понедельник, 28 февраля 2011 г.

Google surprises GDC attendees with free notebooks

Google hands out Cr-48 Chrome OS notebooks to GDC attendees that stuck through the company's two talks on developing on Chrome.

Google hands out Cr-48 Chrome OS notebooks to GDC attendees that stuck through the company's two talks on developing on Chrome.

(Credit:Josh Lowensohn/CNET)

SAN FRANCISCO--As is often the case during most large conferences,swagis given out to attendees. This year'sGame Developers Conferencewas no exception, though those who managed to sit in on one of Google's two sessions on Chrome ended up walking out with something more than the free GDC tote bag: a laptop.

Following the sessions, Google handed developers blue cards saying they could exchange it at the end of the day for a"surprise gift from Google."What that ended up being was a Cr-48, the reference design hardware that houses Chrome OS, Google's still nascent effort at a standalone computer OS.

The Cr-48.

(Credit:Google)

Google, of course, is no stranger to handing out high-value items to developers in the hopes of improving growth on its platforms. The company had given out free HTC Evo 4G cell phones to Google I/O attendees last year, long before they were on the market, and had done the same with the year before with the HTC Magic.

Google staffers on hand would not provide a specific number of Cr-48 notebooks the company had brought for developers, suffice to say that it was enough to supply all attendees of both sessions with something to take home. Following the afternoon hand-out, developers walking the halls of the show could be seen carrying the machines, along with stickers the company had given them to decorate the rather nondescript hardware.

Google first offered up the Cr-48 hardware as part ofa pilot programthat began with its introduction at a Chrome OS event back in December. The machines given out at the show bring no changes since then. The design was never meant to be a device for sale, but rather a way for developers to create Web applications that would run on the OS.

Google had originally described the program users had to apply for to get a Cr-48, as"not for the faint of heart."


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воскресенье, 27 февраля 2011 г.

Facebook beefs up Like button

Facebook's new Like presentation, along with the older Recommend presentation.

(Credit:Screenshot by Steven Musil/CNET)

Is Facebook getting ready to show its Share button the door?

The social-networking giant recently released an update that adds Share button functionality to the Like button, perhaps presaging the phasing out of the Share button. When a Facebook user clicks the Like or Recommend button on a third-party site, a full feed story with headline, blurb, and thumbnail is generated on the user's wall. Users will also have the option of commenting on it.

Previously, unless third-party publishers chose the Like with Comment version of the button for their site, users got only a link to the story in their recent activity section on their wall. Now the Like, Share, and Recommend buttons will all generate the full story with headline, blurb, and thumbnail.

The change should drive more referral traffic to third-party sites and perhaps reduce user confusion over how the buttons work. But because the content will now be more prominent on user's walls, some may be more reluctant to click the Like button.

Facebook is apparently no longer supporting development of the Share button, having removed it from the developers documentation section of the site, and a search for Facebook Share in the developers section redirects to theLike button documentation page.

Facebook representatives did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


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суббота, 26 февраля 2011 г.

Discovery docks for last tango with space station

HOUSTON--The shuttle Discovery glided to a picture-perfect docking with the International Space Station on Saturday, the veteran space plane's 13th and final linkup with the orbiting outpost.

With commander Steven Lindsey manually flying Discovery from the aft flight deck, the shuttle's payload bay docking system engaged its counterpart on the front end of the station's Harmony module at 1:14 p.m. CST.

"Station and Houston, Discovery has capture confirmed,"an astronaut radioed.

The shuttle Discovery, docked to the International Space Station's forward port.

(Credit:NASA TV)

The historic linkup marked the first time in the station's 12-year history that spacecraft from the United States, Russia, the European Space Agency, and Japan were docked at the outpost at the same time.

Later in the mission, if all goes well and mission managers concur, three station crew members will undock in a Russian Soyuz spacecraft to photograph the lab complex and all the visiting vehicles from afar, capturing a unique moment that, with the shuttle's looming retirement, will never be repeated.

But first, the combined crews have to complete the primary objectives of Discovery's mission, including attachment of a final U.S. module, loaded with critical supplies and equipment, and an external storage platform carrying a spare set of radiator panels.

With the shuttle attached to the station, and with all of the visiting vehicles attached, the combined shuttle-station complex masses some 1.2 million pounds. It took longer than usual for relative motion between the two spacecraft to damp out, allowing the docking mechanism to firmly lock the shuttle in place, but it wasn't immediately clear if that was due to the mass of the vehicles or some other factor.

Station commander Scott Kelly (center, facing camera) looks on as the shuttle Discovery's crew enters the space station.

(Credit:NASA TV)

About 45 minutes later than planned, a final hatch between Discovery and the station was opened at 3:16 p.m., and 20 minutes after that, Expedition 26 commander Scott Kelly, along with Alexander Kaleri, Oleg Skripochka, Dmitry Kondratyev, Catherine Coleman, and Paolo Nespoli welcomed Lindsey and his shuttle crewmates--Eric Boe, Al Drew, Stephen Bowen, Michael Barratt, and Nicole Stott--into the space station.

After a mandatory safety briefing, the flight plan called for the shuttle astronauts to press ahead with work to transfer spacesuits and other gear to the station.

Barratt and Stott, operating the station's robot arm, planned to pull a cargo pallet out of Discovery's cargo bay. The pallet, known as external logistics carrier No. 4, is loaded with a spare set of radiator panels for the station's ammonia cooling system.

ELC-4 will be mounted on the underside of the station's right-side solar power truss. To get it there, Barratt and Stott will hand it off to the shuttle's robot arm, operated by Boe and Drew.

The station arm then will be repositioned, inchworm fashion, moving from the Harmony module to its mobile base workstation. When the move is complete, the shuttle arm will hand ELC-4 back to the station arm and the pallet will be mounted on the solar power truss for future use as needed.

Because it took longer than expected to complete the docking procedure, the actual attachment of the cargo pallet may be deferred to Sunday.

The shuttle Discovery performs a backflip maneuver during approach to the International Space Station, allowing the lab crew to photograph its heat shield.

(Credit:NASA TV)

Lindsey and Boe began the terminal phase of the rendezvous at 10:33 a.m. with a rocket firing to begin closing the final 9.2 miles to the station.

Just after 1 p.m,. with the shuttle poised 600 feet directly below the lab complex, Lindsey guided Discovery through a routine-but-still-spectacular end-over-end backflip maneuver, allowing the station crew to photograph the orbiter's heat shield.

Working in the Russian Zvezda command module, Coleman and Nespoli photographed Discovery's heat shield, using 400mm and 800mm telephoto lenses respectively, as the orbiter flipped about. The images will be downlinked to analysts in mission control at the Johnson Space Center here for detailed evaluation.

During Discovery's launching Thursday, several pieces of foam insulation fell away from the ship's external tank, including some that appeared to contact the shuttle's heat shield. The foam shedding occurred well after the first 2 minutes and 15 seconds of flight when the dense lower atmosphere can cause debris to hit with a high relative velocity.

