Aug 24

Certain kinds of stories are more likely to be Dugg: anti-Microsoft screeds, pro-Linux (and especially Ubuntu) and Apple posts (See below). To get Slashdotted, an article needs to chart new territory, even if in these old paths. That’s because Rob knows what is new and interesting, and what isn’t. Digg doesn’t. It’s just a crowd (Read: Lowest-common denominator).

Top Posts on The Open Road - All Time

commentary

Interestingly, CNET is the biggest driver of traffic to this blog. The problem is it only works as a driver for CNET-based traffic. I find that being one link among many in any publication is not a big traffic driver, whether on CNET or elsewhere.

If so, I’m concerned. I like the traffic Digg gives me, but I also like the editorial function that Slashdot provides. I have no clue how something becomes popular on Digg - I’m constantly surprised by the types of stories I get Dugg. But I know how to get something Slashdotted: Deliver something that Rob Malda finds interesting.

Traffic Sources for The Open Road - All Time

Again, I’m not complaining about the traffic. I would simply like to have the crowdsourcing power of Digg with the editorial oversight of Slashdot. Impossible?

(Credit:
Matt Asay)

Last week I had two stories Dugg and two stories Slashdotted. The difference in traffic is striking. Digg delivered three times the amount of traffic as Slashdot did. Granted, my stories hit Slashdot in an off-peak time, but it got me thinking: Is Digg the future of web traffic? The tyranny of the mob, as Slashdot’s Rob Malda once called it?

Aug 24

Despite an over-abundance of media coverage about the importance of innovation in recent years, it seems the business media may not have gotten its point across. Instead of hailing innovation as The Next Big Thing, journalists and book authors now wonder if there’s an Innovation Gap in U.S. business. The September 22nd issue of BusinessWeek, “Keeping America Competitive,” is coupled with online articles like “Firing Up America’s Idea Economy” and “Can America Invent Its Way Back?.” Judy Estrin also examines flagging innovation culture in her new book, “Closing the Innovation Gap.”

Read why chairs are the biggest barrier to innovation in the Fortune 500 and more.

As a follow-up to my recent post on the WEF’s Global Competitiveness Report, I wanted to share what my colleagues at frog design, a global innovation firm, think. When we heard about a so-called innovation gap, we asked all four of our US studios what they thought. In one hour more than 50 “frogs” responded. Here’s our crowdsourced blitz survey response to the current innovation gap debate.

Aug 24

Microsoft has already hinted that
iPhone-like gestures are a part of the next Windows, and Gates said that touch-screen is likely to be the most broadly appealing of the new interfaces.

Microsoft has not said when to expect Windows 7. Some have said it may not be until 2010, while others predict Microsoft will try to get a release out the door next year following a lackluster reception for Vista and growing competition from Apple.

After decades of investing in things like speech technology and handwriting recognition, Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates said that users appear ready for new ways of interacting with machines. And, he said, advances in those areas and in touch-based gestures will find their way into the next version of Windows, known as Windows 7.

In addition to Windows 7, Gates talked about a number of other topics, including why he thinks Yahoo is worth so much money to Microsoft. I’ll post a more detailed transcript of the interview Wednesday or click here to see the video part of the interview.

“I’m a big ink lover,” he said, adding that he hopes with Windows 7 more students decide to go with a Windows notebook that can use pen input. “I would vote yes, but I have a known bias.”

PALO ALTO, Calif.–I still don’t know much about what
Windows 7 will do or what it will look like, but I can tell you that you won’t have to rely on a keyboard and mouse to use it.

“The likelihood is that touch will become mainstream on certain form factors very quickly because we are working hand-in-hand with the hardware companies,” Gates told CNET News.com “Speech and ink it’s a little harder to say.”

“The version after Vista is a big step forward in terms of speech,” Gates said in an interview following his speech at Stanford University. “It’s a big step forward in terms of ink. It’s a big step forward in terms of touch.”

