Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Microsoft e-mails detail Vista woes

Saturday, September 4th, 2010

“I think we have a lot of new PCs, which helps and the hobbyist people who bought (packaged copies of Windows) just know what to do and aren’t calling, but I know they are struggling,” he said.

But the e-mails also show clearly that Microsoft executives saw early on that customers were likely to have negative experiences with the operating system, particularly when it came to compatibility with existing hardware. Sinofsky expressed surprise that Microsoft didn’t get more complaints to its support lines, but said that he did not take that as a sign of satisfaction.

One of the key issues raised in the e-mail exchange was the fact that by loosening the rules for one of Intel’s chip sets, Microsoft was creating a class of machines that were allowed to be marketed as
Windows Vista Capable, even though those same machines would not be eligible to even get Vista Basic logo certification once the software was released. I raised this issue in an article back in the spring of 2006.

These e-mails are particularly salient to this court case, in which Microsoft faces a class action suit over the fact that machines labeled as Windows Vista Capable were nonetheless not capable of running many of the operating system’s features.

The e-mail exchanges also include a note from Mike Ybarra to Jim Allchin saying that “We are caving to Intel.” In the same e-mail, he notes that Microsoft was “really burning HP” which had agreed to build its machines with graphics chips that had a Vista-specific driver that could take advantage of the operating system’s high-end interface features, unlike the aforementioned Intel 915 chipset.

As happens every year or so, some juicy Microsoft e-mails have surfaced as part of litigation that the software maker is party to.

Secondly, he said, major changes to the way Vista handles audio and video caused headaches, particularly for those upgrading from XP. Finally, he said, many Windows XP drivers didn’t really work under Vista. “This is across the board for printers, scanners, wan, accessories (fingerprint readers, smartcards, tv tuners), and so on,” Sinofsky wrote. “This category is due to the fact that many of the associated applets don’t run within the constraints of the security model or the new video/audio driver models.”

Sinofsky notes this issue in his e-mail, as do several other executives. “The ‘915′ chipset which is not Aero capable is in a huge number of laptops and was tagged as ‘Vista Capable’ but not Vista Premium (ready),” he wrote. “I don’t know if this was a good call.”

First off, he said, “No one really believed we would ever ship so they didn’t start the work until very late in 2006.” He added that his Brother home printer didn’t have drivers until after Vista’s commercial launch.

Sinofsky noted that Microsoft executive Orlando Ayala had stuck with XP because there was no Vista driver for his Verizon mobile wireless card. “The Vista Ready logo program required drivers available on (January 30). I think we had had reasonable coverage, but quality was uneven as I experienced,” he wrote.

In one e-mail, Steven Sinofsky writes to Steve Ballmer that three factors were to blame for early Vista challenges.

In this case, Microsoft is being sued over a program in 2006 that labeled some PCs as Windows Vista Capable ahead of the operating system’s mainstream release in January 2007. As part of the discovery process, a number of e-mails have emerged with Microsoft executives discussing various problems with Vista as it came to market.

Report eBay CEO preparing to retire

Sunday, August 29th, 2010

According to the newspaper’s sources, the decision about her retirement could happen within a matter of weeks, but “the situation remains fluid.” The report named John Donahoe, president of eBay’s auction business unit, as the most likely person to succeed her. Donahoe, 47, has been with the company since 2005.

An eBay representative declined to comment, The Journal said. The San Jose, Calif., company announces fourth-quarter earnings Wednesday.

Meg Whitman, chief executive of auction giant eBay, is planning to retire, according to a report in The Wall Street Journal.

Whitman, 51, recently has been entrusting more of the day-to-day responsibilities to others and “is completing her succession planning, say people familiar with the matter,” The Journal said. She has held the top post since 1998.

Get free software every day from Giveaway of the D

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

Let me clarify that: The software doesn’t expire after 24 hours. Rather, you have a one-day window in which to download it and install it. But once that’s done, it’s yours to keep forever (or at least until you reformat your hard drive).

Don’t expect to find Quicken or
Microsoft Office here; the selection consists mostly of utilities, security tools, DVD rippers, and the like. Some of it’s junk, but there are some gems–and you definitely can’t beat the price. If you want to know whether the day’s program is worth the download, click the “Proceed to download page” link and check readers’ ratings and comments, which are usually copious.

(Credit:
Rick Broida)

While you’re at it, head to Game Giveaway of the Day: same deal, all games.

Who says there’s no such thing as a free lunch? Giveaway of the Day gives you a different commercial software application, free of charge, every day. Yes, there’s a catch, but it’s a simple one: each program is made available for only 24 hours, and you have to install it the day you download it.

