6 Feb 2010

Hugo Chávez Speaks Out Against Twitter Terrorists

The Internet is making it harder for dictators around the world to go about their daily business. Mass deception, control of the media, absolute power, that sort of thing. From Italy to China and, indeed, Australia, the people in power are finding it increasingly harder to control the flow of information. The poster child for the social web revolution is none other than Twitter and, while its actual impact on the life of those oppressed may be exaggerated, it at least focuses the world's attention to the places that need it the most. This week's fashionable country in need was Venezuela and the #freevenezuela hashtag was a trending topic for much of the week. President Hugo Chávez, as you can imagine, wasn't thrilled.

Actually, he's downright furious that the terrorists threatening the country's stability and economic growth would turn to such capitalist tools as Twitter. He became increasingly disgruntled with anything having to do with social networks and the Internet as a whole and says that using any online medium to criticize his, elected, rule over Venezuela is nothing short of terrorism.

It looks like Chávez is taking at least one lesson from the US government, for which he doesn't have the kindest words on most occasions, 'when in doubt, blame terrorism'. The speech comes after increasing tensions in Venezuela have resulted in street violence. A couple of weeks ago the president ordered the shut down of five cable TV stations which refused to air his speeches. This set off a wave of protests in the country which have been met with violence from the police.

Students protesters are increasingly turning to Twitter to organize and spread news and Chávez is fearing this may turn into another Iran situation. His plan is now to regulate the Internet in the same way he does the local media, attempting to stop any sort of negative commentary about his rule. Whether or not he succeeds remains to be seen, but as Internet censorship is becoming increasingly popular in, seemingly, democratic countries it's not too hard to imagine him pulling it off.

Toshiba's Viamo Heads to the Hospital

Convertible tablets with radiology features have been seeing increasing adoption in the healthcare department, because of their functionality and lower cost compared to cart systems. Toshiba has just recently finished putting the final touches on one such device. Known as the Viamo laptop ultrasound system, the tablet brings the aforementioned radiology capabilities to hand-carried systems and has an image quality in no way lower than that of larger and more expensive ultrasound systems.
The device was introduced at the 2009 Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) annual meeting and not only brings the aforementioned benefits, but it can even allow the conducting of medical exams at bedside, such as emergency, OB/GYN, vascular, pediatric and general radiology. It boasts “ Best-in-class imaging capabilities in a laptop size” so that it can image, for instance, the anastomoses during a liver transplant, in order for the medical personnel to assess blood flow through the vessels.

“The Viamo combines the portability of a laptop system with advanced radiology features to deliver outstanding image quality, enhance diagnostic confidence and improve ease of use. Developed from a radiology foundation, Toshiba’s Viamo provides the confidence to image patients at bedside, which generally requires larger, more expensive cart-based systems,” the press release explains.

The device's touchscreen interface makes the Viamo easy to use, as does the ability to interchange Toshiba transducers when using the transportation pole. This last feature improves productivity and flexibility while reducing costs, as customers can use their existing Toshiba transducers on the Viamo. Conversely, Viamo transducers will be usable in future Toshiba ultrasound systems.

“The Viamo is specifically designed to provide advanced radiology capabilities in a portable system, creating more comfortable exams for patients,” said Girish Hagan, vice president, Marketing, Toshiba. “Providing the best value in the hand-carried segment, the Viamo delivers high-quality images for numerous clinical applications.”

The price is still unknown, but the Viamo should become available in the United States shortly, considering that it has gained FDA approval. More information may be found on the product page.

Apple Seeds Mac OS X 10.6.3 Build 10D548 to Developers

Apple has seeded a new test build of Mac OS X 10.6.3 to developers, asking them to focus their skills on five areas when testing their applications, adding 9 enhancements, and removing any currently known issues, according to World of Apple. Labeled 10D548, the latest Snow Leopard build lists no known issues - a sign that development is coming along.

Mac OS X 10.6.3 10D548 comes on the heels of build 10D538, issued last month with a weight of 660MB. The update included significant enhancements to QuickTime X, while also improving printing and Logic performance, according to a report by AppleInsider. In the meantime, World of Apple was able to get its hands on the seed notes, further shedding light on the matter. This time is no different, with the latter being able to produce the precious notes revealing all the areas Apple is focusing on in Mac OS X 10.6.3, the third incremental update to its Snow Leopard operating system. The seed notes for build 10D548, as provided by World of Apple, have been reproduced below.


Included in this update
Performance improvements for 64-bit Logic
Addresses compatibility issues with OpenGL-based applications
Includes changes to QuickTime X that increase reliability, improve compatibility and address security.
Improves printing reliability and compatibility with 3rd party printers
Respects the DNS server ordering as specified in Network Preferences
Addresses an issue that causes background message colors to display incorrectly in Mail when scrolling
Resolves an issue that prevented files with the # or & in their names from opening in Rosetta
Resolves an issue that prevented files from copying to Windows shares
Resolves an issue that caused machines using BTMM and the Bonjour Sleep Proxy to wake unexpectedly

Known Issues
none

Focus Areas
AirPort
GraphicsDrivers
iCal
QuickTime
Printing



In January, beta testers said that the public release of OS X 10.6.3 was around three weeks away. If still accurate, these claims should indicate that Apple will issue the latest Snow Leopard maintenance update as early as next week.

YouTube Officially Announces IPv6 Support

YouTube quietly rolled out IPv6 support last week and has been deploying it across the site throughout this week. The video site has now made it official by announcing that YouTube is currently streaming videos over IPv6 through the networks that support the protocol. It marks a significant point in IPv6 adoption as YouTube is one of the largest websites to deploy support for the protocol and one of the most heavily trafficked sites on the planet.

"Since the very first announcement of ipv6.google.com, we have been committed to supporting IPv6 and have steadily added IPv6 support to more and more services. The service most requested to have IPv6 support has unquestionably been YouTube," Lorenzo Colitti, network engineer and IPv6 samurai (official title!) and Steinar H. Gunderson, software engineer and IPv6 mercenary (this one too), both working at Google, wrote.

"Given all of this, we're proud to make YouTube available over IPv6 and to begin streaming videos from a select number of sites worldwide to our Google over IPv6 partners. With YouTube on board, we now have a significant amount of content delivered on IPv6 and a real audience/traffic for it," they added.

For the regular users, it's likely not going to mean that much if anything at all. There aren't any tangible benefits to using IPv6 over the wide-spread IPv4 and most people aren't even going to be able to take advantage of the move as many ISPs don't support IPv6 yet. The reason why this is important doesn't have anything to do with the user, at least not directly, but with the health of the Internet as a whole.

Currently, all (most) devices to the Internet get a unique address to identify them among the billion others. The current system, based on the fourth revision of the Internet Protocol (IPv4), uses a 32-bit address and has served the Internet for decades. The problem is that we're quickly running out of addresses to hand out to new devices and, at the current growth rate, they'll all be gone very soon. There are some solutions to overcome this, NAT for example, but they cause more problems than they solve.

The solution is to switch to the new IPv6 revision which uses 128-bit addresses resulting in a very, very large cushion for growth. Most companies, though, have been slow to make the switch, partly because it wasn't a strict necessity yet. In a chicken-versus-egg type problem, with now real amount of traffic over IPv6, ISPs didn't have any incentive to deploy support and with no ISP support, most sites didn't make the switch either. With YouTube on board, things should really start moving.

