Archive for June, 2010

Berners-Lee project aims to ensure ‘One Web’

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

advance One Web that is free and open
expand the Web’s capability and robustness
extend the Web’s benefits to all people on the planet

The organization, launched at the Newseum in Washington, D.C., is funded initially by a $5 million grant from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.

(Credit:
World Wide Web Foundation)

An academic program called the Web Science Research Initiative (WSRI) helps drive technology innovation. But the Web has largely been made by and for the developed world.

Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee on Sunday unveiled the World Wide Web Foundation, an initiative to spread the Web to developing countries and maintain its openness.

In his speech, Berners-Lee said the foundation is meant to address the social aspects of the Web to promote adoption around the world.

Tim Berners-Lee and Alberto Ibarg?en, Knight Foundation's CEO, at launch of the World Wide Web Foundation.

In a speech, Berners-Lee–a proponent of a “nondiscriminatory Internet”–said the creation of the foundation is necessary to ensure that the Web serves humanity by connecting people.

The Web Foundation will seek to foster collaboration among business leaders, technologists, government, academia, and nongovernmental organizations. The mission is to:

“But you cannot ethically turn your attention to developing it without also listening to those people who don’t use the Web at all, or who could use it, if only it were different in some way. (I have read that 80 percent of the world does not have access to the Web.) The Web has been largely designed by the developed world, for the developed world. But it must be much more inclusive in order to be of greater value to us all,” he said.

FoxTab turns your browser tabs into a spectacle

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

FoxTab lets you see all of your open tabs as thumbnails. You can maneuver them with your scroll wheel, or swap what type of view you'd like on the fly. (click to enlarge)

One of my buddies just tipped me off to a must-have tab management add-on for
Firefox. It’s called FoxTab, and it’s a cross between
Mac OS X’s Expose,
Windows Vista’s Flip 3D, and the thumbnail view in Google Chrome. When you’ve got a lot of tabs open in Firefox, this offers a quick way to jump to the page you want without having to eyeball the name of each one.

Note: This is an “experimental” add-on in Mozilla’s directory, so you must be registered there to download it.

Related: Surf your bookmarks by thumbnail with Bookmark Previews

There are five different styles in all, and each one offers a different way to view the thumbnails you have open. My personal favorite is the standard grid view, which can be tweaked to include as many rows as you’d like. Windows Vista users are more likely to choose the stack view, which is identical to Vista’s Flip 3D. No matter what you choose, it’s a pretty svelte alternative to hunting down the page you want by favicon and text alone.

To toggle it on you just hit a small keyboard shortcut and it zooms out all the tabs into a giant wall. You can also summon it with a small button that sits next to the address bar, or by choosing it from the right click menu. Once opened, you simply pick which tab you want to see by clicking it, or simply scrolling with your mouse wheel. It’s not nearly as smooth as Tab Effect, an eye candy tab switching add-on Rafe wrote about back in September of last year, but it’s neat nonetheless.

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

SlingCatcher delayed–again

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

Wilkes writes: “Will the catcher ship in Q2? No. We are upgrading the user experience and making enhancements to the feature set. These may or may not all ship at the same time. Will the Catcher ship in ‘08? All indications point to this happening in 2008.”

The device was originally introduced at CES 2007, and shown again at CES 2008, which was when Sling was floating the Q2 time frame.

The SlingCatcher is a set-top box, separate from the Slingbox, that brings video content from a Slingbox to another TV in a house, or from an external hard drive. The SlingCatcher also lets users project Web content to a TV screen, either wired or wirelessly, through an application called SlingProjector.

(Credit:
Sling Media)

This is just getting silly.

Gregg Wilkes, vice president of sales for Sling Media–which is now owned by EchoStar Communications–told a frustrated customer in an e-mail that the goal to release the device during the second quarter of this year will not be met.

The makers of the popular Slingbox have been promising the SlingCatcher for almost a year and half now. And once again, the projected release date will come and go quietly.

Sling Catcher delayed again. This time, they're crossing their fingers for a release date sometime before the end of this year.

Sarah Lacy takes on Gnomedex

Friday, June 18th, 2010

Tech journalist and author Sarah Lacy listens to a question from a Gnomedex participant during her presentation at the Seattle conference Saturday.

