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N'Gai Croal
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Feb 6, 2009 08:36 AM
A week after the Senate voted to extend until June 12th the date for
TV stations to switch their broadcast signals from analog to digital,
Congress yesterday followed suit. Even though broadcasters have said
that they were prepared to make the switch on the previously mandated
February 17th, lawmakers and consumer advocates have argued that
citizens need more time to figure out which set-top boxes they'll need
to ensure that they can keep watching their shows.
That sounds
reasonable in theory. But in practice, the way that this delay has been
structured could make this transition more confusing than it would
otherwise have been. According to the Los Angeles Times:
TV stations will be allowed to seek a federal waiver to turn
off their analog signals before the new deadline. So instead of nearly
all broadcasters making the switch Feb. 17, stations now may do so at
different times over the next four months....Several broadcasters have
already stated their intention to make the switch Feb. 17, regardless
of whether Congress moves the date.
Some stations will maintain their analog signals for a while; others
won't. Some will switch early--in fact, 143 of the nation's 1800
stations have already gone all-digital--others will wait. All of this
will only serve to befuddle TV watchers and frustrate TV stations, some
of which are now facing added costs to maintain their analog signal for
another four months. Only time will tell whether the cure was worse
than the disease.
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N'Gai Croal
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Feb 5, 2009 04:55 PM
Google Book Search is no longer tethered to the PC. Earlier today,
Google announced that its service, which provides free access to scans
of public domain books, would immediately be available to users of
iPhones and Android mobile phones. I tested it on my 3G iPhone by
pointing my browser to http://books.google.com/m, where I perused William Shakespeare's play "Titus Andronicus" and Victor Hugo's novel "The Hunchback of Notre Dame."
As
one would expect of Google, the service is quick and responsive.
There's a dialog box that lets you search for new books, links to books
that you've recently viewed; a short list of featured books; and a list
of categories ranging from Adventure to Travel. Once you've made a
selection, you'll be dropped into the start of the book. Each Web page
contains 10 or so scanned pages' worth of text; you can advance Web
page by Web page, or navigate via a table of contents. You can even
click on individual paragraphs to load in the original scanned image of
that paragraph.
Even so, Google Book Search mobile isn't perfect.
It would have been nice if Google had reformatted the text to better
suit the iPhone screen's dimensions. Or let me change the size of the
fonts. Or download the entire text for offline reading. Nevertheless,
it's a nice first step, and I'm curious to see what Google will do next
with it.
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N'Gai Croal
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Jan 21, 2009 11:58 AM
It's no secret that certain Internet service providers
have made a practice of 'throttling' broadband access--reducing the
bandwith available to heavy users, especially during periods. What's
often more challenging to figure out is which ISPs are doing this and
when. That's because the negative PR associated with throttling makes
many ISPs reluctant to disclose such activities.
Canadians,
however, now have more insight into which of its telcos throttle,
thanks to the Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunications
Commission's (CRTC) recent hearings into this issue. According to Ars Technica,
a graduate student at the University of Victoria pored over the ISPs
submissions to the CRTC, extracted their throttling practices, and
combined them into a handy PDF. As
a journalist and a Canadian, I applaud this kind of transparency, as us
consumers should know exactly what we're paying for. Kudos.
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N'Gai Croal
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Jan 21, 2009 10:30 AM

A link to photos of the new First Family mistakenly leads to a gallery of Presidential pets
Change certainly came to Washington Tuesday, but
change.gov did not. President Obama's former transition Web site is now
defunct, with a note sending visitors to whitehouse.gov. The official
presidential Web address relaunched as a shiny social-media hub at
12:01 p.m.—even before Obama took his delayed oath into office.
Immediately,
the twitterati and tumblr set were abuzz over the site, noting how
similar it looked to the campaign's previous sites (with its twilight
blue background, Gotham font and a YouTube video highlighting the
president-elect's train journey this past weekend) and marveling at the
new chief executive's continued technological prowess. But it's worth
wondering how many of these observers had ever actually looked at
President Bush's site. It also had news updates (much like the blog on
Obama's White House site), an "Interactive White House," a
newsroom-like "Setting the Record Straight" feature, and slideshows—and
oh yes, that famous Barney cam.
