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Media player meets Netbook in the Archos 9PCtablet

July 3rd, 2009 No comments

Media player meets Netbook in the Archos 9PCtablet | Crave – CNET

The line between portable media devices and traditional Netbooks just got a little more blurred, thanks to this morning’s announcement of the Archos 9PCtablet. According to the company, this is a 9-inch touchscreen Atom-powered PC, in a form factor much closer to Archos’ line of portable media players (or older UMPCs) than, say, an Eee PC.

Using a touchscreen interface and an optical trackball, the Archos 9PCtablet looks at first glance like a Netbook that’s had its screen and keyboard halves forcibly separated. Probably the closest thing we’ve seen recently is the import-only Viliv S5, which also had an Atom processor and a touch screen — but that display was only 4.8 inches.

The Archos 9 won’t be out until fall, so the company is wisely sticking with Windows 7 as its operating system choice. Taking a look at the rest of the specs, it seems very Netbook-like, although it has the new 1.2GHz Z515 version of Intel’s Atom processer, specifically designed for Mobile Internet Devices (MIDs). We’ll have to wait and see how that stacks up against the much more common 1.6GHz N270 version of that chip found in the vast majority of Netbooks.

Here are some specs, courtesy of Archos:

Processor: Intel Atom Z515 1.2 GHz
Video Chipset: Integrated US15W
Operating System: Microsoft Windows 7
System Memory: 1GB (DDR2 400/533)
Display: 8.9” touch screen – 1024 x 600 pixels
HDD: 60GB or 120GB
Communication: Ethernet 10/100
WiFi: PCI-E interface, 2 Antennas, Support IEEE 802.11b/g
Bluetooth 2.1
Optional 3.5G HSUPA – Huawei EM750M 7.2Mbts module
Audio: 2 stereo speakers
Built-in Microphone
Optical Finger Navigation System with Right and Left click buttons
1 USB 2.0 port
Audio/headphone output
Web cam: Built-in 1.3MP camera

No price info yet, or a specific release date beyond fall 2009, but it does look like Archos will offer both black and white versions, with your choice of 60 or 120GB hard drives, and an optional 3.5G HSUPA antenna.

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Virgin Atlantic ad is high flyer at Cannes

June 25th, 2009 No comments

Virgin Atlantic ad is high flyer at Cannes | Media | guardian.co.uk

Virgin Atlantic’s Sir Richard Branson and Kate Moss
Virgin Atlantic's Sir Richard Branson and Kate Moss
Sir Richard Branson holds model Kate Moss on the wing of a Virgin Atlantic Boeing 747 at Heathrow Airport to celebrate the airline’s 25th anniversary.
Photograph: Steve Parsons/PA

In the week that Virgin Atlantic celebrates its 25th anniversary, complete with Richard Branson and Kate Moss hamming it up at Heathrow, the airline has scooped the top award in the radio category at the Cannes Lions International Advertising Festival.
Link to this audio

Virgin Atlantic picked up the Grand Prix for radio for a bizarre campaign, called Plain Insanity, promoting fare deals from South Africa to London. The campaign, by South African agency Network BBDO Johannesburg, promoted Virgin Atlantic’s Upper Class travel, stating that travellers could fly first class for business class prices.

The series of ads – called “God”, “Ferret” and “Dancer” – feature a man who has a series of encounters with eccentric people who turn out to have struck “amazing” deals flying Virgin Atlantic. In each case the narrator of the ads dismisses the possibility that such a deal could have been available to people who are clearly “insane”.

A Japanese campaign that made sending a Kit Kat-shaped postcard wishing students good luck ahead of exams a must has taken the top prize in the media category at the Cannes Lions festival.

The campaign, developed by WPP-owned agency JWT Japan Tokyo, beat competition including Channel 4’s ground-breaking live sky dive for Honda developed by Starcom Mediavest.

Honda’s campaign, which saw a team of skydivers leap out of a plane over Madrid to make shapes to promote the Accord model, managed to win a silver lion in the media category.