Mozilla yanks infected add-ons, warns users

Mozilla on Friday pulled two programs from its Firefox browser add-on site for containing malware. Sothink Web Video Downloader 4.0 and all versions of Master Filer were found to contain Trojan horse code aimed at Windows users.

In a blog post, Mozilla stated that the Master Filer add-on was able to bypass AMO's security tests.

Mozilla user CatThief discovered the threat, it said. And when Mozilla added two more security checks to its vetting process and rescanned its entire catalog, it discovered that version 4 of the Sothink Web Video Downloader also contained a Trojan horse program. Sothink Web Video Downloader contained Win32.LdPinch.gen, and Master Filer contained Win32.Bifrose.32.Bifrose.

Master Filer was removed from Mozilla's Firefox add-on site on January 25, and the Sothink video downloader was removed on Tuesday. CNET Download.com ceased hosting the Sothink add-on on Friday before noon.

Sothink Web Video Download 5.5.90819 had been a mildly popular Firefox add-on at Download.com, receiving 697 downloads in the past week and 63,716 downloads since it was first added to the site in June 2007.

Because the Trojan horse programs are tied to Firefox, Mozilla warns, host computers won't be infected until Firefox started. Uninstalling either add-on is only part of the solution, if the infection has already attacked the host computer. Mozilla recommends that users who suspect that they are infected use one of the following security applications to sweep and clean their computers after uninstalling the threatening add-on:

  • Antiy-AVL
  • Avast
  • AVG
  • GData
  • Ikarus
  • K7 AntiVirus
  • McAfee
  • Norman
  • VBA32
  • Infected users should note that only Avast and AVG are free.

    Mozilla did not immediately respond to requests for comment. We'll update this post as we learn more.

    Oracle signals change of tone about cloud

    Software heavyweight Oracle's acquisition of Sun Microsystems

    has (and will have) a wide impact on the technology market.

    Oracle's strategy of targeting an "all in one" relationship with its customers--providing hardware, software, and services--is something to which the rest of the high-technology industry will have to pay close attention. Modeling yourself after the "IBM of the 1960s" is not a bad target, especially when you consider market share.

    However, when it comes to cloud computing, Oracle has taken a fairly "arm's length" position. CEO Larry Ellison's famous "cloud is fashion" rant sort of set the tone for the company's perceived skepticism toward the cloud model.

    Apparently, that's all about to change. According to TechTarget, Oracle is preparing a public-relations onslaught, intended to change the perception of Oracle as cloud critic. According to the article, in the Webcast Oracle hosted last week to discuss its strategy for the Sun assets, Ellison explained:

    Said Ellison: "Everything's called cloud now. If you're in the data center, it's a private cloud. There's nothing left but cloud computing. People say I'm against cloud computing--how can I be against cloud computing when that's all there is?"

    He also stressed what will doubtless become another key Oracle message, which is that Oracle software (and soon hardware) powers other people's clouds.

    That statement says a lot about the behavior we've seen from Oracle over the last year, especially with respect to the Sun acquisition. When originally announced, I suggested to some that Oracle would shed the hardware business, and concentrate on the virtualization and cloud capabilities (as well as the customer base and channels) that they acquired.

    I was wrong. Instead, Oracle seems to be focusing on Sun's infrastructure portfolio, including servers, storage, and virtualization, shedding the cloud offerings altogether.

    Sun's chief technology officer of cloud computing, Lew Tucker, has already left Oracle, and this week, there are reports that Oracle executives have confirmed the demise of Sun's reborn Network.com offering. The service, once hosted in the Las Vegas-based SuperNAP data center, was taken off the market soon after it went to beta testing, as Oracle announced its intent to acquire Sun.

    The now-defunct cloud infrastructure service was a replacement for Sun's earlier failed grid offering of $1 per CPU-hour, and it was targeted at developers looking to create new applications and businesses expressly for the cloud. The service was acclaimed by a number of developers that had a chance to use it, and it is reported to have hosted 13 customers and 48 applications before its demise.

    Without an infrastructure service of its own, Oracle seems to be taking a tack with which I'm quite familiar, given my role at Cisco Systems: being an arms dealer to the stars of cloud computing. Ellison mentioned Oracle's role in Salesforce.com and iTunes during last week's Webcast, and it has been offering its database software on Amazon.com's Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) service for well more than a year.

    What remains to be seen is what, exactly, Oracle will offer the cloud world. Based on Ellison's tone, it may be playing a "business as usual" game, with the obvious addition of data center hardware to its portfolio. In fact, some evidence supports this direction, as Oracle recently presented a cloud vision in a Webinar that claims, among other things, that Oracle already has a "private PaaS," or platform as a service, portfolio based on its existing application server, database, Linux, and virtualization products.

    However, with the Sun acquisition, Oracle received one of the best open-source virtualization offerings out there, as well as a variety of cloud computing-related software (including the Q-Layer automation platform). Will it offer a private cloud user experience of its own?

    In the end, Ellison's love-hate relationship with the term "cloud computing" may provide a short-term PR challenge, but it will likely do little to damage the impact of Oracle's products on the cloud-computing landscape.

    Facebook's photo uploader gets an overhaul too

    Hot on the heels of a visual face-lift, Facebook on Friday announced that the prototype version of its photo uploader, which was introduced in mid-November of last year, will soon be rolling out to all users.

    Unlike the existing version of Facebook's photo uploader, the new uploader requires the installation of a browser plug-in. This inconvenience is rewarded with the option to leave Facebook entirely, while the photos continue to upload in the background. Previously, users would have had to leave that window or page running while the uploader did its magic.

    Facebook also said the new uploader supports a few extra photo formats, though it did not specify which ones. The company has, for some time now, had unofficial support for a handful of alternate formats, including raw images. However, on its official spec sheet the company says only .jpg, .gif, .bmp, and .png files will work.

    Facebook currently gets 2.5 billion photo uploads per month. To put that in perspective, the company hit the 10 billion mark in October of 2008, a whole three years after first introducing the photo-sharing feature in 2005. In other words, any small change that makes it easier for people to get their photos onto the social network could end up having a big effect on how fast Facebook's photo collection will continue to grow.

    If you can't wait for Facebook to activate the uploader on your account, you can do it yourself. Just head over to Facebook's prototype page, and turn it on.

    Feds still troubled by Google's digital book deal

    SAN FRANCISCO – The U.S. Justice Department still thinks a proposal to give Google the digital rights to millions of hard-to-find books threatens to stifle competition and undermine copyright laws, despite revisions aimed at easing those concerns.

    The opinion filed Thursday in New York federal court is a significant setback in Google's effort to win approval of a 15-month-old legal settlement that would put the Internet search leader in charge of a vast electronic library and store.

    A diverse mix of Google rivals, consumer watchdogs, academic experts, literary agents, state governments and even foreign governments have already urged U.S. District Judge Denny Chin to reject the agreement.

    The Justice Department's perspective presumably will carry more weight with Chin, given its position as the chief U.S. law enforcement agency.

    In its 26-page brief, the Justice Department praised the revised settlement for making "substantial progress" since it objected to the original agreement in September.

