Archive for May, 2010

Google App Engine to support Java (starting this w

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

I’ve written multiple times about why Java is the right answer for the cloud. It will be interesting to see how Google pulls this off.

And while everyone notes that this appears to be a swipe at Microsoft, I can’t see how Sun can let this pass. It’s starting to get a little depressing seeing Sun on the sidelines as the cloud evolves without them.

I couldn’t find any additional details. If anyone knows if/when this is true please comment.

Word on the street: Google’s Prasad Ram said that Google App Engine will now support Java at recent Google developer event in India.

Yang Yahoo cuts ‘very hard, but very necessary’

Monday, May 24th, 2010

this is a tough time for all of us and i wanted to take a moment to reach out to you.

today, most of our layoffs in the US are happening, and they’ve been underway in other regions around the world.

jerry

for those who are affected by these layoffs, i am extremely grateful for your contributions to yahoo!. we realize the impact this will have on you. that’s why, consistent with our past practices, we’re making every effort to support you with severance packages and other services.

thanks,

Here’s what outgoing Chief Executive Jerry Yang had to say to employees about it in a memo that uses his trademark lowercase style.

the reductions we’re making are very hard, but they are also very necessary–as we focus on the long-term health of our business. to those who are leaving us, i extend my heartfelt thanks on behalf of yahoos everywhere–you will be missed.

but as you all know, we must take actions to better perform in today’s turbulent global economy. while we’ve found efficiencies in many parts of our business, laying off employees is unfortunately unavoidable. our difficult decision to let colleagues go reflects the changes we’re having to make to better align costs with revenues - something businesses in virtually every sector are also having to do.

saying goodbye to colleagues and friends is never easy. they all are dedicated members of our yahoo! family, who worked beside us and shared our passion.

yahoos,

Outgoing CEO Jerry Yang

(Credit:
Yahoo)

Yahoo began laying off 1,520 employees around the world on Wednesday as the company tries to deal with its financial difficulties.

Apple software now supports Nikon’s top SLR

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

Aperture’s competitor, Adobe Systems’ Photoshop Lightroom, also got D3X support Monday, which is eve of the Photo Marketing Association (PMA) show here.

Apple Aperture in action.

(Via Rob Galbraith.)

Apple’s Digital Camera Raw Compatibility Update 2.5 also adds support for Epson’s Epson R-D1x digital rangefinder camera, according to the Apple support page.

LAS VEGAS–Apple on Monday added support in its software for raw image files from Nikon’s top-end SLR, the $8,000, 24.5-megapixel D3X.

(Credit:
Apple)

The software enables Aperture 2, iPhoto ‘08, and iPhoto ‘09 to interpret the cameras’ raw files, proprietary formats that include more information than JPEGs. The update requires
Mac OS X 10.4.11, Mac OS X 10.5.3, or later.

A full list of Apple’s raw image support is available on Apple’s support site.

Yahoo offers Carol Bartz CEO post

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

Shortly after the Google deal collapsed, Yang announced he would step down as CEO as soon as a replacement was found.

During Bartz’s tenure, Autodesk largely outperformed the broader markets and particularly gained ground in mid-2003 to late 2004.

In addition to Bartz, other strong contenders the company had considered included Yahoo President Sue Decker, as well as former Vodafone CEO Arun Sarin.

Bartz comes to a company that has been embattled over the past year.

Bartz is a well known, respected executive within Silicon Valley, who led the drafting and design software maker Autodesk for 14 years, before announcing in early 2006 that she would step down as CEO, as part of a planned transition of the company.

Although Yahoo has not received word that Bartz has accepted the post, The Wall Street Journal is reporting that she will take the position.

Update at 11:21 a.m. PST with more information on Yahoo’s challenges over the past year.

Yahoo has offered the chief executive post to former Autodesk CEO Carol Bartz and she intends to respond to the offer “quickly,” said a source familiar with the talks.

Bartz, should she accept the post, would take over the role held by Yahoo’s co-founder and embattled CEO Jerry Yang, who came under fire after failed buyout negotiations with Microsoft.