Engineers do not believe the foam lost Thursday caused any significant damage, and nothing out of the ordinary could be seen in television views of the maneuver. But the photos taken by Coleman and Nespoli will be carefully scrutinized to make sure.


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пятница, 25 февраля 2011 г.

Verizon CEO refutes claims of low iPhone sales

The line outside San Francisco's Apple Store for the Verizon iPhone earlier this month.

The line outside San Francisco's Apple Store for the Verizon iPhone earlier this month.

(Credit:James Martin/CNET)

Reports of underwhelmingiPhonesales on Verizon's network seem to have been exaggerated.

That's according to Verizon Wireless CEO Daniel S. Mead, who in an interview withThe Wall Street Journal(subscription required) said that the carrier had sold more iPhone 4s during its launch period than any product so far.

Despite Verizon's announcement that it had its most successful first-day sales ever during a pre-order period prior to the phone's launch, alleged sales numbers from 5 of Apple's stores pointed at sales numbers in the mid triple digits. As CNETnoted at the time, this was just 5 of more than 230 Apple Stores that had been selling theVerizon iPhone, and the numbers didn't include any hard data from Verizon's own retail stores, where iPhone 4s were also being sold. Mead also told the Journal that 60 percent of Verizon's sales had been online, which would overshadow some of the reported numbers from the 2 different retail venues.

Along with the inside look at the company's sales, Mead also hinted to the Journal that Apple will bring a product to market that will work on Verizon's"4G"long-term evolution (LTE) network."They understand the value proposition of LTE, and I feel very confident that they are going to be a part of it,"he said.


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среда, 23 февраля 2011 г.

DAR.fm is TiVo for radio. That's not necessarily good

DAR.fm is like a DVR for your favorite radio shows and stations.

(Credit:Screenshot by Rafe Needleman/CNET)

AtLaunch, music industry disruptor Michael Robertson (MP3.com, Lindows, SIPphone) rolled outDAR.fm, a service that records radio shows to the cloud. Think TiVo, but for radio.

Existing online audio services offer some of what DAR.fm already does. Free services like Pandora replace the traditional experience of listening to radio stations for music. And they're better, since you get music more in tune to your tastes. If you want to listen to specific songs or just one artist, there are subscription services such as Rhapsody. Talk show listeners can get their tracks whenever they want via a podcast service, like iTunes.

So where does DAR.fm fit? Oh, and did I mention that since it picks up audio from radio stations, its audio quality is noticeably lower than other services ("sounds more like DAR.am,"as elliotloh Tweeted)? Robertson is threading the needle with this business, but he does have a niche. First of all, it's free, and it gives you some of what you can only get when you pay for a service like Rhapsody: If you record your favorite radio station for a few hours, you can see all the songs played during that time and skip around to them by name, which you can't do for free with another service.

Second, it's legal, or so Robertson believes--and he does have experience battling the music industry in court. The radio stations can't compete thanks to copyright laws, and the legality of letting users record what they hear, even to a cloud service, has precedent.

Robertson also is getting his service baked into, or least working on, other products besides the browser: There are smartphone apps, plus it works on Roku, Squeezebox, and on some $150 Internet radios you can get at Best Buy, he says.

For me, the poor audio quality of DAR.fm is a stopper. For younger users, I'm not convinced that they hew to radio stations the way I did in my youth, which I think is another problem. But there may be a big enough user base who likes the new features DAR.fm offers to give it some wings. It does make saving radio shows easier than almost any other service.


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вторник, 22 февраля 2011 г.

Windows Phone 7's first update bricking some phones?

Oops.

(Credit:Matt Hickey, Bonnie Cha/CNET)

Users ofWindows Phone 7handsets must have had high hopes whenMicrosoft released a patchyesterday that updated the operating system to improve the process of installing a forthcoming OS update. But some users, notably those withSamsung's Omnia 7, are reporting that the patch is bricking their phones, making them useless.

It's not all Omnias, and we can't confirm if its happening on other Windows Phones, but there arereports on Web sites like WinRumorsandTwitterthat some users say the update is making their phones unusable. In response, Microsoft, via the Windows Phone support Twitter feed, recommends that affected usersreturn to the store where they purchased themand exchange it for a new handset.

When contacted today by CNET, Microsoft said it's reviewing the reports of bricking.

"We are investigating reports related to the Windows Phone update process and will provide additional information and guidance as it becomes available,"a Microsoft spokesperson told CNET.

The first major update for Windows Phone 7 is expected in the coming months, though Microsoft hasn't given a concrete date yet.

Omnia users, have you had any luck, good or bad, with this new patch? Let us know in the comments.


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понедельник, 21 февраля 2011 г.

Intel lists new Sandy Bridge mobile chips

Intel has updated its price list with new dual-core Sandy Bridge chips--some likely bound for Apple MacBooks and just about every PC vendor on the planet.

Upcoming MacBook Pros will include dual-core Sandy Bridge processors. Most of the Sandy Bridge chips shipped to date have been quad-core.

Upcoming MacBook Pros will include dual-core Sandy Bridge processors. Most of the Sandy Bridge chips shipped to date have been quad-core.

(Credit:Apple)

On top of the bevy of Core i5 and Core i7 Sandy Bridge chips already listed in Intel's database, the chipmaker yesterday added dual-core mobile i3, mobile i5, and mobile Core i7 chips to the Sandy Bridge family.

Many of the initial Sandy Bridge processors listed back in January were quad-core only.

The new i3 processors include i3-2120 (3.3GHz) and i3-2100 (3.1GHz). They are priced respectively at $138 and $117 in thousand unit quantities.

A low-power i5-2537M (1.4GHz) and standard-power i5-2540M and i5-2520M chips have been added to the current crop of i5 processors. They are set at $250, $266, and $225, respectively.

A sizable cluster of new dual-core i7 processors includes the i7-2620M (2.7Ghz), i7-2649M (2.3GHz) and i7-2657M (1.6GHz). Those are priced at $346, $346 (also) and $317, respectively.

Apple is expected to announce new MacBook Pros soon that will gorge on the fresh smorgasbord of dual-core Sandy Bridge delicacies. Pros--introduced in April last year--have been using last-generation Core i5 and i7 processors.

Launched at this year's Consumer Electronics Show, Sandy Bridge--or"Second Generation Intel Core Processor"--is the first mainstream Intel chip to integrate graphics silicon directly onto the processor. It is also the first chip line based fully on Intel's leading-edge 32-nanometer manufacturing process. These two features allow Intel to offer a power-efficient processor with improved multimedia and gaming capabilities.

Intel has resumed shipments of Sandy Bridge chipsetsas it seeks to put a minor issue with the chipset behind it."There was a slight delay. We have changed some of our ship schedules,"Ross Compton, a market manager at Lenovo's ThinkPad laptop group, told CNET today. He said the delay was measured in"weeks."

