Aug 9

SAN DIEGO–Kadoo.com launched a new uber-social network at DemoFall on Monday that aggregates all types of data and files and gives the user control over with whom to share them.

The service,Gemstone Rings, which offers 10 gigabytes of free storage,Pearl Jewelry, gives users one place to manage, share, and store digital data, contacts, photos,Hermes Watches, files, video, bookmarks, and blogs.

People can share information with people who are not members of Kadoo using a feature called “selective sharing.” The service is integrated with a service for university and high school environments called Blackboard.

Aug 24

Give it a spin.

This Labs release of AIR has all features implemented for Linux, except support for DRM and badge installations. Major new features include support for system tray icons, keyboard shortcuts, localization, internationalized input (IME support), filetype registration, SWF and PDF in HTML, multi-monitor support, fullscreen mode, encrypted local storage, support for V4L2 cameras and printing.

commentary

Those interested can download AIR for Linux here. I’ve been using AIR applications for Twitter (Twhirl), word processing (Buzzword), and other uses, and love how it makes RIAs even richer by tying them in with desktop processing.

This beta release of AIR for Linux isn’t perfect–supported distributions only include Ubuntu 7.10, Fedora 8, OpenSuSE 10.3; and it lacks some other functionality–but it’s a great, running start:

Adobe announced today that Adobe AIR now runs on Linux. AIR is a cool cross-platform runtime that enables developers to create Rich Internet Applications that merge the desktop with the Web. Bringing it to Linux removes yet another roadblock to bringing disruptive applications to Linux.

Aug 24

After the release of the software development kit for Apple’s
iPhone, Sun Microsystems says it’s going to enable Java applications to run on the device, InfoWorld is reporting.

“We’re going to make sure that the JVM offers the Java applications as much access to the native functionality of the iPhone as possible,” Klein said.

Java on the iPhone will mean that versions of software, like customer relationship management and other enterprise applications, could be available on the device.

Sun will build a Java Virtual Machine (JVM), based on the Java Micro Edition version of the programming language after June of this year. It will be available in the iPhone AppStore. Eric Klein, vice president of Java marketing at Sun, told InfoWorld Friday that although Apple passed on enabling Java on the iPhone, Sun decided to do so anyway after Thursday’s SDK unveiling. After combing through the documents for the SDK and seeing nothing that barred it from doing so, Sun decided to go for it.

Aug 24

The interests of the CEA are directly at odds with those of the major unions that heavily support the Democratic Party. Leo Gerard, international president of the United Steelworkers, has had a ubiquitous presence at the convention, urging state delegates to support Obama because he would protect American jobs from “rotten trade deals.” He spoke to bloggers on Tuesday in the Big Tent about “some misguided Democrats” who support free trade deals, “leading to a trade deficit.”

Interested in getting Democratic leadership to revive stalled trade agreements with Colombia, Panama, and Korea, the CEA unveiled poll numbers Monday indicating that Democrats are becoming more accepting of free trade: 62 percent of Democrats said they benefit from free trade, and 69 percent said it was a “good thing” that trade and global manufacturing have reduced the costs of consumer electronics sold in the United States.

Meanwhile, Congress has given no indication it will approve any of the three trade deals in question.

Gornick’s business, which designs and builds high-performance loudspeakers, would benefit from lifted non-tariff trade barriers in countries with large middle-class populations like South Korea. She said the efficiencies created by free trade would, counter to common belief, create new jobs.

It’s a message that should resonate with politicians: The consumer price index (CPI) for imported electronic machinery and TV and sound equipment has dropped by 11 percent since 2000, even as the overall CPI has increased by 28 percent.

“From what I understand from CEA interactions in Denver, the interesting takeaway is the number of policy makers who say they agree on trade, but report how difficult the political environment is,” said Tom Galvin, a partner for 463 Communications, a consulting firm assisting the CEA in its efforts. “Hopefully, once the political season is over we’ll see a less charged environment and the trade agreements can be considered at that time.”

The poll was conducted by Zogby International from August 12 to August 14 and has a margin of error of 1.7 percent. It surveyed 3,440 people, including more than 1,200 Democrats. Corresponding poll numbers on Republican perceptions about free trade will be released next week during the Republican convention.