On Tuesday, Yahoo shares fell about 2 percent to $11.94 in mid-morning trading, despite reports of Bartz’s impending appointment.

Carol Bartz

A Yahoo spokeswoman declined to comment on Bartz. An Autodesk spokeswoman also declined to comment.

Early last year, Microsoft launched an unsolicited bid to buy the company, later walking away after a $33-a-share offer was rejected by Yahoo. The search pioneer was also the target of a proxy fight by shareholder activist Carl Icahn, who eventually joined Yahoo’s board as part of a settlement with the company. And as the year came to a close, Yahoo’s hope of ramping up its revenue with an advertising search partnership with Google fell by the wayside. The search giant walked away from the deal when the U.S. Department of Justice notified the companies it would challenge such an arrangement under antitrust grounds.

Report Electric-car maker Think hits brakes

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

Think, which used to be owned by Ford, is one of the more high-profile electric-car makers.

Representatives from the Norwegian government told Reuters on Tuesday said that it would not directly intervene to prop up the company.

Think Global, which makes the Think City electric
car, is having difficulty securing money to continue operating and is seeking state aid from the Norwegian government, according to a report.

It plans to reduce staff by at least 50 percent and stop production with an eye toward restarting in the first quarter of next year, the report said.

Reuters reported on Monday that Think CEO Richard Canny held a news conference where he said that the company needs up to $29 million in loan guarantees.

It is already manufacturing the Think City for sale in Europe. It had planned on rolling out a new version in Scandinavia early next year that would have a top speed of 65 miles per hour and a range of about 100 miles. Battery makers Ener1 and A123 Systems had been contracted to supply lithium-ion batteries for the city cars.

In a statement, the company said it had “limited possibilities for funding working capital through bank credits without extra guarantees in today’s financial markets.”

Think has run into financial problems before, having gone bankrupt twice. But it secured new investors in 2006.

The Think City from Think Global.

(Credit:
Martin LaMonica/CNET Networks)

The company said the global financial crisis has made it difficult to get working capital and parts suppliers are demanding more difficult financial terms.

Create lean and mean RSS feeds with Feed Rinse

Saturday, May 15th, 2010

Hate reading a certain blogger? Choose to block or otherwise filter posts by keyword, title, author, and more with Feed Rinse.

Here’s an oldie but a goodie. Feed Rinse is a super simple and user-friendly way to tweak RSS feeds before subscribing to them in your favorite reader tool.

One thing worth mentioning is that Feed Rinse is smart enough to know you’re going to take your newly created RSS feed elsewhere, and as such has special links that will send your feed out to various reader services like iGoogle, My Yahoo, Netvibes, and others. There’s also a bookmarklet that lets you tweak the RSS feed on any site you’re on with one click. Both are nice touches that save you time.

With it you can pick which authors or keywords you want to exclude, giving you complete control over what ends up filling your feed reader. For example, on Webware’s RSS feed you could very quickly choose to only get posts about Google (which is possible on our main site using tags), or a handful of keywords at the same time.

Feed Rinse is completely free to use, although you’re limited to creating and managing just 500 filters per user account. The service previously had a premium and plus plans, however these disappeared two years ago in place of a unified offering.

As Martin over at Ghacks points out, you could accomplish a similar feat on Yahoo’s Pipes service, although I found Feed Rinse to be dramatically easier to use. It’s a lot like programming a smart playlist in iTunes, with simple drop-down menus, instead of Pipes’ system which requires you to create programming strings.

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

(via Ghacks)

Google cuts data retention time in half

Monday, May 10th, 2010

In a blog post, Google said it would keep IP addresses on its server logs for 9 months before anonymizing them, down from the 18 months it had previously stored the data.

Under pressure from European regulators, Google is halving the amount of time its stores Internet Protocol addresses.

Google had introduced the 18-month policy in 2007.

A European Commission advisory body issued an opinion paper earlier this year urging search engines to delete data collected about their users after six months.

At the time, Google said the proposals could have an impact on its ability “to provide quality products and services for users, like accurate search results, as well as system security and integrity concerns.”

