Archive for July, 2010

Increased piracy hurt Microsoft’s quarter

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

(Credit:
Microsoft)

Healy said that the company expected the piracy reduction trend to return in the current period, the company’s fourth quarter, which runs through June.

“We saw the PC market take a different mix,” Healy said. “Emerging markets on the PC hardware came in a little stronger; mature markets came in a little weaker.”

In an interview, Colleen Healy, Microsoft’s general manager of investor relations, said that the number of unlicensed PCs, particularly in Asia, increased during the company’s third quarter. That was one of the factors that caused the Windows unit to come in shy of what the company had forecast.

Weakness in the Windows unit and the Microsoft Business Division, which includes Office, was offset by higher-than-expected sales in the Entertainment and Devices unit, which includes
Xbox, Healy said.

She also said that Microsoft continues to see a strong market for software, despite rumblings about the economy.

Colleen Healy, Microsoft's general manager of investor relations

“Q3 was a tough quarter on the unlicensed front,” Healy said. “We had been making gains there for the past several quarters.”

Overall, Healy said the PC market came up about a percentage point shy of Microsoft’s growth forecast.

For several quarters, Microsoft has been seeing a drop in piracy rates, which has been helping fuel improved business in its Windows unit. In the just-reported March quarter, however, Microsoft saw an increased rate of piracy, an executive told CNET News.com on Thursday.

“When we look at the envirnonment, IT and software spending continues to look healthy,” she said. “From where we sit, the economy is looking good from an IT and software spending standpoint.”

Mozilla patches highly critical security flaws

Friday, July 30th, 2010

Mozilla also notes that another set of critical vulnerabilities in all three could redirect users from a legitimate site to a malicious one, where users’ private data could be stolen. And a third set of critical flaws noted in all three could lead to the launching of arbitrary JavaScript within a different Web site.

Users are advised to update to version 3.0.5 of Firefox, which was released Tuesday. They are also advised to update to version 2.0.0.19 of Thunderbird and version 1.1.14 of SeaMonkey.

According to a research note released Wednesday by security researcher Secunia:

Mozilla has released updates to its popular
Firefox browser, its Thunderbird e-mail client, and its SeaMonkey application suite, aiming to address highly critical security flaws that could expose users’ sensitive information.

Some vulnerabilities have been reported in Mozilla Firefox, which can be exploited by malicious people to bypass certain security restrictions, disclose sensitive information, conduct cross-site scripting attacks, or potentially compromise a user’s system.

Errors in the layout and JavaScript engines can be exploited to corrupt memory and potentially execute arbitrary code.
An error when processing the “persist” XUL attribute can be exploited to bypass cookie settings and uniquely identify a user in subsequent browsing sessions.
Multiple errors can be exploited to bypass the same-origin policy, disclose sensitive information, and execute JavaScript code with chrome privileges.

One advisory addresses critical security flaws in all three programs (Firefox, Thunderbird, and SeaMonkey) that could arise from memory corruption and result in malicious attackers launching arbitrary code from users computers.

The vulnerabilities were found in earlier versions of Firefox 3, as well as in versions of Firefox 2.

Retrevo launches DTV coupon exchange

Friday, July 30th, 2010

You can choose to give or receive your coupon through the mail or via an in-person exchange, but the only thing that can change hands is the coupons themselves–no buying or selling allowed.

Though DTV converter boxes are stacked up in most electronics stores, there are not enough guaranteed government coupons for them since the funds for the program began to run out.

On Retrevo’s DTV site, you simply choose whether you have a coupon to give or if you need one. Enter an e-mail address and a ZIP code and Retrevo will connect people living near each other so they can exchange. (Note: the person you are connected with will have your e-mail address, so consider that ahead of time.)

(Credit:
DTV2009.org)

With the scheduled transition to DTV broadcasting fast approaching (slated for February 17), one company is encouraging us to share the wealth. Retrevo’s Good Neighbor Coupon Exchange Program links up those who have unused converter box coupons with those who are in need of them.