    But the government advised Chin that the agreement still oversteps the legal boundaries of a class-action settlement, describing the proposal as "a bridge too far." The Justice Department also raised concerns that Google's partnership with the participating U.S. publishers could turn into a literary cartel that would wield too much power over book prices.

    "The United States believes that the court lacks authority to approve" the settlement in its current form, the government's lawyers wrote.

    The filing also asserted that the modified agreement doesn't adequately protect the copyrights and financial interests of "orphan works" — out-of-print books whose writers' whereabouts are unknown.

    Despite its misgivings, the Justice Department urged the parties to take another stab at making changes that would eliminate its legal concerns. The department provided a list of recommendations on how to achieve that.

    In a statement, Google spokesman Gabriel Stricker gave no indication whether the company and other settling parties are willing to amend the agreement again.

    "The Department of Justice's filing recognizes the progress made with the revised settlement, and it once again reinforces the value the agreement can provide in unlocking access to millions of books in the U.S.," Stricker said.

    Chin has scheduled a Feb. 18 hearing to consider approving the class-action settlement.

    Consumer Watchdog, one of the groups fighting the settlement, applauded the Justice Department for taking a stand against a deal "that unfairly benefits the narrow agenda of one company."

    But a former policy director for the Federal Trade Commission lashed out at the Justice Department and predicted Chin would approve the settlement.

    "The DOJ's view is clouded by taking a microscopic and static view of an incredibly dynamic marketplace," said David Balto, now a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, a think tank.

    The government's antitrust concerns extend beyond the settlement's potential for driving up book prices. Thursday's filings also pointed out that the deal could make Google's search engine even more dominant by giving it a digital database of books built up largely by ignoring copyright laws.

    "Content that can be discovered by only one search engine offers that search engine some protection from competition," the Justice Department wrote. "This outcome has not been achieved by a technological advance in search or by operation of normal market forces; rather, it is the direct product of scanning millions of books without the copyright holders' consent."

    Google already processes about two-thirds of the search requests in the United States, an advantage that led the company to rake in $79 billion in revenue during the past five years — mostly from short ads posted alongside search results and other Web content.

    That success has emboldened Google to make digital copies of more than 12 million books during the past five years, it has shown only snippets from most of them while trying to revolve a class-action lawsuit filed in 2005 by groups representing U.S. authors and publishers. The suit alleged Google's book-scanning project trampled their intellectual rights.

    A $125 million truce reached in October 2008 has remained in a holding pattern while Google tried to notify the affected parties and overcome staunch resistance to the deal. Some of the most strident opponents have been Google rivals, including Microsoft Corp., Amazon.com Inc. and Yahoo Inc.

    The agreement also has prominent supporters, including college libraries, publishing groups and Sony Corp., which wants to tap into Google's digital book index to feed its own electronic reader, which is competing against Amazon.com's Kindle.

    Tweaks made to the settlement in November were supposed to end the bickering.

    Among other things, the revisions provide more flexibility to offer discounts on electronic books and promise to make it easier for others to resell access to the electronic library.

    The changes also narrowed the settlement's scope so it would only apply to books registered with the U.S. copyright office or published in Canada, the United Kingdom or Australia.

    Nevertheless, the French and German governments still maintain the deal will infringe on the rights of writers in their countries. And groups representing authors in Japan, New Zealand, Germany, Austria, Switzerland and Italy remain opposed.

    Facebook removes Microsoft banner ads from site

    SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Facebook is taking full control of display ads on the world's No. 1 social networking website, cutting short an exclusive deal that had allowed Microsoft Corp

    to manage part of that business.

    However, Microsoft -- the exclusive provider of Web search on Facebook -- will continue to sell text-based search ads on the website as the partners extended the arrangement beyond 2011, when it had been due to expire. A Facebook spokesman declined to say how long the deal has been extended.

    Microsoft also said it will further integrate its Bing search engine into Facebook while expanding its reach beyond the United States.

    Facebook, which counts nearly 400 million users, said its own display ads feature interactive aspects and can target viewers based on their personal information, making them better suited to its social networking service than Microsoft's standard Web banner ads.

    "Ad formats that feature social actions perform better and provide a better user experience since they are more consistent with the look and feel of Facebook," the company said in a statement. "This combination of targeting and social relevance is the primary driver behind the shift in strategy."

    Facebook said it stopped displaying Microsoft banner ads in some international markets recently, and following additional talks with Microsoft, has agreed to stop running the banner ads across all of Facebook. The change will take place over the next 30 days.

    Facebook has long sold its own display ads on users' profile pages and other parts of the site, but the company allowed Microsoft to sell banner ads in certain sections of its website in 2006. The deal, which was extended in 2007, was supposed to run until 2011.

    A Facebook spokesperson would not provide details on whether the advertising deal with Microsoft entailed any revenue sharing agreement, or whether Facebook would pay Microsoft a fee for altering the deal early.

    The news comes as Facebook has increased its focus on its financial performance. In September, Facebook said it had become free cash flow positive -- meaning that the company makes enough money to cover the costs associated with running the service -- ahead of schedule.

    Microsoft said on its corporate blog on Friday that Web searches within Facebook will bring up information from Bing beyond just links to websites. Microsoft's search technology will be available on Facebook worldwide, instead of just the United States, it added.

    Facebook, which lets users connect and share information with friends online, has emerged as one of the Internet's most popular destinations and is increasingly challenging the Web's established powerhouses like Yahoo Inc and Google Inc.

    Microsoft invested $240 million in Facebook for a 1.6 percent stake in the company in October 2007.

    On Thursday, Facebook said it expected to reach 400 million active users of its site within the week, representing a gain of 50 million new users since December. The company also announced a new design to its homepage.

    Microsoft shares finished Friday's regular trading session up 18 cents at $28.02.

    Symbian OS now fully open source

    San Francisco – The Symbian Foundation will move forward on Thursday with offering up the full Symbian smartphone platform to open source.

    The Symbian 3 platform, including applications, middleware, and the kernel itself, will be offered under terms of the Eclipse Public License and other open source licenses. "You can download it, you can modify it," said Larry Berkin, head of global alliances for the foundation. Previously, the kernel was made available via open source.

    [ See InfoWorld's report on the new Symbian UI in the works to compete with the Apple iPhone and Google Android. ]

    "We're open-sourcing 108 packages that will be available at the source code level," Berkin said. Handset manufacturers can modify the code and build differentiated handsets, he said. Originally due to be fully open-sourced by June, foundation members accelerated the process, said Berkin. Code, more than 40 million lines of it, will be available at Symbian's Website at 6 a.m. Pacific Time.

    "End-users will see, ideally, differentiated devices, converged devices that are based on Symbian that range from smartphones [to converged devices]," such as cameras or a phone that is a gaming device, he said.

    Mobile 2.0 Deep Dive
    Open-sourcing possibly could result in incompatible, forked versions of the platform, Berkin said. Manufacturers will need to be responsible for their work with Symbian. The market can be self-correcting in situations such as this, he said.

    There are 330 million Symbian-based devices in use, according to Berkin. Five manufacturers currently build Symbian devices: Nokia, Samsung, Sony Ericsson, Fujitsu, and Sharp.

