B are both withdrawals from the same bank account, then there are hacks we can try like one I will describe in my next column, but most programmers just choose to have a cup of coffee and wait for B to finish.But if these are withdrawals from different bank accounts, or maybe even different banks, then no true dependencies exist. Unfortunately, if all of this has been stored in a single relational database then we unintentionally create a false dependency, since that database can only handle a fairly limited amount of items concurrently — we’ve created a bottleneck that will choke the application.While the database guys are busy figuring out how to add more and more concurrency internally, in reality when you take a few steps back and think of a large set of commodity boxes all executing a single data munching app, then no matter how sophisticated we get, the relational database will still effectively be a single thread to that app.A traditional response is to pour dollars into the data tier, buy faster, more concurrent SANs, better interconnects, and bigger database servers. That works up to a point and pleases Sun and IBM no end.Somewhat more helpful though are data grid products like Coherence or eXtreme Scale (IBM), or Appistry’s Fabric Accessible Memory (FAM). For many applications those can take more of the lifetime of each chunk of data and keep it in memory in the middle tier — hopefully on the same boxes where this large data-munching app resides. But this still doesn’t completely solve the problem because there remain limits on how far the relational database can scale.Here’s how Google attacks this problem, which goes beyond simply keeping the entire Internet in memory. The problem, of course, is that you can’t keep the entire Internet in memory in every server because then you’d need more memory chips than even Google can afford to buy. To scale the Google search service, then, they figured that many large problems did not intrinsically require doing actions one at a time. But Google first had to free itself of the false dependencies. So they coined the term MapReduce and created both a set of operations and a way to store the data for those operations natively, all while preserving the natural independence that is inherent in each problem, building the whole mess atop the remarkable Google File System, which I’ll cover some other day.Google led the way but many other companies have followed suit, opening doors to a wide range of new ways of thinking about large-scale data manipulation. Suddenly there are different ways to store the data, new ways to write applications, and new places (thousands of cheap boxes) to run such applications.What this does for Larry Ellison and his libido is a great question, because it looks like he’s bought up most of the traditional database-centric software industry just in time for it to be declared obsolete.Sorry Larry.
Fri, 03 Oct 2008 16:20:13 -0400 Man in China fined $277 for porn on drive, then forgiven [New Window]
The crux of the legal claim, according to press reports, appears to be the distribution function of BitTorrent, which was how the accused said he obtained the video.
Mon, 29 Sep 2008 18:29:00 -0400 The Cringely Plan [New Window]
In the early 1980s I was a volunteer firefighter for a tiny community in the Santa Cruz Mountains of Northern California. We all lived in a beautiful redwood forest and our task was to keep that forest from burning down in a huge conflagration, taking us all with it. The job was made all the harder because our little part of paradise hadn't burned since the 1920s, so there was 60+ years of flammable undergrowth just waiting to light off. The current financial crisis facing the United States and the world really isn't much different from that.An unmanaged forest, one without the sort of fire control we attempted to provide, would naturally burn every few years. The undergrowth would build up, reach a critical mass, some source of ignition would come along -- usually lightning -- and all that undergrowth would burn. The redwoods themselves would be scarred but not really threatened, as we could see from the charring that marked them from countless such fires over centuries. Of course burning undergrowth threatened homes and property, too, so there was a natural desire on the part of that community to want the next burn to not come this year, please not this year. So there came a policy of aggressively fighting fires with the result that we eventually faced 60 (now 90!) years of flammable material growth rather than six or eight years. And the probable fire fueled by 60 years of undergrowth would have been so bad that our job changed to one of trying to prevent fires from happening, well, ever. This was an impossible task, of course. Eventually the stars would align the wrong way and the whole place would burn down, we all knew it. Just let it not happen on our watch.Does this sound familiar?Now America and much of the world face the possibility of recession and we handle that by first arguing about the definition of the term. Are we or are we not in recession? This distinction appears to be very important to some who view it like a forest fire: is it burning or not? Implicit in this distinction, I suppose, is the idea that if we're not burning -- if we are not in recession -- that maybe through some miracle we'll never face that problem. Whether this is a practical attitude or not depends entirely on your event horizon -- how soon you expect things to change.The people in power in this country have a relatively short event horizon. Politicians tend to think of two, four, or eight years as the longest periods of time that matter. Corporate honchos might look out further, you could guess, but they don't since the average duration for a U.S. Fortune 500 CEO is under four years. So while the