Gates has been a tireless proponent of the Tablet PC concept and made it clear he is not giving up on that dream, despite the fact that such machines remain a small fraction of notebooks nearly half a decade after their introduction.

Aug 24

Unfortunately, what Cuomo is doing–sources say the attorney general himself is working the phones–is likely prohibited by the First Amendment. Governmental efforts at censorship must be narrowly focused, and censoring 100,000 newsgroups because 88 may have illegal images fails that test. Courts have ruled that if a government official delivers a credible threat of prosecution, the target may ask a judge to clear things up through what’s called a declaratory judgment.

CNET News intern Holly Jackson contributed to this report.

(Credit:
Office of the New York Attorney General)

If a private-sector lawyer tried that, he might be prosecuted on extortion charges. But for New York’s top prosecutor, it seems to be business as usual.

Comcast is no slouch in the child porn fight: it helped organize an industry-wide agreement last week with 45 attorneys general. But what was good enough for the National Association of Attorneys General was not good enough for New York; we’re told that Cuomo was one of the handful of officials to withhold his signature.

Ronald Yokubatis, Giganews’ chairman and a native Texan, said he couldn’t grant a full interview by our deadline today. When we talked to him last month about the earlier stages of Cuomo’s campaign, Yokubatis labeled it “fascist crap, ignorant” that came from “Demorats.” He added: “We welcome the New York attorney general to the battle against child pornography.”

What makes Cuomo’s quixotic campaign doubly inexplicable is that Comcast doesn’t actually run its own Usenet servers. It outsources that to a third-party provider based in Austin, Texas, called Giganews.

In the letter (PDF), the Democratic politico says he wants Comcast and other broadband providers to “volunteer” to take actions “surgically directed” only at child pornography and “not at any protected content.” (He’s targeting Usenet, the venerable pre-Web home of thousands of discussion groups that go by names like sci.math, rec.motorcycles, and comp.os.linux.admin.)

What Cuomo wants the broadband providers to do is sign a so-called code of conduct, which has not been made public. This follows Cuomo’s efforts to impose a code of conduct on student loan providers and home lenders (based on the theory that prosecutors, not the New York legislature, should be regulating businesses).

Cuomo’s response: “I commend the companies that have stepped up today to embrace a new standard of responsibility, which should serve as a model for the entire industry.” (By that standard of responsibility, an entire library should be burned down if a single obscene book happens to be found on its shelves.)

Yokubatis did confirm on Tuesday that he has been contacted by and has had conversations with the New York attorney general’s office.

The odd thing about round three in Cuomo v. Usenet is that Comcast has a minuscule presence in the Empire State, which has been sewn up by rivals Verizon and Time Warner Cable. The company’s own figures put its market share at a mere half of a percent of the state’s broadband subscribers, and only because Comcast serves communities in Pennsylvania and Connecticut that spill across state borders.

New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo has found a novel way to shake down law-abiding broadband companies: accuse them of harboring child pornography and threaten to prosecute them unless they do what he wants. That might just happen to involve writing Cuomo a hefty check.

New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat, has campaigned against Usenet.

Like its rivals, Comcast seems unwilling to publicly confront a state attorney general, who would surely claim to be trying to protect the children. Spokesman Sena Fitzmaurice said on Tuesday that Comcast’s lawyers are evaluating Cuomo’s request and that the company may enter into an agreement with New York “substantially similar to the agreements they announced recently with AT&T and AOL.”

That might be laudable, if it were true. But Cuomo’s ham-fisted pressure tactics already have led Time Warner Cable to pull the plug on some 100,000 Usenet discussion groups, including such hotbeds of illicit content as talk.politics and misc.activism.progressive. Verizon Communications deleted such unlawful discussion groups as us.military, ny.politics, alt.society.labor-unions, and alt.politics.democrats. AT&T and Time Warner Cable have taken similar steps.

“It’s a shakedown racket, pure and simple,” says Jim Harper, a lawyer who is director of information policy studies at the Cato Institute. “These companies know that the New York attorney general can cause them millions in legal bills and PR damage, and they’re paying for protection. ‘Nice ISP you’ve got here. It’d be a shame if anything happened to it.’”