Added Peter Fleischer, global privacy counsel for Google: “We haven’t sorted out all of the implementation details, and we may not be able to use precisely the same methods for anonymizing as we do after 18 months, but we are committed to making it work.”

Google filed a response to EU regulators (PDF) on Monday, saying in a blog post that “after months of work, our engineers developed methods for preserving more of the data’s utility while also anonymizing IP addresses sooner.”

Microsoft unveils new Xbox Live ‘experience’

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

(Credit:
Microsoft)

Whether that will work is, of course, still to be determined, but Microsoft thinks it got off to a good start by recently lowering the price of the most basic Xbox to $199, a move it says has boosted sales significantly.

But that’s getting a little too far ahead.

For Microsoft, then, the new Xbox Live is an attempt to bridge the entire gaming audience, from the most casual, fortysomething woman, to the most hard-core, teen male Halo addict.

With the new Xbox Live interface, users will be able to see all information relevant to their account in a simpler, easier-to-understand format.

But Microsoft doesn’t think it is copying Nintendo or anyone else. Rather, it takes the view that it is just adjusting to what the marketplace wants.

In the new Xbox Live experience, much of the interface is designed to cascade horizontally across the screen, allowing users to see a wide selection of choices. On HD TVs, users will be able to see even more information, given the wider screen.

That’s in part, Gruhl added, because of what is known as party channels, which actually enable the communications between members of a party, regardless of whether they’re playing the same game or not.

And the system is optimized so that all information surrounding a single game will appear on a single game page, where players will be able to see who’s playing, what live features are offered, any videos that are available, and any new downloads that have come out.

This is basically a quick start dashboard that allows players to jump instantly to what they want, obviating the need, if they’re in a hurry, to go through the larger Xbox Live experience. Choices are more limited in what they can do, but most of what they need to navigate is available here.

Either way, once you’ve picked your avatar, you are ready to jump into the new Xbox Live.

One benefit of this is that friends can set up a party channel that will allow them to, say, jointly go into a multiplayer game and communicate amongst themselves, even as they play against other players.

All about avatars
Clearly, with this new interface, Microsoft is going for both Sony’s and Nintendo’s jugulars, hoping to create a community experience that lures gamers of every level of experience, every age group, both genders, and even those for whom watching movies through the Netflix option that Microsoft will make available at some point is as close as they come to playing games.

Any discussion of the new Xbox Live, though, has to start with the service’s new avatars function.

This will also allow content developers to create a long tail, said Gruhl, because it will allow them to promote their content on Web sites and drive people to Xbox.com, where they can order it.

Party time
Another big element of the new iteration of Xbox Live is what are called “parties.” This, it turns out, is a crucial piece of the whole puzzle, because it’s what will allow players to maximize the way they play games together with their friends.

When choosing an avatar, the choices come running onto the screen, one group at a time. Some will jump up and down to try to get users’ attention.

These channels, then, will show things like events that are coming up in the system, as well as the marketplace, where players can buy all kinds of new things–including a new community games channel that appears in the marketplace. These are games made by the community using Microsoft’s XNA Studio development software.

Now, these themes will be incorporated in a new way, said Rob Gruhl, a senior strategist with Microsoft’s game platform strategy team, who showed me how players can essentially have large game-themed wallpaper that sits in the background of their Xbox Live screen.

Yet another new feature is that Xbox Live users will be able to instigate changes to their system through Xbox.com. That means that if players see some new accessory or game update they want while they are away from their Xbox console, but are using the Internet on a computer, they can order what they want and it will queue up. When they return to their Xboxes, they don’t have to try to remember what it was they wanted.

(Credit:
Microsoft)

It’s not clear yet, according to Albert Penello, director of marketing for Microsoft’s platform and Xbox Live group, whether the avatars will find their way into games. Even if they do, it would likely be something that would happen at the more casual end of the spectrum.

There’s also a way, using Spotlight, to search for games, and to sort by genre, so that players can easily see, for example, all the racing games currently in their system or currently available through the marketplace.

