Archive for April, 2010

Quote of the day ‘Social media is like teen sex’

Sunday, April 25th, 2010

Every once in a while, you read something on Twitter that’s just pitch-perfect, despite (or maybe because of) the microblogging service’s 140-character limit.

On Monday, he posted a total zinger, framing it as an “OH,” or overheard, indicating that he wasn’t the one who actually came up with the contents of the Twitter message (or “tweet”) but didn’t want to openly quote the person who actually said it.

“Social media is like teen sex,” Kaushik tweeted. “Everyone wants to do it. No one actually knows how. When finally done, there is surprise it’s not better.”

Today’s honor is bestowed upon numbers guru and “Web Analytics: An Hour A Day” author Avinash Kaushik, currently employed as Google’s analytics evangelist.

Wham, bam, thank you ma’am. (Do you agree? Comment away!)

McCain’s homeland security strategy could take an

Sunday, April 18th, 2010

Only 9 percent of government funds spent on national security go towards defensive operations, he said, while 80 to 85 percent are spent on offense.

The transition, he said, will prove a chance to “step back and take a strategic look at where we need to go.”

“It’s an example of private sector ideas that could be utilized in government programs,” she said.

As president, McCain would also place a great emphasis on cybersecurity, Dunn said, especially in the wake of the cyberattacks against Georgia from Russia. The candidate has also taken initiative in the area of communications interoperability, the campaign surrogate said, and has been a longtime advocate for setting aside spectrum for first responders, as well as providing them with more funding.

McCain’s offensive strategy for homeland security will not help foster greater resiliency in the United States, countered P.J. Crowley, a senior fellow and director of homeland security at American Progress who serves as a volunteer advisor for Democratic candidate Barack Obama.

The remarks were made during a panel discussion Wednesday focused on a report by the nonpartisan, not-for-profit Reform Institute. The report suggests the federal government create a homeland security policy that focuses not only on offensive measures to protect the country, but also reactive measures to keep the country resilient in the face of an emergency.

“DHS is doing a lot of good things, but certain things have been uneven,” he said. “One of the challenges is to make sure DHS continues to mature.”

“At some fashion you want to make sure the government has resilient systems,” Crowley said. “Ultimately, resources matter.”

Among other things, a McCain administration may take an “eBay approach” to maintaining an open supply chain in the event of an emergency, said Lee Carosi Dunn, counsel to Senator John McCain, the Republican presidential nominee.

That would mean “providing the technology for localities to bid out at competitive rates for the supplies they need” during natural or man-made disasters, Dunn explained. After Hurricane Katrina, for example, many organizations were interested in providing much-needed resources–like ice–to the affected areas, but poor organization and communications hampered the transfer of those supplies.

Dunn noted that former eBay chief executive Meg Whitman is a co-chair for McCain’s presidential campaign and that the candidate greatly admires the company.

WASHINGTON–Government needs better engagement with the private sector to develop a stronger homeland security strategy for emergency response, government and industry representatives said Wednesday–and may even turn to companies like eBay for inspiration on how to respond to domestic emergencies, suggested a representative for John McCain.

The report (PDF), released Wednesday, specifically said industry and government need to create contingency plans to address threats of disruption to the supply chain–such as hazardous shipping containers brought into U.S. ports–that could have wide ranging consequences for the nation, economic and otherwise.

Taking an “eBay approach,” Dunn said, was one way to possibly keep the supply chain open more effectively, with financing for the bidding coming from both the affected localities and federal funding.

Crowley said the foremost responsibility for the next president will be to ensure government departments undergo a smooth transition from the current administration to next. For many departments, including DHS, this will be the first full administrative transition.

“Senator McCain’s answer is to leave 140,000 troops in Iraq,” he said. “The longer this strategy goes on, that necessarily means there are fewer resources available for other things.”

Chilirec records Net radio music to your PC

Friday, April 16th, 2010

Recorded songs are stored as MP3s and quality varies with different radio stations. Sometimes a song starts off with a radio jingle or with the end of another song.

But record companies considered this a service in which Chilirec was making the recordings and thus Chilirec was making copyright-protected material available illegally, since licenses weren’t paid.

Tapping into lots of Internet radio stations, Chilirec software records dozens of songs every minute, adding up to thousands of songs on your hard drive in a single day.
The legality of this and other similar software such as Ripcast and StationRipper is based on the right to record music and make a few copies for personal use.