    Symbian technology had been driven by Symbian Limited, the majority of which was owned by Nokia, which then spun it out as an open source project.

    Putting Symbian into open source will boost the platform in the marketplace, said analyst William Stofega, program manager for mobile device technology and trends at IDC. "I think it's good for Nokia, and it's also good for Symbian in terms of its viability over all in terms of market share and being able to compete with the likes of Apple and Android and the others," he said.

    Also available for download are development kits for building Symbian applications and mobile devices. These include the Symbian Developer Kit and the Product Development Kit.

    In November 2009, Nokia put the Linux-based Maemo OS on its high-end N900 "mobile computer," which features a phone and capabilities like email, a Web browser, and video. But the company remains a backer of Symbian, Nokia representatives said.

    This story, "Symbian OS now fully open source," was originally published at InfoWorld.com. Follow the latest developments in mobile platforms at InfoWorld.com.

    Apple Bans Location-Based Ads for iPhone Apps

    Location-finding applications that give iPhone users information about weather, restaurants or traffic are fine. But if they give information to third parties for targeted advertising, the deal is off.

    That's the message Apple sent to developers this week. The computer giant posted a message on its Developer Connection blog encouraging its partners to use the core location framework, but only for programs that provide "beneficial information," such as the weather forecast or where to find ATMs.

    Back to the Drawing Board

    "If your app uses location-based information primarily to enable mobile advertisers to deliver targeted ads based on a user's location, your app will be returned to you by the App Store Review Team for modification before it can be posted to the App Store," Apple warned.

    The company didn't explain its position, and a call to Apple's media-relations center was not returned by publication time.

    "My internal optimist says they are trying to protect the users," says Jeff Burstein, program manager for Florida-based developer Mobile Applications. "My pessimistic side feels that Apple could be working on their own ad-delivery system for the mobile platform. Time will tell if altruism is their true motivation or just a way of keeping out the competition."

    Applications and advertising are increasingly joined at the hip, said Joe Berkowitz, founder of Interactive Moxie, a digital strategy and incubation company, and a consultant to media companies building and launching mobile apps.

    "Out of the three billion apps that have been downloaded from the App Store, the bulk of them are free. [The developers] are making money either by getting you to upgrade to the paid version or, in other cases, using AdMob to be able to market their other apps."

    But Berkowitz said it appears Apple's new developer policy is intended less for commercial gain than to screen out apps solely intended to target consumers for ads.

    "A contrarian methodology to the Android or Palm store where apps are not reviewed or approved, Apple's stance is to use their influence to protect and add value to a consumer's experience with their brands and products," Berkowitz said.

    Too Paternal?

    But Apple's muscle flexing could have unintended consequences. "It sort of positions consumers as ignorant, requiring Apple to take responsibility for their app safety," Berkowitz added. "My recommendation for folks wanting to utilize GPS within a device is to identify the 'secret sauce' of where a brand or company can provide consumers with unique benefit derived from location-based services."

    BIA/Kelsey predicted last year that the mobile-advertising industry would be a $3.1 billion industry by 2013, an 81.2 percent increase from 2008's 160 million.

    Since the iPhone is currently the most popular handheld in the U.S. today, estimated at four percent of the market in a December Nielsen study, Apple could have a considerable edge in ads targeting its users.

    Patents Pending

    Analysts and blogs have noted that Apple has applied for GPS-related patents for smartphone systems that would automatically display relevant apps based on the user's location and provide location data to people on both ends of a call to make it easier for them to meet.

    Last month Apple (AAPL) bought the mobile ad group Quattro Wireless in a deal estimated at between $275 million and $300 million. The company's clients include Ford, Microsoft, Walt Disney, Visa and Netflix.

    Google-inspired fashion makes debut

    SAN FRANCISCO (AFP) – Google has gone techno-chic, debuting fashion designs inspired by the Internet giant.

    An "old-fashioned magnifying glass pendant" priced at 200 dollars was for sale online at googlestore.com along with a 300-dollar knit scarf in the firm's trademark colors and "peace" T-shirts for 85 dollars each.

    The pieces were the work of emerging designers who last year were asked to come up with "one-of-a-kind" items inspired in some way by Google, whether it be the firm's colors, technology or mission.

    The designs resulted from an annual fund-raising event by fashion magazine Vogue and the Council of Fashion Designers of America (CFDA).

    "Last October, we transformed 10 of the finalists' designs into iGoogle Artists themes," Google product marketing manager Michaela Prescott said in a blog post, referring to the iGoogle personalized homepage that users can manipulate or design to their liking.

    "While we loved seeing fashion meet iGoogle, we wanted to see these pieces in person -- and wear them!"

    Google had its favorite designs customized for "a broader audience" and will have them available for purchase "for a limited time," according to Prescott. Proceeds will go to the Vogue/CFDA fund for nascent designers.

    "Search is at the heart of everything Google does," Waris Ahulwalia said of his inspiration for the sterling silver magnifying glass pendant.

    He crafted a "1" into the clasp of the pendant chain of 100 zero-shaped links to represent the "Googol" number on which the search engine's name is based.

    1 Feb 2010

    ExoPC Tablet Has Flash and Windows 7 Only available in prototype stage

    The recently launched iPad, previously known as the unannounced but hype-generating Apple Tablet, left a large variety of end-users with a bitter-sweet taste in their mouths after it finally came out. While the slate is cheap ($500) and is capable of a good performance when running iPhone apps, it has several downsides that already threaten its popularity. A runner-up in the nascent slate market is a device developed by ExoPC. This tablet, on the other hand, seems to possess everything that the iPad lacks.

    The iPad's inability to handle Adobe Flash content was perceived as the biggest drawback of Apple's new product, because it meant that the new device was incompatible with a very large number of websites. This, however, was not the only thing that the tablet lacked. The iPad also did not feature a webcam and USB connectivity. The ExoPC slate has all these features and even aesthetically resembles the iPad, though its insides are radically different.

    Only in prototype form for now, the ExoPC slate is powered by an Intel Atom N270 central processing unit with a clock frequency of 1.6GHz. It has 2GB of DDR2 memory, Intel GMA950 for graphics, 32GB of storage space (provided by a solid state drive) and even an SD expansion. The product will be running Windows 7 and will have a user-replaceable battery, as its base option offers only four hours of life.

    This configuration seems to point at a somewhat slower performance compared with that of the iPad, but its functionality will definitely be superior. Its support of Flash allows it to view all web content and even act as a TV. Furthermore, by leveraging both the Flash and the multitouch screen, end-users will be able to enjoy a large variety of touch-based applications. This usability is supplemented by the presence of a 1.3-megapixel webcam (which the iPad lacks) and versatility is given by the presence of the USB connectivity (three ports in total).

    The ExoPC tablet will become available in March at a price of $599, quite competitive with the iPad considering the added functionality. Still, eager end-users may already acquire a non-multitouch prototype for $780.

    AT&T's Network Needs More Capacity for the iPad

    Last week, Cupertino-based Apple unveiled to the world its first tablet, the already widely known and commented upon iPad. The new device was announced to hit the market in the United States via the long term carrier partner for the company, none other than AT&T. The Apple iPhone is also available from AT&T, something that has created quite a few issues when it comes to the performance of the operator's network, and now another bandwidth hungry device joins it, the iPad, something that rises questions on the capability of AT&T's airwaves to withstand all the strain.