See the updated Intel pricehere (PDF). Note that Sandy Bridge processors can be identified by the 2XXX numbering scheme--seen as a suffix to the i3, i5, and i7 identifiers.

Intel has also added new desktop processors to the price list.


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воскресенье, 20 февраля 2011 г.

Report: Groupon looks to launch operations in China

The daily-deals broker Groupon is reportedly getting ready to launch operations in China, which would help expand its reach in Asia.

In Beijing recently, a company that operates the site Gaopeng.com was conducting interviews in an office with a Groupon sign on display, according to aWall Street Journal story today. Gaopeng.com is"listed as registered by someone at Internet giant Tencent Holdings of Shenzen, China."Tencent is one of the stakeholders in Digital Sky Technologies, an investor in Groupon.

The Journal report also said openings for Groupon staff positions have been posted recently on Chinese job sites, including at universities."The largest group-buying site is hiring in Shanghai!"said one ad, according to the Journal. Another said:"Groupon is the fastest-growing company in history... and it's now starting its Chinese company."

Groupon did not immediately respond to CNET's request for comment Sunday afternoon. The Journal said a Groupon spokeswoman based in Beijing declined to comment.

In January, the Chicago-based company and Tencent were in talks to form a partnership that would give Groupon a larger presence in Asia, according toAll Things Digital's Kara Swisher, who cited anonymous sources.

Earlier this month, Groupon wascriticized for a series of Super Bowl commercialsmaking fun of social causes, including one ad that centered on Tibet. (The ads were in fact part of a campaign to raise money for the causes they highlighted.) Days later thecompany apologizedand pulled the ads.


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суббота, 19 февраля 2011 г.

HAL-like computer tower rules Monopoly Live

Monopoly Live: You can pass Go if the tower says so.

(Credit:Video screenshot by Tim Hornyak/CNET)

Like counting your money? You'll be deprived of that pleasure in the new version of Monopoly that Hasbro shown off at the2011 Toy Fairin New York this week.

A computer tower controls all transactions in Monopoly Live, and players insert bank cards into slots as they would with an ATM. Tracking everything with its infrared eyes, the tower looms like theEye of Sauron.

Or the eye ofHAL, if you prefer science fiction.

The classic tokens, properties, and plastic buildings have been retained, but there's no paper money; dice; or Chance or Community Chest cards.

The tower does all that, along with barking instructions to players, as seen in the vid below. An added feature involves sending a plastic cab around on a rail to dodge taxes, and the tower can sometimes announce random events like a horse race or property auction.

In classic Monopoly, players wheel and deal with each other, screaming for rent and hiding $100 bills up a sleeve or under the board. In Monopoly Live, they seem to be interacting with the computer. Is that the purpose of a board game?

Sure, board game manufacturers have to do whatever they can to stay relevant to younger generations in this age ofiPhone games. I just don't think that closing the pod bay doors on social interaction is the right approach.

Monopoly Live is slated for a fall 2011 release. What do you think? Would you take on the tower?



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пятница, 18 февраля 2011 г.

Clinton urges risk, investment at security confab

Former U.S. President Bill Clinton addresses RSA attendees.

Former U.S. president Bill Clinton addresses RSA attendees.

(Credit:Josh Lowensohn/CNET)

SAN FRANCISCO--Like any great endeavor, information technology does not come without its risks, former President Bill Clinton said this afternoon during a speech at the RSA security conference here.

Clinton stressed that this was especially true given recent events in Egypt, efforts to secure free Internet access around the world, investigations into WikiLeaks, and the fallout from the Stuxnet virus.

"There are not totally risk-free endeavors and advances,"Clinton said."At every step along the way we have to ask ourselves, 'what is it we're really trying to do here?'"

Clinton closed out the weeklong security conference with a talk entitled"Embracing Our Common Humanity,"in which he focused on the importance of making sure there is good political policy to back up new technologies, so as not to repeat mistakes made in the past. Part of such an effort also involves looking for evidence to make the right decisions, Clinton said.

"You can have all the technology you want, but if you don't have good information, you're going to make the wrong choices,"he said.

As was the case with a past RSA keynote speech by Al Gore, who served as vice president to Clinton, those with press badges werebarred from attending the talk by Clintonbecause of a"contract restriction."But RSA attendees with different sorts of credentials (including, in this case, CNET News staffers) were allowed to snap photos and blog during Clinton's presentation.

Clinton ran through a brief history of economics and policy changes, emphasizing how the focus of the U.S. economy following his administration had led to a set of industries that didn't encourage IT jobs.

"We went through a long eight-year period when there was no source of new jobs. All of America's new jobs were in housing, consumer spending, and finance,"Clinton said."And if you think about it, they're all inherantly self-limiting, and when you go beyond the limits they're all fraught with disaster."

Of course hindsight is 20-20, which is why Clinton talked up the importance of risk in regard to projects like the Hadron Collider in Switzerland. The Hadron was not just about subatomic particles, Clinton said, it was also about the IT that made the setup possible.

Following his speech, Clinton talked about yesterday's Silicon Valley visit by President Obama. Clinton said he hoped Obama was going through a similar process to the one he himself went through in 1992, in which his administration tried to determine where most jobs were likely to come from, as well as what private policies and public incentives were likely to bring the biggest gains.

"I think you have to understand where we are, where we're going, and what we need to do,"Clinton said.


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четверг, 17 февраля 2011 г.

Report: Next iPhone might be cheaper, but not smaller

The iPhone 4

Apple is reportedly looking at ways to make the iPhone cheaper than the current $199 subsidized starting price.

(Credit:CBS Interactive)

Is the nextiPhonegoing to be smaller? Bigger? Or maybe cheaper?

"Cheaper"is the latest in a series of confusing and seemingly contradictory rumors about the nature of the next iPhone Apple has in store. Today theNew York Times chimed in to saythat contrary toa previous reportin The Wall Street Journal, the next iPhone is not going to be smaller, but Apple is working on ways to make it cheaper and more accessible for buyers.

Apple is focused on making the iPhone attractive to a larger audience, according to the report. That includes offering a phone more easily controlled by voice commands for those who have no interest in or can't use a virtual keyboard.

As for how the company is considering bringing down the cost of the phone, it wouldn't be by downsizing the screen. Rather, using cheaper internal components, less memory, or a lower-quality camera are options Apple is considering, according to the Times source who has apparently worked on several iPhone prototypes.

Another source says it wouldn't make sense to make a smaller iPhone (we agree) because of how it would affect developers who make their apps formatted to a particular screen size. A"senior Apple executive"also tells the Times that Apple isn't interested in having a lineup of multiple models of iPhones.

It doesn't sound like a cheaper iPhone is a sure thing yet, just something Apple is thinking about. One thing's for sure: the next iPhone isn't expected until this summer. So anticipate many more months of rumors to come.


