Sunday, September 28, 2008

Lid may be closing on Pandora

Kristen Kuhns of Brentwood endures her hourlong commute by listening to country music from Pandora.com via her iPod and car radio. Maureen Nelson of Pleasant Hill screens out coworker chatter by plugging into classical music on Pandora. And Morgan Smith of San Francisco uses rock music from the online radio site to help him kick out projects on time.
All three may lose their beloved station, along with Pandora's 16 million other registered users, thanks to a decision by a government board obligating Oakland-based Pandora to pay royalties equal to 70 percent of its income, its founder says.
If the decision puts the lid on Pandora, it will end the saga of one of the country's most popular online music sites, known for its accuracy in finding music suggestions matched to its listeners' tastes. The $13 million company, founded in 2000 as Savage Beast Technologies, gets about 1 million visits a day and is one of the 10 most popular iPhone applications.
Paintings of musicians in vivid purples, reds and greens, CDs overflowing from white post office buckets, a massed arsenal of eight black computers for uploads (the Rippers) and an industrial-strength stage grace the company's downtown office.
But this doesn't mean that Pandora's 130 staffers are laid-back slackers rocking out to the approximately 13,000 songs that pour in every month. Years of deferred salaries and 14-hour days carried the company through


From : http://www.mercurynews.com/

An Unlocked iPhone? I’d Travel Halfway Around the World for One

“iPhone 3G puchased at the Apple Online Store can be activated with any wireless carrier. Simply insert the SIM from your current phone into iPhone 3G and connect to iTunes 8 to complete activation.”
It’s been slightly melodramatic to say that reading those words left me giddy. I hate phone contracts and phones locked to a particular carrier–hate ‘em, hate ‘em, hate ‘em, on both practical grounds and principle–and would much rather pay full price for a phone then get locked into a contract. If unlocked iPhone 3Gs had been available when I bought mine back on day one, I’d never have committed to a contract to get a price break. (Were I a civilian, I might not have bought an iPhone 3G at all until contract-free ones became available–AT&T is supposedly going to offer them at some point–but it’s impossible to write about personal technology today without one.)
The good news is that the unlocked iPhone is here. The bad news? It’s only really here if “here” is Hong Kong. The text I quoted above comes from the Hong Kong version of Apple’s online store, where locals can now buy the unlocked, contract-free version of the phone.

A 16GB one goes for $HK 6200–that’s $797.86 to you and me–which is only $100 or so shy of triple the $299 you’ll pay for the phone if you sign up for two years of AT&T service. But such is my hatred of contracts and locked phones that it still sounded tempting. Especially since I’m probably going to be visiting Beijing in November and might be visiting Hong Kong anyhow.
Then it dawned on me: I already have an iPhone, and don’t need another. And I’m already signed up with AT&T until July of 2010. The only benefit of a Hong Kong unlocked iPhone would be the possibility of popping in a prepaid SIM when I’m in another country and thereby avoiding AT&T roaming fees. Which would be nice–but not worth $800 on top of the $299 I’ve already invested in the iPhone I own.
I’ll still be pleased when AT&T starts selling its full-price, contract-free iPhone–and would be even more pleased if Apple were to sell an unlocked iPhone for use with any carrier. I’m not clear, in fact, why it doesn’t. Maybe it simply doesn’t see enough of a market, or the carriers it works with demanded that only locked phones be available. (If you’ve got hard facts or informed speculation, I’d love to hear it.)
Disclaimers and disclosures:
1) I’ve been an AT&T customer for five years now, and it’s been fine; I have no desire to switch carriers and may be with them a decade from now for all I know. (One of the nicest things about the company has been that it’s cheerfully unlocked some of the phones I’ve bought from it when I’ve called customer service and asked politely; it doesn’t do that for iPhone owners, though.) Like I say, it’s the principle of the thing as much as practicalities that I’m obsessing over.
2) While I like to get phones unlocked, I’ve always done so by asking the carrier; going to a back-alley unlocking service unnerves me. I’m not sure offhand if anyone anywhere is successfully unlocking iPhone 3Gs–this post is spawning an ad on my site for unlocked iPhones, but it seems to lead to a dead site–but I don’t think unlocking a locked iPhone will be worth the bother until it’s okay with Apple and AT&T.
3) A month ago, I went into a Verizon store to buy an EVDO adapter. (Yes, I’m a customer of both AT&T and Verizon–I wanted Verizon’s coverage when it came to my laptop.) I fully intended to pay full price and avoid a contract–but the salesguy successfully convinced me to sign a contract on the grounds that the penalty for cancelling the contract goes down each month and eventually reaches zero, allowing me to leave at any time and still save money on the hardware. I feel guilty admitting this, since I wimped out; we’ll see if I ever regret having done so.
I’m still excited about the notion of contractless, carrierless iPhones though. Here’s hoping that by the time a next-generation iPhone (4G?) becomes available, I can buy one in that form. Preferably without flying to Hong Kong…
[Shameless semi-related cross-promotion: Do you have an iPhone? If so, please take Technologizer's iPhone Satisfaction Survey. It'll take around fifteen minutes of your time, and we'll use the aggregated data we collect to help determine just how happy iPhone users are with their phones. Thanks!]