intent of the fire chief and the mayor and the governor and the Congressman and the President and the CEO is that there be no unpleasant surprises during their watch, all of them know such surprises are coming.This short-term focus in the face of long-term difficulties leads to odd behavior at times. In the forest it is usually better to let smaller fires burn or even to deliberately set them, yet few fire chiefs are willing to take that risk, even though NOT taking the risk is so much worse. In financial markets, as companies crumble and governments prepare bailouts, short sellers pile on in scrums of doom that make the shorts rich yet hurt society. Traders with a trading mentality, they can't help themselves any more than Ralph Nader can keep from running for President. "But George Soros did it to the Bank of England," they say, as if that makes everything okay.The American economy is at the end of its longest-ever period without a recession. Through sleight of hand and a fair amount of financial fraud we've managed to keep the "R" word out of our communal vocabulary for 14+ years. We did this through a succession of bubbles -- first the Internet bubble and then the real estate bubble with a little war bubble thrown in between. Financial bubbles are unnatural enough in themselves, but piling bubble atop bubble defies logic, yet still we managed to make it happen, helped somewhat by half a trillion dollars in war spending, all with borrowed money.By rights the end of the Internet bubble should have sent us into recession, burning the financial undergrowth and setting up the next period of prosperity. But we avoided that and the result is what we see now -- something far worse.Recession is inevitable at this point, yet still we talk about avoiding it. This is crazy talk. If we as an economy somehow push the next recession back a few more years, it will be all the worse when it comes. AND IT WILL COME. Everybody in power knows this; none of them argue against it; they all know recession is inevitable; they know that forestalling a recession at this point will only make it worse. Yet still they pray, "Not on our watch, please."So we plan $700 billion bailouts on top of hundreds of billions in other knee-jerk measures all intended simply to forestall the inevitable and therefore ultimately bound to fail. "Just not on our watch, please."The cost of delaying the inevitable is high, but we won't pay it, our children and grandchildren will. We can argue policy all day and whether this matters or not, but it is hard to argue that any such cost doesn't matter IF IT DOESN'T WORK.So I propose The Cringely Plan -- a relatively small attempt to point public policy in a direction that makes sense for a change. The Cringely Plan won't avoid a recession because that's impossible. The Cringely Plan is intended, rather, to look beyond the inevitable recession and assist with the ultimate recovery and beyond.What we need are energy and economic policies that play to the strengths of government, not its weaknesses. Governments are good at big moves that force changes of direction, not little moves intended to, for example, create the economic "soft landing" we'll start to hear about in a couple months.Governments are best at turning super tankers, not at docking them.And while governments can print money and thereby pay for a lot of stuff, they are actually most effective just telling us what we can or can't do, more than anything else. We can see that, for example, in the Clean Air and Clean Water Acts of the 1960s that significantly improved the lives of all Americans without the government having to pay for it.The Cringely Plan does nothing for banks or mortgages. That's a problem that will have to work itself out, I think, and will if we give it a chance to do so. But we won't give it such a chance, I'm guessing, because it is an election year and because government is viewed as stupid and able to be threatened into paying for the most amazing things that it shouldn't. So The Cringely Plan has to look past banks and mortgages to energy policy and economic stimulus.It would be interesting to know what the mortgage market would be like had the price of a barrel of oil not hit $140+. There still would have been a mortgage bubble bursting, but I wonder when?Whatever the banking situation, though, we still need an energy policy and simply have not had one for decades. So get ready, here it comes; The Cringely Plan calls for:Prohibiting the manufacture and sale of incandescent lights.Kind of a letdown, eh?That's it. No ethanol subsidies, no drilling in wilderness preserves, no tax credits, no artificial price supports, no enriching good ol' boys from the oil patch. And no cost to government at all.As our incandescent lights wear out we'll have to replace them with something else, primarily compact fluorescents and LEDs.Yes, this will lead to the closure of light bulb and filament plants in Ohio and elsewhere, costing a few thousand jobs. At the same time it will create jobs in the non-incandescent light industries as those ramp up. But most importantly, it will within a year (based on a 700-hour life for incandescent bulbs) lead to an 18 percent drop in U.S. electrical demand.Dropping electricity demand by 18 percent will have an interesting effect on the electric utility industry. A simplistic view would suggest that our electric bills should drop by 18 percent. Cynics will point out that fixed overhead built into the regulated industry will keep bills from dropping that much simply because doing so would unduly hurt utility profits.I don't think so.Our utility bills pay for power that comes from many sources, some more efficient or profitable than others. Our bills also pay for building new power plants, some of which are again more efficient or profitable than others. An 18 percent cut in