Tech lobbying groups look into possible merger

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

ITAA and AEA (formerly known as the American Electronics Association) would complement each other, according to AEA President Christopher Hansen. AEA lobbies mainly at the state level, while ITAA works with at the federal and international level.

Two tech trade and lobby groups say they are exploring a merger.

The two groups together would represent more than 2,000 companies–right now AEA has 2,500 member companies, the Information Technology Association of America about 350, with some overlap. The two say becoming one would increase their size and clout.

The merger is not a done deal yet, but both groups say that there needs to be further consolidation in tech lobbying. The industry has several other trade groups as well: including the Consumer Electronics Association, the Computer & Communications Industry Association, the Computing Technology Industry Association, the Business Software Alliance, and the Information Technology Industry Council.

Kevin Rose foretells iPod Nano redesign

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

Expectations are running high that Apple next month will bring out new
iPod models.

Against that backdrop, we bring you to today’s tip sheet, the blog of Digg founder Kevin Rose. His take: “Sometime between now and the end of next month, Apple’s going to be refreshing quite a bit of their iPod line.”

And will OS X 10.5.6 include Blu-ray support? Could well be, Rose reports.

Certainly, September has a solid track record as the month that Apple favors for its iPod launches. And as my colleague Tom Krazit pointed out the other day, drawing on a report on AppleInsider, some inventory management changes at retailer Target lend credence to the notion of old iPods giving way to new iPods next month. Tom has also pointed to reports of a potential redesign of the iPod Nano.

Blogger Kevin Rose offers this photo of what he says is the redesigned iPod Nano.

(Credit:
Kevin Rose)

The Touch will be the first, he says, to have the 2.1 software, after which Apple will bring that software to the
iPhone. The world will also see the arrival of iTunes 8.0–”a true point upgrade,” according to Rose.

Price cuts are on the way for the iPod line, too, to avoid cannibalization from sales of the $199 iPhone 3G, Rose says.

Rose offers some details on what he says will be coming, though he doesn’t provide any info on his sources. The Nano, he says, will see a significant redesign, with a shift to a longer, skinnier case. As it happens, that matches up with design murmurings from earlier in the summer. The iPod Touch, meanwhile, will see just cosmetic changes, Rose reports.

Who will reign over Digg Obama or Jobs

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

What it shows is that, politics or no politics, Digg is getting big, and its tight-knit, active community isn’t sure that it’s a good thing. Adelson and Rose kept hinting at more customization features on the way. Soon you’ll be able to get suggested stories, they said, and Rose said that the suggestion about letting members block stories in an unwanted category unless they rake in a minimum number of Diggs was “an awesome idea.” Fixes are in the works, they kept reiterating.

But something it did reveal: There’s a storm afoot at Digg, and it could very well shape the site’s future.

The first question asked complained about the dilution of Digg’s trademark tech news by partisan politics, with the submitter declaring, “I’ve had enough Huffington Post stories for a lifetime” in reference to the popular liberal news aggregation site. Another question wondered whether Adelson, Rose, & company might make it so that users could customize it so that they see only the extremely popular stories in categories they don’t prefer. A Digger who’s not a fan of political news, for example, could limit politics stories to stuff on the caliber of a winner for the Democratic presidential nomination.

When Kevin Rose founded Digg, the site caught on as a hub for quirky geek news, and it’s retained a reputation as being full of extremely opinionated tech enthusiasts. But with the 2008 presidential election on the way, Digg has caught on among another very vocal set of news junkies: the political crowd. It’s helped boost the site’s numbers for sure: Digg now boasts 230 million page views per month, 26 million unique visitors, and 15,000 stories submitted per day.

That wasn’t all. Still another participant asked whether the management could institute a feature to block stories that contain certain words, another complained about “special interest groups” and “rude, agenda-driven people,” and yet another said that “useful information is pushed aside for whatever the mob wants.”

But that’s what Adelson and Rose were saying in the last town hall event, too, and that presidential election isn’t going away any time soon.

On one hand, Digg’s geeky early adopters ought to welcome the red-and-blue hordes because they’re helping to bring the site to a new level. But the questions in Monday night’s Webcast, which were selected by users “digging” and “burying” the questions, revealed that the politicization of Digg hasn’t been altogether popular.