So the real difference is that
the new site glosses with the buzzwords of social media and pristine
politics: transparency! Participation! RSS feed! All these look good on
paper (or, in this case, on screen) but delivering on the many promises
won't be easy—making the Web site a near-perfect metaphor for the
entire Obama presidency. The premier blog post, written by the director
of new media, Macon Phillips, introduces a framework full of features,
few of which are ready to use. Things that do work, like the
slideshows, are rife with bugs. Early Tuesday evening, Obama's new site
still referred to him as the president-elect in some places, and a link
to a gallery of first families shows you pictures of presidential pets.
"[Phillips's] first message was just about openness," says Rex Sorgatz,
an online media consultant who runs fimoculous.com. "But you can't just
crack open a wiki and say, 'Go at it.' Even forums or comments won't
produce anything meaningful. You need to have a filter in order for
productive discussions to rise to the top."
READ THE FULL STORY HERE.
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N'Gai Croal
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Jan 21, 2009 07:48 AM

A purported image of visual voice mail on the BlackBerry Bold. Photo courtesy Boy Genius Report.
If the folks at Boy Genius Report are correct,
it would
appear that sometime this year, visual voicemail will be coming to
users of the BlackBerry Bold on AT&T's wireless network.As one of
the signature features of the iPhone since its debut--it allows you to
select and play back individual voice messages rather than forward
through your entire list of voice mails--it's a welcome addition to
non-iPhone gadgets like the Bold. The only reason that I'm not more
ecstatic is that I have a BlackBerry Pearl, with no intentions to
surrender the diminutive device anytime soon. So if anyone from AT&T and RIM is listening, don't forget about us Pearl users. We like up-to-date features too.
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N'Gai Croal
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Jan 2, 2009 05:08 PM
One of the most interesting (social) media ventures of
the past couple of years has been San Francisco-based 8020 Publishing.
Here's how it worked: anyone could submit pictures and articles via the
Internet for the company's two publications (JPG, devoted to
photography, and Everywhere, which focused on travel); online readers
voted on their favorite submissions; and a small staff of 10 assembled
the layouts into a magazine available for free as a downloadable PDF or
at newsstands for $6.
Backed by C|Net founder Halsey Minor, the
concept of a crowdsourced magazine was so ingenious that University of
Mississippi professor and Mr. Magazine blogger Samir Husni told the New York Times in 2007,
“You’re going to see more of this....I don’t think it’s just about
getting cheap content into a magazine. Seeing their own work in print
makes people feel like part of a community.”
Today, it would
appear that such a community was not enough. Reporter Brad Stone posted
on the New York Times' Bits blog that 8020 publishing is shutting down,
taking with it JPG and Everywhere. Stone wrote:
JPG had a circulation of around 50,000 and had recently secured some prominent space on newsstands around the country.
But
ultimately the money ran out, and Mr. Minor declined to invest more,
according to a person with knowledge of the situation. 8020 was
attempting to either raise more money from other investors or to sell
itself to big media names, including the Meredith Corporation and Conde
Nast, but with no success. Mr. Minor could not be reached for comment
on Thursday.
The 18 employees who worked for 8020 were given the
holiday week off. On Tuesday, they received individual telephone calls
and e-mail messages telling them that the company had exhausted its
options and was shutting down.
Given the small
size of the magazine's staffs., I'd have to think that it was the
economy more than the concept that is to blame for 8020 Publishing's
collapse. Regardless, amateur and semi-professional photographers and
writers must all be shedding a tear for the untimely passing of these
two mags.
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N'Gai Croal
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Jan 2, 2009 03:08 PM

A Logitech webcam attached to a laptop. Photo courtesy of
Mofetos.
For
prospective college students, the interview has long been one of the
most nerve-wracking parts of the admissions process. Now, according to
a recent Associated Press story, colleges are beginning to bring the
admissions interview into the 21st century by conducting them online
via webcams. As the story explains:
Wake Forest
uses a webcam version of Skype for their online interviews. The
technology allowed [Avery] Cullinan and about 30 other hopefuls to use
a computer-mounted video camera and microphone to speak with an
admissions officer through the Internet, "face to face" on a computer
screen.