And that, she suggested, is precisely the point. By not worrying whether her blog is making money, she is free to write what she wants and not be concerned with how much traffic she gets–in that medium, at least.

As a result, she argued that some prominent bloggers are saying they’ve had enough and abandoning the medium.

But more on that later.

And fireworks there were, though they came from uber-blogger Robert Scoble, who at one point during the session oddly got up out of his seat near the front of the auditorium and marched toward the back of the room to tensely confront author and entrepreneur Geoff Livingston.

SEATTLE–Since there is significant attendee crossover between the Gnomedex conference here and the South by Southwest (SXSW) festival in Austin, Texas, it’s safe to say that when Sarah Lacy took the stage Saturday, a lot of the audience had some pretty strong memories of the last time they’d seen her.

And while that is a well-established pattern among mainstream technology journalists, Lacy suggested, it’s a growing–and unfortunate trend in the blogosphere.

Lacy wanted one major focus of the discussion to be what bloggers need to do to, on the one hand, make money with their sites, and on the other, to build scalable community around quality.

Suffice it to say that he and Livingston had words, disagreeing with each other’s points. Finally, Scoble turned around and walked back to his seat, muttering, “That’s (B.S.)”

Livingston argued that the people in the room who were debating the question–Lacy, Li, Scoble and others, were “people who already have influential positions.”

It was hard to follow exactly what happened next, for me at least, because I was stunned that Scoble had felt he couldn’t make his point from his seat.

The blog as loss leader
To Lacy, who wanted to continue talking about whether bloggers could make money using their sites, one point was that some people–herself included–may find that the blog itself is itself not a direct moneymaker but rather a means to an end.

As Pirillo told me the night before Gnomedex started, what conference organizer wouldn’t want that controversy.

A tense moment
By now, for reasons that were not entirely clear, the room had started to get very charged up. Afterward, people told me they couldn’t understand why the tension had ratcheted up, but some of it seemed to have to do with the definition of the terms and whether some people thought the discussion itself was much ado about nothing.

“I just look at each one as an individual case,” one person in the audience said. “People have blogs that become very popular….Maybe blogging is just the activity of posting content to the Web. Some blogs are journalism and some aren’t.”

Last March, it was Lacy whose SXSW keynote interview of Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg ended up in a Twitter-fueled mutiny by the audience. Many on hand in Austin had felt she conducted that session in an overtly flirty and self-promotional style that left little room for participation from a crowd eager to interact with the young billionaire.

“What’s amazing to me,” Li continued, “is that the audience is starting to follow me….It’s really about people wanting to hear what I have to say.”

(Credit:
Daniel Terdiman/CNET News)

Charlene Li, a well-known blogger who until recently was an analyst with Forrester Research, agreed.

With that recent history, then, the packed house on hand for Lacy’s Gnomedex talk Saturday, “What happens when you get what you want: The growing blogosphere angst,” was keyed up and wondering what kind of fireworks might erupt this time around.

To her credit, Lacy, a journalist and author, eschewed the normal kind of conference presentation and instead chose to walk around the auditorium letting attendees ask and answer questions related to her topic. And while there were some in the room and online who expressed frustration with her subject matter and style, the crowd was extremely engaged, almost always a good thing, at least from the perspective of conference organizers. When it was over, Lacy got an energetic ovation.

“It’s about keeping an audience,” the speaker said. “(Gnomedex founder) Chris Pirillo is good at keeping an audience. Why? Because he writes good (stuff). Either you write good (stuff) or you write crap. Bottom line.”

Scoble is one such person she singled out, and given a chance to share his thoughts, he said that working with an ever-increasing number of unprofessional PR people has turned him off.

Lacy suggested that there were plenty of people wanting to make a living as bloggers and that these questions were germane to them. Livingston seemed unconvinced.

“From the beginning of my blog (in 2004, I decided) it’s not about driving traffic, it’s about driving influence,” Li said. “From the beginning, I said I wasn’t going to overblog, I was only going to blog when I had something to say.”

“I consider my blog a loss leader for my other businesses,” Lacy, who does some consulting and gives paid speeches in addition to her professional writing, said. “I do all of those things, but ultimately my blog is the heart of it.”