Monday night’s Digg Town Hall, the second in the social news site’s live Webcast series hosted by CEO Jay Adelson and founder Kevin Rose, didn’t answer any of the really big questions. No acquisitions, no Series C funding, no dirt about Rose’s dating life.

Week in review Google axes Yahoo ad deal

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

Google is letting Yahoo go it alone.

The FCC also approved the $28 billion merger between Verizon Wireless and Alltel after a four-hour delay in which commissioners negotiated terms of the deal. The merger will create the largest wireless operator in the U.S. The FCC had been expected to approve the merger, but like the Justice Department, which is requiring Verizon to sell off assets in 22 states, the FCC was expected to put its own conditions on the merger.

On the airwaves
The Federal Communications Commission–despite protests from TV broadcasters, entertainers, professional sports leagues, church pastors, and some congressional leaders–approved rules for devices using spectrum that sits between broadcast TV channels. This 300MHz to 400MHz of unused spectrum known as “white spaces” is considered prime spectrum for offering wireless broadband services because it can travel long distances and penetrate walls.

Regulators, at one point two or three weeks ago, told Google that if the government pursued a lawsuit to block the deal, it would consider adding a monopolization count against Google to the complaint, which in essence would allege the search giant of using monopoly power in a relevant market. Apparently that hit a nerve with the search giant, noted a source, and it became evident to regulators that Google’s resolve to fight a legal battle was wavering when faced with the prospect of a monopolist label and all the regulatory oversight that could come with it.

One piece of spam alleges to contain a link to video of Obama’s acceptance speech but links to a site with an .exe file that could infect systems with a Trojan virus.

Technology companies such as Google, Motorola, Microsoft, and Dell have been lobbying the FCC for years to open this spectrum for unlicensed use. The hope is that the spectrum could be used to augment existing wireless services or eventually be used to create new wireless broadband services.

The 10-year deal would have placed Google ads on some Yahoo search results, and the companies would have shared resulting revenue. The deal would have let Yahoo show ads on pages where its own technology, called Panama, wasn’t able to provide results, the company said.

Also of note
One of the fathers of the
iPod, Tony Fadell, is leaving Apple after seven years spent inside the division that changed the company’s fortunes…Circuit City announced plans to close 155 stores and lay off 17 percent of its workforce in the U.S….Microsoft is discontinuing an option to use Hotmail’s older “classic” interface, merging it with a newer “full” design into a hybrid the company says is faster to use than both the predecessors…YouTube will begin offering feature films produced by at least one of the biggest Hollywood movie studios, possibly as early as next month.

When Obama becomes president in January with a strongly Democratic Congress, he’ll have the chance to push a technology policy that relies more on government subsidy and regulation than that of his immediate predecessor.

But TV broadcasters and wireless microphone companies have long opposed the use of this spectrum, saying it will interfere with their services. In the past few weeks, these opponents, along with several congressional leaders, had urged the FCC to allow more public comments before the vote would take place.

Now that Google has given Yahoo the boot, is Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang getting eager to make a deal? Yang appears to be leaving the door very much open for an old suitor: Microsoft.

Also, after the election, word surfaced that Obama’s presidential-campaign computers had come under cyberattack this summer from an “unknown entity.” His machines weren’t alone; John McCain’s computers were also attacked, according to a report in Newsweek.

On copyright, the conventional thinking is that Democrats are more likely to align themselves with the recording and movie industries’ wishes. That may not be the case here: it was John McCain who talked up more aggressive enforcement of copyright law domestically, while Obama said “we need to update and reform our copyright and patent systems to promote civic discourse, innovation, and investment while ensuring that intellectual property owners are fairly treated.”

In some ways, the Justice Department’s decision was not terribly surprising. Over the past two or three weeks, federal antitrust regulators became increasingly wary of the agreement and, in particular, tested Google’s resolve to remain in the deal, according to sources. Over the past few weeks, the give-and-take of negotiations between the parties began to falter as government regulators became increasingly unyielding in their demands.