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среда, 16 февраля 2011 г.

Sony banning PlayStation 3 hackers for life

Sony came down hard onPlayStation 3hackers today, saying they will be permanently banned from the company's online services.

"Violation of the System Software Licence Agreement for the PlayStation 3 System invalidates the consumer guarantee for that system,"reads anotice posted to Sony's official PlayStation blog."In addition, copying or playing pirated software is a violation of International Copyright Laws. Consumers using circumvention devices or running unauthorized or pirated software will have access to the PlayStation Network and access to Qriocity services through PlayStation 3 system terminated permanently."

(Credit:Sony)

To avoid the lifetime shutout, Sony said, consumers must"immediately cease use and remove all circumvention devices and delete all unauthorized or pirated software from their PlayStation 3 systems."

In the post, Social Media Manager Jeff Rubenstein said the policy represents an initial response to questions from PlayStation.Blog readers about how Sony plans to deal with breaches of its policy.

The company did not say when the ban will begin, but the blog PS3 News is reporting that many users of itsPS3 forumshave already confirmed receiving e-mail notices from Sony followed by their PlayStation 3 consoles being banned.

According toone account,"If you get error 0x8002A227, Sony banned your PS3 from the PSN."

This is just the latest step by Sony to thwart PlayStation 3 jailbreaks.

In the most well-publicized battle, the company last monthrequested a restraining orderagainst famediPhonejailbreakerGeorge Hotz, also known as Geohot, for coming up with a jailbreak that lets people run unauthorized software on the PS3.

Sony alleged that the jailbreak, created with the assistance of the hacking group fail0verflow, violates the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and asked a court to stop Hotz from making any material related to his hack available on the Web. Hotzcountered Sony's claim, saying his solution was a jailbreak for a closed system, just like any jailbreak for mobile phones, which are explicitly allowed by the DMCA.

A U.S. District Court granted a temporary restraining order, and Hotz has since removed all mentions of the jailbreak from his site, but Sony mistakenlyretweeted the jailbreak code.

That case is ongoing.

Sony also took legal action last year tohalt the sales in some places of PS Jailbreak, a USB dongle that allows PlayStation 3 owners to dump borrowed games onto the system's hard drive.

In addition, Sony hastightened securitywith each successive firmware update.

In its statement today, the company said that"by identifying PlayStation 3 systems that breach our guidelines and terminating their ability to connect to PlayStation Network, we are protecting our business and preserving the honest gameplay experiences that you expect and deserve."

A majority of commenters to the blog seem pleased by the move announced today.

"Thanks for acknowledging this officially. Good to know Sony is not just hoping that this goes away,"wrote one poster. Wrote another:"Thank You Sony! Ban these punks!"

But a few voices of dissent popped up on the forums as well.

"If Sony actually took the time to know what us (the consumers) wanted, maybe they would see less piracy,"one person wrote."I mean the whole reason hackers want to hack the PSP Go is to play games that are still only available in UMD only."

Wrote another:"While I understand the security and legal issues relevant to piracy and hacking, if I felt companies' motivation was pure, I {might} be OK with this stern stance. But, I think it is motivated more by greed and control than anything else. They want to keep all the $$$ for themselves."


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понедельник, 14 февраля 2011 г.

Reports: Obama coming to Silicon Valley

(Credit:Screenshot by CNET)

President Obama will make an appearance in the San Francisco Bay Area this week to meet with technology industry leaders, according to local reports.

Both theSan Francisco Chronicleand CNET cousin KCBS (part of CBS Corp.) are reporting that Obama will make an appearance somewhere in the area on Thursday for meetings with"business leaders in technology and innovation,"according toKCBS reporter Doug Sovern's Twitter feed. Obama outlined several proposals focusing on investment in technology and green energy duringhis State of the Union address in January.

The Chronicle said it's unclear whether any of the meetings or appearances will be open to the public or media. Obama is no stranger to the region, havingmost recently attended a fund-raising dinnerat Google's Marisa Mayer's house in Palo Alto and a meeting with Apple CEO Steve Jobs. Google's Eric Schmidt is also a member of the president's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology, so it wouldn't be surprising if a multicolored building in Mountain View has extra security on Thursday.

Obama's not confining his tech-oriented visit to California, with plans to visit Intel's massive chip manufacturing and research facilities just outside Portland, Ore., on Friday,according to The Oregonian.


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воскресенье, 13 февраля 2011 г.

Boeing 747-8 Intercontinental is here

The all-new Boeing 747-8 Intercontinental, which the aviation giant formally unveiled Sunday in Everett, Washington.

(Credit:Daniel Terdiman/CNET)

EVERETT, Washington--Sporting an all-new corporate color scheme--red and orange and white instead of the company's traditional blue and white--Boeing unveiled its next-generation747-8 Intercontinentalhere Sunday.

With the formal unveiling the aviation giant made it clear that its787 Dreamlineris hardly its only card in the global commercial aviation poker game.

Billed as the most fuel efficient and cheapest airliner to operate in the world, the new plane seems poised to join its predecessors in the 747 line as an iconic representation of what air travel can and should be.

And while pre-orders of the 747-8 Intercontinental are nowhere near what Boeing saw with the 787, it also appears ready to move to the final stages leading to customer delivery without the numerous, and much publicized, delays of its Dreamliner cousin.

At a media event yesterday, Boeing vice president and deputy 747 program manager Elizabeth Lund said that the 747-8 Intercontinental is currently slated for anearly spring first flight, and a fourth quarter first passenger delivery. Asked if she felt confident about that schedule, Lund pointed out that while you can never predict unforeseen problems,"we started to build on schedule, and we're rolling out on schedule...so we're performing to plan at this point."

To date, the 747-8 program has received 107 announced pre-orders. But of that number, just 33 are for the Intercontinental passenger version, and from just two carriers--Lufthansa, Korean Air--and several private customers. The remaining 74 pre-orders are all for the 747-8 freighter, which is about a year ahead of the passenger plane. Indeed, the freighter made itsfirst flightalmost exactly a year ago.

Lund acknowledged that Boeing would"love"to have more orders for the Intercontinental at this point, but argued that the plane has come to maturity during a very"tough"environment, and said that the aviation giant is"very confident"that the plane will sell well this year.

The low pre-orders figure for the Intercontinental indicates that the market for big, long-haul planes that fly between major transport hubs may not be as big as it once was. TheAirbus A380, the largest passenger plane in the world, which can carry 525 passengers in a three-class configuration, has also sold in smaller number than hoped. Airbus has sold 234 of the planes. Boeing's 787 Dreamliner was said to have had the most pre-orders in aviation history, though some carriers later pulled back, perhaps because of the difficult economy, and some would say because of the plane's many delays. To date, Boeing says that it has 847 pre-orders for the Dreamliner.

