Aug 9

Google announced on Tuesday that it has launched a free music search service in China that will give users access to free downloads of licensed songs.

The service could pose a challenge to Baidu.com, which dominates China’s Internet search business with 64 percent of the market, compared with Google’s 26 percent.

The service is being touted as a way to legally monetize music in China, which is well known as a hotbed for rampant piracy. Analysts have estimated that more than 90 percent of Internet users in China download unlicensed music every day via search engines.

Mountain View, Calif.-based Google said the service will be supported by advertising revenue, to be split with music companies and Top100.cn.

Users outside of China won’t have access to the service,Cubic Zirconia jewelry, Google said.

Google said its service would let users search tens of thousands of Chinese songs by singer or song title on its Web site,LONGINES Watches, then download them from partner Top100.cn,A Lange and Sohne Watches, a Chinese music site that has financial backing from NBA star Yao Ming.

Sep 4

Better get on board the XP train soon…

The moment you’ve all been dreading has finally come. Dell says that June 18 is going to be the last day that you can order a desktop or laptop with an OEM version of (almost) everyone’s favorite operating system, Windows XP. According to details posted on the Dell Web site:

XP isn’t totally dead, however–Microsoft will still offer it to individual system builders until January 31, 2009, and a suddenly popular stripped-down version will continue to be available for Netbook-style laptops, such as the Asus Eee PC and Dell’s own (still not officially announced) E series.

This “downgrade” option hasn’t been fully sketched out yet, but presumably, it involves eating the cost of a more expensive Vista license, and this being Dell, paying some kind of modest fee.

Per the Microsoft Windows life-cycle policy, direct OEM and retail license availability for Windows XP will end-of-life (EOL) on June 30, 2008. To meet Microsoft’s June 30 last-day-to-ship OEM Windows XP deadline, June 18 is the last time to purchase a Dell laptop, desktop, or workstation with an OEM Windows XP license (or while supplies last).

 
After June 18, you have the option to purchase
Windows Vista Business or Windows Vista Ultimate with a downgrade service to Windows XP Professional.

 
This option will be available on XPS 630, 720 H2C, and M1730 systems. After June 18, Windows XP will no longer be offered on currently available Inspiron desktops.

News.com has more on the XP end-of-life plans plans of different PC makers here.

Aug 29

A Sony Vaio laptop running Ubuntu remained unscathed at the end of the conference.

The contest rules stipulated that any winner sign a nondisclosure agreement immediately after a successful hack, so that the nature of the flaw could be disclosed to the vendor. Once Adobe and Apple patch their flaws, the nature of the flaw will be disclosed.

TippingPoint’s Aaron Portnoy, with Shane Macauley and Alexander Sotirov (left to right) take control of a Windows Vista laptop.

But on Friday, hackers could target any “popular” piece of application software that you might find on a system. The Fujitsu laptop, running Vista Ultimate, was compromised by a previously undiscovered flaw in Adobe’s Flash software.

Shane Macaulay, Derek Callaway and Alexander Sotirov, were able to gain control of the laptop, which also means they get to keep it. However, since the rules had been relaxed, they only get $5,000; the MacBook Air winners collected $10,000.

It held out as long as possible, but a Windows Vista laptop fell to a determined bunch of hackers Friday evening at the Pwn to Own contest at CanSecWest.

Since it was the third day of the contest, which saw a MacBook Air get hacked on Thursday, the TippingPoint Zero Day Initiative relaxed the rules even further. On the first day of the contest, only the operating system could be targeted, but on the second day that was expanded to include standard applications. An undisclosed
Safari flaw led to the MacBook Air’s downfall.

(Credit:
TippingPoint)

Aug 24

Today, there’s a minimum bid of 10 cents per keyword. Soon, though, Yahoo will move to a variable minimum price, the company said Friday. The new minimum price could be higher or lower, depending on the keyword and the quality of the individual advertiser who’s bidding for it, the company said.

The changes are part of Yahoo’s overhauled search ad system, called Panama, which has enabled a series of changes over the last year and a half. One change was the ability for Yahoo to assign a quality ranking to each advertiser based on factors such as how often users click on their ads. Another was discounts to the price advertisers pay when users click on ads hosted on non-premier sites that use Yahoo for serving up ads.

Overall, the goal is improved relevance–the likelihood that an ad will appeal to somebody searching for information on the Web and that that person is who the advertiser wants to reach.

Don’t expect variable pricing to be switched on completely in one fell swoop. The change is launching in the United States and will arrive internationally later, spokeswoman Kristen Wareham said. Also, it will begin with some keywords and eventually spread to all of them, she said.