Microsoft clearly has to work on how it messages the changes in the new Xbox Live, due to the worries of its core audience. But from what I’ve seen, I think anyone who uses the system for a while will grow to like what they see.

With the existing Xbox Live, a big fan favorite was what are called themes, essentially imagery from games like Halo 3 or Gears of War that are used to customize the Live experience.

Well, based on a demo I got recently of the (not quite finished) new version of Xbox Live, I’d have to say, fret no more.

All told, these game pages will show everything related to the individual games, including material that players don’t yet have, allowing them to easily buy those new things–and making it easier for Microsoft to generate revenue through additional transactions.

One feature will be that parties will make it easy for players to communicate with a group of friends, using a voice or text messaging system. And even if a group isn’t actively playing together, friends can see others’ profiles, showing what they’re playing and whether it’s possible to join games in progress.

To date, the Xbox Live interface has been based on what are called blades, essentially pages of information stacked on top of each other in such as way as to maximize the number of choices Xbox Live players have and the directions in which they can go. They can see lists of games to play, choose to watch a movie, go into a section to buy add-ons for games, and so on. The new interface largely does away with the blades era and moves into a more advanced motif of full windows that spread out on the screen and stretch off into the distance, allowing users to shuttle through them, left to right or right to left.

And, again, I would have to agree.

Dubbed the new “Xbox Live Experience,” this re-launched service–which is rumored to be launching in November, but which Microsoft will only say is due “before Christmas”–really does seem to have something for everyone: an easy-to-use graphical interface complete with deeply customizable avatars that casual players will enjoy, and all kinds of new functionality that will actually reward the dedication of the hard-core Xbox player.

The avatar editor in the new Xbox Live lets users choose many different styles, and to modify those styles as often as they like.

Still, one obvious question is whether games like Halo will reward players with things like Master Chief’s armor as new avatar accessories, and Penello acknowledged that that is a frequent query from users.

(Credit:
Microsoft)

“It’s an example of a feature that doesn’t feel core,” said Penello, addressing more concerns from longtime Xbox users that the parties feature is an attempt to turn the service over to casual users, “but I think it’s something that core gamers are really going” to like.

Since the first announcement of the new approach to the massively popular service at E3 in July, some longtime fans have fretted that Microsoft is morphing it into a place for purely casual players at the expense of those for whom Xbox Live is nearly as much a home as where they actually live.

The party channel is just one example of a larger channels system that is now an important piece of the larger system, and which makes up what is known as Spotlight. This is basically a view into the very wide range of things that are going on within Xbox Live at any time as viewed through a series of channels.

And customizable avatars creates an opening for an extension to the traditional Xbox achievements system, in that games can now give out things like clothes, tattoos and other add-ons that will help users distinguish their avatars from the millions of others on the system.

(Credit:
Microsoft)

Microsoft readily admits that there may be a bit of a transition period for those core players–a time during which a lot of griping might be heard–but the company fully expects a gradual realization on the part of those players that the new service takes the existing Xbox Live and adds all kinds of new community and interactive functions to it.

Whether you’re one of the legions of hard-core
Xbox players or someone who’s only played with the game console casually, get ready for an all-new Xbox Live.

And lastly, the new Xbox Live features a simple guide mechanism that gives very quick access to almost everything the system has to offer, and which mimics the blade motif of the existing Xbox Live.

Once you pick your avatar, you go into a low-end character editor where you can outfit your new persona with new clothing, hair, accessories and the like. To those familiar with Nintendo’s Mii avatars or those from the countless virtual worlds out there, this will feel like old hat.

“I doubt Halo would incorporate avatars,” Penello said.

To begin with, players can choose an avatar from a large selection that run onto the screen looking like a group of school kids, each dressed differently and sporting diverse hair styles and skin color. Don’t like that group? Move on to the next one. And on and on, until you find one you like. Each group is presented randomly, and within the group, individual avatars seem to try to get your attention by jumping up and down and raising their hand. Don’t worry, they won’t be too disappointed if you choose someone else.