Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Best Buy Offers $99 IPhone to Some Reward Members


If US$99 for an 8GB iPhone sounds too good to be true--well, it kind of is. The latest offering comes from Best Buy, which is selling both the 8GB and 16GB iPhones for $100 off their respective retail prices. And unlike similar past deals from AT&T, these are brand new phones, not refurbished units.


Of course, there's a catch. There's always a catch. In this case, the deal is only applicable if you are a Best Buy Premier Silver Reward Zone member. If you're wondering what a Best Buy Premier Silver Reward Zone member is, then you've played right into their hands. Really, the only prerequisite for Premier Silver "status" is that you have to have spent $2,500 at Best Buy during a calendar year. Like the old adage says, folks, you've got to spend money to...spend...money.


Anyway, in order to take advantage of this amazing deal, you need to have been a Reward Zone member by February 21st, so don't think going out and buying yourself a brand new MacBook Pro this week will make you eligible. The price is also only good through February 28th, requires that you go to the store, and, of course, means you have to sign up for a two-year contract with AT&T, so don't think you're sneaking out of that. There's plenty more fine print at the link above, so I'd guess there are a lot of people who won't be able to take advantage of the offer.


Source : http://www.pcworld.com/

AOL's social strategy: Merge Bebo, AIM, all else

AOL has been fairly criticized for its purchase of Bebo in 2008 for $850 million. Since the acquisition, Bebo has been rolled into a group at AOL called People Networks. As we wrote yesterday, Bebo now has spiff new features. But that doesn't make it worth $850 million.


I sat down with Joanna Shields, president of AOL People Networks, about the division's longer-term strategy. Shields was brought in by Bebo's venture investors to "package and sell" the company, she told me. She obviously did that, and quite capably. "We sold at the top of the market," she said. She's stayed there to make the acquisition pay off for AOL, and there are clearly a lot of people who are curious about her plans for doing so.


The goal for the People Networks group, which includes Bebo, AIM, ICQ, SocialThing, Yedda, and Goowy Media, is to "connect people with everything they care about," Shields days. Before she came to AOL via the Bebo acquisition, she says the various social properties in AOL were operating as islands. To an extent they still are, but she's trying to bring all the pieces and parts together into a system that's useful for people, and that will pay back for AOL.


That goal to connect people explains why the team is evangelizing the social aggregation features of Bebo so strongly. People are on a lot of networks, not just Bebo. Shields realizes, though, that becoming another social aggregator is not the ticket to riches. It's useful, but you don't become Facebook by aggregating Facebook.


AIM is the key
For the native audience that can drive Bebo and AOL forward, the company will rely on AIM and ICQ. AIM, which has 94 million global users, should have been AOL's social network, I said to Shields and to David Liu, GM of AOL People Networks and the leader of the AIM project. "It should have been our Twitter, too," Shields said.


As AOL announced yesterday, AIM users will be getting Bebo's more developed profile pages. In April an "integration version" of AIM will be released that will combine the AIM and Bebo instant messenger networks. Mid-year, a "revolutionary" new AIM will emerge that will allow access to not just AOL's own instant messaging clients, but others as well. I told Liu I use Adium on my Mac and Digsby on my PC (both are apps that support multiple instant messaging platforms, including Facebook's), and he told me that the new AIM client will be able to replace those. Also, "We'll have a better version of Twitter inside it," Shields said.


Shields indicated that there are no more social service acquisitions coming, so it looks like AOL will be building these new services with the people and companies it already has.


Liu told me that one of the key factors to AOL's future social success is the desktop client. "I can't say enough about how strategic it is have the client." Shields added, "It's that always-on pulse. It's a multiplier."


The group will continue to support both Web-based and mobile AIM clients, but they believe that having the rich client app is vital to staying in front of users.


AOL's People Networks group is aiming for openness. "We want to out-open everybody," Shields says, and indicated that upcoming products will support both OpenID for login and OAuth for third-party access. I did note that some of the products announced yesterday weren't completely integrated even with AOL's own products (the Life story function doesn't read in items from the Lifestream, for example), and she admitted that the integration among the different groups and products is a work in progress.