demand will have a huge impact on the production strategies and capital spending plans of every U.S. utility. More expensive plants built to serve marginal demand -- plants like smaller gas turbines for example -- could be taken off-line, dropping the average cost per kilowatt. Large new plants that have been in the works (and that we've been paying for) for years can be eliminated or delayed. Cancelled plants would lead to higher profits that lead to lower electrical rates. So our electric bill won't go down 18 percent, they'll go down 25 percent, which is a savings of $22 per month for the average American home.Twenty-two dollars per month!? Big deal. Was there an economic component of this energy policy?Well, it's a savings of $29 billion per year EVERY YEAR FROM NOW ON, which pales the recent and easily forgotten economic stimulus package that sent $600 checks generally not to the people who needed them most. How much of a positive effect those checks had on the economy is open to debate, but how much effect they had on reducing energy consumption isn't, because that effect was nada, zilch, zero.$29 billion also amounts to about the annual debt service cost of either the Iraq war or the coming $700 billion bailout. Take your pick.Want another energy policy with positive economic implications? Make single-phase lighting illegal for businesses with ceiling heights above 15 feet. Three-phase power at 380 or 440 volts is more efficient, requires less copper, and saves money overall. Once you have it in place for lighting it's a no-brainer to also use it for electric motors, where the savings are HUGE. The financial payback period for such conversion is under two years, which is an imputed annual interest rate of 50 percent. What investment can you reliably make that pays back 50 percent year after year after year?Still no government money has been spent.Take this a step further and require all new residential construction to use 380V three-phase power for EVERYTHING, which is to say turn the U.S. into Europe, where homes already use less power for the same level of service because of three-phase efficiency. Now this is a big change, of course, because it means getting all new electric appliances, TVs, everything. What's wrong with that? It's not like the products don't exist, since the same manufacturers are already making them for sale in Europe. Market expansion leads to lower prices. Swapping out 10 percent of the U.S. appliance market per year ON TOP OF NORMAL ATTRITION would create a huge boom in electronics and electrical goods. Okay, maybe this one will cost some money, but no more than those $40 digital decoder subsidies the government is already handing out.These are just a few examples of what can thoughtfully be accomplished. There's a natural role for government here and that's setting rules. They are good at that. Government hasn't always been as good at enforcing rules as setting them, but that doesn't mean rules aren't worth having. Let's just set a few new ones that make sense as we recover and rebuild after the economic fire to come.
Sat, 27 Sep 2008 00:15:59 -0400 Door Number Three [New Window]
I’ll begin this third and (I promise) last column on IT management with a confession: I have been fired from every job I have ever held. This is certainly not something I set out to do, nor did I even realize it until one day my young and lovely wife mentioned that I had never told her about voluntarily leaving any position. It’s not that I’ve had so many jobs, either. This one and the one before it have kept me going for more than 20 years. But they always seem to end the same way. This one might, too. You can never tell.Most of the times I have been fired it’s because I’ve been judged to be unmanageable, which is to say I won’t shut up. The ultimate reason given is usually something minor. The last time around, for example, I was fired because I didn’t transfer the cringely.com domain to my employer. They asked me to do it and I said “no.” Had they said, “Transfer the domain or you will be fired,” I might have decided differently. But they never said that — never gave a hint of the consequences — so I assume the real goal was less to get the domain and more to get rid of me.The guy who had me fired, Stewart Alsop (maybe you’ve heard of him), ultimately lost his own job for firing me, at least according to International Data Group Chairman Pat McGovern, who told the story to 300 people once at a DEMO conference.Back when I was a kid and working at WWST Radio in Wooster, Ohio, I was fired for writing those seven unspeakable words in the middle of a livestock auction report. Another kid had been playing similar tricks on me for weeks, but when I finally retaliated he turned me in. I guess I was a threat to him and didn’t know it.One company hired and fired me three times and another company hired and fired me twice. And somehow in all this I’ve never received severance or unemployment compensation. I just found another job or it found me.There’s a point to all these firing stories and they actually do relate to IT. I’m typical of a lot of IT types. You know us. We are useful but sometimes a pain in the ass. We have opinions and speak our minds and don’t suffer fools at all. We stand up to authority from time to time. Sometimes we’re wrong. We get fired a lot and hired a lot, too, because we are generally useful, though dangerous.What do you do with folks like me if you are a manager? At a traditional newspaper you’d either fire me or make me a columnist. And, sure enough, look where I am. In an IT shop you give me a task to do and let me do it, generally on my own, and never EVER put anyone under me, because I am hopeless as a manager.But it turns out I’m not so bad as a leader.Weird, eh?The last two columns have shown that IT is the Cousin It of American industry. We