And that’s when the really odd developments began.

To that point, one audience member agreed that the point is that community follows quality.

And because she’s developed significant influence, she says even abandoning her official Forrester blog hasn’t cost her her community.

Lacy began the session by posing the theory that in some ways, the PR industry has co-opted blogging–taking advantage of the fact that many bloggers trying to earn a living are so eager for page views that they will post just about anything they are spoon-fed.

Still, some in the audience said they feel that people get too caught up in the specific word, “blog,” and that people shouldn’t try to “pin” down what the term means.

(Credit:
Daniel Terdiman/CNET News)

Others agreed, saying that the problem is that while the architecture of blogging is fairly standard, what people do with it can be quite different: Some may write a small personal blog and TechCrunch may be a large media company, but both use similar tools and are therefore lumped together to the detriment of the terminology.

“When I was first coming to Gnomedex (in 2001),” Scoble said, “I was a nobody.”

In other words, she was saying that, in her opinion, her blog–which may not itself generate much income directly–builds the community that creates lucrative business for her elsewhere.

“Why should the average Joe Metroblogger care,” Livingston asked.

Her theme was that because of that co-opting, blogging as a medium has become less and less distinguishable from technology journalism, as bloggers and traditional reporters alike find themselves too worried about pumping out content to focus on meeting people and finding good stories.

But at that point, Scoble came marching up the aisle toward Livingston’s row with a head of steam.

It still wasn’t entirely clear why there had been so much tension, or precisely what people had been arguing about. For Pirillo, though, there’s no doubt the experiment–having Lacy and the history of the SXSW imbroglio that she brought–paid off due to the engaged audience, and even the tense moment between Scoble and Livingston.

Lacy said she wanted to change the topic to talk about new technologies that could be used for better blog commenting systems, but time was running out and there were still people who wanted to keep the discussion on the same track.

In contrast to the famous keynote interview she did with Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg last March at SXSW, Lacy decided to spend much of her time Saturday engaging directly with the audience.

From here, the conversation seemed to stall. Discussion continued for a bit longer, but it mainly was more people making the same points that had already been made.

3Com’s new chief to be based in China

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

3Com also said Wednesday that it has hired Ronald Sege, 51, as chief operating officer. Sege, who will run 3Com’s U.S. operations, returns to 3Com after a decade. From 1989 to 1998, Sege held several senior executive positions at 3Com. Most recently he had been CEO of the Wi-Fi equipment maker Tropos from 2004 until this year.

The news of the management shift comes after the U.S. government essentially put the kibosh on a proposed $2.2 billion buyout of 3Com by Bain Capital Partners and Huawei Technologies.

(Credit:
3Com)

Network equipment maker 3Com announced Wednesday a new CEO who will be based in China.

Last month, after the Committee on Foreign Investment, an official security panel under the U.S. Treasury Department essentially blocked the deal, Bain Capital Partners withdrew its bid for the company.

3Com, which was founded in 1979 by the Ethernet inventor Robert Metcalfe, helped shape the early Ethernet and IP networking market. The company had many successes over the years, including the spin-off of the handheld device company Palm. But over the last decade, the company has lost much of its luster and market significance as competitors, namely Cisco Systems, have risen in importance.

3Com’s decision to put Mao in charge is yet another signal that the company sees China as its most important market.

The Bush administration had raised security concerns over the deal. 3Com makes network security equipment that is sold to the U.S. Department of Defense. The government has traditionally been leery of allowing foreign ownership of critical communication assets.

Robert Mao, 64, will succeed Edgar Masri as chief executive officer. Mao, who is fluent in Mandarin and English, had most recently been 3Com’s executive vice president for corporate development. Prior to working at 3Com, he headed up Nortel Network’s China operations. And before that he had worked for the French telecommunications equipment maker Alcatel, which is now Alcatel-Lucent.

Bain Capital had originally agreed to buy 3Com in September 2007 in a deal that would have given Huawei Technologies, which is based in China, a 16.5 percent stake in the company. As part of the deal, Huawei would have had the opportunity to increase its share by another 5 percent.