Worth $850 million?
Before talking with Shields and her team, I felt that AOL's Bebo strategy was scattered: A saw a lot of feature improvements, but no knock-out vision. After talking to Shields, I'm still not convinced that AOL has a killer social strategy. The company is doing the right thing by finally trying to leverage its strong instant message platform, AIM (and also ICQ) and by taking good features from Bebo and layering them in to AOL. It's also smart to make Bebo and AOL more interoperable with other networks. These are solid moves and should help keep the AOL social products relevant. But none of what I heard sounded like a threat to Facebook in terms of users, or to Twitter or Friendfeed in terms of innovation.


Source : http://news.cnet.com/

HD movie purchases coming to Vudu

Most video-on-demand set-top boxes let users rent or buy downloadable movies. But high-definition movies have been rental-only, thanks to limitations from the movie studios that own the content. But owners of Vudu's on-demand box will now be able to buy a limited selection of HD movies from independent studios Firstlook, Magnolia, and Kino.


The initial roster of 50 high-def movies includes such titles as "Transsiberian" and the Oscar-winning "Man on Wire," and they'll be offered simultaneously with the DVD releases. (Viewers can opt to buy either the "instant HD" or the much more impressive HDX version of the movie, and rentals will still be available.)


Vudu is hoping that these niche offerings will pave the way for the major studios to flip the switch on HD purchases of their more mainstream fare at some point in the future.


What does it mean? The HD movie purchases offers Vudu another nice bragging right in its competition with Apple TV, but little more.


On a personal note, after building up significant VHS and then DVD movie libraries, I've moved to an almost entirely all-rental model in my viewing habits, so buying downloadable movies doesn't appeal to me--even if Vudu can get the bigger studios to sign onto this plan. And if I did want to invest in a keeper, I'm still going to feel more comfortable with Blu-ray Discs than with having movies locked into a proprietary hard-drive format.


But that's just my opinion. I'm still a Vudu fan, thanks to the excellent video quality of its HDX movies and the breadth of its 1,400-strong HD movie library. I'm just happy sticking with rentals.


What do you guys think?


Source : http://news.cnet.com/

Yahoo executive joins Hearst amid reorganization

NEW YORK (AP) — A Yahoo executive in charge of news and information is jumping ship to media conglomerate Hearst Corp., as a major overhaul of management at the search company is expected to hit this week.


Neeraj Khemlani, 38, will join Hearst as its vice president and special assistant to the chief executive for digital media on March 23. It is a newly created position.


Khemlani's job will be to promote and coordinate digital content at Hearst. At Yahoo, Khemlani managed the business and products of news, tech, weather and education. He also was the executive editor of Yahoo! Finance.


He directed original content programming across Yahoo and oversaw business development deals with major media companies. Previously, Khemlani worked as a producer for CBS News' 60 Minutes and 60 Minutes II from 1998 to 2006. In addition, he was a creative consultant to Imagine Entertainment and ABC Entertainment, advising scriptwriters.


He also was a producer for ABC News. Khemlani started his media career as a newspaper reporter, stringing for The New York Times and The Post-Standard in Syracuse, N.Y.


"We are sorry to see Neeraj go, but we wish him the very best," Yahoo said in a statement. It did not name a successor.


Yahoo Inc.'s recent hiring of Chief Executive Carol Bartz has been expected to shake things up at the Sunnyvale, Calif.-based search giant. Media reports have speculated Bartz is likely to undo or scale back prior reorganizations by former CEO Jerry Yang.


Media conglomerate Hearst owns newspapers, magazines and television stations and holds stakes in cable networks, business publishing, Internet companies and real estate.


Source : AP

Apple Looking to Free the iPhone from AT&T?


The IT Examiner reports that while Jobs is away from his spot as CEO of Apple the interim CEO is looking to free the iPhone from the grips of AT&T notoriously spotty network. The publication cites an unnamed source that claims Apple will announce an iPhone for Verizon soon. Of course, we have been hearing that a second iPhone model will be coming soon for years, so take this rumor with two grains of salt.