Yahoo has been trying to improve its search-ad results to boost its business, attract more advertising, and better compete against leader Google. Meanwhile, Google has been adding refinements of its own, changes that yielded fewer clicks on ads but more revenue per click. The competition has been going on for years, but it’s under more intense scrutiny with Microsoft’s attempt to acquire Yahoo.

For example, with the new system, a minimum bid–called a reserve price–could be lower for a high-quality advertiser whose ads have proven to be relevant to what searchers are looking for. Or it could be higher for a keyword that’s in high demand, requiring advertisers to think more carefully about which keywords they truly want to sponsor.

The seriousness of the situation for Yahoo was spotlighted earlier this week when Yahoo announced a limited test of Google’s search-ad delivery system alongside Panama. Google makes more money per click on its search ads than Yahoo, so using Google’s ads could theoretically increase Yahoo revenue depending on how the proceeds were divided.

In an attempt to improve the relevance of ads attached to search results, Yahoo plans to adjust the process advertisers use to bid for placement as soon as next week.

Yahoo alerted advertisers of the minimum-price change in February on its search marketing blog, and offered some answers to frequently asked questions page.

Aug 24

Web 2.0 is the same, and VCs would do well to remember that the mainstream majority has a lot more cash than the early adopters. Web 2.0 is just now hitting its stride as it becomes boring and mainstream.

It does if we assume that VCs invest in early stage bubbles, not the later-stage mainstream. VCs got into the early stage consumer Web 2.0 party, following early insight from Tim O’Reilly, but seem to be forgetting that the real money will be made in the later-stage, boring enterprise adoption of Web 2.0. Tim O’Reilly watches the “alpha geeks” to see where markets are going long-term; I watch the “alpha consumers” to see where the money is in the short-term.

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As a case in point, Tim stopped worrying about open source years ago. It’s old news now. But that old news is selling incredibly well into the enterprise. Tim saw it years before anyone else, but those who are building businesses in open source now are reaping the harvest.

The other day Forrester Research published the results of a survey that suggested that 63 percent of enterprises feel that Web 2.0 is going to impact their businesses in a big way.

Tuesday morning, I came across some news that venture investments into Web 2.0 start-ups have slowed.

So, just as enterprise adoption of Web 2.0 has picked up, the VCs decide to stop funding it. Does this make sense?

Aug 24

The critical factor to passing climate change laws is managing the transition to low-carbon energy sources without sharply raising prices for consumers, said panelists at the Fortune Brainstorm Green conference.

“If enacted and implemented, 20 years from now we’ll look down the road and see this is as the most important piece of legislation in the history of the country,” said Bumpers. “It has truly transformational potential.”

“The fact is that electricity prices will go up anyway as we retire and replace power generation so why not address this environmental issue at the same time,” he said.

On the panel were energy industry executives who are lobbying for quick enactment of carbon regulations, which would be phased in over the next five years. They included Jim Rogers, the CEO of utility Duke Energy, and NRG Energy CEO David Crane, a power generation company that relies primarily on fossil fuels.

These developments make it more likely than in previous years that rules to put a price on emitting carbon dioxide in the U.S. will be put in place. If they take hold, it would be a turning point for the U.S. economy, creating the financial foundation for sustainable and green technologies, said William Bumpers, the chair of the climate change practice at law firm Baker Botts.

Successfully managing the transition to minimize or eliminate cost increases on consumers is important to get right in the coming year, Bumpers said. Otherwise, carbon regulations will be set back years.

“Businesses will have an obligation to deal with a capital commitment over the next 30 years that is unprecedented,” Bumpers said. “If we don’t manage this transition by mitigating cost impacts…there could be political backlash because prices have gone too high too quickly…Those trillions of dollars of investments will turn out to be bad investments.”

Up for debate are how many of those permits are given away, rather than auctioned off. The House bill, for example, calls for giving away permits to heavy polluting industries in an effort to keep them competitive internationally.

Best or last chance?

It’s important to establish a price on carbon emissions because large businesses are waiting for a “price signal” before they make investments in low-carbon technologies, Krupp said.

(Credit:
Martin LaMonica/CNET)

Handicapping Washington and carbon: From left Marc Gunther of Fortune, Environmental Defense Fund President Fred Krupp, NRG Energy CEO David Crane, William Bumpers of law firm Baker Botts, Applied Materials CEO Michael Splinter, and Duke Energy CEO James Rogers.