From : http://technologizer.com/

Pandora, Webcasting appear headed for Senate victory

Technology companies are supposed to be wide-eyed novices on Capitol Hill. I've read that they don't spread enough money around or aren't hip to the ways of Washington.
Regardless of whether that's true, this weekend saw Pandora, a struggling music service, whip up enough support among fans of Web radio to help persuade the House of Representatives to unanimously pass the Webcaster Settlement Act on Saturday, according to multiple people associated with the bill. The proposed legislation is designed to give Webcasters added time to negotiate a settlement with the music industry on reduced royalty rates.
Lower rates are vital to the survival of Internet radio stations, according to Tim Westergren, Pandora's founder, who pleaded with the public on Friday to call their congressional representatives and demand they support the bill. The two sides are close to reaching an agreement, but if the legislation fails to pass it could push the discussions back months and deliver a financial death blow to some Webcasters, Westergren said.
According to one Washington lobbyist, the phone calls from the public were one of the factors that helped the legislation pass in the House and now have it headed for a Senate vote within the next two days without any major parties gunning for it.
Two other factors, however, likely played larger roles in getting the bill through the House: the lobbying efforts made by National Public Radio and some 12th-hour deal making to appease traditional radio broadcasters, who were trying to kill the legislation, according to sources.
"You know," said a fatigued Westergren, "it was a nerve racking day."
In crunch time, Howard Berman came through
Saturday started with lobbyists for the National Association of Broadcasters "making a huge press in the House, blasting every (Congressional representative's) office" with appeals to kill the legislation, according to on lobbyist with knowledge of the events.
NPR, the publicly and privately funded non profit organization created by Congress in 1970, has plenty of friends in Washington. The group, which produces Webcasts and supports the bill, e-mailed Congressmen on Saturday explaining how much it needed the legislation and that a deal on a new royalty rate couldn't be struck without it, sources said.
The real deciding factor came when Rep. Howard Berman (Democrat-Van Nuys, Calif.) met with members of the NAB. They told him that they feared their Web competitors would get a deal done before them. Under the terms of the legislation, SoundExchange, the body that collects royalties and is part of the Recording Industry Association of America, has until Dec. 15 to negotiate a new rate. The NAB apparently was worried that the deadline didn't give the organization enough time to strike its own royalty agreement.
"Berman said 'Fine, we'll extend the date until Feb. 15 which gives you two more months to talk,'" said one music-industry source with knowledge of the discussions. "There isn't anything in the act that prevents traditional broadcasters from reaching their own royalty rate."
That did the trick, according to the source. Dennis Wharton, an NAB spokesman confirmed Saturday night that the NAB met with Berman and that the deadline was extended. He said the trade organization has dropped its opposition in both houses of Congress.
This means unless something unforeseen happens, the Webcaster Settlement Act should pass, according to insiders.
Then what? Internet radio stations must still reach an agreement with the music industry on a price for streaming music over the Web. Sources on both sides say they are closer than they ever to a number and should the Webcasting bill pass in the Senate, one source predicted that a deal could be reached as early as next month.

