Aug 23

This stands in contrast to Baidu’s service, which the Journal says has led to legal disputes with record labels because illegal downloads are accessible. You get no shortage of illegal download options when you run a Baidu music search for Björk mp3s. (Sidenote: Björk herself plays Shanghai March 3.)

It will definitely be striking if Google puts legal music online. Like DVDs, CDs here are almost always illegal copies and it would take some doing to find the legal ones in many cases. Perhaps they will share ad revenue from the search pages with the record companies. Something like the ad-supported free music we hear on the radio, but available anytime and as a high-quality file…

Baidu, China’s leading search engine, gets 7 percent of its traffic on a service that eases access to free music downloads. Google, determined to catch up after two years in what is now the second largest Internet user base on earth, may follow suit.

The Wall Street Journal
describes Google’s possible plans thusly: “Vivendi SA’s Universal Music and about 100 other foreign and domestic record labels have been working with Top100.cn, a Beijing-based Web site that currently sells licensed music downloads for 1 yuan (about 14 cents) each, and Google. Together, Top100.cn and Google would provide free MP3 downloads with value added services, people familiar with the plans say. The new search options, for example, promise to give users free access to a database of information about their favorite artists–from concert listings to links to special ring tones.”

P.S.: The Journal
article includes a useful outline of the Baidu-Google competition in China.

Aug 23

I wrote a trio of postings here on why I think XP is the better choice for Windows users (just comparing XP and Vista, not considering Macs and Linux)
– I pity the fool (Windows XP good, Vista bad)
— When to convert from Windows XP to Vista, Part 2
— Putting Windows Vista on trial

And the message wasn’t the price cuts (hardly anyone buys Vista in a box on the shelf of a retailer). The real message was that Service Pack 1 was about to be released, news that normally stays within the IT industry. The subliminal point being that while Vista may have been bad initially, now it’s OK. An unusually well done bit of PR.

Mike Ricciuti of CNET says Windows XP is “doomed” and that “most of us will likely be using Vista sometime in the near future” (see Microsoft: All roads lead to Vista). In contrast, Ina Fried of CNET writes that Windows XP may get another reprieve, the title referring to the fact that major computer manufacturers are slated to stop selling Windows XP in June. Who’s right?

*How many of us believe that the free tech support from Microsoft will be useful? For example, see this item from Leo Notenboom about how Microsoft was unable to help him install a legal copy of Windows XP. They didn’t know what their own error message meant. Incompetent being the applicable word.

**See my Linux vs. Windows page

One reason Mike cites for the Vista assimilation is that “Dell launched a Vista migration program to nudge big companies toward the OS. The PC maker’s ‘client migration solution’ will cut migration costs…” I see this as evidence of Vista resistance. If there was value to Vista, the cost of migrating would not be an issue.

Ina thinks Windows XP will continue to be sold on what are now cheap laptops running Linux. Quoting: “The biggest area where XP is likely to stick around is in the nascent but growing market of low-cost, flash memory-based notebook computers, such as the Asus Eee PC”.

The Cloudbook has a normal hard disk, but that won’t last. The future for ultra-cheap laptops is flash (a.k.a. SSDs or solid state devices) and flash ram is expensive. All laptops benefit from flash ram because it’s rugged, consumes less power (no moving parts) and creates less heat. Cheap small Linux machines especially need the faster read time offered by flash ram, it helps offset their relatively slow processors.

On top of this, the Linux GUI is flexible, extremely so. No doubt this will result in some horrible user interfaces, the XO from OLPC comes to mind. But, it will also result in some that are more appropriate for children or senior citizens than a full-blown copy of Windows or a
Mac. And people comfortable with Windows XP can find versions of Linux that mimic XP. One of the cheap laptops running Linux ships with a simple interface but it can be reset to the normal user interface of the underlying Xandros Linux.

I don’t think Don’s article went far enough though. To me, the price cuts were intended to break out of computer industry news vehicles (like CNET and ComputerWorld) and be reported to the general public. No techie is going to decide to go with Vista because its a few dollars cheaper today than yesterday. No, the audience for the price cut announcement was non-techies.

The personal computer field is maturing to the point that people will soon be cognizant of two hardware categories: full-blown personal computers, typified by Windows and Macs, and stripped down ones for
children, senior citizens or traveling. Linux is perfect for people with simple computing needs (see Is Linux right for your mother?).

Linux does simple.**   It can be stripped down as needed. In 2004 I reviewed a product called NASLite that converted an old computer into a Linux-based file server. It was a useful product, but amazing for its size - it fit on a floppy disk. A single floppy contained the operating system, networking software, an internal website used for reporting and a telnet based administrative utility.

My perspective is defensive computing. To that end, I want mature software, and Windows XP, with 7 years of bug fixes applied to it, is the more mature option. I also want the one with the best chance of working with assorted peripheral devices. Score another for XP.