Whether Boeing will ever sell anywhere near as many units as the Dreamliner is unlikely. But with its two-day media extravaganza surrounding the unveiling of the Intercontinental this weekend, Boeing is signaling that it believes in its next-generation 747, and that it is committed long-term to the platform.

New wings
One major highlight of the Intercontinental is the plane's new wing design. Created using"the latest in computational fluid dynamics validated in the world's most sophisticated wind tunnels,"the wings offer improved aerodynamics, and larger fuel capacity while also allowing the plane to be as fast, or faster, than any passenger aircraft on Earth.

"Several elements of the wing design improve performance and reduce noise compared with the 747-400,"a marketing document for the Intercontinental reads."When the flaps are extended, the ailerons automatically deflect and act as additional high-lift devices, improving takeoff and landing performance and minimizing noise."As well, Boeing has replaced the 747-400's vertical winglets with"raked wingtips that increase lift and reduce drag at cruising speeds."

At the same time, the new wing design features"fly-by-wire spoilers and ailerons that make it possible to incorporate a flight control feature known as a maneuver load-alleviation system. Pioneered on the 787 Dreamliner, it changes the lift distribution over the wing during non-normal flight conditions, reducing the load on its outboard portion."By using the new system, Boeing said, it was able to make the wing structure smaller, saving 1,400 pounds of weight, while not compromising structural integrity.

Clearly, Boeing thinks that airline customers will benefit strongly from the Intercontinental. It eagerly touts the plane's economic and green credentials: It is the only passenger plane in the 400- to 500-seat market, its four General Electric GEnx 2B engines consume 16 percent less fuel per seat than do the engines on the current-gen 747-400, and 11 percent less than the A380. As well, Boeing lauds the Intercontinental's reduced noise: According to the company, the"noise footprint"of the new plane is 30 percent smaller than that of the 747-400. As an example, Boeing said that the new plane will be able to fly in and out of London's Heathrow airport 24 hours a day, while most other aircraft are subject to an evening curfew due to noise.

All of this is due to the use of advanced materials in the construction and design of the plane, as well as its use of the GEnx engines, and the form factor and materials of its wings. Most of the plane is made from new aluminum alloys, while it also incorporates graphite composites in the rudder, spoilers, flaps, and other areas. According to Boeing,"the materials are more durable and better able to resist corrosion and damage, which reduces maintenance and increases the time an airplane is available and productive."

In addition, the advanced materials are lighter, meaning the new 747 weighs less, and therefore uses less fuel, and costs less to navigate and land. All told, by using the new alloys and composite materials, the 747-8 weighs a ton less than its predecessor.

At the same time, the plane featuresinterior designsbrought over from Boeing's 777 and 787 Dreamliner that are intended to give passengers a better experience, the company said. Using"curved, flowing lines; sophisticated lighting; new windows; and roomier stowage bins {creates} a spacious, open feeling throughout the cabin."

Specs and advantages
As designed, the 747-8 Intercontinental will carry 467 passengers in a three-class configuration, and has a range of 8,000 nautical miles. The 747-8 freighter can fly up to 4,390 nautical miles. The Intercontinental has a wing span of 224 feet, 7 inches, and is 250 feet, 2 inches long. Its tail towers to 63 feet, 6 inches high. And its four GEnx-2B67 engines produce 66,500 pounds of thrust. The passenger plane's top cruising speed is Mach 0.86, while the freighter can fly at Mach 0.845.

Boeing's 747-8 Freighter, which made its first flight a year ago. Boeing said that the 747-8 Intercontinental should make its first flight sometime in early spring this year.

(Credit:Daniel Terdiman/CNET)

While the Intercontinental was designed to be the same height as the 747-400 and fit into existing 747 slots at airports--meaning that no airport should have to do any reconfiguring to welcome the new plane--its 18.3 feet of added length will allow carriers to add 51 seats, and the revenue that comes with those additional passengers. As well, Boeing designed the new plane so that the flight crew's rest area is located in the upper deck, freeing up space on the main deck and lower hold for passengers and cargo. That means that the Intercontinental can carry 37,000 pounds of cargo--33 percent more than the 747-400, and 8,600 pounds more than the A380.

Compared to the A380, the Intercontinental is 10 percent lighter per seat. And all told, Boeing said its new plane has the lowest operating costs per seat of any passenger plane in the world. Due to the costs of fuel, maintenance, and weight-related costs, Boeing says that the plane offers carriers"trip costs"that are 20 percent less than that of the A380, while seat mile costs are 5 percent lower than Airbus' double-decker behemoth.

Technology
Befitting a brand-new, next-generation airplane, the Intercontinental is essentially a flying computer, Boeing said. That's due to a flight deck brimming with high-tech avionics and navigation systems. These systems include a state-of-the-art flight management computer, a future air navigation system (FANS)-2 data link, a global navigation satellite system (GNSS) landing system, and integrated approach navigation.

According to Boeing Commercial Airplanes Communications' Jim Proulx, the new plane also features an airport moving map system integrated into its front display screen, allowing both pilots to see, without moving their heads, their plane's precise location on the tarmac. This means that in low visibility situations, pilots of a 747-8 Intercontinental can easily see where they are at any given time when on the ground."It's an extra tool to let you know where you are on the runway surface,"Proulx said.

One advantage that Boeing has with the Intercontinental is that, because the 747-8 freighter has been flying for a year already, the testing program for the passenger plane will be significantly scaled down from what it would be if it was an entirely new plane. That could mean, Boeing would seem to hope, that some of the kinds of delays that have plagued the 787 Dreamliner could be avoided.

At the same time, because the Intercontinental is so similar to the 747-400, Boeing expects that pilots flying the current-gen 747 will be able to very quickly get up to speed on the new plane. Boeing said in a brochure that it should take just three days of training for 747-400 pilots to qualify for the Intercontinental.

New colors
One thing that likely surprised most of the people on hand was that the plane was decked out in the entirely new orange, red, and white color scheme. For years, Boeing has painted its test planes blue and white. But Pat Shanahan, Boeing vice president and general manager for Airplane Programs said that around the world, red and orange are often seen as having a powerful meaning and have long been associated with"prosperity, good fortune, and the promise of success."

Now, as the 747-8 Intercontinental moves into its testing phase, Boeing can only hope that the world agrees with the sentiment expressed in a text message posted to the giant video board that attendees could watch the festivities on:"There are airplanes that are 747s, and there are airplanes that wish they were 747s."


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суббота, 12 февраля 2011 г.

Wael Ghonim: A 'one-off' for Silicon Valley?

Wael Ghonim

(Credit:CBS)

Wael Ghonim, theGoogle product managerwho helped pull together the popular demonstrations that forced Hosni Mubarak to step down as Egypt's president, is the hero of the hour. But not everywhere. For many in Silicon Valley, he's their worst nightmare.