From : http://news.cnet.com/

Apple selling unlocked iPhone 3G in Hong Kong

Apple has made an unlocked version of the iPhone 3G available in Hong Kong, letting consumers pick whichever carrier they so choose.
This is in sharp contrast to Apple's policy for the almost everywhere else on the planet. Unlocked iPhones are rampant worldwide, but that isn't something that Apple has sanctioned.
Freedom doesn't come cheap. The 8GB version is available for about $695 (5,400 Hong Kong dollars), while the 16GB iPhone costs about $798 (6,200 HK dollars), according to Apple's site.
The "iPhone 3G purchased at the Apple Online Store can be activated with any wireless carrier," the site states. "Simply insert the SIM from your current phone into iPhone 3G and connect to iTunes 8 to complete activation."

From : http://news.cnet.com/

Fast Forward's Help File

Q How can I stop the touchpad on my laptop from treating random taps as mouse clicks?

AMost Windows laptops seem to come with this "tap-to-click" feature enabled on their touchpads. If you find this leads you to click when you don't want to, you can turn it off -- after taking a few detours through Windows' interface.

First, open the Mouse Properties window. In Windows XP, go to the Start menu, select Control Panel, click "Printers and Other Hardware" and then "Mouse"; in Vista, hit the Start menu, select Control Panel, and click "Mouse" under its "Hardware and Sound" heading.

In that properties window, look for a tab not labeled "Buttons," "Pointers," "Pointer Options," "Wheel" or "Hardware," then click on it to see your laptop's specific touchpad settings. On a Dell laptop, for instance, a "Dell Touchpad" tab led to a screen with a "Touchpad Settings" link, which in turn revealed a "Tap to Click" checkbox that I could click to disable. On an HP machine, a "Device Settings" tab's "Settings . . . " button opened a window in which I could select a "Tapping" heading at the left, then click to clear its "Enable Tapping" checkbox.

Whether you like or hate tap-to-click, one thing's for sure: The people behind these settings screens desperately need to simplify them.

My iMac G5 did not come with a wireless card. Should I get Apple's AirPort card? A friend suggests a third-party USB adapter instead.

Yes, get an AirPort card. It will cost more, but it won't tie up one of your Mac's too-few USB ports.

Owners of such older Macs as the first line of G4 iMacs, however, don't have this option. Apple stopped making AirPort cards compatible with them years ago, leaving those buyers no choice but to purchase external WiFi adapters.

From : http://www.washingtonpost.com/

Apple updates Java on Mac OS X


Apple updates Java on Mac OS X
Apple has updated Java runtime for Macs to fix several security bugs and issues.
The updates have been released for both Mac OS XTiger and Mac OS X Leopard. 
The company said in an advisory that the updates fixes address a total of 38 Common Vulnerability and Exposure (CVE) entries in Java.
Apple added that the fixes included both Mac-specific and Java-specific flaws.
Java for Mac is not developed by Sun.  Apple  provi des it from its own sources and as a result they are often slower at providing all the latest patches available on other platforms.
Checkout:
Java for Mac OS X 10.5 Update 2
Java for Mac OS X 10.4, Release 7

From : http://stuff.techwhack.com/

Microsoft Advertisement Created Using a Mac

Seattle: A takeoff of a Mac commercial by Microsoft has hit a snag after Computerworld magazine revealed that four of the images used in the campaign are software stamped "Adobe Photoshop C3 Macintosh".

In the original commercial an actor who looked a bit like Bill Gates claimed he was a PC while a younger, more stylish man identified himself as a Mac.