Find more deals, coupon codes, and bargains on CNET’s Shopper.com.

Giveaway of the Day offers one free download every day.

PNY, Transcend flash cards move to 32GB

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

Both cards will be available in the second quarter. The SDHC card should cost about $250 and the CompactFlash card about $400, though the company cautioned prices could change given volatility in the flash memory chip market. PNY purchases its flash memory chips from Toshiba, Samsung, Intel, and others, the company said.

(Credit:
PNY)

Capacity of 32GB may sound like overkill for digital photography–that’s enough to hold more than 10,000 3MB images–but there are reasons it’s useful. Raw files, especially newer 14-bit files, have moved well beyond 10MB apiece, shooting in combination with JPEG adds even more, and trigger-happy high-end cameras that shoot 5, 6.5, 9, and even 10.5 frames per second chew through memory in no time. And, of course, flash memory-based video cameras need all the capacity they can get.

PNY plans to show the cards at PMA along with new 8-inch and 10.2-inch digital photo frames and a 32GB USB flash drive, the company said.

Transcend's 32GB CompactFlash card

Jumping the Photo Marketing Association trade show gun by a few days, PNY Technologies announced several new 16GB and 32GB flash cards for cameras and video cameras on Thursday.

PNY's 32GB CompactFlash card should cost about $400 when it emerges in the second quarter of 2008.

Correction January 27 7 p.m. PST: I messed up the photo-capacity math. A 32GB card can hold more than 10,000 3MB photos.

The Transcend card also supports UDMA access. (UDMA lets cameras write to a memory card faster, but only newer and higher-end cameras include the feature right now.)

The 32GB SDHC card can keep up with high-definition video captured at 9 megabits per second, the company said. And the Optima Pro CompactFlash card, has a 266X transfer speed, or 40 megabits per second, using a UDMA interface.

Another company that’s taking on better-known flash card brands such as SanDisk and Lexar is Transcend. It announced a 133X 32GB flash card earlier this month that includes support for ECC (error-correcting code) that can catch and fix some errors that sometimes occur when reading and writing data.

(Credit:
Transcend)

Fire Eagle’s missing apps

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

Coates wants Last.fm to get geo-enabled. He sees two use cases. First, he’d like to be able to look into his personal playlist and see not just what he played and when, but where. Second, he thinks it’d be very cool to see group data on geo-coded music preferences: Which music is popular in a given neighborhood or building, for example. Sounds like a job for the Wi-Fi-equipped
Zune player. Too bad Microsoft and Yahoo fell out.

Coates also wanted to see integration into Twitter, so Fire Eagle could post your location when you wanted it to. This may be along soon, via Whrrl (story), a geolocation service that will work with Skyhook Wireless’ Wi-Fi location finder, Loki. And Loki, it happens, works with Fire Eagle.

(Credit:
Rafe Needleman/CNET)

Fire Eagle architect Tom Coates at the Where 2.0 conference.

Coates hinted that Yahoo is working on a friend locator widget for its Yahoo Widget Engine. This app, run on a PC or
Mac, would show you when your friends are on their PCs nearby. A special case of this app is the “Boss Proximizer,” which warns you when your supervisor is nearby. (”It’s coming,” Coates said, “Trust me.”) I’d like to see location widgets for more popular platforms–like OS X, Vista, and Google.

The Spot Satellite Messenger is a handheld device that reports your position, anywhere in the world, every 10 minutes. It gets your data from GPS and reports it via the commercial satellite phone network. It sends data to Google Maps but really cries out for a Fire Eagle link, Coates said. (Likewise the Isaac Daniels Compass GPS-equipped shoes–yes, they appear to be real.)

Tom Coates, creator of Yahoo’s Fire Eagle data location broker, took the stage at Where 2.0 to talk up some of the cool new apps that use the platform. “Fire Eagle is nothing,” Coates said, without the apps. Nearly all the apps he mentioned are listed on the Fire Eagle’s Gallery page (log-in required), but what I thought was more interesting were the apps he mentioned that don’t support Fire Eagle yet, but should. Or that simply don’t exist:

Previous coverage: You are here, sort of.

Shootout Sling bag lets you shoot long or fast

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

I haven’t used or tested Tenba’s bags at all, but if anyone has, please let me know what you think. This one looks pretty freakin’ sweet.

The bag’s made from water-resistant nylon; uses weather-sealed YKK zippers on all outside openings; has monopod straps, protective rubber bottom treads, and a front-mounted phone/audio pouch; and includes Tenba’s fast-deploying WeatherWrap rain cover.