The story makes a little sense though if you think about it. Apple wants to expand its user reach and to do that it needs more than one exclusive partner in each market. Verizon is one of the largest providers and has operations in many countries so giving the iPhone to it would mean availability in many parts of the world.


Apple is also said to be looking for EVDO and CDMA engineers in iPhone job postings, which could be evidence for talent needed to work with the Verizon network. Freeing the iPhone from the grips of AT&T would give the device the sort of broad availability that the Blackberry and other popular smartphones offer. With only AT&T offering the iPhone and the device still sitting at the top of the U.S. smartphone charts, what could the device do with much broader availability?


Via IT Examiner

The 10 Coolest iPhone 3G Cases

No matter where you roam, you're bound to catch someone with an iPhone. With carrier relationships in over 70 countries, unit sales of the iPhone 3G have been significantly greater than sales of the first-generation iPhone. From its launch on July 11, 2008, Apple sold 6.8 million 3G iPhones in that quarter; according to Apple, 4.36 million iPhone units were sold in Q1 of 2009, representing 88 percent unit growth over the first quarter last year. Simply wow.

So what makes the iPhone 3G such a hot-ticket item? For starters, it has multi-touch capabilities, true GPS, improved voice quality, a brighter screen, and surprisingly good battery life. And it looks so darn cool. Plus, you can take your pick of the countless number of iPhone 3G cases on the market to protect your precious phone. But you don't want to pick just any case. Since your iPhone 3G deserves the very best, we've collected the ten coolest-looking cases, including one that has a rechargeable external battery and another that looks good enough to eat. Show off your iPhone and the case it's in.


Here are some of the products featured in today's The 10 Coolest iPhone 3G Cases slideshow:


iSkin solo/solo FX
iSkin's solo and solo FX iPhone 3G cases have got to be the coolest ones on this list. Both the solo ($29.99) and solo FX ($32.99) form-fitting cases feature an ultra high-gloss finish and are hot/cold temperature resistant; the solo FX has an embossed designer pattern and a unique mirror film that lets you check yourself out when not using the phone. The solo's color options are opaque black or white and translucent red or blue; the solo FX comes in translucent blue, green, red, and orange.


mophie Juice Pack air
Debuting this spring, the all-new mophie Juice Pack air is a case that charges your iPhone 3G! Basically it's a rechargeable external lithium polymer battery that's concealed inside of a 4.9-by-2.59-by-0.75-inch (HWD) hard-shell case. Mophie claims that it's the world's thinnest Apple-certified external battery. The on/off switch lets you choose between using the battery or just the case. Preorder it now for $79.95 and choose from black, white, or purple.


Now check out the rest of our The 10 Coolest iPhone 3G Cases slideshow, including the SwitchEasy RebelSerpent, Chocolate Style Silicone case for iPhone 3G, Marware Game Grip, Miniot iWood cobra, SENA Walletbook Case for iPhone 3G, Speck PixelSkin for iPhone 3G, Wave for iPhone 3G, and OtterBox iPhone 3G Impact Case.


Source : http://www.pcmag.com/

Analyst: iPhone service plans too pricey. Duh!

Opinion – Kaufman Bros. analyst, Shaw Wu, released an enlightening research note today. Those pricey iPhone service plans may actually be limiting the growth potential of the iPhone, creating an opportunity for AT&T’s rivals. Really? If one looks beyond the splashy iPhone style to see how AT&T may have been able to take advantage of the hype to date, the opportunities afforded to others may soon force AT&T to finally bring its level of service quality and features into parity with what it charges.


Over the past two years, I have really written enough about the fact that the iPhone is one expensive toy. The fact that the actual cost of the device over a 2-year service period (and beyond) is deceiving, and the fact that many people who own an iPhone may not actually be able to afford it. You can chastise me for those opinions, but I won’t change them because the at least $80 per month phone service and Internet access cost, excluding taxes and fees, turns the iPhone into a $2000+ toy. Most of us mere mortal consumers could not justify such an expense for a phone that can also surf the Internet -- at least if we took off our Apple blinders, that is.

Do I sound upset? Yes, there are plenty of reasons for being upset about the iPhone and what we the consumers have to accept just to use one of them.