The convention proceedings on Tuesday night included remarks from no less than five union members, including John Sweeney, president of the AFL-CIO. His union earlier in the year committed $53.4 million for pro-Democrat campaigns in battleground states–part of an unprecedented $200 million effort from various labor groups.

“There’s a saying that no two countries that support the golden arches have ever been at war,” said Kathy Gornick, president of Thiel Audio, which is represented by the CEA.

“Admittedly we are shifting in the kinds of jobs, but generally they are higher paying jobs,” she said. “The biggest reason jobs go away is not because of free trade but advances in technology that change the way we do things.”

DENVER–Technology companies are here at the Democratic convention this week to highlight more than just their new products–they’re pushing an agenda as well.

The Consumer Electronics Association, a lobbying firm that represents 2,200 technology companies such as Microsoft, Sony, and Hitachi, brought its 28-state “America Wins with Trade” bus tour to Denver this week to convince Democrats that free trade benefits the tech industry, as well as consumers. Groups with opposing views are taking a high profile at the convention, however, and the conflicting interests in the party are apparent from its mixed messages on trade.

“Traditionally Democrats would be less open to free trade, but these days it’s very hard to predict what a political party is going to do,” Gornick said. “I wish Ron Paul were running.”

It is, in fact, a message that the Democrats’ new leadership could very well embrace. “There is no doubt that globalization has brought significant benefits to American consumers,” Barack Obama wrote in his memoir, The Audacity of Hope. “It’s lowered prices on goods once considered luxuries, from big-screen TVs to peaches in winter, and increased the purchasing power of low-income Americans.”

“The expansion of trade and global supply chains has undoubtedly played a role” in dropping prices, said Dan Griswold, director of the Center for Trade Policy Studies at the Cato Institute in Washington, D.C.

Gornick of Thiel Audio demurred to say whether she favored an Obama or McCain presidency.

The technology platform provided on Obama’s Web site says that “Barack Obama supports a trade policy that ensures our goods and services are treated fairly in foreign markets. At the same time, trade policy must stay consistent with our commitment to demand improved labor and environmental practices worldwide.”

Aug 24

(Credit: Ticketmaster)

Prices for airline tickets are one of life’s great mysteries. A travel agent tried to explain it to me once, and without getting too detailed, it’s a combination of segmentation, demand-based pricing, and ensuring that seats are filled. Segmentation’s the reason why last-minute tickets cost so much–most vacationers plan far in advance, and business travelers are much more likely to accept high prices. Demand-based pricing is why it’s way more expensive to take the same trip over Thanksgiving than over the second weekend in November, and why prices can fluctuate from moment to moment–as one “class” of seats is filled, the airline figures out that shows high demand for that route on that date. The need to have seats filled is why you can sometimes score amazingly cheap seats on long flights overseas if you commit to a non-refundable ticket early enough.

So leave it to every music fan’s favorite corporate entity, Ticketmaster, to bring the clarity of airline-style pricing to the world of concert ticketing! According to an SxSW blog post by L.A. Times reporter Todd Marten, Ticketmaster CEO Sean Moriarty said the company is considering demand-based pricing for concerts and expects to have it in place within five years.

If you think about it, concert tickets and airline tickets are very similar–both are strictly limited in quantity and time-dependent. I can imagine Ticketmaster segmenting audiences–the business person who wants to take a client to a hot show will pay more for a last-minute ticket than the casual music listener who buys tickets a few days after they go on sale, but less than a hardcore fan who buys tickets the instant they go on sale. Fans will eventually figure out how to game the system, but in the meantime, this kind of pricing should help Ticketmaster and the entities it represents (promoters, artists, and everybody else in the concert chain) maximize revenue from ticket sales. Overall, I would expect prices to go up, not down. But as I’ve said before, you can’t blame Ticketmaster for the dark side of supply and demand.

How much does that ticket cost? In a few years, it might depend on when you buy it.

Aug 24

Fire Eagle, Yahoo’s new geolocation service, is fresh out of the company’s Brickhouse development team, and third parties are lining up to cut deals.

The reassuring part is that Fire Eagle is permission-based. And Tom Coates, who joined Yahoo from the BBC to serve as product director at Yahoo’s Brickhouse, said all the right things about protecting privacy rights at the Fire Eagle debut. The service does allow you to restrict location reporting or even shut it down for a period of time. Without that variable privacy feature, Fire Eagle would be one more hellish intrusion into our already over-snooped, overwrought lives.