serve the company but often don’t feel part of it. Certainly the value structures and lines of authority that function perfectly well for most of the rest of the company don’t work at all well for IT. We’re vital but at the same time, well, so different that it’s hard to imagine a CEO emerging from the IT ranks. It happens from time to time. Everyone points to John Reed, who rose from IT to CEO of Citicorp, but Reed was an exceptional case. He succeeded because his predecessor, Walter Wriston, had an unusual interest in IT and mentored Reed. Reed succeeded, too, because he didn’t really come from IT but from Data Processing, which was more hierarchical. And ultimately he didn’t succeed at all, by some measures, because John Reed was fired.So right now let’s just accept that it is very unlikely that, coming from IT, you’ll ever become the CEO of your company. That means you are instantly off the traditional management track and have the option of either eventually moving on to some other organization or taking what’s behind Door Number Three.Remember Door Number Three from Let’s Make a Deal? It could reveal a sports car or a donkey, but whatever was behind Door Number Three was unlike anything you could imagine.We need a Door Number Three for IT professionals.I have a friend of 20 years who is in a key technical role at a very large company. He’s too vital to the company to risk losing but too geeky to fit in. He’s on the craft (non-management) salary scale, but way higher than he ought to be for having no direct responsibility. All he does, in fact, is from time to time save his company from ruin. And even more rarely, he saves all the rest of us from ruin, too, in ways I am not at liberty to explain. How do you manage such a guy? Where he works they have him report to the CEO. The Big Guy has 5-6 direct reports and one of them — my friend — doesn’t manage anyone or anything.THAT’S Door Number Three.We’re in an important transition period not just for IT, but also for business in general. Everything seems to be in flux. And that means the old ways of doing things are changing and ought to. And in this way IT is leading — or ought to lead — the way. Later this week I’ll be making a dramatic shift and proposing the Cringely Energy/Economic Policy, but first I need to drive home the point that, however different it is from the rest of the company, IT is generally the vanguard for a new corporate culture and whole new ways of doing business for the world.We’re in a mess. The world is screwed up and some of that can be traced to the improper use of IT as a financial weapon. But the people of IT actually present many of the answers we need, because they are living much deeper in technology than other parts of the company or of our society.Think about it. There has nearly always been a class of eggheads showing us a path toward new business models, whether it was Edison and Firestone, Hewlett and Packard, Noyce and Moore, Gates and Allen, or Brin and Page. It takes in each case a generation to happen, but ultimately we all (and I mean ALL — everyone in the total organization) come to look like the geeks of the generation before. So let’s lean into that, get on with the transition, and get past this place we’re in right now where nobody wants to be. Let’s consciously embrace the next model that’s generally running fitfully right now inside every company, down in the more functional parts of the IT department.What I mean by this is that times have changed and the world can no longer afford even John Reed’s world view with its needs analysis, design, debug, test, rollout strategy — whether we’re talking about a new app or a new marketing campaign. By the time the app (or the campaign) is rolled out, the world changed from HTML to Javascript/SOAP/Ajax (or from financial regulation is bad to financial regulation will save us). At the heart of this is a concept completely foreign to traditional business — Open Source. What the open source community has demonstrated is the superiority of a strategy that emphasizes early proof of concept, early release, and frequent releases with features added as needed — probably totaling 20 percent of the features identified in a needs assessment. This is the new IT strategy we live with every day — 80 percent solutions because they are fast, increasingly reliable, and keep the end users in the loop from almost the beginning. All made possible because of an open Internet (at least until Comcast succeeds and enslaves us), easily grasped standards and impressive demonstrations by companies like Amazon, Google, Facebook, and a ton of start-ups. Wall Street back offices figured this out long ago, they just never got their boss’s bosses to understand.Last week’s column was a utopian vision that simply requires all the old managers to be reprogrammed or accept a bullet in the head. But it is not at all utopian if applied solely (or initially) to IT, where this stuff actually works pretty well. IT people are most of the time building fortresses or feeling unappreciated — often both at the same time. Yet to our discredit, we’ve done a very poor job of explaining or demonstrating or outright selling our utility to the broader organization. Where are our Geek Appreciation Days? Take a Geek to Lunch? Bring Your Geek to School? Taciturn, we disparage our co-workers for not appreciating us while giving them little obvious reason why they should appreciate us.That has to change.Door Number Three isn’t just an escape hatch for nerds, it is the way business and culture and civic life will be for most of us a generation further into this information age. We’re just leading the way. And if we’re leading the way let’s embrace that role and become leaders.If, like me, you are likely to be fired, anyway, there’s no real downside to this strategy. Let’s give it a try.