Now we find Shaw Wu is quoted saying "Sprint's Boost Mobile unit now offers a $50 plan that includes unlimited talk, messaging, web, and walkie-talkie while T-Mobile is test marketing a $50 unlimited voice plan and $25 more for unlimited data/Internet," he wrote (see our coverage, which includes a chart showing how many months it would take before you'd be saving money by switching). "This compares to $130 for both AT&T and Verizon for unlimited voice and unlimited data/Internet."

According to Apple Insider, the “analyst cites high service plan pricing - as opposed to hardware pricing - as the cause for slowing iPhone sales and reduced smartphone adoption in general. And while he acknowledges that Sprint and T-Mobile aren't catering to the majority of smartphone customers, he believes their ‘lower prices will likely help them participate more in this secular trend and cause AT&T and Verizon to also lower prices in response.’”

Did it really take an analyst and dedicated research to come to this conclusion? By the way, let’s not forget, that Apple plays its part in this game as well. AT&T has to recover a few hundred dollars from every iPhone, as it sells the device for a subsidized price of $199 (8GB version).

The iPhone is a great phone, don’t get me wrong, but Apple and AT&T have made it about as painful as possible for consumers to actually own and use such a device.

I recently decided to ditch my Blackberry Pearl, arguably the worst smartphone ever made, and remove the dust from my Gen-1 iPhone (which I had only bought for the purpose of a review). [Note: Gruener was so outraged by iPhone's contract pricing that he had discussed with TG Daily's editor the possibility of creating our very own Will it Blend? series, beginning with that device. -Editor]

Even if the battery life is terrible, I figured it would be a nice transitional device until a reasonable smartphone would show itself from my main provider, T-Mobile. So, I walked into an AT&T store with the intention to re-activate the iPhone on a basic voice plan. I learned, however, that AT&T would rather turn me down as a customer than agreeing to just a voice plan. I would have to subscribe to a data plan, I was told. Hello?!? I own the phone. I paid $650 for it and they are now telling me I cannot get just a voice plan for it. It is this kind of greedy business practice which gives me such a bad taste for Apple's iPhone, an otherwise great device.

In addition, I also learned that I normally would get a local discount, since my wife works for a large local company that has some deal in place with AT&T. But since it was an iPhone, these discounts do not apply. To AT&T’s defense, the sales person recommended that I should jailbreak the iPhone and use it with T-Mobile. [Note: TG Daily does not advise doing this as it is illegal and violates your iPhone warranty. -Editor]

And, after all of these personal dealings I now find in my inbox an analyst who says there's something wrong with iPhone's service plan pricing, and that rivals may be able to take advantage of this scenario. Gee, who would have thought that?!?

While I am calming myself down again, I believe AT&T royally screwed itself over with its overconfident pricing, which was most likely inspired by Apple's Jobs as he personally went around to Verizon first, and then other major carriers trying to negotiate the best deal.

Imagine now that there would have been a $50 flat fee plan. Sure, the lines may have been even longer in the beginning, but there would be no issue keeping the growth of the iPhone going. Rivals may have caught up at some point, but in the end, it would have been a good strategy both for consumers who forgot to consider all those costs the iPhone will accumulate, as well as AT&T, not to mention the rest of the industry that would've had to revamp its pricing strategy to compete with that additional attraction of the $50 service plan iPhone. Even with AT&T's shoddy EDGE network for the original iPhone, and the problems with the iPhone 3G and how it aligned itself with AT&T’s 3G network, the reality is a $50 iPhone would've been huge.


Conclusion

As it is today, AT&T's service quality and features seem to be well out of line with the price being charged for the service. Every company may run its business in whatever way it wants, charging for its products whatever it can get -- and that is, of course, fine. But I rarely have seen such a discrepancy between actual value and price as in this case with current smartphone service plans. And that discrepancy does not only refer to AT&T, but it seems that all carriers seem to think that they can sell all those fancy new smartphones with ancient service contract ideas. And in the case of the iPhone, it seems the actual phone is years ahead of the ideas at AT&T.