Businesses typically favor a cap-and-trade system, rather than a straight carbon tax. With a cap-and-trade system, big polluters such as utilities and cement manufacturers purchase or are given permits to emit carbon. Permits can be traded among participants to stay under an emissions limit–the cap–established by government.

“We can keep the costs to households to pennies a day,” said panelist Fred Krupp, the president of Environmental Defense Fund. “We can limit the costs to very manageable levels if we do it right. I think the equitable thing to do is to have a transition.”

LAGUNA NIGUEL, Calif.–Despite formidable political challenges, the United States has a good chance of passing legislation to regulate greenhouse gas emissions in the next nine to 12 months, energy industry experts said here on Monday.

Because of that time scale, a utility can upgrade its power generation facilities around cleaner forms of energy and efficiency and address the “carbon issue” at the same time, said Duke’s Rogers.

Panelists said that a legislative approach to regulating carbon emissions is better than having the EPA regulate them under the Clean Air Act because Congress can better deal with the complexity of the situation. The Obama administration, too, prefers “comprehensive legislation” over regulation by the EPA.

“The key is to smooth out the cost increases as much as possible, to help the business plan, and help us use electricity more efficiently,” he said.

In cap-and-trade proposals in general, there is a long-term horizon for emissions target reductions–the House bill targets an 83 percent decrease in carbon emissions compared with 2005 levels by 2050.

Once that price is in place, a utility that relies heavily on coal, for example, will invest in renewable energy or technology to store carbon dioxide underground. That also helps create jobs for people in clean-energy industries, Krupp added.

That’s why negotiating the details of a “transition period” between now and a future low-carbon economy are so crucial, panelists said.

Despite the support in some quarters, climate change laws are opposed by some business leaders and politicians, particularly from states in the South and Midwest that rely heavily on coal for power generation. As such, even if the House passes a bill this year, it faces a tough road in the Senate.

The House on Tuesday will begin hearings on an energy and climate bill its sponsors hope to pass this summer. The Environmental Protection Agency on Friday issued a preliminary finding that greenhouse gas could be regulated under the Clean Air Act because they pose a threat to public health and safety.

Aug 24

According to Amnesty International, Mourtada said two plain-clothes security agents arrested him on the morning of February 5.

Supporters of Mourtada have set up a Web site to call attention to his case.

Mourtada, however, said he posted the profile out of admiration for the prince, and not out of a desire to undermine the monarchy as asserted by the prosecution during the trial. The court convicted Mourtada of modifying and falsifying information technology data and usurping an official’s identity; the case is expected to go to appeal.

(Credit:
HelpFouad.com)

But The Wall Street Journal on Friday quoted Brandee Barker, a Facebook spokeswoman, as saying in a statement that while the company’s privacy policy and terms of use allow it to share data with law enforcement and other government agencies “when it has a good faith belief it is legally obligated to do so…Facebook has shared no such information with the Moroccan authorities.”

A Moroccan court last week sentenced the 26-year-old IT engineer to three years and fined him 10,000 dirhams ($1,320) for setting up a Facebook account in the name of King Mohammed’s brother, Prince Moulay Rachid.

Some civil-liberties groups questioned whether Facebook helped the Moroccan government locate Fouad Mortada.

Mourtada’s family has sent the prince an appeal for clemency. In addition, a Web site set up by Mourtada supporters has declared Saturday as an international day of solidarity, with protests on his behalf scheduled in cities including Rabat, Paris, Montreal, London, Brussels, Washington D.C., Amsterdam, and Madrid.

They blindfolded him and covered him with a sheet, he said, then drove him to an unknown place where they beat him until he “confessed” that he had placed a profile of the Prince on the social-networking site to “get girlfriends.”

Facebook has denied giving the Moroccan government information to identify a man who was sentenced to prison for posting a fake profile of a Moroccan prince.

While Facebook prohibits users from impersonating others, the site is nonetheless full of false profiles of well-known personalities.

Aug 24

Follow me on Twitter @mjasay.

And so Apple has, as its soon-to-be-released iPhone 3G S shows. But the Pre’s launch suggests that Apple doesn’t have a stranglehold on mobile mind share. If Symbian does things right and provides compelling value as an application publisher, it should have ample time to mount a serious challenge to existing smartphone competitors.

Or perhaps it was the fact that Wood has spent 21 years with Symbian (and Psion before it was acquired by Nokia), long enough to live through several mobile revolutions and not get too ruffled by any particular one.

Symbian doesn’t plan to launch an App Store, Apple-style. Instead, as CNET has reported, the foundation wants to serve the same role a book publisher does: provide intermediary services between application developers and the wireless carriers. Such a strategy not only gives Symbian more devices to play on, but it also makes it a valuable partner to more wireless carriers than Apple can.