Mon, 22 Sep 2008 15:29:57 -0400 Leadership [New Window]
Last week’s column on bad IT management and the strong response from readers that followed show this to be a huge issue. There are WAY too many IT managers who either can’t or shouldn’t manage technical teams. Last week I maintained that having a firm technology base, or at least the ability and willingness to acquire one, was essential for good managers. While readers got carried away with which technical test is the best, I don’t think there is much dispute that there are certain aspects of technical management that are helped by the manager being a code god. But that’s far from all there is to the job. So this week I want to go deeper and look at what’s really missing in nearly every instance of such bad management, which is leadership.The distinction between management and leadership is a critical one. Management is — at its very best — an exercise in coping while leadership is so much more. Last week’s simple idea that the manager ought to at least be able to tell good work from bad is exemplified by Bill Gates, who liked to claim that he could tell good code from across the room and that whatever task a team was facing was something he could code in Visual Basic over a weekend. Both statements are nonsense, of course, but Bill knew he had to talk the talk, making him at least an adequate manager.Does it make him a leader? I don’t think so. But let’s not blame Bill for that. Let’s blame Charles Simonyi.Charles is the guy who came up with Microsoft’s development process — an outgrowth of his research at Xerox PARC. I covered this extensively in my book, Accidental Empires, but the short version is that Charles came to advocate a strong program manager as the central controller of any development group. One person made all the decisions and as long as that one person was correct 85 percent of the time, it was better to have a dictatorship than a democracy or even a meritocracy. This was an effective way to extend Bill’s will to Microsoft programmers Bill would never even meet. And to Charles’ credit the system worked well enough if the dictator was really, really smart and the task at hand wasn’t too complex. It was perfect for the 1980s.But it is far from perfect today and represents one of the fundamental reasons why Windows Vista was so late to market and such a mess when it finally shipped. Vista had plenty of management, but not very much leadership. When I think of leaders what comes to mind first are political and military leaders. We use the term “leadership” to describe those roles far more than we do for what ought to be similar roles in business or technology. This week former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina said that John McCain, Barack Obama, Sarah Palin, and Joe Biden were all ill-suited to be CEOs of major corporations. However badly the statement went over (Carly supports McCain, by the way), her real point was that there are different skill sets for leaders than managers. And she’s right to an extent, but it also says a lot about her own tenure at H-P, which was long on management and short on leadership.Management is telling people what to do, which is a vital part of any industrial economy. Leadership is figuring out what ought to be done then getting people to do it, which is very different. It is a vital part of any successful post-industrial economy, too, but most managers don’t know that.Let’s use the U.S. military involvement in Iraq as an example of the difference between leadership and management. As more books are written and stories come out we can see that there is a lot of arguing that goes on inside the military. Officers are onboard or not. They are proposing various strategies and taking positions generally advocating what’s perceived as safest for both the mission they have accepted and the preservation of life among their troops. Eventually someone makes or imposes an order, but even then there is a lot of second-guessing in the military, which has to be ready with Plans B through G just in case they are needed. This is a lot different from the image many of us have of General Patton pointing toward Berlin, imposing a singular view and forcing it through.In contrast to the military, most businesses do a lot less explaining and pondering and a lot more laying down edicts. That’s management, which works fine on an assembly line, but not at all well building a big software application or winning a war.Janna Raye is someone I worked with at InfoWorld half a lifetime ago who has built a consulting career on understanding this stuff and helping companies to transcend 20th century corporate hierarchies and become what she calls “fractal organizations.” Janna’s consulting business is called Strategems and here is her take on this issue:“Modern corporations suffer from systemic-level issues that emerge in top-down hierarchies. Managers are there to control staff and budgets, not to lead. Although you can make valiant and often successful attempts to control things and processes, you will never again be able to control people. We’ve evolved, basically, and the information age has had a lot to do with it. So we still “manage” companies the same way as when we actually operated assembly lines in America—the good old days! Now, people need leaders, not managers, and that’s what a fractal organization enables.