Source : http://www.tgdaily.com/

Why iPhone Service Prices Probably Won't Budge

There's no shortage of buzz over predictions that iPhone service costs are about to drop, but I wish to respectfully disagree with that expectation. The predicted price drop is supposed to be the result of a trickle-down effect from the heating up of competition for cellular customers. Fortune.com quotes Kaufman Bros' analyst Shaw Wu as saying cheaper all-you-can-eat pricing from Sprint and T-Mobile could convince AT&T reduce its up-through-the-sky pricing for iPhone users.


From Wu's lips to God’s ears, but I am not particularly hopeful. Apple, which plays a key role in determining AT&T’s pricing for iPhones and service, has never been known to reduce prices except as a normal part of the technology cycle.


Steve Jobs' claim that the iPhone 3G offered "twice the speed for half the price" was so transparently bogus that it took only a few minutes for even the most starry-eyed Mac fan to realize the total cost of owning an iPhone increased significantly as part of the new, "lower" pricing.


As long as the iPhone is considered the preeminent handset, Apple and AT&T will do very little in the way of price reductions, especially on the monthly service. Wu is correct in noting that service pricing is a reason some people don't purchase an iPhone (and why I haven't upgraded my personal handset), but the large price reduction necessary to offset that simply isn't in Apple’s bag o' tricks.


I'd be happy if 3G service just wasn't more expensive than what I pay for the original iPhone's EDGE data service. Moving from my old iPhone to the 3G model would add $30 or even $40-a-month to my bill. Plus the cost of the new handset.
Sprint and T-Mobile are cutting prices because they don't have interesting handsets to sell. And price-sensitive consumers will probably find that acceptable.


Yes, the price of the iPhone and AT&T's service for it will eventually come down, but I don't expect it to happen quickly or in a major way. Though, I'd love to be wrong on this one--and get to upgrade my iPhone at a price I'd be willing to pay.


Source : http://www.pcworld.com/

Microsoft boosts giving in 2008


Microsoft Corp. increased its cash and software donations in fiscal year 2008 to $498 million, a bump of 15 percent, according to the company.


In 2007, Redmond, Wash.-based Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) donated $432 million in cash and software.


Those figures include the company’s matching awards for donations made by its employees.


Microsoft’s fiscal year runs from July 1 through June 30.


Source : http://www.bizjournals.com/

Microsoft Resources and Tools Designed to Elevate Job Skills

Microsoft has debuted a new initiative designed to provide free and low-cost tools and resources set up to help workers elevate their job skills. Available exclusively for the U.S., the Elevate America program aims to reach no less than 2 million people with technology training over the course of the next three years. Microsoft emphasized the strong connection between developing IT skills and succeeding in the 21st-century economy. The first phase of the initiative is already live, as the Redmond company introduced the Elevate America website.

“Millions of Americans don’t have the technology skills needed in today’s economy. Through Elevate America, we want to help workers get the skills they need to succeed,” said Pamela Passman, corporate vice president of Microsoft Global Corporate Affairs. “We are also providing a full range of work force development resources for state and local governments so they can offer specialized training for their workers.”

The Microsoft Elevate America website will help people interested in building a foundation of basic IT skills in order to start their careers. At the same time, the resources and tools available are designed to help workers expand their technology skills, and access Microsoft Certifications in order to build upon their career. Still, this is just the first step in Microsoft’s vision. The software giant has also announced partnerships with local governments across the U.S., including Florida, New York and Washington, to bring Elevate America to residents.

“At the federal, state and local level, leaders are working together to help start the engine of economic growth. The private sector provides much of the spark needed to jump-start that engine,” Washington Gov. Chris Gregoire said. “Elevate America is a great example of Microsoft’s leadership on education and work force development — issues that bring us a step closer to recovery by helping us provide critically important help to our citizens. Washington state is pleased to be one of the first states to partner with Microsoft to provide Elevate America to our residents.” he continued.


Source : http://news.softpedia.com/

Trouble In The Clouds: Gmail Turns Into Gfail

Thousands of Twitter messages carrying the words "gmail" or "gfail" will teach you that Google's free web-based e-mail platform is currently down around the world. A Google spokesperson told Pocket Lint that their engineers are working on it but have no clue why the errors are turning up.