    Most of you might have learned already that AT&T's 3G network has been heavily criticized due to a great deal of issues its subscribers faced, including frequently dropped calls, slow download speeds, some network outages, and more. Metropolitan areas are those with most issues, such as New York and San Francisco, since they are more densely populated and the demand for 3G services is higher here. If the iPhone hasn't managed to put the network on its knees, though it was close to doing so occasionally, the launch of the iPad, coupled with the increasing number of iPhone users with AT&T, might just do so.

    On the other hand, the carrier says that it has in plan a great deal of enhancements to its network during the ongoing year. The company is reportedly gearing up for multi-billion spendings for increasing capacity and expanding coverage of its 3G network in 2010. Work on this direction has started since last year, when AT&T added 1,900 new cell sites to the network, expanded 3G coverage to 360 markets, and also started deploying spectrum in the 850MHz frequency bands, to strengthen its 3G signal. Moreover, it also announced HSPA 7.2 speeds available for its users, showing that it can keep up with the increasing demand for data connectivity.

    John Stankey, president and CEO of AT&T Operations, said recently, “We're very pleased to say that one of the 7.2-enabled devices that will have connectivity on our network is Apple's new iPad, which was unveiled yesterday. […] We're really excited about the device, and we work closely with Apple in planning for its connectivity on our network. AT&T is a natural fit for the iPad, given the combination of the ever-improving speed of our 3G network and our robust Wi-Fi capabilities. We have a thorough technical understanding, with a good read on the iPad's usage requirements and characteristics, and all that is included in our network plans for 2010.”

    Google Chrome 5.0 Is Not Tailored to Windows 7

    The most advanced developer milestone of Google Chrome is still not in tune with the latest iteration of the Windows client from Microsoft. While rival browser makers such as Opera and Mozilla have labored to adapt their products to Windows 7, at over three months since the platform became generally available, and after half a year since it was released to manufacturing, Google is choosing to ignore the operating system when it comes down to features specific of its GUI evolution. At the end of the past week, the Mountain View-based search giant made available Google Chrome 5.0.307.1, a release that does little to tailor the browser to Windows 7.

    “The devchannel has been updated to 5.0.307.1 for Windows & Mac. [Improvements for]Windows: use default downloads directory on Vista and Windows 7 (except where it is the desktop). Start work on Content Settings window and sub-dialogs,” revealed Orit Mazor, from the Google Chrome.

    More specifically, Chrome 5.0.307.1 offers no support for the Thumbnail Preview feature associated with Windows 7’s new Superbar (Taskbar), one of the main features introduced with the evolution of the operating system’s graphical user interface. At this point in time, both Opera 10.50 pre-Alpha and Firefox 3.6 play nice with Taskbar Thumbnail Preview. The feature is designed to allow users to better manage multiple windows opened on their desktop from a single Taskbar icon, corresponding to an instance of a launched program. In the case of browsers, but not only, the Thumbnail Previews can be used for individual opened Tabs and not just for windows.

    The default Internet Explorer 8 copy shipping in Windows 7 was the first browser to embrace the feature, with Mozilla and Opera quick to catch up, while Google is still lagging behind. The past week, Google graduated Chrome 4.0 from Beta to Stable version introducing Build 4.0.249.78. The latest developer channel build 5.0.307.1, just as Build 4.0.249.78 will not allow Windows 7 users to take advantage of Thumbnail Taskbar Previews, especially in relation to Aero Peek.

    Google Chrome 5.0 Dev Channel Build 5.0.307.1 is available for download here.
    Google Chrome 4.0 Stable is available for download here.

    The latest release of Opera 10.50 pre-Alpha is available for download here.

    Firefox 3.6 Final for Windows is available for download here.
    Firefox 3.6 Final for Mac OS X is available for download here.
    Firefox 3.6 Final for Linux is available for download here.

    SSDs Get Better with 25nm NAND from Intel and Micron

    IMFT is a joint venture between Intel and Micron, through which the two companies strive to bring about advancements in the area of flash storage. The joint venture already has a reputation for being the first to develop sub-40nm NAND, as well mass-producing it. More recently, the two companies further increased their reputation by introducing the next generation of NAND flash, namely 25nm wafers.

    Solid state drives have been gaining popularity over the past years. This is mainly due to the significantly higher data transfer rates that such storage units can achieve. However, SSDs still have not been able to wrench the mainstream market from hard drives, mainly because the latter have a significantly larger storage capability. The new 25nm NAND flash from Intel and Micron will lessen the gap between the two, as it allows for the creation of SSD units that have both a larger storage capacity and a lower price.

    “To lead the entire semiconductor industry with the most advanced process technology is a phenomenal feat for Intel and Micron, and we look forward to further pushing the scaling limits,” said Brian Shirley, vice president of Micron’s memory group. “This production technology will enable significant benefits to our customers through higher density media solutions.”

    “Through our continued investment in IMFT, we’re delivering leadership technology and manufacturing that enable the most cost-effective and reliable NAND memory,” stated Tom Rampone, vice president and general manager, Intel NAND Solutions Group. “This will help speed the adoption of solid-state drive solutions for computing.”

    When the 34nm NAND was launched, the flagship product was a 4GB (32Gbit) 2-bit-per-cell MLC NAND device. Its die size was 172mm2. 25Nm basically doubles the capacity of such a die size, which seems to point to SSDs that, while maintaining the same price as a 34nm, would have twice its storage capacity. IMFT is already sampling the 25nm NAND. Devices based on this new technology are expected to include Intel's third-generation X25-M drives, set to come in storage capacities of 160GB, 320GB and 600GB. This line of products is expected to arrive sometime during the fourth quarter.

    Last year, IMFT pronounced its intention to develop 3-bit-per-cell 34nm MLC NAND chips but the arrival of 25nm practically makes such products unnecessary. On the other hand, there is the possibility that 3-bi-per-cell 25nm NAND will be developed because they can be a convenient choice for cheap or low-cycle USB sticks. Still, in solid state drives, 3-bit-per-cell NAND would not justify the compromise in performance and reliability. Actual mass production of 25nm NAND flash is currently set for Q2 2010.

    Microsoft's Game Room Won't Feature Titles Beyond an E10+ Rating

    Microsoft's Game Room may be bringing back some of the classic arcade games, but, unfortunately, most of the nostalgia that we're expecting from it won't be coming along for the ride. While there's no vivider memory of our youth than playing video games while also playing hide-and-seek with out parents, whether because we weren't allowed to stay up that late for such a useless activity or because the gore of Mortal Kombat was beyond what we were allowed to experience at such a tender age, the Game Room won't give us any reasons to hide our gameplay vices.

    The only games present in Microsoft's new service will be those rated E or E10+, and while the lack of Mature titles is a disappointment, the fact that even Teen titles are excluded is downright confusing. "Games available for download within 'Game Room' will carry either E or E10+ ratings," a Microsoft representative told GamerBytes. "We currently have no plans to feature titles of those [higher Teen and Mature] ratings."