The latest company to be honored by Cuomo’s personal attention is Comcast, which received a two-page letter on Monday threatening “legal action” on child pornography grounds within five days, if its executives failed to agree to a certain set of rules devised by the attorney general.

After that unqualified success in “surgical” targeting, Cuomo took aim at AOL. On July 10, Cuomo lauded AOL for agreeing to “eliminate access to child porn newsgroups.” What that press release didn’t mention was that the Time Warner unit actually had eliminated all Usenet newsgroups in January 2005.

That might be a good short-term response. But over time, it may encourage more attorneys general to play Net censor, especially if they come to view broadband providers as compliant, off-the-books sources of revenue. This seems to be Cuomo’s opinion; his press release said Verizon, Time Warner Cable, and Sprint will pay “$1.125 million to fund additional efforts by the attorney general’s office and the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children to remove child pornography from the Internet.”

Aug 24

Verified Identity Pass, and its CLEAR program, has been the subject of much hype since its launch a couple years ago . However, it has received quite a bit of criticism from the security community, as well as from TSA’s head honcho Kip Hawley. In a statement last year explaining why CLEAR customers still had to take off their shoes and belts, Hawley told Congress:

Second: with your new Hyatt platinum number in hand, go over to the CLEAR site and sign up for a one year free membership.

For the last few years, frequent travelers have had the option to sacrifice their privacy (as well as some money) for speed at the airport. Now, thanks to some keen deal-spotting by bloggers, passengers can skip to the front of the airport security line for free. The question to be asked is: even when such services are free, are they worth the price?

Passengers wishing to join the CLEAR program will need to fork over $100 per year, plus $28 for the background check that TSA will run. As part of the application, customers are asked for their social security and drivers license numbers, although these are clearly marked as optional information.

Thanks to some keen spotting by Gary over at View from the Wing, suckers passengers willing to hand over this information to a central database can now join CLEAR for free, at least for the first year.

“The technology is not yet there to provide significant screening benefits to members,” Hawley said today before the House Committee on Homeland Security, adding that providers need to tweak such systems before TSA grants full approval. He did not specify the modifications TSA seeks.

I’ve thought it over, and even when it’s free, I still can’t convince myself that it’s a good idea to do this. However, for those of you who fly frequently (or who have been arrested before, and thus already have your paw-prints on file), perhaps you may find this useful.

The real sticking point, at least for me, is that passengers are required to give up a copy of their fingerprints and a retina scan. This information will then be used to authenticate you when you go through a CLEAR checkpoint. Of course, should the FBI write a national security letter and decide that it would also like a copy of that biometric information, Verified Identity Pass will be forced to hand it over. Creepy.

First: go and sign up to be a member of the Hyatt Hotels Platinum Program (valid until March 31).

Verified Identity Pass is one of three companies that participate in TSA’s Registered Traveler program. The company offers separate lines leading to TSA checkpoints for its subscribers. Passengers passing through one of these lines get to skip to the front of TSA’s security checkpoint — although they still must take off their shoes and belts.

(Credit:
Courtesy CLEAR/Verified Identity Pass)

For those more adventurous travelers, as I’ve discussed before, there is another way to jump to the front of the security line - refuse to show ID.

Aug 24

Harvest Moon (1997, SNES, 800
Wii points): What’s considered to be a relatively rare title is no longer scarce as Harvest Moon makes its way to the virtual console today. The game is basically a farm simulator in which you must raise livestock and grow crops in addition to turning a run-down farm into a thriving success.

Lords of Thunder (1993, Turbografx 16, 800 Wii points): Lords of Thunder is a side-scrolling shooter with a heavy-metal soundtrack. Blast through six stages of intense action as you try to revive “The Dark One.”

Looks like the days of the triple-update are long gone as this week is another two-game showdown on the Virtual Console.