Tenba makes a lot of bags for all kinds of cameras and equipment. Featured in the video above is the new $103.95 Shootout Sling, which for a bag fetishist such as myself is simply dreamy. It’s designed for immediate access to your camera and to keep gear organized (a given), but is also quite capable of swallowing a dSLR with a mounted 300mm telephoto lens, just by removing some of the interior padded walls. Watch the video to see what I mean.

In downturn, solar industry sees bright days ahead

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

Long meetings with bankers
Discussion of the impact of the credit crisis and an economic slowdown at the conference alternated between “glass half full” and “glass half empty” perspectives.

“The price of electricity is determined in large part by the cost of capital,” said Michael Ahearn, CEO of First Solar, which is recognized as having the cheapest solar panels. “We’re in a temporary state where there is no real market functioning. The question is, where does the market reset?” he said during a panel.

And in a volatile investment environment, solar looks solid, purely from a financial point of view, many executives argued.

SAN DIEGO–People in the solar industry are hopeful that the sun is a good place to put money these days.

Residential looks strong
For consumers, meanwhile, solar power looks more attractive than ever.

Sempra Energy, which builds and operates natural gas power plants, plans to invest billions in solar power plants in the coming years and expects to get about the same 10 percent return on the capital it typically gets, said Michael Allman, president and CEO of Sempra Generation. Because of the credit crunch, other firms may have a harder time than Sempra launching large projects, he said.

Shifting to an economically driven business is a very deliberate attempt to scale up solar adoption rapidly in the next five years, according to Julia Hamm, executive director of the Solar Electric Power Association.

That’s helped by the recently changed federal policy that gives homeowners a 30 percent tax credit on solar electric panels. Before, that credit was capped at $2,000.

(Credit:
Martin LaMonica/CNET News)

What’s still unknown for solar–or other industries–is how badly the bruising from the current financial crisis will be.

To be sure, the financial crunch is rippling through even the fast-growing solar business: With falling house prices and general belt-tightening, consumers may be more reluctant to purchase solar panels, even if they want renewable electricity. And less available capital makes it difficult to finance large-scale projects, like corporate rooftop arrays or solar power plants.

Other executives were more sanguine about the commercial market, noting that many funds set up to invest in renewable energy projects already have the money to invest.

Click on the image to launch a photo gallery of products and solar installations from this week's Solar Power International conference.

The returns on solar projects for utilities and corporations have the advantage of being predictable and thus low-risk, said Bill Gross, CEO of a tech incubator called Idealab, which has spawned two solar companies targeting utilities–Energy Innovations and eSolar.

Today’s economic and political environment favors a push toward energy independence and environmental protection. For that reason, most solar company executives are bullish when they take a long-term view.

All the numbers talk, though, is not to say that the environmental attributes of solar energy are insignificant. On the contrary, the existing federal and state policies place a value on renewable energy, executives said. The industry is lobbying for more policy initiatives, such as plans to modernize and bulk up the electricity grid.

Technology enhancements are helping bring the price of rooftop solar panels closer to the retail electricity rate, or “grid parity.”

But even with the gloomy economic outlook, the mood at this week’s Solar Power International 2008 conference was decidedly upbeat.

Matt Cheney, CEO of solar financing firm MMA Renewable Ventures, said solar company executives should expect to have long meetings with financial analysts and bankers as they seek to clamp down on risk and get better terms.

To lower the upfront cost barrier, start-ups like SolarCity and SunRun are offering financing options, such as leases, for consumers and small businesses. A handful of utilities, too, are getting into solar as well, a move that could make it more accessible.

Significantly, the tax credits, which go into effect next year, were extended for eight years, a relatively long period for people to take advantage of them. Also, because solar cell efficiency continues to improve, homeowners can purchase more productive panels for about the same price, Chan said.

A recession in the general economy can put a damper on solar in another way. If corporations see their tax bills drop because of falling earnings, they are less likely to purchase a rooftop solar array because they won’t have the “tax appetite” to benefit from government incentives.

“Historically, with respect to an impact, a shock like we’ve just experienced…takes about four years for things to settle down to the point where we can access capital at a rate that we were getting just six months ago,” Cheney said during a CEO panel at the conference.

Sempra Generation’s Allman said that policies like a renewable portfolio standard, which mandates a certain percentage of renewable electricity generation, act as a market signal.

For solar companies themselves, the financial turmoil can stall plans to expand. Raising money on the stock market to build a new manufacturing facility, for example, is likely to be delayed as there are few initial public offerings.