“We have had our law firm verify in detail that this is a recorder which is legally ok,” Chilirec CEO and co-founder Carina Dreifeldt told CNET News.

Just press record and Chilirec grabs music from up to 100 Internet radio stations simultaneously, based on your music preferences, for free and legally.

“The hitch is that the individual must perform the actual recording,” explained Dreifeldt.

As Chilirec didn’t want to go up against the recording industry, the cloud-based model was abandoned at the end of 2008, at least for now. Dreifeldt expressed some disappointment over the industry’s standpoint.

In the cloud-based model, each user had his or her own disk space on Chilirec’s servers and managed the recordings via the Internet with the PC serving as a kind of remote control. The service soon became very popular.

Chilirec is Java based and runs in the browser. Initially only Windows is supported, but Dreifeldt told Cnet News that versions for
Mac and Linux will be coming later.

This is the reason why Chilirec now launches a software that runs on users’ PCs. In October 2007, an earlier test version was launched in a cloud-based model, with a patent filed for the technology.

“We wanted to cooperate with the record industry. The basic idea was to have a place where you could listen to the world’s music, and (then) if you wanted to download a song with better quality and without radio jingles,” you could, she said. That would give the record industry more music-selling opportunities.

It looks like music-playing software, such as iTunes, but it’s also a kind of digital recorder.

“We could either fight and go to court, or transform the product from a cloud-based model to a personal recorder,” Dreifeldt said.

Users can choose from a long list of radio stations and, in addition to genres, can narrow recordings to categories like “most played on radio in the U.K.”

The new software, a second beta version, was initially released only in Swedish, and the full Web site at Chilirec.com can currently only be reached from Sweden. The software is free to use until the end of August. But eventually, Chilirec plans to offer both a free advertising-based version and a premium version that would cost about one euro a month.

A similar case regards the U.S. cable provider Cablevision’s network-based DVR.

CNET News gave the software a try and loaded our hard drive with a couple thousand songs in a few hours, even after narrowing the genre down to jazz.

(Credit:
Chilirec)

Chilirec CEO Carina Dreifeldt

Chilirec is yet another digital music venture from Sweden, where a debate on piracy and copyright issues seems to have inspired alternatives such as Spotify and Tunerec, all offering listening for free.

It’s also possible to copy various top lists on the Internet as playlists, and to explore music already stored on the hard drive.

Robots kiss, but don’t go to second base (yet)

Monday, April 12th, 2010

Thomas and Janet practice a kiss, and fortunately for us, there is no tongue involved.

With robots now doing everything from strutting the fashion catwalk to greeting hotel guests, it was only a matter of time before our humanoid friends started engaging in public displays of affection. Exhibit A: Thomas and Janet, two performance bots who made out publicly in front of hundreds during a December 2008 robotic production of “Phantom of the Opera” in Taiwan (racy robot lip-lock video is only making the rounds now).

Cheng noted that last December’s performance did hit some glitches when motors malfunctioned unexpectedly and signals on walkie-talkies used by stagehands interfered with the network that controls the robots.

(Credit:
Taiwan Tech)

“Available service robots could be very expensive and are only used at certain places. However, tickets for theater performance are affordable for everyone,” Cheng said.

A team at National Taiwan University of Science and Technology spent three years developing and programming the smooching bots, which with the help of servo motors that pull at the face and mouth, can form six expressions–fewer than the highly expressive Einstein Robot, but sometimes sacrifices must be made for romance. The team used manual molding, non-contact 3D face scanning, and 3D face morphing to make the movements realistic.

Li-Chieh Cheng, a PhD student at Taiwan Tech’s Intelligent Robot Lab, told IEEE Spectrum at the recent International Conference on Service and Interactive Robotics that performances like the one featuring Thomas and Janet have the potential to bring advanced robotics to a broader audience.

Thomas and Janet are clearly going to need to meet up for more kissing practice. To which we say, “Get a room!”

Yahoo has escape clause in Microsoft search deal

Saturday, April 10th, 2010

If Microsoft falters as the exclusive provider for search on Yahoo’s network of Web sites–when benchmarked against Google–Yahoo can back out of the deal.

As might be expected, Yahoo declined to comment on the exact number for revenue per search or market share that would trigger the escape clause. Microsoft is planning to guarantee Yahoo’s revenue per search for 18 months following the completion of the deal, so this clause would likely come into play following that period and prior to the five-year anniversary, when Yahoo can also re-evaluate whether it still likes the deal, based on its revenue per share viewed against Google’s.