After a successful round of Web-based interviews
in the early admission process, Wake Forest offered the program to its
entire undergraduate applicant pool--a decision that doubled the number
of requests for such interviews.
"We decided this would be a wonderful alternative to the face-to-face interview," [Wake Forest admissions director Martha] Allman said. "We have to stay attuned to how students receive information and how they communicate."
While
this is a new development at the undergraduate level, the story says
that a dozen or so graduate programs have already been using webcams to
interview prospective students for years. With cameras increasingly
becoming a standard component on laptops--to say nothing of how popular
online video is among teens--I predict that this practice will become
standard within ten years.
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N'Gai Croal
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Jan 2, 2009 10:40 AM

Cover art for the Criterion Collection edition of Ang Lee's "The Ice Storm"
Back in my DVD buying heyday, scanning The Criterion Collection
section of Tower Records (R.I.P.) or the Virgin Megastore was an
essential part of movie shopping. Some of the movies I'd already seen
("Dead Ringers") and others I hadn't ("The Seven Samurai"), but the
care and dedication of the folks at Criterion always added a little
extra something to my viewing experience. So it's welcome news that the
company has started streaming some of its movies online. Here's how
Laurence Lerman wrote up the news for Video Business:
Titles
will be available online as streaming video for $5 for a one-week
rental. The rental fee can be applied toward the purchase of that film
on DVD or Blu-ray Disc when it is bought online at www.criterion.com.
Criterion also initiated a "frequent flyer" program wherein every
dollar spent earns the purchaser a point; 500 points yields a $50 gift
certificate redeemable at the Web site.
"The rental fee
counting toward the purchase of the DVD or Blu-ray was a direct
response to the fact that, even though we've spent a huge amount of
time developing an encoding workflow and a set of compression standards
that we truly believe is the most film-like streaming experience on the
Web, we still feel we can't offer video worth buying over the
Internet," said Becker. "If you love these movies and really want to
see them in high quality versions, you should buy the DVD or the
Blu-ray disc."
Kudos to Criterion for
implementing a loyalty program that should encourage movie lovers to
sample an even broader array of films than they might otherwise. There
are presently 26 of the company's 450 titles available for streaming,
including
such movies as "Solaris," "Au Revoir Les Enfants" and "Lord
of the Flies." Criterion has also partnered with The Auteurs, a social
network for cinephiles, to offer a monthly free, advertising-supported
online film festival. I really don't want to be enticed into buying any
more DVDs or Blu-Ray discs, but this is certainly tempting.
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N'Gai Croal
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Dec 31, 2008 02:40 PM

Cover art for the Blondie single "Call Me"
Some
iPhone apps are useful. Others are entertaining. Over at Ars Technica,
Jeff Smykll takes a shot at a series of paid apps whose value is highly
questionable: the speed dial apps from JerryBeers.com. Smykll writes:
In what could be considered the least imaginative get-rich
scheme in the history of the App Store, developer Jerry Beers of
JerryBeers.com has created a slew of speed dial applications that allow
users to dial a phone number by touching an icon on the iPhone's Home
screen. The catch is that the developer is hard coding names into the
apps; so while the number can change, the name cannot, allowing Beers
to sell a plethora of applications with the only difference being the
name on the icon, as well as a pink or blue icon based on the sex of
the name.
Caveat emptor, right? Yes...were it not for the fact that these apps clog up the store, which potentially makes it harder for more dedicated developers to rise to the surface. While I'm sympathetic to Smykll's
complaint, I'm not sure that it's really in anyone's interest for Apple
to clamp down on such apps. However, it does drive home the point that
the App Store is going to become less like a retail outlet and more
like the Web. There will be a wide variety of content--some useful, some
entertaining, and some whose value is highly questionable--for all of
us to choose from. And in time, we'll come to see that diversity as a
strength, not a weakness.
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N'Gai Croal
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Dec 31, 2008 12:33 PM

Train tracks shrouded in fog. Photo courtesy of
vsz.