(For more, check out what Webware’s editor in chief, Rafe Needleman, had to say about the pluses and minuses of Fire Eagle on the CNET News Daily Debrief.)

Who can deny that location is going to become increasingly important for Web services? In the initial rush of coverage, MG Siegler correctly noted that Fire Eagle essentially serves as the intermediary between services offering that geolocation capability and those wishing to make use of it. (Fire Eagle’s not an original idea. There’s also Loopt, a cell phone-based service that allows people to track and communicate with friends, as well as Whrrl and Brightkite.)

So this is progress? Maybe it’s just my particular hangup but, truth be told, knowing that “they” (and that includes friends and family) may be watching me does not fill me with much enthusiasm. Sometimes it’s comforting just being off the grid. I don’t think I missed something growing up in a Fire Eagle-less world and I’m in no hurry to change now.

From a business perspective, Yahoo probably has a winner. Whether it’s Fire Eagle or a better, similar incarnation by someone else, this is another signpost of a future where we choose from a panoply of location-based services. From what I understand of Fire Eagle, I can’t find any evidence that it won’t succeed. Already, more than 50 services make use of the Fire Eagle technology and more will follow. Unfortunately, don’t you just know that some marketing go-getter is going to figure out a way to exploit location-based programs to shove targeted advertising (and spam, naturally) down our throats as we navigate around town. Again, you don’t have to play. And you can shut the darned thing off for a time. Still…

So now, Yahoo’s (rightly) taking a “let 1,000 flowers bloom” approach by opening up the APIs to the rest of the Internet, and the wisdom of the free market will decide the matter. For better, or for worse. We’ll see.

Aug 24

Verizon Wireless paid nearly $10 billion for licenses in the C block, which are subject to a special FCC rule that requires the winner to allow any device to connect to a network using this spectrum. Verizon will use the spectrum to deploy a 4G network using long-term evolution (LTE) technology. The company expects to have an LTE service deployed in late 2009, the article quotes Melone as saying.

And the B-block licenses, which cover parts of California and New Jersey, will be used for research and development.

The gag order that silenced those participating in the FCC’s auction that ended last month was lifted late Thursday. Now companies are free to discuss their plans and strategies for bidding in the auction.

Verizon Wireless plans to use its newly won wireless spectrum licenses in the 700MHz auction to deliver 4G services, CTO Tony Melone told the wireless news site Unstrung.

Companies bidding in the Federal Communications Commission’s 700MHz spectrum auction are starting to talk.

Other bidders in the auction have begun to talk, as well. Google, which had also been bidding on the C-block spectrum, said its main goal in bidding was to make sure the $4.6 billion reserve price was met so that the open-access rule would take effect. Richard Whitt, Washington telecom and media counsel, and Joseph Faber, corporate counsel for Google, wrote about Google’s strategy on the company’s Public Policy Blog on Thursday.

Cell phone chipmaker Qualcomm said it plans to use licenses it bought in the E block to provide more capacity for its mobile broadcast TV service called MediaFlo. Qualcomm spent a total of $558.1 million on licenses in the E block and a few licenses in the B block. The E-block licenses will expand MediaFlo coverage in areas such as Boston, Los Angeles, New York City, Philadelphia, and San Francisco.

But the company doesn’t plan to roll out the new network any time soon. According to RCR Wireless, AT&T’s CTO doesn’t expect the technology to be ready until 2012.

AT&T also said it plans to use the $6.6 billion worth of spectrum it bought in the B block to build a 4G network using LTE, according to RCRWirelessNews. The company will also use spectrum it won in the 2006 advanced wireless services (AWS) auction for the new network.

Aug 24

Technology companies have also proven that they can mitigate interference issues through proper engineering. Just look at the use of Wi-Fi. The technology uses unlicensed spectrum in the 2.4GHz band, and there are specifications to ensure that Wi-Fi devices don’t interfere with microwave ovens and garage door openers that operate at the same frequency.

That said, Google and the rest of the technology companies lobbying for the freeing of white spaces have their own motivations and interests to consider. The more wireless spectrum and broadband services available, the more Google can make from advertising. The company hasn’t denied this. Intel, Microsoft, and Motorola also benefit as they can each sell more products and services to consumers who use this unlicensed spectrum.