    And if our state of confusion demands an explanation, the given one is nothing short of a puzzling one. According to GamerBytes, Microsoft decided to get an ESRB rating not for the titles present in the Game Room, but for the service itself, thus saving a ton of money in rating fees. The downside is that since the entire Game Room is rated for nothing higher than E10+, no game that would require a higher rating could be released for it.

    How valid its scheme really is remains rather unclear, since games can't really be released on trust alone. The Game Room may be E and E10+ rated, but unless they get an actual check, neither the ESRB nor Microsoft can be sure that the titles haven't crossed into the Teen category, so a rating check would still be needed. General guidelines can only get you so far, and if Rebellion's upcoming Aliens vs Predator was docile enough to earn an MA15+ rating, then nothing is set in stone anymore.

    Multitasking: Intel does, iPad doesn't

    How important is the ability to multitask on tablet-class devices like Apple's iPad? Important enough that the feature will likely be touted as a trump card for Intel-based smartphones such as a tablet-size phone from LG due later this year.

    How do we know this? Watch the embedded CNET video below, which I took at the Consumer Electronics Show earlier this month, and find out. Toward the end of the video (the 2:55 mark), Pankaj Kedia, director of Intel's Global Ecosystems Program for Mobile Internet Devices and Smart Phones, makes it clear that multitasking--in this case using Intel's Moblin operating system--is a marquee feature for devices running on Intel's Moorestown chip technology, due sometime in the next few months.

    Kedia shows three applications running but is quick to add that "you can have more apps running."

    Of course, on an Apple laptop, where a user can easily have a dozen or more apps active, multitasking is taken for granted. For example, users can watch a video feed while writing an e-mail. For the iPad, however, Apple is betting that the snappy interface, as demonstrated in this CNET video, will more than compensate for the lack of multitasking.

    On Friday, I asked Keida about the importance of multitasking on Intel-based smartphones and tablets.

    "Consumers want to do multiple things at the same time: listen to music while browsing the Web, look for directions while looking at your calendar and talking with your friends, and so on," he said in response to an e-mail query. "Multitasking is one of the key differentiators for the LG GW990 smartphone, based on the Intel Moorestown platform," he said.

    To date, Intel has gone public on three Moorestown-based designs. The LG GW990 smartphone, the Aava Mobile smartphone, and the OpenPeak tablet. "The LG GW990 is a product, while the Aava and OpenPeak are two of our leading reference designs, which will generate multiple end-user products," he said. "As we launch Moorestown in [the first half of this year] and products begin to ship in (the second half of the year), you will hear about additional customers."

    Wacom takes Intuos4 wireless

    Close to a year after launching its excellent graphics tablet, the Intuos4 series, Wacom releases an updated version with Bluetooth wireless connectivity. Available only in the medium-size version for about $50 more than its USB-only twin, the Intuos4 Wireless becomes a great option for artists and illustrators on the go--or even sedentary ones with an aversion to wires.

    The Wireless model runs off a replaceable lithium ion battery that charges via the USB connection. You have to charge it before going wireless, as well as be physically connected to install the driver. After that, Bluetooth setup is fairly typical. You switch the tablet on and press a button to initiate the "I'm here!" broadcast and wait for your system to discover the tablet, which is essentially treated as a mouse. Note that the tablet doesn't ship with a dongle, so if your system doesn't have Bluetooth you'll have to deal with that separately.

    In addition to the USB connector, the wireless tablet has a power switch and Bluetooth discovery button.

    (Credit: Wacom)

    Unlike the wired-only version, the Wireless tablet has two tiny lights on one side: yellow/green to indicate charging and battery state and blue to indicate connected state. The wireless model also has a perk the wired model lacks, a snap-in pen holder.

    Among its power-saving measures, the tablet will go to sleep after 30 minutes of disuse. If desired, the driver places an icon in your systems status area that provides percentage of battery life left. It doesn't give you a percentage charged when connected via USB, though. Wacom rates the tablet's battery life at up to 18 hours, though that's not continuous usage. I couldn't decide whether the USB charging is a plus or minus; it's very convenient, but you can't charge a spare while you're working. And if you get sloppy with your battery hygiene, you can kill the battery altogether. Per the manual:

    If the battery charge is low and the battery remains in the tablet for a long period of time (a week or longer) with the power switch in the on position, the small trickle of current used by the tablet is likely to discharge the battery so far that an internal protection circuit within the battery is activated. If this occurs you will no longer be able to charge the battery.

    Replacement batteries will cost somewhere between $39 and $49.

    I did have some detection issues. I had to run the Bluetooth Setup Assistant to connect every time on my MacBook Pro (OS X 10.5.8), even after pairing, and had to run install on a Windows notebook (Windows Vista Business 64-bit) a couple of times.

    In all other respects, the tablet is identical to the medium wired version I reviewed last year. It operates just as smoothly, without a lot of the glitchiness and hesitation I experienced the last time I tried Bluetooth mice and keyboards.

    If you can spare the extra bucks for the wireless version, it's probably worth it simply to have the option; even if your current system lacks Bluetooth your next one will probably have it, and as long as it operates identically, losing the wires is always a bonus. However, if you plan to use the mouse as well, that's gonna cost you about $70 more.

    Mozilla releases first mobile Firefox browser

    Mozilla has been steadily creeping toward its goal of releasing the first Firefox browser for mobile phones. On Friday, Firefox 1.0 for Nokia's Maemo--previously code-named Fennec--arrived.

    Firefox for the Maemo 5 platform has a few interesting conceits that set it apart from other mobile browsers, like Opera Mobile and Opera Mini. Mozilla is banking on the uniqueness of its claim to fame--third-party, customizable browser extensions--to help its browser win mobile market share. Add-ons, after all, helped make Firefox the top browser alternative to Internet Explorer in the desktop space. To punctuate the importance of add-ons for Firefox's mobile browser, Mozilla also pushed out on Friday the general release of its bookmark and history-syncing extension, Weave Sync 1.0, for both desktop and mobile.

    Mozilla's accomplishment with a mobile version of Firefox is a mixed one, and not only because Maemo is a platform relatively few people have heard of. Nokia's open-source, Linux-based Maemo operating system supports mobile Firefox on just two devices--the N900 and the N810, an Internet tablet. To make matters more limited, just two days ago Mozilla unveiled a third release candidate with a last-minute decision to pull wholesale support for Adobe's Flash plug-in from the build, citing unhappiness with the overall standard of quality. As an aside, this is apparently a sore spot for Adobe, who became miffed with Apple for excluding Flash in its new iPad device about the same time that Mozilla made its comment about degraded performance when visiting Flash sites.

    Yet what kind of mobile browser would Firefox be if users couldn't watch videos or adequately view Web sites that heavily rely on Flash? Not a browser anyone could take seriously.As a workaround, Mozilla has released an add-on called YouTube enabler, that early adopters can install to view YouTube videos. Mozilla is hoping to work out other solutions for those who are wary of optionally installing the Flash plug-in, but still want to see select Flash-based content.

    Luckily for Mozilla, a relatively small sliver of the mobile phone-toting population actually has one of the two compatible devices, so there's time to smooth out Firefox before it matures on another mobile platform. Windows Mobile is slated to be next, with Android to follow. You can download Firefox 1.0 for Maemo here, and read more details in Mozilla's blog post.