Meanwhile, a Google representative posted this on a its help pages:


We're aware of a problem with Gmail affecting a small subset of users. The affected users are unable to access Gmail. We will provide an update by February 24, 2009 6:30 AM PST detailing when we expect to resolve the problem. Please note that this resolution time is an estimate and may change.


(POP3/IMAP seems to be still functioning, and the problem doesn't appear to affect other Google Apps at this point)


I'm not buying the small subset part, and considering the fact that Pocket Lint says the problem started occuring around 10:20am GMT, 3 hours before even telling everyone what's going on is an incredibly long timeframe in my opinion.


Update: Gmail is supposed to be coming back now, at least for some. But Google is also dealing with people posting adult content on Groups pages related to Gmail.


Update 2: there's a status box on the Gmail Help homepage that says the outage started at 1:30 AM PST, which means the problems have been occurring for nearly 2 hours and a half at the time of this update. The message now reads that access has been restored without any indication of time.


Update 3: the problem appears to be solved for most users now, 3 hours after Google indicated that it was aware of the errors.


This comes a couple of weeks after the chaos when a reportedly human error caused Google's search engine to erroneously flag the entire internet as malware. Curious to see what their response to this outage will be, as this is not the first time this has happened.


Good thing Gmail went offline with Google Gears some time ago.


Update 4: Google's official statement was just blogged.


If you?ve tried to access your Gmail account today, you are probably aware by now that we?re having some problems. Shortly after 10 9:30am GMT our monitoring systems alerted us that Gmail consumer and businesses accounts worldwide could not get access to their email.We?re working very hard to solve the problem and we?re really sorry for the inconvenience. Those users in the US and UK who have enabled Gmail offline through Gmail Labs should be able to access their inbox, although they won?t be able to send or receive emails.We?re posting updates to the Gmail Help Centre at http://mail.google.com/support/and Google Apps users can visit the Google Apps help centre at www.google.com/support/a.Thanks for bearing with us while we sort this out. We'll report back as we make progress.


Source : http://www.washingtonpost.com/

Apple releases public beta of Safari 4

Apple on Tuesday released a public beta of Safari 4, the next generation of its Internet Web browser.

Apple touts the Nitro engine at the heart of Safari as running JavaScript over 4 times as fast as Safari 3, up to 30 times faster than Internet Explorer 7 and three times faster than Firefox. Nitro also allows Safari 4 to load HTML pages three times faster than IE 7, according to Apple.


Other new features in Safari 4 include Top Sites, giving users a visual preview of frequently visited pages; Full History Search, to search through titles, web addresses and the complete text of recently viewed pages; Cover Flow, to easily flip through web history or bookmarks; and Tabs on Top, to make tabbed browsing easier.


Safari 4 includes HTML 5 support for offline technologies so web-based applications can store information locally without an Internet connection. The browser also supports advanced CSS effects.


Safari 4 public beta is free and available now for download from Apple’s Web site.


Apple said Safari 4 for Mac OS X requires Mac OS X Leopard 10.5.6 and Security Update 2009-001 or Mac OS X Tiger 10.4.11, as well as a minimum of 256MB RAM.


Source : http://www.macworld.com/

Carol Bartz Prepares to Revamp Yahoo Management

Even if it’s a spectacularly obvious thing for a new CEO to do, Carol Bartz’s reorganization of Yahoo’s management ranks as early as this week will be a pivotal development.


That’s because, contrary to a lot of the analytical blather out there, the embattled company’s fate will be determined more from within than without. More than anything else—more than Microsoft’s fitful deal-making attempts, more than Google’s crushing competition in search, more than the current slowdown in online advertising—the quality and determination of Yahoo’s management from here on out will decide whether the Internet icon will do a slow fade (or a quick sellout) or mount an unlikely comeback.

According to Kara Swisher at the blog Memotown—I mean Boomtown—missives sent to Yahoos the past two weeks indicate that Bartz will implement a “more traditional and more accountable structure like the one she employed while rehauling Autodesk.” That means she will have a chief operating officer, chief technology officer, chief marketing officer, and the like report directly to her in a more simplified structure than Yahoo’s longstanding and infamous “matrix management” system.