The Grand Prix winning campaign, called Kit Kat Mail, built on a previous ad campaign in Japan that positioned the Nestlé chocolate bar as a good luck charm for those sitting school entrance exams. In Japanese the word Kit Kat sounds a lot like “kitto katsu” or “surely win”.

Ad agency JWT Tokyo developed a special Kit Kat package that can be mailed like a postcard and was sold through the postal service, Japan Post, to allow friends and family to send good luck messages to students sitting exams.

Kit Kat became available in 20,000 Japan Post outlets – with no competition from rival brands – with PR coverage from the initiative estimated to be worth $11m.

UK ad agency Leo Burnett won a bronze lion in Cannes in the radio category for an anti-drink-driving campaign for the Department for Transport.

In the media category, the highest-ranking UK entrant was AEG Electrolux’s “The world is noisy enough” for its washing machine range. The campaign, which won a gold lion, was by Publicis Groupe’s ZenithOptimedia’s international division.

On Monday Virgin Atlantic took a plane packed with media and celebrities, including England cricketer Kevin Pietersen, to New York to celebrate the airline’s inaugural flight 25 years ago.

The flight, called Birthday Girl, was preceded by a PR stunt featuring Branson on the wing of a Virgin plane at Heathrow with a red dress-wearing Kate Moss in his arms.

Passengers on the flight were treated to “specially themed music and meals with an 80s twist” and watched spoof disaster movie Airplane, also shown on the first Virgin Atlantic flight 25 years ago.
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Apture Packs a Lot of Media Into a Little Pop-up

February 16th, 2009 No comments

Apture Packs a Lot of Media Into a Little Pop-up – ReadWriteWeb

The most obvious feature of Apture is that it is a pop-up technology. Apture is a Javascript plug-in for publishers that adds contextual information to links – via pop-ups which display when users hover over or click on them. However, because of its association with pop-ups, Apture thinks it’s gotten a bad rap. Many people dislike other pop-up products such as CoolPreviews, Snap and a new Microsoft product we covered recently called Gaze. Why? Because pop-ups can disrupt a user’s browsing experience and are sometimes even regarded as a nuisance. We spoke to Apture co-founder and CEO Tristan Harris, to find out what makes Apture different.

Here at ReadWriteWeb, we’ve been skeptical of how pop-up technology has been used over the years. But we’re also optimistic about the potential for pop-ups to present rich contextual information to readers, as long as it’s done in an unobtrusive way.

Apture is a similar service to Panels.net, which pops up useful contextual data about companies and people. Probably what differentiates Apture is that it makes great use of rich media, such as video and audio. The product was created by 4 Stanford computer science graduates and it is very much targeted at media publishers, from small bloggers to big media companies. One of the customers using Apture is WashingtonPost.com, which we will take a look at in this post.
Examples: Washington Post & Brand South Africa Blog

Apture enables publishers to offer extra third-party content on their website, without the user having to leave the host site. For example in the screenshot below Washington Post has a link to Senator Amy Klobuchar – when the reader hovers over it, up pops up a new window with not only biographical information about Klobuchar, but details on what she’s voted on and financial disclosures. Many of the links in the pop-up lead to more information presented inside that same window (the only links which open a new browser window are the blue official website links). It’s rather impressive how much extra information is offered in just one little pop-up.

What stood out most to us about Apture though is its ability to present – and manipulate – multimedia. Not only can publishers add links to videos inside an Apture pop-up, but they can select which point in the video to jump to. For example if there’s a quote from a Barack Obama video that is relevant to readers, and it starts 5 minutes and 10 seconds into the video, you can link to and start the video at that 5:10 mark. Below is an example from a government blog in South Africa. You can also see that it opens a separate Apture window for the video – you can have multiple Apture windows on the same page.

Human Editing Trumps Algorithms

Another interesting aspect about Apture is that it relies on publishers to make the ultimate decisions about which media items to add to a webpage. In other words, algorithms don’t do all of the work – although they do select the sources for the editors to select from. This is a point of difference from products such as Snap and Adaptive Blue’s SmartLinks, which are both fully automated. How Apture works from the publisher’s perspective is that editors (at e.g. Washingtonpost.com) select related content, as suggested by Apture’s algorithms. The editing work is currently done post-publishing, because Apture hasn’t yet found a way to easily integrate into multiple CMSs – although it is working on solving that issue. Right now though, Apture works as a javascript plug-in on the host site, and editors can add pop-ups via their Apture account.