The NAB may claim it is afraid of interference, but the reality it members don’t want to give up control of airwaves they believes are theirs. Verizon Wireless and other wireless operators don’t want competitors to get their hands on free spectrum that they could use to build competing services.

The FCC is expected to release a report of the test results next month. And it will likely vote on whether to open the spectrum in the next few months.

Google and other technology companies such as Intel, Microsoft and Motorola have been lobbying the FCC for months to open up what’s known as “white space” spectrum for unlicensed use after the digital TV transition early next year. These slivers of spectrum that sit between TV channels as buffers to ensure that TV channels don’t interfere with each could be used to provide broadband wireless services.

The NAB and others, such as Verizon Wireless, which also opposes the use of white spaces, certainly have their own business motivations for opposing the use of white spaces.

But broadcasters say using these channels will cause interference with their broadcast signals and cause major issues for people watching TV.

The 300MHz to 400MHz spectrum that is being made available through the use of white spaces is not contiguous across the United States, so it’s unlikely that any company could use the spectrum to build a nationwide network to compete against the major carriers.

This is exactly what Wally Bowen, from the Mountain Area Information Network in Asheville, N.C., and Matthew Rantanen, who works with the Tribal Digital Village in San Diego, Calif.–which represents Native American tribes–say they hope will happen if the white spaces are offered to the public without licenses. They say that broadband operators are currently underserving their constituents and that access to free spectrum would help get broadband to more people in the country.

On the other side, Google and the technology community say that these are simply proof of concept devices and not even prototypes that could be used in commercial products. In fact, Google’s Whitt said he is certain his company and others would pour millions of dollars into development if the FCC approved the use of white spaces and gave specific guidelines and rules for products.

It’s clear that this has become as much of a political debate as it has a technical one. On the one hand, the National Association of Broadcasters is pointing to the tests as evidence that interference can’t be avoided.

“Spectrum is very valuable and we want to make sure it’s being used as efficiently as possible,” he is quoted as saying in the Journal. “The idea of trying to utilize the ‘white spaces’ from a consumer perspective would be a good win for everyone.”

Better coverage
But my gut feeling is that this new spectrum won’t likely become a major threat to wireless operators, such as Verizon, nor will it cause any disruption in TV service. But it could drastically improve the coverage of broadband particularly in rural areas.

Google on Monday launched the new site called FreetheAirWaves.com to provide consumers with a voice, the company’s policy guru said during a press conference call.

“Microsoft’s applications fail all the time. “But for us our signals need to get to our audience, so it’s a different world. And it’s not acceptable for there to be any interference.” –Dennis Wharton, National Association of Broadcasters

“When you look at low power FM or ultrawide band rules, the technology has great promise but the Commission adopted rules that constrained it to the detriment of consumers,” Whitt said. “So of course there are concerns that that the rules could be too limiting.”

The debate is coming to head as the FCC finishes field tests of proof-of-concept devices used to detect and avoid spectrum already in use. The results of the tests have been mixed. Some companies claim that geolocation-based technology has proven that it can interference with existing spectrum holders. Meanwhile, a field test of spectrum sensing technology at a major sporting venue proved that technology still has some problems.

So far it looks like FCC Chairman Kevin Martin agrees. He was quoted Monday in The Wall Street Journal in favor of opening up white space spectrum to encourage more broadband deployments.

“Microsoft’s applications fail all the time,” said Dennis Wharton, a spokesman for the National Association of Broadcasters. “But for us our signals need to get to our audience, so it’s a different world. And it’s not acceptable for there to be any interference.”

The debate over new unlicensed spectrum the Federal Communications Commission is considering opening up is heating up as Google ups the ante with a new lobbying Web site.

That said, much of the white space spectrum that will be available will be in sparsely populated rural areas where there are fewer TV broadcasters and little access to broadband. And because the spectrum is ideally suited for rural areas with good propagation characteristics, it could be used by rural communities to blanket their regions with broadband access.

The NAB says it only trying to protect the TV viewing public.

“NAB supports new technology and ending the digital divide,” Wharton said. “What we can’t support is a multibillion-dollar spectrum giveaway to Google and Microsoft that threatens interference-free television.”