On the record, Google's not talking about Ghonim or the question of employee activism. For his part, Ghonim told CBS's Katie Couric inan interviewon Friday that his participation in the protests had no connection with his employer.

"They did not know anything about this and actually when I took the time off and I went to Cairo, they did not know I was going to the protest,"he said."But when everything became public, I talked with the company and they suggested that I take a leave of absence and I also suggested that to them and I think it was a good decision for that. Google has nothing to do with this."

Asked whether he planned to return to the office, Ghonim said that he'd be honored to return to Google"if I'm not fired."

Maybe that was meant as a tongue-in-cheek comment. But there's a larger truth behind his quip. The key role played by one of Google's key executives in the Middle East revived a decades-old dilemma that many other technology companies face when it comes to the question of political activism: where should they draw the line?

"It's one of those things that companies don't want to touch with a 10-foot pole,"a tech public relations exec told me on background.

The obvious truth du jour is that tech companies don't want to take political positions--even when regimes use their products to oppress their own people.

This isn't the first time the issue has stirred this debate in the tech industry. In the 1980s, the divestiture movement pressured American companies to cut their business ties with South Africa's apartheid regime. One by one, nearly every major U.S. tech company eventually left. The one notable exception was IBM, which argued that its policy of constructive engagement would give it more leverage with the South African government to treat black citizens more fairly. It's hard to say how many of the departing companies were spurred by demands for social justice. Most, it's fair to say, were trying to stay ahead of a political movement that threatened to take a toll on their bottom lines.

For the most part, tech execs are just like their colleagues in other industries in their efforts to try and steer clear of political controversy. This has not always been easy. In the last decade, technology companies have struggled with the question of whether to demand more flexibility from China on human rights and Internet censorship. This has sometimes turned into a political issue. A few years ago, Yahoo turned over information to China authorities which led to the jailing and conviction of a local journalist. (Yahoo was subsequentlypilloried in prime timeby a Congressional panel.) So far, most tech companies--with the notable exception of Google--have opted to go with the flow and not press publicly for change as a condition of selling technology to China.

If we were talking about plastics makers or fertilizer seed companies, none of this would create a stir. But the American counterculture had a strong influence on the nascent computer and software industries which blossomed in the aftermath of the 1960s. In"What the Dormouse Said: How the 60s Counterculture Shaped the Personal Computer,"John Markoff does a nice job tracing those unique social and intellectual filaments connecting today's tech world to a broader conception of a corporation's responsibility. The book documents how the industry was created with the help of passionate people who wore their social conscience on their sleeves.

Fast forward and thus, the subsequent"Do No Evil"mantra from Google--it may sound kooky to the rest of corporate America, but the slogan resonates, at least with many in the rank and file. It also opens up a Pandora's box--this time, it's Ghonim, maybe tomorrow an employee in Beijing. That's a possible scenario that few management teams in Silicon Valley are eager to confront.

Update at 5:51 p.m. PT Saturday:This tweet, for what it's worth, was posted midday today on the Google Twitter account with a link to this story:"We're incredibly proud of you, @Ghonim,&of course will welcome you back when you're ready - cf."

This story first appeared onCBSNews.com.


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пятница, 11 февраля 2011 г.

Inside Microsoft's science fair

The .NET Gadgeteer snaps a photo of Microsoft's Channel9 mascot.

The .NET Gadgeteer snaps a photo of Microsoft's Channel 9 mascot.

(Credit:Josh Lowensohn/CNET)

REDMOND, WA.--It would seem to be just another day here on Microsoft's campus. In one building thenext version of Windowsis being built in secret, and in another thenext version of Office. But this day is a little different from the rest. In a closed off auditorium, a gathering of Microsoft employees are showing off their latest science projects.

Most may never see the light of day, but some could go onto to become real products, or at least features in products of the future. This is all a part of what Microsoft calls its"science fair,"a event that takes place every six months or so, and looks a lot like--well--a science fair.

There are poster boards with glued on diagrams, candy to attract passers by, and a myriad computers running code cooked up during employee off-time. Microsoft's Research group holds a similar event on its main campus, and on its other campuses each year calledTechFest, which CNET hasvisitedin the past.

The event itself is hosted and funded by"The Garage,"a group within Microsoft that acts as an incubator for technology implementations dreamed up by its employees. Anyone can come to The Garage with their idea in the hopes of getting others to collaborate on it with them, or get it realized with the group's resources, which include both engineering and technical know-how. The idea behind the fair is to get some of those ideas out there, as well as for groups to possibly come together and collaborate on projects of an even grander scale.

During today's fair I get to see just three of 50 exhibits that make up the fair. The first is made by four employees and called"Human Beatbox."It makes use of Microsoft's hit Kinect peripheral and its skeletal tracking and depth sensing prowess to turn your body into a giant input device that can punch or kick beats from a virtual set of drums, keyboards and cymbals. There's even a hip hop mode where your flailing arm can simulate a record scratch.

The Human Beatbox project makes use of Kinect to let users hit virtual instruments with their hands and feet.

The Human Beatbox project makes use of Kinect to let users hit virtual instruments with their hands and feet.

(Credit:Josh Lowensohn/CNET)

Alongside the play area, where co-creator George Perantatos (who also happens to be a senior program manager for Office Labs) is hitting the virtual instruments, is a secondary display showing users what the Kinect is seeing--complete with working skeleton tracking that people on the side can watch in real time.

The second exhibit is one that's actually on its way to being a real consumer-facing service through Microsoft's Office Labs site. Called"seamless desktop,"this software tool lets you connect the mouse and keyboard together from multiple machines, and send that information in the cloud. The idea is nothing new per se, with consumer products likeSynergyandMaxiVistathat can do the same trick, but seamless desktop promises to scale beyond those products one day.

Seamless Desktop lets users share a single mouse, keyboard, and clipboard with multiple machines.

Seamless Desktop lets users share a single mouse, keyboard, and clipboard with multiple machines (click to enlarge)

(Credit:Josh Lowensohn/CNET)

Known internally as"magic mouse,"seamless desktop is currently used by around 10,000 Microsoft employees. Besides sharing the mouse and the keyboard, it has a few other tricks up its sleeve, like bringing your clipboard across machines--that includes any images, which come along for the ride. It's also got a neat feature, that CNET was told will probably be cut from the final shipping tool, that can automatically grab the latest photo from Bing.com, and turn it into your desktop background.

The third and final tool, called.NET Gadgeteeris one that fans ofBug Labs' Bugare likely to latch onto. The Gadgeteer is a small device with an ARM7 processor and a logic board full of ports that users can plug various devices into, in order to change the kinds of things it can do. The technology itself is a collaboration between Microsoft Research and .NET guru Colin Miller, and has been shown in public before in places likeMaker Faire.