I don’t know that Microsoft is smart enough to see the threat from these machines. Way back, it was IBM that didn’t take PCs seriously. Now, perhaps, it will be Microsoft that doesn’t take simple, cheap machines seriously. Every new version of Windows is bigger and more complex. I doubt they can do simple. Large companies usually can’t.

But, to keep the machines cheap, flash ram needs to be minimized. Linux is a perfect fit because it needs relatively little hard disk space. The $300 version of the Asus Eee PC has a 2 gigabyte “hard drive” that fits the operating system, applications and still leaves room for some of your data files. Try that with Vista or XP.

Cheap Laptops Running Linux

As for Mike’s point that “XP may work, but it’s not pretty”, that’s damning the OS with faint praise. The four regulars on the Personal Computer Show agree on only two things: making backups and avoiding Vista. After Hank Kee kicked the tires on Vista he was challenged to provide reasons to migrate from XP. All he could come up with was a comment from his wife, “it’s pretty”.

In large part, Mike’s argument comes down to this: “I’ve been running Vista on three machines for well over a year. Compatibility issues are beginning to disappear, my wireless network connection no longer mysteriously vanishes, and other random glitches appear to have been fixed.”

In other words, Vista works for me, so it’s ready for the world. Many of the reader comments here at CNET make the same point. Vista, no doubt, runs fine for many people. That doesn’t make it the right choice for you.

Mike also writes that “Microsoft is greasing the skids for Vista acceptance by offering free telephone support for Vista Service Pack 1 through March 2009″.*   Microsoft never did this with XP service packs, so why are they doing it for Vista? They are trying to get people to go where they don’t want to go.

Microsoft may be able to brow-beat the world into using Vista on fully functional PCs, but if they walk away from XP on simple, cheap computers and cede the market to Linux, they are a dead man walking.

Let’s not forget the price cuts to
shrink-wrapped versions of Vista which were to take effect at the same time Service Pack 1 was released. As Don Reisinger wrote (see Vista price cuts show how much trouble Microsoft is in), those price cuts were really a publicity stunt.

In short, until Vista is at Service Pack 2 or has been around for at least another year and a half,
it shouldn’t be on your radar screen.

Linux benefits out of the box from being immune to the vast majority of malicious software being spread online. Thus, children, senior citizens and anyone else craving simplicity doesn’t have to deal with anti-virus and anti-spyware software.

Back in November, I wrote about a dog and pony show where Microsoft tried to scare
people about how insecure Windows XP was. That they have to use FUD (Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt) to sell Vista says a lot. Think of a politician trashing their opponent rather than touting themselves.

Aug 23

While the upgrade from SD to HD would be nice for any service, it may seem like an even larger upgrade for Unbox on TiVo users, since our initial hands-on testing with the service revealed that movies were letterboxed, instead of true anamorphic widescreen. We’d also like to see HD movies get a bump from the standard stereo soundtrack to at least a 5.1 Dolby Digital/DTS–although Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio would be even better. And while Denney’s comment only referred to HD content coming to the Unbox on TiVo service, we see no reason why HD movies shouldn’t be available to PC users as well.

TiVo users have been able to rent and buy movies from Amazon.com’s Unbox service for over a year now, but lately the service has felt a little outdated compared with competitors like Vudu and Apple TV, which offer HD downloads. Well, thanks to a comment by TiVo’s VP of product marketing, Jim Denney, it seems like that’s going to change soon. In an article on TV Week, Denney claims TiVo and Amazon will announce HD capabilities “in the not too distant future.”

Via Zatz Not Funny

Aug 23

“Yahoo could always come back again and say please buy us for $33 (a share) and I’m sure we might reconsider it but we’re not assuming that’s going to happen,” Mundie told Reuters.

The comments themselves are along the same theme. First, say how you are moving on. Second, leave the door open a crack, just to keep everyone guessing.

Speaking to Reuters in Indonesia, Mundie said “The market may wish that the Yahoo deal may come back together, but Microsoft at least at this point assumes it’s over.”

Now to the details, so I can get to my cup of tea.

It’s become a morning ritual for me: grab a bagel and a cup of tea and sit down and parse the latest comments from a Microsoft executive interviewed overseas.

This morning, instead of my usual Lemon Lift, I’m trying a cup of mandarin orange green tea. And, instead of Bill Gates, today’s quotes come from Craig Mundie, Microsoft’s chief research and strategy.

He reiterated that the economics just didn’t make sense. Microsoft was offering $33 a share, while Yahoo was demanding at least $37. Now, to open the door a crack.

Aug 23

In Salesforce’s case, co-founder and EVP Parker Harris said that early on, Salesforce’s architects wanted to build a platform service for consumers, not just an application. But business logic prevailed: customers needed an application, not a platform.