According to Wikipedia, vaporware is "a term used to
describe a software or hardware product that is announced by a
developer well in advance of release, but which then fails to emerge
after having well exceeded the period of development time that was
initially claimed or would normally be expected for the development
cycle of a similar product." Every year, the tech industry gets us
journalists all wound up about its new products, so we in turn wind you
up, but a lot of them don't make it to market; hence the term
vaporware. Wired has been handing out its Vaporware Awards for eleven
years; you can see its 2008 list here.
My
thoughts? While the recently released Home virtual chat room for
Playstation 3 is certainly deserving of criticism, its inclusion on the
list violates the spirit of the Vaporware Awards. After all, if a
released product's beta status were enough to make it eligible,
shouldn't Gmail (yup, still officially in beta) get a Lifetime
Achievement Award? Other entries, like the Zap-X all-electric SUV (#7),
GPS-maker Garmin's Nuvifone mobile phone (#5) and Blizzard's real-time
strategy game StarCraft II (#4) are all worthy of the honor. As for the
#1 choice--the twelve-years-in-development videogame Duke Nukem Forever
(most games are completed in 12-36 months)--all I can say is, hail to
the king.
On a more serious note, if I'd had a vote, I would have found a place for Toshiba and Canon's SED (Surface-conduction Electron-emitter Displays)
flat screen television technology. Imagine a large TV with the vivid
colors and deep blacks of your old 4 by 3 TVs, but only as deep as a
plasma televison--while being cheaper than plasma and LCD to boot. That
was the promise of SED when Toshiba demonstrated it at the 2006
Consumer Electronics show in Las Vegas. My fellow journalists and I were blown away, and since then, nada, thanks in part to a lawsuit over patent rights. Now that the lawsuit has been resolved in Canon's favor, I'm hoping that SED sets will finally make it to market next year so that you can see for yourself.
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N'Gai Croal
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Dec 29, 2008 02:38 PM

An image from Atari's original patent application for its "video game control unit"
The folks over at Technologizer have put together a
gallery of images taken from patent applications for electronic gaming
systems ranging from the original Television Gaming Apparatus in 1969 to the Nintendo Game Boy in 1989. The text of the applications is rather geeky, but the images therein make for memory-prompting journey through our not-too-long-ago interactive past. Enjoy.
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N'Gai Croal
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Dec 29, 2008 10:09 AM
At a certain age, every boy outgrows his toys and his sandbox. The Central German amusement park Männerspielplatz
says no, you just need bigger toys and an even bigger sandbox. For 219
Euros, or around $280, customers can spend and entire day driving front
end loaders and backhoes, playing with jackhammers and firing all kinds
of weapons. Here's how Andrew Curry described it in Wired (you can also
see the magazine's photo slide show here):
The brainchild of Alexander Bammer, a former IT honcho,
Männerspielplatz (literally "men's playground") began seven years ago
as a one-off corporate promotion with a handful of rented earthmovers
at a construction site near Kassel in central Germany. The event struck
a chord with pasty execs who loved getting in touch with their inner
ditchdigger. "Most men these days don't work on a construction site;
they work at a desk," Bammer says. "They dream about experiences like
this." So in 2004, he decided to open Männerspielplatz, just outside
Kassel, as a 17-acre one-stop shop for man fantasy (slogan: "We fulfill
men's dreams!"). Most of the customers, it turns out, are actually
women buying tickets as gifts for husbands or boyfriends as an
alternative to one more tie--or perhaps something else. After all,
Bammer says: "I hear 'It's better than sex' a lot."
Having never been to Männerspielplatz myself, I'll have to refrain from further comment.
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N'Gai Croal
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Dec 19, 2008 12:36 PM
- FLAT: "Sales Growth of Flat-Panel TVs Is Expected to Slow"
is the headline of Eric A. Taub's New York Times story on what's
happening to the centerpiece of any worthwhile man cave. The story
quotes DisplaySearch senior vice president as saying "There was
an unnaturally high growth in sales due to the transition to digital TV
and the replacement of picture tube TVs....You would expect a reversion
to the mean, but this is beyond that."