The Microsoft spoof includes a MS engineer who resembles the Mac guy from the original ad along with Students on Ice Expeditions founder Geoff Green and author Deepak Chopra identifying themselves as PCs.

From : http://www.shortnews.com/

New Nintendo DS Coming This Year With Camera, Music Playback

According to a report from Nikkei Net, Nintendo will introduce a new iteration of this Nintendo DS later this year, featuring a built-in camera and music playback. The new version of the DS is also reported to have improved wireless functions. Some versions of the report indicate the improved wireless capabilities will allow the new DS to connect to "information terminals," expanding the machine's non-gaming features.
The Japanese version of the report mentions that pictures taken via the DS's internal camera can be used by games, opening up new gameplay options.
Nikkei Net writes that the new version is "expected to be priced below 20,000 yen." The Nintendo DS Lite is currently priced at 16,800 yen in Japan. The new DS will launch first in Japan, with the country seeing an allocation of "several hundred thousand units" before any overseas sales.
Nintendo To Debut Camera-Equipped, Music-Playing DS In Late '08 [Nikkei Net (subscription required) via NeoGAF and Kotaku ]

New Nintendo DS Has Camera, Music Playback

Possible price mentioned, but no details on any new form factor, a Japanese newspaper reports.

The Nintendo DS could finally be getting the redesign that rumors have centered on for months. Nikkei Net, the online component to Japan's Nikkei newspaper, has reported that Nintendo is set to announce a new hardware revision of their wildly successful DS handheld system. This revision is said to include a built-in camera, music-playback capabilities, and the ability to connect to information terminals.

According to Wired, a photograph of the corresponding Nikkei print story suggests that the new design could go on sale for less than 20,000 yen (about $188 US). Currently, the DS Lite retails for 16,800 yen (about $158 US). The print story also reports that the new DS will have a larger screen.

Nikkei speculates that this means that the device will be better able to compete with today's increasingly versatile consumer electronics and cell phones. Nintendo has been experimenting with added uses for their DS hardware almost since the hardware's launch, where people could order food at Major League Baseball games, guide users at a Japanese poetry museum, and has even undergone pilot programs at Disney World. Nintendo fans who know their history may also draw a connection with the Game Boy Camera peripheral, which let users take black and white pictures and use the images in games and activities back in 1998.

The DS has seen one significant hardware revision (the slimmed-down DS Lite) and countless colors and special editions since its launch four years ago. If the Nikkei report is accurate, Nintendo could be depending on this new hardware design to keep the DS sales momentum high as it approaches and seeks to surpass the 100 million unit mark. The hardware has sold more than 77 million units worldwide already.

Nintendo is holding press events this Thursday in both Japan and America, and Nintendo World Report will be on hand at the San Francisco event this week to bring you the latest Nintendo news as it breaks.

From : http://www.nintendoworldreport.com/

Nintendo to launch camera, music-capable DS: report

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese video game maker Nintendo Co Ltd plans to launch a new model of its DS handheld machine that can take pictures and play music by the end of the year, the Nikkei business daily said on Sunday.
The move would pit the top-selling portable game gear with Apple Inc iPod and camera-embedded cellphones in general.
The price for the new machine, which will also be equipped with advanced wireless communications functions, is expected to be below 20,000 yen ($189) in Japan, compared with 16,800 yen for the current model, the Nikkei said.
The Wii game console and DS have been Nintendo's twin growth engines, helping its share price to grow more than three-fold over the past three years.
The DS far outsells Sony Corp's rival machine, PlayStation Portable (PSP), globally.
But in Japan, the PSP's unit sales exceeded the DS's in five consecutive months through July, according to game magazine publisher Enterbrain, in a potential sign of slowing momentum for the current DS model.
Nintendo officials were not immediately available for comment.
($1=105.97 Yen)
(Reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka; Editing by Jacqueline Wong)

From : http://www.reuters.com/