For its part, Microsoft is no longer thinking only about applications. It continues to build apps with varying degrees of local and Web-based functionality, and because of that, Debra Chrapaty, vice president of global foundation services, keeps a close eye on the efficiency of apps. Because when scaled up into a data center, computational-efficiency matters.

Click here to see more stories from the Structure 08 conference and on cloud computing generally.

“As a technologist, you want to build a platform, but you risk losing touch with what you’re building it for,” Harris said. “So when we started, we said we’re going to build a service that’s fast, simple, and right the first time.”

(Credit:
Rafe Needleman/CNET Networks)

Microsoft's Debra Chrapaty illustrates the point that Microsoft is a software-as-a-service company, too.

Parker Harris (center) of Salesforce.com, gets grilled by Om Malik (left) and Michael Copeland.

I find it curious that the two companies, Microsoft historically a pure software play, and Salesforce, a poster child for software as a service, are needing to solve the same problems today: building online applications and platforms that are reliable and open to their customers. And I especially liked that Microsoft is taking responsibility for the energy its apps use. I’d love to see that mindset spread through the industry.

The company needs to “make every kilowatt count,” she said. Chrapaty also said that at least one of Microsoft’s Virtual Earth servers, in Colorado, runs on wind power.

SAN FRANCISCO–In consecutive talks here at Structure 08, we just heard from big brains at Salesforce.com and Microsoft on the topic of software vs. services. Surprisingly, these companies, which historically have espoused very different philosophies, are converging on a similar pitch: you can’t build one with the other.

(Credit:
Rafe Needleman/CNET Networks)

And once Salesforce did expose its platform to developers, it found it couldn’t think about its main app separately from this underlying architecture. “Software and infrastructure are not separate things. They’re one thing.”

Aug 23

According to you, readers, Barack Obama’s an iPhone, while John McCain is a phonograph, and Sarah Palin is a Hello Kitty assault rifle.

View results

Wikipedia (lots of info, not always right)
iPhone screen protector
Copy machine
Energizer bunny (just keeps going and going)

Now, in the final installment of our presidential-race-related Friday Poll, our thoughts turn to Delaware Sen. Joe Biden, Obama’s running mate. With so much attention on the other three candidates, it was a little hard to come up with our choices. Luckily, Biden’s been around a long time, which gave us some good material to work with.

If none of our poll options quite hit the spot, be sure to suggest your own in our Talkback section below.

News.com Poll Judging Joe
If Joe Biden were a tech product what would he be?

Aug 23

Though thoughts of doom began to flood my mind, I took the advice of my very knowledgeable colleague over at iPhone Atlas and tried the update a third time. And that’s when Murphy’s Law hit me over the head with a mallet. Not only did the “unknown error” flash across my computer screen again, but also my iPhone snowed over with the “white Apple logo screen of death.”

Uh-oh, it’s the dreaded white screen of death.

Any screen of death, be it blue or white, is not fun as now it looks like a trip to the Apple store is in order. I was able to clear the screen with another restore, but now my iPhone won’t get past the pesky iTunes prompt. It may not be bricked, but it might as well be.

It’s more than clear, Cupertino, that we have a problem. I’m hardly the only one to experience this problem, as message boards across the Internet can attest. But so far, Apple has remained silent on this issue, not to mention the mounting reports of 3G reception problems and dropped calls. AT&T is denying responsibility, but the fact the user complaints are coming from outside the United States seems to support the theory that there is an issue with the phone.

Apple, it goes without saying that you should fix these issues soon. But in the meantime, it would be nice if you could discuss them at all–even if it is a simple “we’re working on it.” I’m certain that even the very acknowledgment that something is afoot would put a lot of minds at ease. And AT&T, you should chime in as well. My iPhone is a free loaner so I deserve nothing. But there are plenty of people who paid a lot of money for your product. And they deserve better.

Have you been struck with the iTunes “white screen of death”? Leave a comment to let us know.

Analysts and researchers have pointed to probable causes, from the Infineon chipset to a lack of 3G sensitivity, but so far iPhone users have been left to fend for themselves. And that’s just shameful. According to a Business Week story, a software update to fix the reception problems is on the way. But until I hear anything officially, I consider it hearsay.

(Credit:
Kent German/CNET Networks)

Since Apple loaned CNET an
iPhone 3G just over a month ago, I had experienced none of the problems that have plagued so many other users. I didn’t have dropped calls or buggy software, and my iPhone wasn’t cracking around the edges. Sure, the 3G connection was a bit shaky, and the battery life suffered during a day of heavy use, but on the whole my handset was doing just what it was supposed to do.