I had dinner Monday night in London with David Wood, futurist at Symbian, and came away feeling strangely calm. Perhaps it was the exceptional food at Veeraswamy, capped off by a bitter chocolate ice cream….

Plus ça change…

But in June 2008, Nokia announced that Symbian would be open sourced to broaden its appeal to developers. The catch? The process would take up to two years to complete. Today, Symbian still isn’t open source but is actively working toward that goal.

To prove his point, Wood points out how Apple’s iPhone was considered near divine until the Palm Pre came out, and then suddenly criticism was heaped on the iPhone for lacking basic functionality. No multitasking? No cut-and-paste? Come on, Apple!

It’s not a given that Symbian will succeed, of course, but Wood could be right to remain calm in advance of Symbian’s launch of its open-source project. The world is not standing still, waiting for Symbian’s arrival. On the other hand, it’s also not moving forward nearly as fast as we might think.

Symbian has proved to be such a formidable competitor in Europe and the Middle East, but has underwhelmed in North America and Japan, though it claims roughly 50 percent of the global handheld market. In part it stemmed from the fact that Symbian had limited target GSM wireless carriers in the U.S. (AT&T and T-Mobile). Without a CDMA offering, Symbian was locked out of much of the U.S. market.

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Unfortunately, Apple’s
iPhone, Research in Motion’s BlackBerry, and even the
Palm Pre have been claiming ever-widening swaths of the global smartphone market, taking share in Symbian’s European backyard. Wood isn’t overly concerned. He may have good reason.

While we like to think of technology moving at incredible speed, the fact is that adoption moves much more slowly. Even in a market as dynamic as browsers, Mozilla’s Asa Dotzler calls out the snail-pace shifts in browser adoption trends.

In fact, over the course of our dinner Wood pulled out his back-to-the-future Psion Series 5mx on several occasions, a device released a decade ago yet eerily resembles the cutting-edge Netbooks and smartphones of today.

Aug 24

Reports from market research firms were also positive. On Tuesday, Jon Peddie Research, which tracks the graphics chip market, said shipments were up 3.3 percent from the fourth quarter, “breaking an eight-year seasonal trend that dictated negative sales from Q4 to Q1.”

Qualcomm indicated on Monday that it is encouraged by demand. “We’re feeling more comfortable looking forward…We’re happy to see chip demand up,” CEO Paul Jacobs said during the company’s second-quarter earnings conference call. “We’re happy to see inventories stabilizing, reaffirming the device demand, we have very strong operating cash flows,” he added.

Chip giant Qualcomm said that it is seeing a pickup in chip demand. Separately, two chip industry research firms said graphics chips shipments rose in the first quarter.

Peddie added this cautionary statement. “Things probably aren’t going to get back to the normal seasonality till Q3 this year, and we won’t hit the levels of 2008 until 2010.”

The sentiment expressed by Qualcomm’s CEO adds weight to comments made by Intel earlier this month in its first-quarter earnings conference call. “I believe the worst is now behind us from an inventory correction and demand-level adjustment perspective,” Intel CEO Paul Otellini said on April 14.

Peddie attributed this, however, to going from nothing to something. “In Q3 and Q4 of 2008 the channel stopped ordering GPUs (graphics processing units) and depleted inventory in anticipation of a long drawn out worldwide recession. But, no recession, no matter how severe, results in zero sales. The world continued to turn and the consumers continued to buy, albeit they bought less,” Peddie said in a prepared statement.

The world’s largest maker of cell phone chips had revenue of $2.46 billion, down from the $2.61 billion posted in the same quarter last year, and posted an operating loss of $10 million, reflecting a $748 million charge for litigation settlement related to the settlement and patent agreement with Broadcom.

Also on Tuesday, Nvidia released information from Mercury Research, another firm that follows chip markets, which said overall graphics chip shipments were up 3.8 percent from the fourth quarter of 2008. The uptick was attributed to improved desktop sales.

Aug 24

Newspapers have traditionally been funded by things like classified advertising in areas like real estate, help wanted, and
car sales. Had one of the newspaper companies seen the online threat and said, “We need to own those categories online,” perhaps they would be in better shape. Instead, they are faced trying to reinvent themselves at a time when their revenue is in sharp decline.

But if the biggest long-term threat to Windows and Office is free rivals and Web-based services, shouldn’t Microsoft be using a significant fraction of its profits to develop its online advertising capacity?