Today the device is being hooked up with a small display in one of the plugs, with a camera module being plugged into the other. With that combination, you suddenly have a camera. With different accessories, you can turn that same board into a security camera, and a Wi-Fi controlled robot with wheels. The idea is to let developers, and enthusiasts alike ways to come up with their own add-ons, and find new creations that can take advantage of the platform's extensibility, while making use of Microsoft's own tools like Visual Studio.

Like any science fair, there is a judging panel, which deems one of the displays a winner. Microsoft employees who attended the three hour open house were also able to put in their nominations for their favorite product. What does the winner ultimately get? A sticker to put up on their office door or cubicle wall, as well as the chance to grab some time with someone in Microsoft's senior leadership to pitch their idea into the makings of a future product or service. During today's fair, both the Gadgeteer and Seamless Desktop pick up the honors, winning the coveted"golden volcano"award, which CNET was told is not actually a volcano or made out of gold.

Microsoft's next big science fair, TechFest, happens in March, and will include demos from Microsoft's research teams around the world.


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четверг, 10 февраля 2011 г.

Shoot! Camera excised from back of prof's head

Wafaa Bilal

A body modification artist in a Los Angeles tattoo shop installed the camera system in Bilal's head.

(Credit:Brad Farwell)

ProfessorWafaa Bilalhasn't been feeling so well lately. And it's no wonder. His body hasn't been entirely accommodating of the camera he hadimplanted in the back of his headto take photos of what's going on behind his back.

So, for now at least, he's had part of it surgically removed.

That might be a relief to those who found themselves walking behind the NYU arts professor/cyborg and staring disconcerted at a strange dime-size contraption jutting out from his skull.

Bilal had the shooter installed last year as part of a project called"The 3rd I."For the past couple of months, it has spontaneously captured images at a rate of one per minute, wirelessly transmitting them via laptop to a Web site for public viewing, as well as to monitors in an installation at Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art in Qatar.

But according to theChronicle of Higher Education, Bilal's body rejected part of the camera's apparatus, one of three posts between his skin and skull that held the digital camera in place.

Antibiotics and steroids didn't ease the discomfort, the Chronicle reported, so last week Bilal had to resort to surgery to remove part of the system that had been put in place by a Los Angeles body modification artist.

He does not, however, view the lens-ectomy as the end of the 3rd I project, which he describes as an attempt to objectively (without the direction of hands and eyes) document his life. Once his wound heals, he may try implanting a different, more skull-friendly cam, but for now, he'll just tie the camera to the back of his neck.

The 3rd I headcam, the Iraqi-born professor says in an artist's statement,"arises from a need to objectively capture my past as it slips behind me from a non-confrontational point of view."He says he is left with only ephemeral memories of his journey from Iraq to Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and the U.S., and wishes he could have better recorded his experiences.

This isn't Bilal's first provocative fusion of technology and the arts, however. In 2007, hemounted a video installationcalled"Domestic Tension"that invited the public to log on toWafaaBilal.comto splatter the artist with paint using arrow icons to maneuver a remote-control paintgun. The Iraqi-born artist said he viewed the constant assaults as a metaphor for the danger and confinement his family and others face back home.

An image captured by Bilal's implanted headcam. The artist says he wants to objectively document his daily life.

(Credit:Wafaa Bilal's head, via 3rdi.me)


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вторник, 8 февраля 2011 г.

Wikileaks hearing set in dispute over Twitter data

A federal judge in Virginia has set a hearing for next week in a high-profile case that will decide whether the U.S. Justice Department can obtain records about the Twitter accounts used by Wikileaks activists.

The hearing, scheduled for February 15 in Alexandra, Va., is expected to focus on whether the Justice Department has the legal justification for its request for the account details, and whether the almost-entirely-secret court records in this case should be made available for public viewing.

As CNET previously reported, federal prosecutors obtained a court order directing Twitter to turn over information about the accounts of activists with ties to Wikileaks, including Icelandic politician Birgitta Jonsdottir, legendary Dutch hacker and entrepreneur Rop Gonggrijp, and U.S. computer programmer Jacob Appelbaum. It also covers"subscriber account information"for Bradley Manning, the U.S. Army private charged with leaking classified information and Wikileaks frontman Julian Assange.

Lawyers for Jonsdottir, Gonggrijp, and Appelbaum have jointly filed a motion with the Virginia court -- it and their other motions were unsealed today -- arguing that the Justice Department's request should be slapped down."There can be no reasonable basis for finding that the information sought here regarding the parties' Twitter accounts is both 'relevant' and 'material' to an ongoing investigation,"they wrote, saying that their clients also use Twitter for political and personal discussions unrelated to Wikileaks.

The U.S. government began an criminal investigation of Wikileaks and Assange last July after the Web site began releasing what would become a deluge of confidential military and State Department files. In November, Attorney General Eric Holder said that the probe is"ongoing,"and a few weeks later an attorney for Assange said he had been told that a grand jury had been empaneled in Alexandria, Va. Possible criminal charges include violations of the Espionage Act.

The order sent to Twitter initially was signed and kept under seal by U.S. Magistrate Judge Theresa Buchanan in Alexandria, Va. on December 14, and gave the social networking site three days to comply. It was eventually unsealed on January 5. But many of the key documents in this case, including, oddly, the Justice Department's original request remain off-limits.

That's also unacceptable, attorneys for the Wikileaks activists have argued in a separate motion asking that the documents be available to the public. Their joint brief says the"sealed materials are of immense public interest,"and requests that"all documents relating to the Twitter order"and similar orders sent to any other companies be unsealed as well. Despite speculation, no other company has confirmed receiving such a request.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation and the ACLU are representing Jonsdottir. The law firm Keker and Van Nest is representing Appelbaum. John Cline represents Gonggrijp.

A wide-ranging court order

Buchanan's order isn't a traditional subpoena. Rather, it's what's known as a 2703(d) order, which allows police to obtain certain records from a Web site or Internet provider if they are"relevant and material to an ongoing criminal investigation."The 2703(d) order is broad. It requests any"contact information"associated with the accounts from November 1, 2009 to the present,"connection records, or records of session times and durations,"and"records of user activity for any connections made to or from the account,"including Internet addresses used.

While it was unclear whether or not the original order requested the contents of communications, such as direct messages, the attorneys for the Wikileaks volunteers indicated that's no longer an issue.

Buchanan's original order from December directed Twitter not to disclose"the existence of the investigation"to anyone, but that gag order was lifted last month. Twitter's law enforcement guidelines say"our policy is to notify users of requests for their information prior to disclosure."

Jonsdottir was a close ally of Assange and supported efforts to turn the small north Atlantic nation into a virtual data haven. But after Assange became embroiled in allegations of sexual assault, which have led to the Swedish government attempting to extradite him from the U.K., Jonsdottir said the organization should find a spokesman who's not such a controversial figure.