After connecting the phone to iTunes and accepting the update, all was proceeding normally until suddenly, disaster struck. iTunes informed me that it was unable to complete the update because of an “unknown error” and my iPhone froze with the “connect to iTunes” prompt on the screen. Ouch…that was unexpected, particularly since I had updated CNET’s first-generation iPhone moments before. But thinking it could just be a one-time quirk I tried a factory restore, reconnected the phone to iTunes in recovery mode, and accepted the update again. But alas, disaster struck a second time.

That is, until today. Since I only got the iPhone back from the CNET Labs just this week–I’m convinced Eric Franklin was getting back at me for being cold-blooded–I had to wait until today to get the latest 2.0.1 software update.

With tales of iPhone 3G horror abounding on the Web, I figured I was just lucky.

Aug 23

Open source is no longer about heroes and villains. It’s about code. Code is neither good nor evil. The people behind it may be, and increasingly the people behind open source are “calculating folk with a great idea of the value of money.” Is this a good thing?

Last night as I was reading The Hobbit to my son, I came across this favorite passage:

I’m not sure it matters. It just is. It’s now up to us to ensure that open source sells well without selling out.

We’re past the time when open source was about freely sharing code for the benefit of others. Oh, sure, people still do that, but the bigger the project, the more likely it is to have a commercial angle on it. Perhaps it all started with Martin Fink’s The Business and Economics of Linux and Open Source, and perhaps it was accelerated by Novell and Microsoft moving in together, but whatever the motivation, it’s clear that we’re well past Open Source 1.0.

Waking up to the news that Google is launching a competitive browser to its longtime partner, Mozilla, I realized that we’re all just “dwarves” in open source, much as we may pretend to be a happy community of hobbits.

commentary

The most that can be said for the dwarves is this: they intended to pay Bilbo really handsomely for his services; they had brought him to do a nasty job for them, and they did not mind the poor little fellow doing it if he would; but they would all have done their best to get him out of trouble, if he got into it…There it is: dwarves are not heroes, but calculating folk with a great idea of the value of money; some are tricky and treacherous and pretty bad lots; some are not, but are decent enough people like Thorin and Company, if you don’t expect too much. (Chapter 12)

Aug 23

The bid for the rival publisher of the Grand Theft Auto game places the value of Take-Two at $2 billion. Announced Thursday, the EA tender offer is set to expire April 11 at midnight Eastern Time, unless extended.

In February, EA issued a public statement saying it had made an earlier offer to Take-Two that was rejected and that it was boosting the per-share price it was willing to pay to make the deal worth $2 billion. But Take-Two quickly issued its own announcement, saying it thought EA’s offer was too small and that it would prefer to wait to have any negotiations with anyone until after the April 29 release of Grand Theft Auto IV, which is expected to be a hit.

Updated March 13, 12:45 PM PDT, to reflect the announcement by EA.

The news was first reported by The Wall Street Journal on its Web site Wednesday night, citing people familiar with the matter.

Electronic Arts has launched a $26-per-share tender offer for all outstanding shares of game publisher Take-Two following the rejection of an unsolicited bid.

Aug 23

At that time, Microsoft said little except that Windows 7 will ship in consumer and business versions, and in 32-bit and 64-bit versions. The company also confirmed that it is considering a subscription model to complement Windows, but did not provide specifics or a time frame.

Windows 7 and its intended feature list have been the topic of speculation since Microsoft discussed some details of the new software last summer.

Vista, the current version of Windows, has sold well, according to Microsoft. But the operating system’s debut was marred by repeated delays and shifting feature lists. Last week, Microsoft stepped up efforts to drive adoption of Vista by businesses.

In response to a question about Windows Vista, Gates, speaking before the Inter-American Development Bank here, said: “Sometime in the next year or so we will have a new version.” Referring to Windows 7, the code name for the next full release of Windows client software, Gates said: “I’m super-enthused about what it will do in lots of ways.”

MIAMI–Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates on Friday indicated that
Windows 7, the next major version of Windows, could come within the next year, far ahead of the development schedule previously indicated by the software maker.

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

The company said it will continue to allow Windows XP Home edition to be sold for a class of computers it calls “ultra-low-cost PCs.”

Less than 24 hours ago, a Microsoft representative told CNET News.com that the company expects to ship the successor to Vista roughly three years from Vista’s January 2007 debut.

CNET News.com’s Mike Ricciuti contributed to this report.

Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates speaking at the Consumer Electronics Show in January.

Most of Gates’ speech was devoted to topics closer to home for the crowd, such as how Latin America can be more competitive.

Unclear is whether Gates was referring to early testing of Windows 7 coming within the year, as opposed to a widespread release or debut. An early test geared toward developers would be conceivable. The company has repeatedly said that it will accelerate the development of new Windows versions, largely as a response to Vista’s roughly five year gestation period.

Microsoft on Thursday declined to extend a lifeline for Windows XP, saying that only a limited number of specialized machines will be sold with the operating system after June.

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