“In addition to his 30 years in the global IT and telecommunications industry, Bob’s bi-cultural background, extensive business experience in Asia and fluency in Mandarin and English offer a rare set of skills that can bridge Chinese and western organizations,” Eric Benhamou, chairman of 3Com, said in a statement. “Bob brings the company a set of skills that are uniquely fitted to 3Com’s current business needs. Having him based out of China and having an experienced leader of Ron’s caliber based in the United States will allow us to speed execution of our global business plan.”

Despite the company’s decline over the years, 3Com has survived. And in recent years, it has recognized China as a key emerging market. In 2003, it formed a joint venture with Huawei to better serve the Chinese market. And in November, 3Com paid $882 million to buy Huawei’s 49 percent stake in the venture. Today, about 4,000 of 3Com’s 6,000 employees are based in China with only a little over 400 employees working at its U.S. headquarters in Massachusetts.

Robert Mao, 3Com CEO

Intel unveils new cooling tech for ultrathin lapto

Friday, June 11th, 2010

Eden showed a concept Calpella laptop on stage during his IDF keynote speech.

This is done “automatically on the fly. It is transparent to the operating system,” Eden said.

Intel wants a laptop to live up to its name.

Intel demonstrated laminar jet cooling at IDF.

“When you design a very thin system, cooling the skin is a very big challenge,” said Eden. “If you put (a laptop) on your lap, it can feel very uncomfortable. Very hot.” This is one of the biggest hurdles to designing an ultrathin laptop like the MacBook Air or HP Voodoo Envy 133.

He also discussed how additional transistors in Nehalem can switch cores on and off, depending on how processor-intensive the application is. This will be critical in a quad-core Calpella laptop to deliver acceptable battery life. (Eden intimated that Calpella quad-core laptops would be common.)

To date, cooling technology has focused on keeping the internal components from getting too hot but not the outside of the computer, according to Mooly Eden, general manager of Intel’s Mobile Platforms Group, speaking at the Intel Developer Forum in Taipei this week. Eden’s keynote was streamed from the event.

Intel demonstrated a system using the same laminar air flow technology to move the heat off a laptop’s skin. “We are licensing it to our customers so they can keep making thinner and thinner laptops,” Eden said.

A laminar flow occurs when a fluid–or air in this case–flows in parallel layers.

For instance, three of the cores can be shut down to save power when the user is doing tasks that don’t require a lot of compute power. Then more cores can be turned on depending on the need.

Intel uses laminar jet technology to cool a laptop's skin (corrected image)

Eden showed an animation of a jet engine to prove his point. The inside of a jet engine can get as hot as 1,000 degrees centigrade. But the jet engine’s wall must be kept cool because it is connected to the wing where the fuel is. To keep the engine heat away from the wing, laminar air flow cooling is used.

(Credit:
Intel)

If this problem isn’t solved, laptops “can’t be made thinner and thinner,” he said.

Updated on October 24 at 10:20 a.m. with corrected image of Intel laminar jet technology.

A computer that sits comfortably, coolly on your lap. The world’s largest chipmaker expects a crush of ultrathin laptops from PC makers in 2009 and unveiled cooling technology this week to make sure these svelte air-flow constrained designs stay cool.

He also talked about “Hyperthreading” or simultaneous multithreading on Nehalem–the ability to run two program threads simultaneously per each core, doubling the number of threads and, Intel claims, obviating the need for eight cores. “We could have done eight cores. We know how to do it. But it would have been too hot,” he said.

Intel also revisited the next-generation Calpella laptop platform (due in the second half of 2009) based on its Nehalem technology. Eden reiterated that the graphics and memory controller would be integrated onto the same piece of silicon as the processor.

(Credit:
Intel)

CNET News Daily Podcast Green is the new black N

Friday, June 11th, 2010

Greenpeace rates electronics makers’ green claims

Listen now:

Download today’s podcast

That and the day’s headlines, in Tuesday’s podcast.

Today’s stories:

Is the video game industry recession-proof?

Green may be the new black as far as consumer electronics companies are concerned. But Greenpeace is not so impressed with their efforts to date. In a new report, the group charges that electronics manufacturers are failing to make sufficiently bold moves to cut energy usage. CNET News’ Martin LaMonica has the story.