But even if the FCC is to allow the use of white spaces, Google and others are concerned that the FCC might succumb to pressure from the broadcasting industry to put onerous rules on the spectrum that will make it virtually useless. Some critics say that the FCC’s rules on low-power FM devices and ultra wide band devices have restricted them so much they can barely be used.

Aug 24

FriendFeed’s API will bring this data to a larger audience.

This is certainly an important step for FriendFeed. The closely related service, Twitter, has benefited greatly from providing support for third-party developers, so FriendFeed should see a similar bump from the introduction of its API.

(Credit: FriendFeed)

To give some examples of what its API can do, the FriendFeeders told us, “You can develop a FriendFeed interface for a mobile phone, build a FriendFeed widget for your blog, or develop an application that makes it easy to post photos to your feed from your
iPhone.”

FriendFeed’s API currently offers PHP and Python libraries, with support for OAuth apparently on the way. In making the API, FriendFeed also took feedback from some developer influentials, such as Dave Winer.

It’s going to be very interesting to see what developers can do with this API, given the wealth of quality data that FriendFeed brings together.

I think we all saw this one coming. The hottest social aggregator out there today, FriendFeed, has launched an application programming interface, paving the way for third-party applications using its service. Full documentation for the API is available on Google Code.

Aug 24

YouTube 2.2 plays videos in landscape and portrait modes on the Samsung Omnia.

In the demo video below, both the application and the selected video begin to play around a second after they’re launched. That’s a whole lot faster than the iPhone, especially the launch time, which should make clicking on YouTube links in e-mails and while browsing a less painful experience. While YouTube for Mobile is available globally, it’s only localized for Australia, Ireland, N.Z., UK, and the US. Regardless, Nokia N95 owners should be pleased:

While not nearly as sexy as YouTube on the
iPhone, Symbian and Windows Mobile users have reason to celebrate with a new version of the YouTube’s mobile application (download and review). The company boasts that it’s 90 percent faster than the previous version in terms of how quickly it starts up, pulls up search results, and when a video begins to play. It also detects what connection you’re on and will serve up a quality that will stream in the fastest.

Aug 24

“There’s at least a trillion dollars just in media, communications, and advertising, not all of which we can capture,” Ballmer said.

(It seems every time Microsoft talks about the opportunity, it grows, even if Microsoft’s market share doesn’t.)

“Some say it’s too expensive,” Ballmer said. “It’s a relatively small percentage investment from an overall Microsoft standpoint, in order to have a real opportunity at significant acceleration of our market value. I think it is a very good risk return.”

Ballmer: Online investments a fraction of operating income.

In any case, Ballmer made the familiar case that the scale of the opportunity for a company of Microsoft’s size is too big to ignore.

Ballmer’s comments came at the start of Microsoft’s financial analysts meeting, which runs all day here.

Update: Ballmer went into detail of where that online spending is going. He talked about how Microsoft’s costs to maintain its search index have to be nearly as high as Google, despite the fact that Microsoft has a lower volume of searches.

The money that Microsoft is spending, he said, is a few hundred million dollars in losses each year, but amounts to around 5 percent of the company’s overall operating income.

Ballmer also said that the on-again, off-again talks with Yahoo are in the “off-again” stage.

But, he said, as both advertising and content move online, the opportunity is huge.

“We are going to have to ante up in a significant way to even be in this game,” he said.

But, he said, the company thought it was important that “whoever gives this presentation was actually still going to be here in three weeks.”

Updated 10 a.m. PDT, with more details on spending plans

Ballmer did say that the investment will have to continue until Microsoft gets more scale, which he said he could not put a time frame on.

Of note, one slide Ballmer showed pointed to an investment of 5 percent to 10 percent of operating income until the company has a more significant share of the market.

Originally, Ballmer said, he wasn’t planning to give the online pitch, but said recent organizational changes (i.e. the departure of online business head Kevin Johnson) forced him into duty.

REDMOND, Wash.–In trying to explain Microsoft’s continued decision to spend in its money-losing online services business, CEO Steve Ballmer likened it to a game of high-stakes poker.

Microsoft also has to spend more in other areas than Google, by virtue of its No. 2 position. Marketing was one area, he said, where Microsoft will have to outspend the market leader. “Google doesn’t have to. We do,” Ballmer said.

(Credit:
Ina Fried/CNET News)

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