“In fractal organizations, it’s the staff deciding how to continuously improve processes in their functional areas for efficiency of time and resources. These organizations thrive with a new pay model also, based upon results or value of work delivered and not how much time it takes to do the task. Those who are really good will get to go home early! These are not the organizations that are shrinking. Like galaxies, they continue to expand, actually aided by a strong gravitational pull of the leaders at the center. Those who do it well create a compelling vision and keep it alive. They allocate resources to projects that align with the vision, and reward arm- and team-cluster leaders for the creative ideas their staff bring to the organization. It’s a shared vision and collective goals that are missing from the vast majority of organizations, which is why failing projects continue to drain resources. Really caring about what you do and feeling proud to be a part of something special and wonderful is what every human desires, even if they say they don’t.”So what’s Janna’s model for the ideal 21st century organization? Pixar.“They let creativity run wild at Pixar!” says Janna. “Ed Catmull, Pixar’s president, wrote an article for the Harvard Business Review on their collective creativity. Ed and John Lasseter (and sometimes Steve Jobs) are in the center of the galaxy, keeping the gravitational pull strong and the company rotating, so to speak. Around them are the directors, who in the fractal org model lead the arms (no more divisions!). Each film team or cluster, from the storyboard artists to the renderers, goes through the iterations necessary to achieve the best results. Everyone is on board with creating exemplary films and they are relentless in demanding only the best. But in this process, as they say, they have to get all the “sucky” ideas out first. If they don’t reveal all the ideas, they don’t get all the perspectives and therefore might miss something important. In quantum physics and information theory, this relates to the observer effect and the importance of acknowledging the perspective influence of everyone in a scene. “In top-down hierarchies, the opposite occurs, yet the people on the front lines are the ones dealing with the evolutionary changes going on around them and are the best source of ideas for solving tactical issues. You wouldn’t need “change management” if you made continuous improvements at the functional level the responsibility of every individual and team cluster. Yet Pixar makes incredible films in this manner, so you could certainly accomplish it anywhere, even in a supermarket! In fact, some of Whole Foods’ leadership practices are fractal — in-store teams make decisions about products and their placement, based on their observations of customer patterns.“Most start-ups are fractal in their nature, especially those that have exciting visions and get everyone on the same page with collective purpose, goals, and objectives. Most investors, however, are bought into the conventional org chart; when the company devolves into top-down, the turnover begins. That’s because of the internal competition that emerges in top-down organizations. The perception is that there’s only so much room at the top. At each level of management, the competition increases as cooperation decreases. Thus are created the ubiquitous “silos” of information that thwart collaboration and encourage redundant, wasteful business practices.“Managers are supposedly promoted because of their ability to outperform others and not because of an intention to provide inspiration, guidance, and mentoring to their staff, nor are they openly rewarded for this behavior, even though it usually produces a healthier bottom line. The usual way of rewarding based upon meeting financial goals and managing budgets keeps the focus on short-term financial results only, whereas continuous improvement leadership by frontline staff creates more long-term successes.