That should calm worries among a few of those who felt that with the deal, Yahoo’s fortunes in the lucrative search-ad market were tied to the performance of Microsoft’s search technology for a decade, which is more like a century in Internet years.

A few other details came out in the SEC filing:

• All details must be hashed out by October 27, or the disputes will be taken to an arbitration panel.

Yahoo and Microsoft had a combined U.S. query market share of 28 percent in June, compared to Google’s 65 percent, according to ComScore. When it comes to revenue per search, according to Microsoft estimates spotted by the Associated Press, Yahoo was earning 4.3 cents in revenue per search, and Microsoft was earning 3.9 cents, while Google was earning 7 cents in revenue per search.

• Microsoft is required to hire at least 400 Yahoo engineers and pay them “market-competitive compensation packages.”

• The two companies have agreed to a “limited, nonexclusive” patent cross-licensing deal.

Yahoo has the right to terminate the deal signed last week, “if the trailing 12-month average of the (revenue per search) in the United States (the “U.S. RPS”) of Yahoo and Microsoft’s combined queries falls below a specified percentage of Google Inc.’s (”Google”) estimated RPS measured on a comparable basis or if the combined Yahoo! and Microsoft query market share in the United States falls below a specified percentage,” according to a document filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Peripherals that changed gaming

Thursday, April 8th, 2010

This week marks the latest release in the Rock Band series (see our hands-on). It features one of the biggest names in music–The Beatles. It also features pack-in instruments that continue to look more and more like their real-life counterparts.

In creating this roundup, one thing became clear: Nintendo’s made great efforts to bring new ideas to the table every few years. And in that process, the Wii has proven to be one of the company’s great successes. But there were also failures along the way. Those, along with winners from Nintendo’s competitors and third parties, are all chronicled.

Photos: Fun with plastic–peripherals that changed gaming

Disclaimer: This list is, of course, neither completely comprehensive nor as far reaching as it could be, but (we think) it does a pretty good job at painting a picture of how far gaming peripherals have come. Feel free to add your own favorites, or ones we missed in the comments.

(Credit:
Dave Lowensohn)

Rock Band was definitely not the first video game to necessitate special hardware, nor will it be the last. Below we’ve put together a list of some of the most innovative peripherals and hardware that have helped change the way we play games. Some went on to become big, while others failed or were martyrs to future incarnations that proved successful.

Man accused of ‘peephole hacking’ ESPN star

Monday, April 5th, 2010

Erin Andrews in happier times.

In announcing the arrest, FBI agents went into some detail as to the technical means by which the videos were shot. Each of the eight videos is alleged to have been shot through the peepholes of two hotel rooms in which Andrews was staying. Barrett is accused of making efforts to secure the room next to hers.

A man has been accused of hacking at hotel peepholes and replacing them with tiny cameras in order to shoot voyeur videos of ESPN presenter Erin Andrews in the nude.

The FBI believes that having hacked the peepholes, Barrett allegedly used a cell phone camera or other miniature device to shoot his infamous videos, which were originally thought to have been posted on the French DailyMotion.fr site.

(Credit: CC Conspiracy of Happiness/Flickr)

The criminal complaint contains this quote from an FBI agent: “The inner eyepiece of the peephole screws into the sleeve for the peephole. The eyepiece had been tampered with and was shortened, and it appeared to have been hack-sawed.”

Barrett has been arrested and charged with interstate stalking. The criminal complaint states that Barrett allegedly acted “with the intent to harass, to place under surveillance with intent to harass and intimidate, and to cause substantial emotional distress to a person in another state.”

Someone then tried to sell the videos to the nice folks over at TMZ.com. However, being wise to the nuances of invasion of privacy, TMZ contacted the ESPN presenter’s lawyers. The feds say that the e-mail address used to make the offer of sale led them to Barrett.

However, she has returned to what is, for so many, her rightful role on ESPN’s college football coverage.

For her part, Andrews, who was understandably outraged by the videos, is now considering legal action against both the person who shot them and any site that published them, according to the Associated Press.

According to the New York Post, the videos, which in July caused many males of uncertain character to risk computer virus invasion in order to view them, were allegedly shot by Michael Barrett, 48, of Westmont, Ill.

She told Oprah last month that when she learned of their appearance on the Web: “I kept screaming: ‘I’m done. My career is over. I’m done. Get it off. Get it off the Internet.’”