Importantly, after reporting weak Windows results in April, Microsoft saw that unit post healthy and better-than-expected 15 percent growth for the most recent quarter.

A long-term battle between Microsoft and Google is shaping up. The question is whose economic engine will be stronger. Google is funding its legions of data centers and armies of engineers via online advertising, while Microsoft is using Windows.

Obviously, Microsoft needs to execute better on the Web. Pouring money into online ventures is only good if it produces returns. To date, Microsoft has not seen the kind of gains it will need to have to make it pay off. Some newspaper companies did, for example, build online job sites and auto sites and just weren’t able to grab enough money to replace the ad dollars being lost. It’s not enough to see the threat and try. To prove the grumblers wrong, Microsoft will have to do more than throw money online. It will have to win.

As I listened to financial analysts grumble about how Microsoft continues to pour its hard-earned software profits back into its online services effort, I couldn’t help but think that maybe Microsoft is on to something.

Of course, it’s not a direct parallel. There’s an argument to be made that, while newspapers were inevitably going to lose revenue to online sources, Microsoft could steer clear of advertising by focusing on business software.

Wouldn’t newspaper industry analysts have had the same grumbles if the Gannetts and Knight Ridders of the world had poured a huge chunk of their profits into online ventures a decade ago at a time when their ad revenues were still enjoying healthy growth? And wouldn’t they now say such a move, if well done, would have been brilliant?

Aug 24

Not surprisingly, the dearth of HDMI inputs on recording devices is by design. The HDMI specification includes a copy-protection scheme known as High-Definition Copy Protection. So to use HDMI (and get the snazzy HDMI certification logo on your device), manufacturers need to ensure that their products are HDCP-compliant. That pretty much means that HDMI inputs are limited to display devices (TVs) and repeaters (AV receivers and switchers). Those repeaters are so-called “passthrough” devices–they can do little more than pass the HD video signal onto the next device (invariably, the TV). But, by definition, that HDCP-encoded video signal is designed to be unrecordable. That’s why there are no recorders with an HDMI input. (You won’t find HDMI inputs on Slingbox products for the same reason.)

CNET reader “deesmac” asks:

Why doesn’t a DVD recorder have an HDMI in, as well as an HDMI out?

DVD recorders have HDMI out, but not HDMI in. Why the disparity?

The irony here, as usual, is that honest users who just want more convenience, better quality, and fewer wires are the losers–even as digital piracy remains as rampant as ever (thanks to PC-based recording, not set-top recorders). Still, don’t expect Hollywood studios or electronics manufacturers to change their tune on this one. For the same reason, I wouldn’t hold my breath for a set-top Blu-ray recorder in North America anytime soon (despite the fact that they’ve long been available in Japan).

Note: This post has been updated to include a reference to older Philips and Sony DVD recorders that offered component video inputs (thanks, Wes#1 and Matt).

It’s a great question. High-Definition Multimedia Interface provides the advantage of passing a high-bandwidth all-digital high-definition video and audio signal on a single cable, as opposed to the tangle of component video plus audio cables that were required for HD. (If those terms are Greek to you, check out the connectivity section of the CNET TV Buying Guide.) HDMI is now the standard connector for HDTVs and all of the HD-capable components that connect to them–DVD players and recorders, DVRs, game consoles, Blu-ray and HD DVD players, and even camcorders and PCs. But all of those are video sources that only have HDMI outputs. You’ll find HDMI inputs only on AV receivers, HDMI switchers, and–of course–TVs. So, why the disparity?

So what’s the alternative? Recorders with component video inputs are few and far between: Philips had component-in on its otherwise lackluster DVD recorders in years past, as did Sony on at least one model–but both companies have since dropped the feature. The upcoming Hauppauge video encoder supposedly can accept and process 1080p video via its component inputs. Likewise, several Slingbox models (as well as competing placeshifting products from Sony, Monsoon/HAVA, and Pinnacle) can accept component video–including HD streams–and pass it through to a TV or AV receiver. However, for recording you’re pretty much stuck either with “closed box” HD DVRs or utilizing the so-called analog hole: the composite or S-Video output from your DVR, cable, or satellite box will still output an analog video signal–not in high-definition, of course–that’s easily recordable. Which is why they’re the only two inputs you’ll find on your DVD recorder. (Speaking of which: make sure you use S-Video in–the quality is noticeably better than composite.)

That’s the [relatively] quick answer. But if I’m wrong, it certainly wouldn’t be the first time. If anybody knows of a recorder with an HDMI input (or even a component input), let us known of your discovery by commenting below.

(Credit:
Crutchfield)

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