“When managers don’t mentor staff, focusing only upon numbers and bossing people around, it leads to an illusion of control, of which there’s no such thing. In these situations, they begin to feel they must continually prove their worthiness and so defend their territories against possibly brilliant staff working “beneath” them. This is a systemic issue, not a personality quirk, though some personalities are more susceptible than others. In most companies, the idea of climbing over others on your way to the top and throwing people who get in your way under buses is de rigueur. The top-down hierarchy was designed to manage industrial-age processes, not information-age challenges. You didn’t want the door guy getting creative when attaching the door. Nor did he need to collaborate with the bumper dude. The information age is vastly different. Each scene we’re in presents new circumstances and opportunities.“Pixar claims they have a meritocracy. This is a good description of the atmosphere that emerges in fractal organizations. Google was likely more fractal in the beginning, before they brought in managers trained in top-down hierarchies and engrained with the accompanying behavioral patterns, such as knee-jerk resistance to ideas they haven’t thought of themselves. Not everyone is like this, of course, but usually those who aren’t have had confident mentors themselves who encouraged creative participation. In Catmull’s HBR article, he says they insist that everyone in the company contribute ideas, across all functions and levels, or they will perish. Interestingly, he mentions the difficulty in getting new hires to feel comfortable with this process. This results from cultural-level systems that keep people in competition rather than cooperation. Though Catmull tells readers what they do at Pixar and why, he doesn’t instruct on how to make the organizational changes that enable this approach to creativity.”I guess that last part is Janna’s job.All this fractal stuff is interesting, but I’m guessing it is also difficult to implement, because it may describe Pixar but it DOESN’T accurately describe Apple — the other place where Steve Jobs is king. Still, Apple’s product success shows that something is being transferred from one company to the other. It’s just that at Apple, Steve Jobs can’t make himself stay out of the way.
Wed, 17 Sep 2008 19:29:44 -0400 Reports: TypePad unblocked in China [New Window]
Various TypePad-hosted bloggers are rejoicing as their blogs become visible again in China.
Tue, 16 Sep 2008 16:00:00 -0400 Chinese social networks block Baidu indexing [New Window]
User privacy concerns on Chinese social networking sites have led the biggest players to block indexing by Baidu, China's leading search engine.
Sun, 14 Sep 2008 23:28:00 -0400 Be unique to avoid duplicate content [New Window]
Differentiating copy and creating unique content, as well as being careful how you reuse content on your own site, can help reduce duplicate-content issues.
Sat, 31 May 2008 15:56:00 -0400 Selling duplicate content [New Window]
Online retailers often hinder their online performance by keeping with the status quo. Don't let manufacturer stock copy hinder your search results because of duplicate content filtering.
Wed, 14 May 2008 23:03:00 -0400 Book review: How To Make Money With Your Blog [New Window]
A book review of How To Make Money With Your Blog by Duane Forrester (a search engine marketer) and Gavin Powell (a technical writer).
Thu, 01 May 2008 13:59:00 -0400 Yahoo Suggest: The Good, the Bad, and the Unbelievable [New Window]
Yahoo Suggest isn't quite the search term suggestion tool that I thought it was...
Thu, 24 Apr 2008 20:21:00 -0400 Understanding duplicate content: Outside view [New Window]
Duplicate content from external sites may seem like an uncontrollable issue, but there are steps that can be taken to reduce the concerns.
Fri, 11 Apr 2008 10:00:00 -0400 Flickr adds video to photo sharing services [New Window]
Flickr adds video support to their photo sharing services. But a Pro account is needed to take advantage of the new service.
Wed, 09 Apr 2008 09:55:00 -0400 Duplicate content: Separating the penalty from the filter [New Window]
Finally, sort through and understand whether duplicate content is penalized by the search engines or just filtered in the search results.
Mon, 07 Apr 2008 10:33:00 -0400 Use SEO to optimize your recession [New Window]
Tips on how to use SEO to make the most out of a recession for your business and Web site.
Thu, 03 Apr 2008 21:58:00 -0400 Recession: The best thing for SEO [New Window]
Search marketing may present many opportunities for businesses to maximize their marketing efforts by reaching consumers closer to the point of purchase.
Mon, 31 Mar 2008 11:05:00 -0400 Analyze, create robots.txt files in Google [New Window]
Google adds another helpful feature to Webmaster Central that helps Webmasters create a robots.txt file for their sites.
Sat, 29 Mar 2008 14:52:00 -0400
RSS Mix Reviews [Beta]
We pick the best professionally-written reviews, and summarise them on one page.
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