- BOOHOO: The layoffs at super-portal Yahoo! have to results both tense and funny. Tense, according to a blog post Valleywag's Owen Thomas,
are comments made to Yahoo! founder Jerry Yang during the company's
Southern California holiday party (sample remark: "You laid off my
husband in February, we just had a baby, I got laid off on Wednesday.
Now you at least can put a face with some of the people you put out on
the street.") What about funny? That would be this YouTube video here.
- FLASH:
Traditional hard drive manufacturers can't rest on their laurels,
because solid state drives (SSDs) are breathing down their necks. Ars Technica's Jon Stokes writes that Sun and Micron have found a way to increase the lifespan of Flash memory-based drives. But that's not all. "The other big SSD news today is Toshiba's
announcement of a half-terabyte (512GB) SSD, the price of which hasn't
been revealed. The new drive has a maximum sequential read speed of 240
[megabytes per second] and a max sequential write speed of 200
[megabytes per second], making it plenty fast, especially relative to
its 2.5-inch magnetic competition." Which means quieter computers that
consume less power. Nice.
- 3-D: Stereoscopic imaging for laptops and iPhone is what Wazabee is showing off at MacWorld 2009. Engadget's Darren Murph posted
about the company's 3DeeShell, an "autostereoscopic overlay for the
MacBook Air and other 13.3-inch notebooks," and 3DeeFlector, "a special
protective skin with an integrated removable lens that can display 3D
content on the Apple iPhone." Perhaps 3-D pictures of that not-going-to-be-keynoting Steve Jobs will help ease attendees' pain.
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N'Gai Croal
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Dec 17, 2008 09:35 AM
- SAYONARA: We don't need no stinkin' Macworld, says Apple,
which revealed yesterday that a) Steve Jobs would not be delivering the
keynote at the January 2009 conference (senior vice president Phil
Schiller will, um, fill in); and b) Apple would no longer be
participating in Macworld following that event. And if Valleywag's Owen
Thomas is correct, the way the news came to light was interesting.
He says: "When [BusinessWeek's Arik] Hesseldahl published a story on
Monday with the headline 'Steve Jobs Will Be at Macworld,' all hell
broke loose. Kent called back, saying he meant that the show would go
forward, not that Jobs was a sure thing. Hesseldahl changed 'will' to
'may' in his headline and updated the story--but Kent's PR firm kept
calling to backpedal. The story spread, and the drumbeat of speculation
grew ever louder. Then, late Tuesday, came Apple's announcement that
Jobs would not deliver the keynote address at Macworld, a tradition
he's maintained since he returned to the company a decade ago." Oh, and
one more thing: The cover story was plausible enough: Trade shows were
an outdated way to sell Macs and iPhones. But Apple investors didn't
buy it, sending the stock down in after-hours trading."
- IPTV: Phone giant AT&T crosses a major threshold with
its U-Verse online television service: 1 million subscribers across 79
major markets in 16 states. Writes Ars Technica's Nate Anderson:
"The numbers remain below those of competitors like Verizon, and much
further below those of cable companies like Comcast. But getting to a
million subscribers for AT&T is a remarkable achievement given its
use of new technology (it's the only true IPTV operator among the big
US players), the regulatory and legal climate (the company got state
laws changed across the country), and the fact that's it's all
happening through DSL on twisted-pair copper wiring over which AT&T
continues to sell Internet and phone access."
- SERVED: If you've got legal woes, you may want to consider ditching your Facebook account, in Australia, anyway. As Canberra Times legal affairs reporter Noel Towell writes of a couple that had defaulted on its mortgage,
"[A]fter 11 failed attempts to find the couple at their Wyselaskie
Circuit home between November 8 and December 6, the lawyers tried a
change of tack. Lawyers Mark McCormack and Jason Oliver convinced the
court the Facebook profiles for the defendants were those of Ms Corbo
and Mr Poyser. 'The Facebook profiles showed the defendants' dates of
birth, email addresses and friend lists and the co-defendants were
friends with one another,'' a spokesman for the firm said. This
information was enough to satisfy the court that Facebook was a
sufficient method of communicating with the defendants." Gives a whole
new meaning to the relationship status "It's Complicated."