Trial ending in MySpace suicide case

The dark side of Galileo

Who hasn’t Microsoft signed a patent deal with

Friday, June 11th, 2010

But it’s not just Linux companies that have not signed an accord with Redmond. Two other names worth noting from General Counsel Brad Smith’s not-yet-friends list are search king Google and database giant Oracle.

The company has inked a lot of deals since it began its patent deal push a few years back, signing folks from Sun Microsystems to Novell to Samsung. So it’s getting a lot less interesting to write up each one of these things. As the latest one crossed my desk earlier this week, I had an idea. Rather than write up a story on how another name got added to the list (Pentax), I’d focus on something far more interesting–who’s not on the list.

In both cases, Microsoft competes pretty head-on with those companies’ products, so it’s not surprising that they would be among the companies with whom Microsoft either hasn’t sought, or hasn’t struck, a deal.

Microsoft declined to comment on why any particular companies might not be on the list. Representatives from Oracle and Google also declined to comment.

Anyone have any names that I missed? And who will be next to sign? Sound off with your guesses below.

With Microsoft’s announcement of yet another patent cross-licensing deal this week, it would seem nearly everyone has a deal with Redmond.

Red Hat is not alone among Linux companies in saying no to Microsoft, despite its claim that open-source software infringes hundreds of Microsoft patents. Mandriva, among others, also spoke out against the need for such a pact.

The most vocal about not being on that list, hands down, is Red Hat. The Linux seller has been adamant in resisting Microsoft’s idea of a “patent bridge” in which commercial open-source companies pay Redmond money and, in return, Microsoft offers to indemnify them–and their users–from intellectual property claims.

“The reality is that the community development approach of free and open-source code represents a healthy development paradigm, which, when viewed from the perspective of pending lawsuits related to intellectual property, is at least as safe as proprietary software,” the company said in a 2007 statement. “We are also aware of no patent lawsuit against Linux. Ever. Anywhere.”

Gates speaks at UN, Ballmer in Silicon Valley

Friday, June 11th, 2010

SANTA CLARA, Calif.– Microsoft’s Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer were both making speeches Thursday, but to widely different audiences.

Gates was before the UN wearing his hat as head of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and to speak on where the world stands versus the Millenium Development Goals. Although the metrics show the world ahead in some areas and trailing in others, Gates told the assembly of world leaders that the important thing is that there are now measurable goals for fighting poverty.

Gates, the company’s chairman who has stepped away from full-time Microsoft work, was at the United Nations to discuss global progress in the fight against poverty, while chief executive Ballmer is here to address the Churchill Club, a collection of Silicon Valley entrepreneurs and executives.

“I love the Millennium Development Goals,” he said, according to remarks posted on the Gates Foundation Web site.
“I think they are the best idea for focusing the world on fighting global poverty that I’ve ever seen…Thanks to these goals, not only UN agencies but the world at large knows the key measures of poverty, hunger, health, and education. Some of the numbers are good and some are not. But the fact that the world is focusing on the numbers is excellent.”

As for Ballmer, he is speaking on stage in a conversation with Silicon Valley venture capitalist Ann Winblad. That talk starts in about an hour, so check back to CNET News and Beyond Binary for coverage then.

Sugar Labs will make OLPC interface available for

Friday, June 11th, 2010

One of the first of the “others” on the list is Asus’ popular Eee PC.

“By being independent of any specific hardware platform and by remaining dedicated to the principles of free and open-source software, Sugar Labs ensures that others can develop diverse interfaces and applications from which governments and schools can choose,” Bender wrote on the Sugar Labs Web site.

Former One Laptop Per Child President Walter Bender has formed a nonprofit called Sugar Labs, which will advance the Sugar graphical interface he originally created for the low-cost computing project.

Sugar Labs will partner with developers of Sugar-compatible applications and other hardware makers that want to use the user interface on their devices.

Bender moved on from OLPC last month after it was revealed the project’s founder was leaning toward abandoning the use of Sugar and Linux in favor of putting Windows XP on his $188 XO laptops.

Microsoft and OLPC made it official yesterday, though there will still be OLPCs offered with Linux. In an interview with CNET News.com, OLPC founder and Chairman Nicholas Negroponte said the company is aiming to port the XO’s Sugar interface over to Windows and has been “in discussions” with third parties, which would appear to refer at least in part to Sugar Labs.