    Colbert starts iPad campaign at the Grammys

    In case you were wondering how Apple intended to advertise the iPad, the answer might just be "very well."

    At Sunday's Grammys, Stephen Colbert approached the deeply onerous task of reading out the nominees for Song of the Year with singular glee. Because just as he looked lost, trying to remember where the list of nominees was, he whipped out an iPad from inside his jacket pocket.

    It was real. It was on. When he turned it, the screen went from vertical to landscape. And you see how portable it is, people? You can slip one inside your dinner jacket. Even a rented dinner jacket.

    Jay-Z joined in the amusement as Colbert wondered whether the rapper and mogul hadn't received an iPad in his gift bag, too. Colbert then asked his daughter, who was also in the audience, whether he finally looked cool. She demurred, with a pleasantly understated performance.

    In case any of you might have wondered whether this was a complete coincidence and not a blatant and winning piece of what was once called product placement, might I suggest you cut down a little on some of your evening habits.

    The iPad campaign has only just begun.

    Google censors 'Lolita,' but not 'bestiality'

    It seems like only yesterday that news surfaced that naughty words were being replaced by hash marks on Android phones.

    Should you have missed this purely puritan entertainment, words such as the very common one beginning with an "f" were being censored by the built-in voice-to-text feature found on Google's mobile operating system. Even the latter half of "BS" became "####".

    This appears, however, not to have been the half of it. CNET's readers are nothing if not disturbingly intelligent. And I am particularly grateful to Zechariah-Aloysius Hillyard from Boston who put his Droid and his patience through their paces in the quest for, well, accursed freedom.

    Hillyard was surprised to find that a search for "Nabokov Lolita" became "Nabokov ####" when transcribed by Google Voice (safe search was switched off). This seemed strangely picky of the software, especially as Hillyard told me he tried the search after enjoying "Reading Lolita in Tehran," a book that itself wonders what should be acceptable and what not.

    So, encouraged by my own curiosity, he delved further. "Ass" seemed to be acceptable. However, "Oh, Come All Ye Faithful" became "Oklahoma, All Ye Faithful," followed by "#### All Ye Faithful."

    "Scum" and "Scumbag" appeared to encounter a huge hash of resistance, although the second time he tried "Scumbag," he got "Futurama" (the cartoon).

    Hillyard and the Lolita search on his Droid.

    (Credit: Zechariah-Aloysius Hillyard)

    "I wonder how many #### words there are," Hillyard told me in an e-mail. "The arbitrariness of it bothers me as an American and as a curious person. Do I get my phone service terminated if I get too many ####'s?"

    Any fear he might have experienced quickly dissolved as he began to delve further into the Android underworld.

    "Incest" was hashed, but "bestiality" was fine. And if you're wondering what other works of literature might have been made a hash of by Android, well, you may be relieved to hear that "Lady Chatterley's Lover" enjoyed no censorship. However, "Best Little Whorehouse in Texas" was a vast no-no.

    Google's original explanation for this phenomenon to Reuters went as follows: "We filter potentially offensive or inappropriate results because we want to avoid situations whereby we might misrecognize a spoken query and return profanity when, in fact, the user said something completely innocent."

    I would be interested if other readers have experienced similarly innocent linguistic peculiarities. However, is it really likely that any human or machine would misrecognize "Lolita"? Especially when it is uttered in the very close juxtaposition to a word that sounds mightily like "Nabokov"?

    I understand censorship. We all censor ourselves every day. But did Google's engineers really sit around and make value judgments about what might be misrecognized and what might not?

    I have already asked Google twice to further enlighten its customers on this very interesting encounter between technology and moral philosophy, one that is certainly more fascinating than anything currently on TV. I have yet to receive a reply.

    Cell Phone Bans Don't Work? Try Duct Tape

    A new study by the Highway Loss Data Institute indicates that laws preventing motorists from texting or using handheld cell phones while driving haven't led to a large drop in the number of vehicle crashes. While the findings are questionable, let's say, for the sake of argument, that they're true.

    So if bans on texting and handheld phones don't work, what's the next step? Two words: Duct tape.

    We're all aware that duct tape has 101 valuable uses, and probably a lot more. Its potential as a transportation safety tool has yet to be tested, however. It's time we gave it a test drive.

    I propose a federal law requiring all drivers and passengers to apply a thick strip of duct tape to their mouths upon entering a vehicle. No one could speak, of course, and the safety benefits of this simple procedure would be enormous.

    Though only a partial solution, duct tape would prevent many distractions that plague drivers and lead to vehicle accidents.

    Benefits of the mandatory Duct Tape Law include:

    Drivers couldn't talk on the phone, period. They couldn't use hands-free devices either, which apparently aren't any safer than handheld phones.
    Drivers couldn't talk to passengers, thereby eliminating another source of distraction. No relationship squabbles, philosophical debates, or idle chatter. Serenity at any speed.
    Children couldn't yell, scream, or ask annoying questions. A thick, durable slab of duct tape would eliminate a significant source of noise pollution. Parents wouldn't have to tell their kids to quiet down--one less distraction.
    Driving and driving? Not after the Duct Tape Law takes effect.
    Female pedestrians would be protected from annoying, rude, and sexist comments from male drivers.
    Road rage incidents would drop, as irate motorists couldn't yell at each other. Middle-finger insults would rise exponentially, however.
    In-car consumption of fatty fast foods would end. The nation's waistlines would shrink. Obesity epidemic solved.
    What about texting? OK, my proposed legislation doesn't address that issue. But maybe there's a duct-tape solution for that drivers who text. Suggestions?


    Contact Jeff Bertolucci via Twitter (@jbertolucci ) or at jbertolucci.blogspot.com .

    Connecting Your iPhone or iPad with Your Business Buzz up! 0 votes Send Share Print Play Video

    Despite its reputation as a consumer device, the presence of the iPhone, and soon the iPad, in the business environment cannot be ignored. IT Administrators at businesses of all sizes must address the challenge of integrating the devices and providing access to network resources.

    The iPhone has a long way to go to enable the level of business integration provided by BlackBerry or Windows Mobile smartphones, but Apple has made great strides since the iPhone was introduced. Despite the hype around the iPad, at its core it is essentially a giant iPhone--or, more accurately, an iPod Touch--which means it can leverage the same tools for business integration.

    Enterprise Integration

    The iPhone had a rough start for business professionals, but once Apple added the ability to connect with Microsoft Exchange messaging it became much more viable as a business tool. With Exchange or other standards-based systems, the iPhone or iPad can receive e-mail, contact, and calendar updates automatically.

    For businesses that use Exchange Server 2003 or 2007, though, Exchange and ActiveSync provide a number of other administrative benefits. For example, in the event of a lost or stolen iPhone, the data and settings on the device can be wiped remotely by issuing a command from Exchange.

    Apple doesn't appear to be in any hurry to develop an equivalent to the BlackBerry Enterprise Server (BES) to enable IT administrators' complete internal control of the iPhone. Apple has created some business tools to help out, though.

    The Enterprise Deployment Guide and iPhone Configuration Utility can help businesses deploy passcode policies and configuration profiles via USB or wirelessly. Configuration profiles enable administrators to remotely configure VPN, e-mail, and wireless networking settings, and install certificates and devices restrictions.