“It’s so tight trying to beat the price of fossil fuel electricity. If you can cut the price at all with totally green energy, that’s awesome,” Gross said.

Large deals are still “financeable” because the government incentives are generous and the demand strong, said Steven Chan, chief strategy officer at solar cell and panel manufacturer Suntech Power. Financiers, however, are likely to shift terms around.

(Credit:
Martin LaMonica/CNET News)

The solar industry scored a major policy win, getting an eight-year extension to federal tax credits that tacked on more generous terms for homeowners.

“Now having said that…the credit markets are different and more measured. Banks are studying things more–the risk profiles and the balance sheets of companies,” Werner said.

For a business that caters to environmentally minded consumers, talk at the Solar Power International conference was laced with hard-boiled financial terms like “tax equity investors” and “internal rate of return.”

“I think there’s a flight to quality and we believe there’s a flight to solar because of that,” said Tom Werner, the CEO of California-based solar panel manufacturer and installer SunPower. He noted that big solar projects over the past three or four years have created a track record of delivering expected financial returns.

“Nobody would sign up for solar power today without the environmental attributes it offers. It’s just too expensive,” he said. “I think of it as two separate markets–one for brown power and one for green power.”

“Without that cap, an average suburban home system could probably get a $9,000 tax credit on a system that might cost $30,000,” Chan said. “It’s real money now. The economics have gotten a whole lot better for the residential homeowner.”

New technologies are bringing the cost of solar electricity closer to fossil fuel generation. And policies that encourage clean-energy production improve the financial return on big projects.

Microsoft on open source We should have done it

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

So, Microsoft, which do you want? Do you really want to open up to open source, or do you want to continue to try to beat down the movement while simultaneously offering a palsied embrace? Our customers want interoperability, but we can’t do it on the terms you’re offering.

“We should have done it earlier,” said Abet Dela Cruz, Microsoft Philippines platform strategy manager, narrating Monday’s panel discussion at the Cebu summit….

No, it’s not Steve Ballmer pounding the podium in favor of open source, but apparently Microsoft’s field is being told to play nice.

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Many of us in the community don’t want to work with Microsoft on these terms, and won’t. Microsoft had signed up JBoss, MySQL, and SugarCRM on interoperability agreements, but then it came out with its patent agreement with Novell. Since that time, how many open-source application vendors have signed up to work with Microsoft? I can’t think of a single one off-hand.

Microsoft is finally starting to warm up to open source as it belatedly remembers that it’s a platform company, and lots of great (open-source) applications should be making Microsoft’s Windows coffers even fatter. But it needs to first stop trying to scare away this opportunity with patent FUD.

At least, that’s the sense I get from the comments made by a Microsoft representative at a recent open-source conference:

“It took IBM about 10 years to be at this stage and it is only now that Microsoft is going in the same direction…Open Source is a broad worldwide phenomenon….[O]verall we see it (open source) as a long standing movement that will continue.”

Yes, you should have (done it earlier), Microsoft. But there is still time to do it right. The first step will be to invite open-source application and infrastructure developers, commercial and otherwise, onto your platform without requiring them to sign up to patent pledges. Treat the open-source world with the same respect that you expect. We don’t (knowingly) violate your patents, just as I’m sure you don’t knowingly violate anyone else’s.

Video games make you feel better about our economy

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

Since most people affected by the economic downturn already have computers, this makes a good bit of sense. But, I don’t know that those really suffering are going to go out and buy an
Xbox, even with the reduced price.

Now, nearly 80 years later, Americans looking for a cheap way to distract themselves from tough times aren’t turning to theaters. Though movie revenues are up slightly, the number of movie tickets sold has remained fairly constant for the past decade.

And video games are a better investment than movies, lasting longer and providing more hours of entertainment. In fact, video games are probably a better investment than a house or stocks at this point.

David Riley of the NPD Group says part of the reason video game sales are rising and movie ticket sales aren’t is that a movie only lasts a couple of hours — it gives you less “bang for your buck.”

With the financial markets still reeling, Americans are looking for distraction. NPR.org says that movies have often filled the void left by rough economic times, but these days video games are taking the pain out of all of our money going down the drain.

By comparison, overall video game sales are up 43 percent from this time in 2007. Since its release on Aug. 12, fans have purchased more than 2 million copies of the football game Madden NFL 09, according to the National Purchase Diary (NPD) Group.

Playing backup to Red Hat

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

Dave Rosenberg thought that this press release was a spoof on my affection for Red Hat. Yes, it’s true that I’m a fan of Red Hat’s - I think it does a lot of good for open source - but this goes too far…. :-)

I really resent that I have to play backup.

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