Bowing to federal regulators’ antitrust concerns, Google pulled the plug on a search-ad partnership with Yahoo that would have given the latter major new revenue.

During the meeting, the two Democratic commissioners on the FCC–Michael Copps and Jonathan Adelstein–expressed concern that combining Verizon and Alltel will limit the number of roaming partners that smaller carriers in rural markets can work with. In addition to keeping roaming rates the same, the FCC is requiring Verizon to divest service in a total of 100 markets. It is also requiring E911 accuracy and Universal Service Fund contributions.

“After four months of review, including discussions of various possible changes to the agreement, it’s clear that government regulators and some advertisers continue to have concerns about the agreement,” David Drummond, Google’s chief legal officer, said in a blog post Wednesday.

Tuesday night’s total was a big jump from the previous record of 7.3 million, set in June 2006, when Ghana eliminated the United States in a World Cup soccer event. Sporting events–most notably the U.S. March Madness basketball tournament–dominate Akamai’s list of the top 15 events in terms of visitors per minute since the index was started in August 2005.

During a moderated “conversation” at the Web 2.0 conference in San Francisco, Yang said late Wednesday, “To this day, I have to say that the best thing for Microsoft to do is to buy Yahoo. I don’t think that is a bad idea at all…”

Meanwhile, some of the Internet activity related to the election fell into the nuisance and nefarious categories. Within hours of the election’s conclusion, spam seen worldwide began incorporating the name and image of the incoming president, according to various security vendors. The U.K.’s Sophos reported 60 percent of all spam seen by the lab on Wednesday was in some way Obama related.

On Wednesday, two new Web sites launched that map out Obama’s transition to the White House. Change.gov, Obama’s official transition site, features a blog, a section with Obama’s agenda, and a section that profiles the Obama administration. Meanwhile, the Government Accountability Office launched its own 2009 Congressional and Presidential Transition site to make recommendations for ways the new government can address the nation’s biggest challenges.

Election fever
Intense interest in the outcome of the U.S. presidential election helped drive record traffic to news sites, according to Akamai Technologies. At 8 p.m. PST Tuesday, just as word was coming that Barack Obama had won the election, Akamai’s Net Usage Index showed more than 8.5 million worldwide visitors per minute to the company’s aggregate set of news sites. Not all of the traffic, of course, may have been specific to election coverage, but the relative audience size in the index correlates strongly to particular events.

Report iPhones en route to Russia

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

Official sales of the iPhone are likely to start in October, with a deal having been reached between Apple and Mobile TeleSystems, Russia’s largest carrier, according to the Reuters news agency, citing market sources. A second, carrier has also signed a framework agreement, and a third deal is in the offing, Reuters reported.

(Credit:
Apple)

When Apple announced the latest
iPhone, the 3G, in June, CEO Steve Jobs set a goal of getting the device into 70 countries “over the next several months.” But in the big map of the world on display during his keynote address at Apple’s Worldwide Developer Conference, Russia was a large and conspicuous void–as was its sizable neighbor, China.

A mobile telecommunications analyst told Reuters that MTS aims to sell 1 million iPhones within two years, and that total sales by the top three carriers over that two-year period are expected to hit 3.5 million units.

Also at WWDC in June, Jobs said he expected Apple to sell 10 million phones this year.

There are reportedly 600,000 unauthorized iPhones already in Russian hands.

The price to Russian consumers is expected to be 24,000 rubles, or about $990. That’s far higher than the price in the U.S., but much less, Reuters said, than the price of unauthorized iPhones already being scooped up in Russia.

The iPhone 3G.

Russians may soon get their chance to queue up to buy the Apple iPhone. Legally, that is.

SanDisk, record labels announce new music format

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

The ever-shrinking record album–its latest iteration being the compact disc–just got a lot more compact, or shall we say, micro.