    Apple has also addressed one of the biggest complaints IT administrators have with iPhones in the enterprise: iTunes. Granted, users will still need iTunes in order to sync or update the iPhone or iPad. But, Apple has provided an ability to customize iTunes to restrict or disable services like the iTunes Music Store, or shared media libraries, and enable IT administrators to control access to software updates.

    Old-Fashioned VPN

    For road warriors and workers on the go, a VPN is a requirement for secure access to the data and resources on the business network. Particularly when using public Wi-Fi networks which generally don't provide any security, the encrypted tunnel of a VPN is necessary for ensuring the data can not be intercepted or eavesdropped.

    The iPhone and iPad have native support for Cisco IPSec, L2TP over IPSec, and PPTP. These three VPN protocols are compatible with the vast majority of VPN solutions and allow the iPhone or iPad to connect with the business network without any additional network configuration or third-party applications.

    Apple also provides support for certificate-based and two-factor authentication for improved security.

    Third-Party Tools

    Third-party solutions have been developed that enable business professionals to use the iPhone and iPad with the company network as well. Good for Enterprise enables IT administrators to provision, manage, and update a variety of smartphone platforms which is beneficial for small and medium companies that do not have an established smartphone standard.

    The Array Networks Desktop Direct app for the iPhone (and iPad), and the Citrix Receiver software let users remotely access their desktops and use the software and tools they are used to securely while outside of the office.

    There is no denying that the iPhone and the iPad are both primarily consumer devices, but the fact that so many consumers have them (or will have them in the case of the iPad), and that consumers are also employees, means that the devices will be in the workplace and businesses need to find a way to integrate and manage them.

    Amazon gives in to Macmillan on e-book pricing

    NEW YORK (Reuters) – Amazon.com Inc all but waved the white flag in a dispute with publisher Macmillan that could lead to the online retailer raising prices on some of its e-books.

    "Ultimately ... we will have to capitulate and accept Macmillan's terms because Macmillan has a monopoly over their own titles, and we will want to offer them to you even at prices we believe are needlessly high for e-books," Amazon said in a message to customers on its website.

    Amazon said Macmillan told them that they want to charge $12.99 to $14.99 for e-book versions of bestsellers and most hardcover releases. Amazon currently charges $9.99 for the e-book version of most new releases and bestsellers.

    Amazon temporarily removed all titles published by Macmillan from its website, saying the move would express its "strong disagreement and the seriousness of (its) disagreement" on pricing. Macmillan titles, including "Sarah's Key" by Tatiana de Rosnay, were only available for purchase on Amazon's website through third parties on Sunday.

    Amazon is facing pressure from publishers concerned about dwindling royalties, as well as new, formidable entrants like Apple Inc that could squeeze what e-booksellers make from each title. Apple unveiled its iPad tablet computer on Wednesday.

    The company, along with rivals such as Barnes & Noble Inc and Sony, are jockeying to offer as many titles as possible in their e-bookstores to make their devices the most attractive.

    But relations between e-reader sellers and publishers are strained, with publishers still smarting from last year's price war involving low-cost books sold online by Amazon, Wal-Mart Stores Inc and Target Corp.

    Analysts say publishers are concerned about the devaluation of the printed book -- specifically how lower retail prices for e-books will affect demand for higher priced hardcover books.

    Amazon said it did not believe that all of the major publishers will take the same route as Macmillan.

    Earlier this month, in advance of Apple's iPad launch, Amazon said it would offer higher royalties on the discount books sold for the Kindle. Under that limited program, Amazon will pay authors and publishers 70 percent of a book's list price, net of delivery costs. The plan is limited to e-books whose list price is between $2.99 and $9.99.

    Company officials were not immediately available for a comment.

    According to statistics released by the International Digital Publishing Forum, wholesale revenue from e-book sales in the United States almost tripled in the third quarter of 2009 to $46.5 million from $13.9 million in the same period in 2008.

    Brazil Internet fest targeted by military, politicians

    SAO PAULO (AFP) – An Internet festival in Brazil billed as one of the biggest in the world has proved an irresistible attraction not only for corporate technology sponsors -- but also for military recruiters and politicians.

    All were out in force at the third annual week-long Campus Party which closed this weekend after gathering 6,000 web-savvy "nerds" from across Latin America.

    Among the areas promoting robotics, debates, computer games, design and programming were officials looking to lure the young participants to their missions.

    Next to a camouflage tent bedecked with a US Marine flag, Brazil's air force had set up multi-screen, surround-sound flight simulators that officials insisted were not mere "games."

    "It's more historic, to show how planes developed over the decades," said one demonstrator/recruiter, Kurt Krause, next to a 20-something "pilot" whose virtual cockpit was being strafed by a World War II enemy plane.

    "We've had about 100 people a day come through, and there's been quite an interest in learning about the air force," affirmed a colleague, Andrea Krauthein.

    Just a few meters (yards) away, though, a much bigger crowd was waiting for turns to play another simulator whose theme -- and popularity -- dismayed the air force team.

    Those players were battling their way through a split-screen duel based on the hugely popular point-of-view shoot-em-up game Modern Warfare 2.

    The made-up world they were blasting their way through to bloody effect was a representation of a Rio de Janeiro slum. One player assumed the role of a gun-toting gang warrior and the other a member of Brazil's brutal elite urban police unit.

    The screen was set up in a booth belonging to the telecom group Telefonica, which was ostensibly showing off the roll-out of its new 10-gigabyte broadband offer.

    One player, 22-year-old student Rodrigo Prado Morena, quite cheerfully called it "just a game" with no hidden intent, as he locked his hapless rival into "kill cam" mode before a respawn.

    Elsewhere, past rows of laptops and desktops plastered with joke stickers like "If you don't follow me on Twitter, don't walk behind me" and "C:/RUN/DOS/RUN," officials from a government department were readying a presentation on how sites such as Facebook can promote human rights.

    "We're reaching out to young people... We have even launched a web mascot to help fight against child pornography," explained Mariana Carpanezzi, who was there for Brazil's special secretariat for human rights.

    The small number of chairs prepared for that talk, though, contrasted with the many rows already filled in front of a neighboring podium where a talk on "Is the Internet for porn?" was about to start.

    And then there were other areas pulling in large number groups intent on just having fun -- even at the literal risk of mental health.

    One such was a variation on the bestselling "Guitar Hero" game. Only instead of the player standing in front of screen and strumming a hooked-up guitar in time to the music, this one featured a wireless shaggy wig as the "instrument." The aim: to shake, jerk and snap the head in time to heavy metal riffs.

    Roge Delavi, a 27-year-old post-graduate student who ignored the mandatory on-screen warnings of possible "neck injury" and "brain trauma" to energetically flail his head around in front of a projected mock death-metal concert, gave his verdict.

    "It's great," he said after a two-minute workout, sweat trickling down his face.

    Almost forgotten up the back of the exhibition center, near the secure area where 3,000 tents had been set up to accommodate participants, a group of indigenous Brazilians from the Amazon proudly displayed their blog.

    "It's a site where Indian people exchange experiences and maintain a presence in the virtual world," said Poran Potiguara, a 20-year-old demonstrator wearing traditional feather headwear, as he clicked through www.indiosonline.org.br.
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