"Wikileaks should have spokespeople that are conservative and not strong persons, rather dull, so to speak, so that the message will be delivered without the messenger getting all the attention,"Jonsdottir said at the time. Although she said she did not believe the allegations, she suggested that Assange step aside, which he did not do.


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понедельник, 7 февраля 2011 г.

Ken Olsen, founder of DEC, dead at 84

Ken Olsen, co-founder of the defining technology company of a bygone era, Digital Equipment Corporation, has died. He was 84.

DEC co-founder Ken Olsen

DEC co-founder Ken Olsen

(Credit:Gordon College)

A spokeswoman forGordon Collegein Massachusetts, where Olsen was a trustee and prominent donor, confirmed Monday evening Twitter reports of his death on Sunday. Olsen's company dominated the minicomputer era of the tech industry from the 1960s through the 1980s with thePDPandVAXseries computers, and was a key part of the famed Route 128 technology corridor just outside Boston, along with companies like Data General and Wang.

"Ken Olsen is in the elite club of tech founders w/Gates&Jobs, and set the stage for them. What he did we take for granted today,"wrote Dan Bricklin, co-creator of the landmark VisiCalc spreadsheet software, former DEC employee and fellow New Englander,on his Twitter feed.

Olsen led DEC--later to wind up as part of Compaqand then Hewlett-Packard--during an era in which computing advanced from huge expensive room-sized mainframes produced by companies like IBM to what were called minicomputers, although they were enormous refrigerator-sized cabinets. They were, however, a much more affordable alternative to mainframes and ushered in an era in which computing grew to dominate back-office functions in even small businesses.

Olsen's PDP computers kick-started the era, and later on DEC's VAX machines, powered by the VMS operating system, became nearly ubiquitous, supporting a company that at one point employed over 100,000 people. The company was the starting point for many an East Coast technology worker, and Olsen was known for a management style that encouraged autonomy and responsibility.

"Ken was brilliant, bold, incredibly lucky, impossibly successful, clearly flawed, and delightfully unique. Of all the companies that stood in opposition to IBM in the '70s and '80s, his stood tallest and straightest,"Jonathan Eunice, principal advisor at Illuminata anda CNET Blog Network contributor, wrote in an e-mail.

DEC's decline in the early 1990s came as minicomputers were squeezed by powerful Unix and RISC servers and eaten away at the low end by PCs. Olsen famously once said"there is not reason for any individual to have a computer in his home,"which has been cited as an example of DEC's myopia butappears to have been taken out of contextover the years.

DEC did, however, squander its position near the summit of the tech industry with infighting and indecision as smaller and more powerful computers arrived, taking Boston's role as a technology hub along with it as the tech industry headed west to Silicon Valley. The company tried to regain prominence as a chipmakerwith the Alpha processor in the 90s, but despite Alpha's technical prowess it was never a big seller. The technology wound up as part of Intel's Itanium chip--also not a big seller--through partnerships between Intel, Compaq, and HP.

Gordon College is home to the Ken Olsen Science Center and is the curator of his archives. Friends, colleagues, and well-wishers are being invited to submit remembrances of Olsenhere on Gordon's site.


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воскресенье, 6 февраля 2011 г.

Civil servant fired for googling, um, 'chest'

Men, sometimes, cannot help themselves. This, it seems, includes civil servants.

I am moved to this dour view of life by the case of an Australian civil servant who took his government-issued laptop home.

The Sydney Morning Herald tells the taleof this man, a senior government employee, who, once at home, chose to google the word"knockers".

This, for those of you not influenced by English colloquialisms, is a pejorative word used by little English boys to refer to women's chests.

Unfortunately, the Australian Government has in its employ a program calledSpector360, which tends to come down hard on, its Web site proudly declares,"all employee Internet and desktop activity whether they are in the office, traveling or working remotely on both Windows orMacOS."

This official, a 25-year veteran, works at the Department of Resources, Energy and Tourism. Or should I say, worked. For he was fired after Spector360 discovered his slightly rude search.

Surely governments can allow their staff a little online downtime.

(Credit:Chris Matyszczyk/CNET)

You might have thought that the official decided to argue that he was merely investigating the limits of energy and tourism resources in Australia.

But, no. Instead, he reportedly argued that Spector360 was a gross invasion of his privacy. Or, perhaps, an invasion of his gross privacy.

He said that the pornography he had downloaded was legal, that he was using his own personal Internet connection, and that the laptop had been given for his personal, as well as public, use.

There was, moreover, no evidence that anyone else had seen the result of his googling.

The judge found for the government. He reportedly said that the civil servant knew about Spector360. He was also troubled that, initially, the civil servant had claimed the pornographic download was, um, accidental.

But, he also offered an alluring glimpse of promise to others who might inadvertently (or not) use work computers for domestic relaxation.

For the judge, perhaps sighing deeply, reportedly said:"Some might think that the resources of the commonwealth could be much better utilized on activities apart from the zealous pursuit {of the public servant} over something he did in his own home which was not against the law."

Some might interpret this as meaning:"Look, these cases are stupid. People are people. I don't want to be the one who tells the government and corporations to lay off, but hopefully another judge will. Thank you. I am going home now to surf the Web on my own very personal computer."


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пятница, 4 февраля 2011 г.

Microsoft eases procurement of WP7 dev phones

Windows Phone logo

Microsoft is trying to make it easier for any developer to get their hands onWindows Phone 7devices for building and testing applications.

Ina blog postthis afternoon detailing some of today'spreviously announced updatesto the Windows Phone Developer Tools, Brandon Watson, who is Microsoft's director of developer relations, said that the company had partnered withZones.comto let developers buy Windows Phone 7 devices without a voice or data contract.

The phones, which run the gamut from $500 to $525, include HTC's HD7 and Surround, along with the Samsung Focus come carrier locked, though can be had without venturing to a carrier, or third-party retail site to make the purchase.

In the past Microsoft has made a concerted effort toget devices into developer hands, even before the official launch. That includes last year's Professional Developers Conference where all paid attendees were given phones following the keynote, a week ahead of the U.S launch. That said, to get additional or replacement devices, Microsoft had been encouraging developers to go through carriers, where contract strings were attached.

Updated numbers
Along with that news, Watson also provided an update to the number of developers and apps within its library, and there have been noted improvements in just a week's time.

Microsoft now says the number of registered Windows Phone developers is 27,000, up from the 24,000 metric the company had cited just a week ago. Those developers have also bumped up the number of apps on Microsoft's Windows Phone Marketplace to"more than 7,500"marking an increase of 1,000 apps in a week's time.

To put both these metrics side-by-side, and over time since the launch of the device, here's what things look like using data Microsoft has provided over the past several months:

Microsoft has yet to provide concrete numbers on overall app downloads, though during thecompany's CES keynote, CEO Steve Ballmer said that more than half of Windows Phone 7 users were downloading a new application every day. By comparison, competitor Apple announced that it hadtopped 10 billion application downloadsin its less than three year old App Store last month.


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