A joint press release from all the involved parties is scant on details about what will be released in SlotMusic format. But The Wall Street Journal (subscription required), citing people close to the record companies and retailers, says the initial release batch will be 29 albums from all four of the involved labels. “The releases are mostly by current pop artists including Rihanna, Ne-Yo, Robin Thicke, New Kids on the Block, Weezer, Usher, Chris Brown, Akon and Leona Lewis,” the story stays. “In a nod to older buyers, Elvis Presley is also represented.”

Also not mentioned in the release is anything about pricing. The New York Times’ Saul Hansell, however, says a record label executive told him he estimates they’ll go for $7 to $10.

With CD sales continuing to flounder, this latest effort to boost physical media sales is aimed at users of the millions of cell phones and MP3 players with MicroSD slots. They can insert the card right into the slot and immediately hear the music. The card will also come with a USB sleeve so it can be plugged in directly to any USB-enabled computer.

SlotMusic cards will be sold without digital rights management restrictions and in the form of MP3 files from EMI Music, Sony BMG, Universal Music Group, and Warner Music Group.

Backed by four major music labels, SanDisk on Monday announced a new physical music format dubbed “SlotMusic” that’s essentially an entire album on a MicroSD compact memory card. Wal-Mart and Best Buy are among the retailers that have already signed on to start selling the cards for the upcoming holiday season.

A "SlotMusic" card

(Credit:
SanDisk)

Software, camera allies try easing photo data pain

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

Another possible issue is handling metadata for photo licensing information, which could bring some rights management order to the today’s image copying free-for-all, but that’s tricky. “We’re in the phase of capturing the problem,” Weisberg said. “There are no standards in the industry for licensing images that are widely adhered to.”

The working group has produced guidelines to try to bring common practices to metadata areas including keywords, description, creator, star rating, orientation, and location, Weisberg said. The group dealt with three file formats: TIFF, JPEG, and Adobe Photoshop’s PSD.

“Whether you’re a soccer mom uploading photos to a Kodak gallery, or a pro selling images on Getty, these are issues everybody deals with,” said Josh Weisberg, Microsoft’s director of digital imaging evangelism and the metadata group’s chairman and founder.

It’s a boon that digital photos can incorporate textual information, leaving behind some film-era complications, such as having to separately record a photo’s caption or copyright status.

The companies have formed the Metatdata Working Group and released a first set of guidelines that attempts to standardize some issues that can crop up as metadata travels from cameras to computers, software, and Web sites. On Wednesday, the group announced its work at the Photokina camera show in Germany.

The Metadata Working Group’s guidelines are a free download from the Web site, and anyone is free to implement them without worrying about infringing any of the members’ intellectual property, Weisberg said.

The working group got started on the current guidelines a year ago. Now, it’s moving on to the next set of issues. “With the first version, we began with consumer scenarios. We’re formulating a plan for a second version. It’s our intent to address professional scenarios,” Weisberg said.

For example, when moving a photo from one application to another, a vertically orientated photo can get rotated 90 degrees into a landscape orientation, or captions and descriptive keywords can get lost. Part of the problem is that there are multiple ways to record metadata, including EXIF (Exchangeable Image File Format), IPTC (International Press Telecommunications Council), and Adobe’s XMP (Extensible Metadata Platform).

One big issue is handling the profusion of raw file formats produced by higher-end cameras and commonly used by professionals and advanced amateurs. These formats are generally proprietary, so it’s hard to handle their metadata. Windows does so by relying on software supplied by camera makers, but Adobe and Apple do their own reverse-engineering work to handle the metadata. So for example, unless a
Windows Vista user has downloaded the appropriate support, the operating system’s file browser software can’t report when a raw photo was taken, even though that metadata is stored in the photo file.

Being guidelines, others are free to handle metadata they way they want, but the collective clout of the working group members–the two major operating system makers, the top camera maker, and the top image-editing software maker–mean it’s likely others will follow suit.

“It is a goal to try to establish guidelines for where and how metadata is stored in raw formats,” Weisberg said.

But there are some problems handling this so-called metadata, and now Canon, Adobe Systems, Apple, Microsoft, Sony, and Nokia have banded together to solve some of them.

Up next: Handling raw images
There’s more work to be done, though.