Mozilla nudges Firefox users to latest version

Monday, April 5th, 2010

Mozilla touts better performance in version 3.5, along with various features to make the browser a better foundation for running Web applications. But getting people to upgrade can be a problem. One of the biggest obstacles for Firefox, aside from the universal hassle of upgrading, is that Firefox extensions often break with a new version.

Users can go ahead with the update, postpone the reminder, or shut it off altogether, but don’t expect this latter option to permanently mute the reminder. Firefox 3.0.x will stop receiving stability and security patches in January, so further coaxing will be likely.

A month and a half after Mozilla issued a significant update to its open-source Web browser, the organization has begun encouraging users of
Firefox 3 to install version 3.5.

Firefox 3.0.13 users will see an offer to download the latest iteration of the newer version, 3.5.2, according to a blog post. Firefox 3.5.2 is available for Windows, Mac, and Linux.

Mozilla, though, said more than 90 percent of Firefox’s add-ons now work with Firefox 3.5. Meanwhile, Mozilla coders are at work on Firefox 3.6, code-named Namoroka.

Browser upgrades can be a tricky issue. Microsoft is trying to coax users off Internet Explorer 6, a product now 8 years old. Google’s newer Chrome browser, by contrast, automatically updates itself to the newest version with no user intervention, though IT administrators can throttle the behavior.

Coalition to challenge Google Books settlement

Sunday, April 4th, 2010

Google has book-search agreements in place with numerous publishers, but the company hopes that the settlement will permit it to bring many more books into its service. In a victory for settlement opponents, a judge gave authors four more months to decide whether to participate.

It’s an unusual reunion for Reback, who marshaled industry opposition to Microsoft’s efforts to squeeze Netscape from the browser business. Reback, who until 2000 was a partner at the storied firm of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, was responsible for compiling evidence to aid the U.S. Department of Justice’s antitrust case against Microsoft on behalf of Microsoft’s Silicon Valley adversaries. In 2003, PeopleSoft hired Reback in its failed effort to fend off Oracle’s hostile $6.3 billion takeover bid.

Reback is the second prominent attorney to be linked this week with the growing opposition to the settlement. On Wednesday, The New York Times reported that Scott Gant, a lawyer with Boies Schiller & Flexner, would act on his own as an author concerned about the use of class action status to lump all authors into the same pool.

Authors and publishers may opt out of the proposed settlement, but if they do nothing, they’re considered part of it. That includes authors who can’t be located.

The Internet Archive is enlisting some heavy hitters in its challenge of Google’s proposed settlement with book publishers and authors.

Google is digitizing the works from many major libraries, including the New York Public Library and the libraries at Stanford and Harvard universities, and is making those texts searchable on pages with advertisements. The Authors Guild, which represents more than 8,000 authors, sued Google in September 2005, alleging that the company’s digitizing initiative amounted to “massive” copyright infringement. The suit was subsequently granted class action status.

Microsoft, Amazon, and Yahoo are joining with a few library associations to oppose the settlement, Peter Brantley, the Internet Archive’s director, told The Wall Street Journal in an interview. The coalition, which is expected to be announced in a couple of weeks, will be co-led by antitrust lawyer Gary Reback, Brantley said.

Currently, users of Google Book Search are able to view snippets of books online. The settlement agreement would allow Google to make whole pages of copyright works available to online searchers.

Under the proposed $125 million settlement with the Authors Guild and the Association of American Publishers, announced in October 2008, Google would have the right to show content from books online that are still in copyright but that are no longer in print. In addition, those copyright holders could be paid for online sales of their books.

Dell Order a Vista PC and get it with Windows 7

Sunday, April 4th, 2010

Dell’s latest offer is more about convenience than price. For some time now, those who buy a Vista machine with Home Premium or above have been eligible for a free upgrade to Windows 7. However, that requires a user to sign up and upgrade the machines themselves. The Dell program eliminates that step.

It’s kind of the reverse of programs that PC makers did after XP could no longer be sold on most new PCs. In that case, computer makers, including Dell, allowed users to order Vista machines that were pre-downgraded to Windows XP.

Under its Windows 7 Free and Easy program, launched on Monday, customers can order a Windows Vista machine now, but elect to have Dell upgrade the PC to Windows 7 before it ships the computer. As a result, customers can order now and get their machine right around the time Windows 7 ships.

(Credit:
CNET News)

Of course, one could also just wait until October 22 and just get a Windows 7 machine without the semantics. But who likes to wait?

Dell has come up with a novel way to allow customers to pre-order machines with
Windows 7.