According to Apture CEO media Tristan Harris, Apture has “lowered the cost of inserting a [multimedia] link”. He said that the majority of journalists are not technical, in terms of HTML and related web technologies, but that Apture is simple ‘point and click’ and so it makes it very easy for them to add multimedia. We asked Harris if there is much Semantic technology happening in the back-end. He replied that they do some “semantic guiding” – e.g. when on a book page, Apture pushes up book content in the results presented to editors. But overall, Harris likes to think of Apture as a “hyper-relevant web” technology, rather than semantic web.
Conclusion: Useful and Visually Appealing

We came away impressed by Apture, because of the amount of multimedia that can be packed into such a little pop-up. Also the end-user experience is sophisticated – readers on washingtonpost.com and other Apture sites can see rich, relevant, contextual content from the likes of Wikipedia, YouTube and Flickr without leaving the host site. Apture is positioning itself as “more than a pop-up site”. Actually we still think it’s a pop-up technology, but we have to say that it’s a sophisticated and useful application of it!

Apture is free for bloggers and works via one line of javascript at the bottom of your site. Although Apture’s business model was initially advertising, now the company has turned its attention to premium offerings for big media companies. It is looking for monthly subscription fees from large media companies, in exchange for premium services.

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State of the Blogosphere / 2008

November 10th, 2008 No comments

Introduction

    Previous reports: 2007, Index

    Welcome to Technorati’s State of the Blogosphere 2008 report, which will be released in five consecutive daily segments. Since 2004, our annual study has unearthed and analyzed the trends and themes of blogging, but for the 2008 study, we resolved to go beyond the numbers of the Technorati Index to deliver even deeper insights into the blogging mind. For the first time, we surveyed bloggers directly about the role of blogging in their lives, the tools, time, and resources used to produce their blogs, and how blogging has impacted them personally, professionally, and financially. Our bloggers were generous with their thoughts and insights. Thanks to all of the bloggers who took the time to respond to our survey.

    Blogs are Pervasive and Part of Our Daily Lives

    There have been a number of studies aimed at understanding the size of the Blogosphere, yielding widely disparate estimates of both the number of blogs and blog readership. All studies agree, however, that blogs are a global phenomenon that has hit the mainstream.

    The numbers vary but agree that blogs are here to stay

    • comScore MediaMetrix (August 2008)
      • Blogs: 77.7 million unique visitors in the US
      • Facebook: 41.0 million | MySpace 75.1 million
      • Total internet audience 188.9 million
    • eMarketer (May 2008)
      • 94.1 million US blog readers in 2007 (50% of Internet users)
      • 22.6 million US bloggers in 2007 (12%)
    • Universal McCann (March 2008)
      • 184 million WW have started a blog | 26.4 US
      • 346 million WW read blogs | 60.3 US
      • 77% of active Internet users read blogs
    Entertainment Sites

    What is a Blog? The Lines Continue To Blur

    Wikipedia defines blogs as:

    • A Blog (a contraction of the term “Web log”) is a Web site, usually maintained by an individual with regular entries of commentary, descriptions of events, or other material such as graphics or video. Entries are commonly displayed in reverse-chronological order.
    • The Blogosphere is the collective community of all blogs. Since all blogs are on the Internet by definition, they may be seen as interconnected and socially networked. Discussions “in the Blogosphere” have been used by the media as a gauge of public opinion on various issues.

    But as the Blogosphere grows in size and influence, the lines between what is a blog and what is a mainstream media site become less clear. Larger blogs are taking on more characteristics of mainstream sites and mainstream sites are incorporating styles and formats from the Blogosphere. In fact, 95% of the top 100 US newspapers have reporter blogs (see The Bivings Group).

    What is Technorati Looking At and Why?

    With blogging so firmly entrenched in the mainstream, the story now is about the Active Blogosphere. The trends, stories and behaviors here influence not only the rest of the Blogosphere but mainstream media as well.