- WEEZY: Can Lil' Wayne (and Merge Records and Kid Rock) save journalism in the Internet era? That's the argument being made by Alissa Quart in the Columbia Journalism Review.
Quart says, "The first thing that writers might copy from
musicians—even more than they do already—could be called the Free
Culture Method. In music, one prong of that is mixtape giveaways.
Despite recent miseries in the music business, Lil Wayne, the
rap artist, sold more copies of his CD in one week than anyone this
year, having built an audience by sending free mixtapes into the ether.
Mixtapes, at least these days, are pressed CDs or downloads containing
demos or raw mixes of tracks, as well as collaborations. Lil Wayne’s
mixtape method is the musical equivalent of writers who give away
original material on their blogs, writers like Alan Sepinwall,
otherwise just another television reviewer at a mid-size metro—The
Star-Ledger in Newark. Sepinwall writes an elaborate, trenchant, and
heavily commented-upon blog (check out his 2,023-word analysis of the
television show Mad Men’s 'Maidenform' episode) in addition to his
print column, and the blog has extended his reach. Or consider Andrew
Revkin’s sharp New York Times blog and vlog on global warming, through
which Revkin made himself a brand."
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N'Gai Croal
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Dec 15, 2008 10:05 AM
- Can Palm find its mojo again? As someone who's still
rocking a Palm T|X--along with a BlackBerry and a 3G iPhone--I'm
pulling for them. Thankfully, this Business Week story centered around ex-Apple guru Jon Rubenstein gives me hope.
Peter Burrows writes: "On Jan. 8 at the Consumer Electronics Show in
Las Vegas, Palm is due to unveil the long-awaited operating system,
code-named Nova, as well as the first of a family of products that will
run on it. While Palm has protected its plans with Apple-like secrecy,
Rubinstein and others say the goal is to create products that bridge
the gap between Research In Motion's (RIMM) BlackBerry devices,
oriented to work and e-mail, and Apple's iPhone, oriented to fun.
'People's work and personal lives are melding,' [Palm CEO Ed] Colligan
says, adding that Palm is aiming for the 'fat middle of the market.'"
- Microsoft's Live Labs group has released its "deep zoom" mobile photo application called Seadragon first for the iPhone.
Why? Says Alex Daley, the division's group product manager, to
TechFlash's Todd Bishop: "The iPhone is the most widely distributed
phone with a (graphics processing unit)....Most phones out today don't
have accelerated graphics in them. The iPhone does and so it enabled us
to do something that has been previously difficult to do. I couldn’t
just pick up a Blackberry or a Nokia off the shelf and build Seadragon
for it without GPU support." The article says that we can expect to see
other iPhone apps from Microsoft next year.
- Just as video killed the radio star, Steve Jobs snuffed out the album. That's the word from Smashing Pumpkins frontman Billy Corgan,
sort of. When interviewer Greg Kot asked Corgan if "Zeitgeist" was his
last album, Corgan replied: "We're done with that. There is no point.
People don't even listen to it all. They put it on their iPod, they
drag over the two singles and skip over the rest. The listening
patterns have changed, so why are we killing ourselves to do albums, to
create balance and do the arty track to set up the single? It's done." This Smashing Pumpkins fan hopes that Corgan will reconsider.
- Looking
to bring in some extra coin during "The Great Depression II: Electric
Boogaloo"--and satisfy passengers who start jonesing without their
broadband connections--Delta is rolling in-flight Wi-Fi service on a number of its flight. Here's how the Washington Post's Alejandro Lazo describes it:
"The service will allow customers traveling with WiFi-enabled devices
such as laptops, smartphones and personal digital assistants access to
the Internet, as well as SMS texting and instant messaging services.
Voice calls still will not be allowed. The service will be offered for
free on local shuttle flights through the end of the year. Next year,
it will be $9.95 on flights of three hours or less and $12.95 on longer
flights." Once I get my hands on a gaming laptop and a copy of Left 4 Dead, I'll be able to train for the coming zombie apocalypse just about anywhere.
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