As I wrote when Bartz was chosen, this is one of the key things the new CEO needed to do, and quickly:



* Nuke the current management structure once and for all. Although former CEO Terry Semel was credited with turning Yahoo around in its youth, he helped create a “matrix” management system that required ideas to be vetted by many managers, slowing new services and making few people truly accountable for particular projects. Despite repeated vows to get rid of the matrix and constant reorganizations of management, that hasn’t happened. “They need one person in charge to coordinate what they do,” says Autodesk CEO Carl Bass.

And Bass and others think that’s precisely what Bartz can do. “She has a forceful ability to make decisions, and that’s a talent Yahoo needs,” says Neil Sims, managing director at the executive search firm Boyden Global Executive Search.



Bartz also is looking at a couple of other crucial moves, according to the memos. That includes slowing down the rollout outside the U.S. of its new display-ad system called APT, which has not wowed many people since its limited launch last fall. But she will need to find a way to revitalize Yahoo’s fading leadership in display ads as the poor economy accelerates some big changes in how those ads are sold. After all, as I also wrote five weeks ago, if anyone can lead the new generation of display ads, “it should be Yahoo, whose considerable experience in search, banner, and video ads—combined with unmatched relationships with advertisers and agencies—gives it a golden opportunity. Bartz must figure out how to seize it.”


Bartz apparently is also looking at remaking Yahoo’s important media unit, according to Swisher, splitting it into three units while also centralizing product development at Yahoo’s Sunnyvale headquarters.


Whatever the specifics, and whenever the changes get underway, all this will be a major change in how Yahoo manages itself. “Get well-rested, because next week’s a biggie,” Bartz advised the troops in a Feb. 20 memo.


Source : http://www.businessweek.com/

Apple announces Safari 4 public beta

Apple on Tuesday announced the release of a public beta Safari 4, promising a much faster browser with improved navigation and searching.


The company said the newest edition of Apple's browser for both Mac OS X and Windows will run JavaScript commands 4.2 times faster than Safari 3, and also claims to deliver better JavaScript and HTML page loading than Microsoft's Internet Explorer 7 or Mozilla's FireFox 3. Apple also added the Cover Flow interface now found in almost every piece of its software to let users scroll backwards through browsing history like they were flipping through album covers, and what appears to be Apple's own implementation of FireFox's Smart Location "awesome bar" called Smart Address Field.


The new beta version is available for download at Apple's Safari Web page with both Windows and Mac OS versions ready for testing. Mac users need to be running Mac OS X Leopard 10.5.6 and Apple's latest security update or Mac OS X Tiger 10.4.11 on an Intel Mac or a G3 or better Mac. Windows users need Windows XP SP 2 or Vista.


Safari is used by about 8 percent of Internet surfers, according to Net Applications, trailing Internet Explorer and FireFox.


Update 6:50am - Apple senior director of system software Brian Kroll said the performance improvements are the result of a new JavaScript engine called Nitro. Apple used the SunSpider benchmark to post the JavaScript results, and the iBench benchmark for the HTML numbers, he said.


Kroll emphasized Safari 4's support for Web standards like HTML 5, which allows Web applications to work while offline, and CSS 3 for adding graphical effects. Safari 4 has passed the Acid3 test developed by the Web Standards Project, while FireFox 3 and Internet Explorer 7 have yet to do so, he said.


As far as changes that will be more visible to average users, Safari 4 moves the tabs from below the address bar to the very top of the window, and allows you to add a new tab by clicking a "+" sign in the uppermost right-hand corner of the window.


Apple added some new history browsing options, such as the aforementioned Cover Flow interface in the basic history view as well as a new feature called Top Sites, which checks the various Web sites you visit most frequently and arranges them in a grid pattern. If one of your Top Sites has published new content since the last time you visited, a white star on a blue background appears in the upper right-hand corner of the view for that site.


Windows users will notice a new "Windows-native look," according to Kroll, that uses the standard Window font rendering. Safari has been available as a Windows browser since June 2007.