Aug 24

[via FreewareGenius via Lifehacker]

If you’re a Windows user you know full well the tight integration among Microsoft products that has made the operating system a little less than friendly when it comes to tying in various Web apps. E-mail in particular is one of those actions that will usually pop up Outlook or Outlook Express, forcing you to either install a third-party mail app like Mozilla’s Thunderbird or go in and tweak your registry.

See also: Set Web e-mail as default Firefox e-mail

Once installed you've got an easy way to tweak your mail settings in Windows to open up in Gmail instead of Outlook or other default programs.

Yahoo mail users can also take advantage of a sister product called yAttach, which will do the same thing, although you can’t have both installed at once.

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

If you’re a Gmail user, and looking to get that same level of integration in Office documents and elsewhere on your system check out gAttach (download). This simple program will append all your mail extensions, getting them to open up in Gmail instead.

One thing that’s nice is that it’ll simply tack onto whatever browser you’ve got open, or simply open your default one if you don’t have it running. It’ll also suck in multiple files at a time (up to Gmail’s 20MB limit of course).

Aug 24

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.

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.

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.”

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.

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.

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.

Aug 24

“Did you guys get the Curve.”
“Yes.”
“Can I get one”
“What is your cell #?”
“Does it matter?”
“No.”

You can’t make this stuff up.

Then he bounded off to the backroom to return without the Curve.

As for the Van Ness store, I have bought things there in the past and the experience has been fine. This time I had to stand there sweating while some morons behind the counter shouted to each other their Facebook status. The company and the manager of the store should be embarrassed with the behavior.

“Yup, we have them.”
“Can I get one?”
“What is your cell #?”

Thanks for the lesson in mobility and economics. There is nothing more I enjoy than having a moron in a bad tie give me life lessons. I spared us all the heartache of explaining to him that I spent several years in mobile and telecom.

“Can I change my plan and get it?”
“No.”
“How is the camera.”
“It’s Ok like the Pearl.”
“This is why people get annoyed with cellphone carriers.”
“This is how the wireless industry works in the US.”

I had a few minutes today and I went to the Verizon store on Van Ness to see if I could get the new Blackberry Curve that just came out. After standing there for 9 minutes (I checked on my existing BB) someone finally asked if they could help. Here is my experience as verbatim as I can recall.

I give him my number and he tells me that I am not eligible, I have only had this phone for a year and 2 months.

There are few things in life more infuriating than dealing with cell carriers. I am sure I will never hear from VZW on this–or RIM for that matter, whose 9000 I just blogged about earlier today!! That’s it. Both companies suck and you deserve to be publicly flogged. I won’t do you any favors until you do me a solid.

Aug 24

Microsoft may be putting together an “entertainment marketplace” tentatively named
Zune VideoX, ZDNet’s Mary Jo Foley reported Wednesday. In other words, it’s yet another digital content store trying to take a bite out of Apple’s iTunes.

“eLive was renamed and recrafted to Zune VideoX,” a source told Foley, “and the eLive vision scaled down to focus on Zune.” Really? That’s too bad. The Xbox has been a much more resounding success than the Zune, and it already has the successful Xbox Live Marketplace as a starting point.

The Zune hearts content, but how many people heart the Zune?

(Credit:
Microsoft)

That said, there’s reportedly a third-generation Zune coming next year. And on another note, can somebody please outlaw the term “iTunes killer?”

Joe Belfiore, corporate vice president of Microsoft’s Devices and Entertainment eHome division, is reportedly spearheading the project. But it goes without saying that as with any of these “iTunes killers” that seem to pop up like mushrooms after rain, well, it’s going to be an uphill battle even for Redmond.

Creating a solid digital download store is something that Microsoft has tried repeatedly, and hasn’t gotten right yet. Its Zune Marketplace hasn’t exactly been a resounding success. There has also been chatter about something called “eLive,” a marketplace of digital download content–music, video, games–for Zune digital media players, Windows-based PCs,
Xbox gaming consoles, and Windows Mobile smartphones.

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