Source : http://news.cnet.com/

A smaller Rampage II board from Asus

Want the power of Intel’s Core i7 CPUs in a small “shoebox-sized” PC chassis?


One new motherboard to consider may be Asus’ Rampage II GENE, a “small brother” of the no-holds-barred Rampage II Extreme motherboard, which I used in my own watercooled PC as well as Digital Life’s Dream PC 2008.


The Rampage II GENE is a micro ATX board with the same Intel X58 chipset, and tri-channel DDR3 support. More importantly, it will support both Nvidia SLI and ATI Crossfire dual-graphics modes. That lets you squeeze two graphics cards onto a small shoebox PC - cool!


I’m not sure how you’re gonna dissipate the heat of two giant graphics cards in a rather tight shoebox PC, but at least this board lets you try!


I have to mention that there’s also the add-on SupremeFX X-Fi soundcard onboard, which gives you a “software” version of Creative’s X-Fi sound effects in games. All in, this is not a microATX board that stinges on features - it’s a full-blooded enthusiast part.


Notably, the heatsinks here are smaller and less elaborate than on the Rampage II Extreme, but that may be  done to ensure that the smaller board will fit into shoebox chassis.


If this follows on the excellent (though expensive) Rampage II Extreme, then Asus may have a winner here for users who want performance in a shoebox PC.


As a fan of Asus ROG series of boards (I also bought the X48-based Rampage Formula), I’m looking forward to fitting this in my lil’ Lian Li case. Now if only I got moolah left for a Core i7…


Source : http://www.techgoondu.com/

Asus looks at Google Android as a netbook OS

Asus, the folks who helped define what we think of as a netbook with its Eee PC line, is now looking at Google's Android OS — which, as we recently reported, will be busting its way off of cellphones very soon. There's a third player in all of this, and that's Microsoft. The software giant saw Android push aside Windows Mobile's presence on mobile phones, and now Android may do the same with low-cost laptops, which Microsoft previously fought with Linux over.


The new Android-powered Asus netbook could hit as soon as this year. Since landing in the handset world last October with HTC, Android has attracted Motorola, LG, Samsung and others. Only time will tell if Asus will set a new trend in the netbook world for other manufacturers, namely using Android instead of Windows or Linux.


Bloomberg, via Wired

Android to Bring Asus Netbook to Life. Maybe.

Netbook pioneer Asustek has engineers working on bringing a Google Android-based netbook to market by the end of the year.


That’s according to Samson Hu, head of the company’s Eee PC business. But the project is still under development, he said, so it remains to be seen if it will actually come to fruition.


With Android-for-netbooks becoming an ever-louder theme in the industry, it’s a good bet Asus’ plans will end up commercially realized. Android so far powers the T-Mobile USA G1, with other smartphones on the way, but a range of players from NVIDIA to Qualcomm Inc. are focusing on bringing the mobile operating system into the sub-notebook category, for small lightweight devices optimized to run cloud and Web applications. This sub-$500 mobile device category is the fastest-growing segment of the PC world and cracking it would give Google another way to take on Microsoft Corp. while spreading exposure and gaining more eyeballs for its advertising-based Web services suite.


Google Android to be Offered on Asus Netbook


When it comes to netbooks, the most popular operating system is Windows XP. Some more machines can be had with Windows Vista or Linux, but XP remains the OS of choice for the low cost machines. Bloomberg reports that Google's Linux-based Android OS could help to significantly narrow the gap between Windows and Linux on netbooks over the next year or so.


Windows held 85% of the netbook market for operating systems in Q4 2008 leaving Linux with 15% of the market. Some sources say what Linux needs to be able to grab more market share is a big name behind it, and Google is believed to be that big name.


One of the big benefits of Android is not only that it has the Google name behind it, but also that it is free. That could make netbooks running the OS cheaper than Windows-based rivals. Bloomberg says that neither Acer nor HP would comment on the possibility of Android-based netbooks at this time and little is known about the Asus netbook other than the company says it is considering using Andoroid. Another big selling point for Android netbooks is that Google also offers free rivals to Microsoft Office productivity apps that could be bundled for free into the netbooks.


Via Bloomberg