    Technorati defines the Active Blogosphere as: The ecosystem of interconnected communities of bloggers and readers at the convergence of journalism and conversation.

    For the 2008 State of the Blogosphere Report, we wanted to go beyond the numbers to deliver insights into bloggers and the state of blogging today. Who are the bloggers, why and how do they do what they do, and what is the impact on their lives and work?

    To find out, we conducted a survey from a random sample from more than 1.2 million bloggers who have registered with Technorati. In addition, we have supplemented the survey results with our traditional analysis of Technorati’s index data.

    For more information, please see Technorati’s methodology.

    Key findings from the report include:

    All Blogs Are Not Created Equal

    Take a quick journey into the size of the Blogosphere

    Technorati Authority

    Blogging is…

    • A truly global phenomenon: Technorati tracked blogs in 81 languages in June 2008, and bloggers responded to our survey from 66 countries across six continents.
    • Here to stay: Bloggers have been at it an average of three years and are collectively creating close to one million posts every day. Blogs have representation in top-10 web site lists across all key categories, and have become integral to the media ecosystem.

    Bloggers are…

    • Not a homogenous group: Personal, professional, and corporate bloggers all have differing goals and cover an average of five topics within each blog.
    • Savvy and sophisticated: On average, bloggers use five different techniques to drive traffic to their blog. They’re using an average of seven publishing tools on their blog and four distinct metrics for measuring success.
    • Intensifying their efforts based on positive feedback: Blogging is having an incredibly positive impact on their lives, with bloggers receiving speaking or publishing opportunities, career advancement, and personal satisfaction.

    Blogs are Profitable

    The majority of bloggers we surveyed currently have advertising on their blogs. Among those with advertising, the mean annual investment in their blog is $1,800, but it’s paying off. The mean annual revenue is $6,000 with $75K+ in revenue for those with 100,000 or more unique visitors per month. Note: median investment and revenue (which is listed below) is significantly lower. They are also earning CPMs on par with large publishers.

    Bloggers are sophisticated in using self serve tools for search, display, and affiliate advertising, and are increasingly turning to ad and blog networks. Many bloggers without advertising may consider it when their blogs grow – the inability to set up advertising will not be a factor.

    Brands Permeate the Blogopshere

    Whether or not a brand has launched a social media strategy, more likely than not, it’s already present in the Blogosphere. Four in five bloggers post brand or product reviews, with 37% posting them frequently. 90% of bloggers say they post about the brands, music, movies and books that they love (or hate).

    Company information or gossip and everyday retail experiences are fodder for the majority of bloggers.

    Companies are already reaching out to bloggers. One-third of bloggers have been approached to be brand advocates.

    Global Snapshot of Bloggers

    Demographics U.S. Bloggers
    (N=550)
    European Bloggers
    (N=350)
    Asian Bloggers
    (N=173)
    Male 57% 73% 73%
    Age
    18-34 years old 42% 48% 73%
    35+ 58% 52% 27%
    Single 26% 31% 57%
    Employed full-time 56% 53% 45%
    Household income >$75,000 51% 34% 9%
    College graduate 74% 67% 69%
    Average blogging tenure (months) 35 33 30
    Median Annual Investment $80 $15 $30
    Median Annual Revenue $200 $200 $120
    % Blogs with advertising 52% 50% 60%
    Average Monthly Unique Visitors 18,000 24,000 26,000

    Segment Snapshot of Bloggers

    Demographics Personal
    (N=1015)
    Corporate
    (N=156)
    Professional
    (N=590)
    With Advertising
    (N=695)
    No Advertising
    (N=595)
    Male 64% 70% 72% 66% 66%
    Age
    18-34 years old 52% 45% 48% 53% 45%
    35+ 48% 55% 52% 47% 55%
    Single 36% 24% 31% 34% 34%
    Employed full-time 52% 51% 55% 49% 56%
    Household income>$75k 37% 49% 42% 40% 37%
    College graduate 70% 74% 74% 69% 72%
    Average blogging tenure (months) 35 35 38 35 33
    Median Annual Investment $100 $200 $150 $100 0
    Median Annual Revenue $120 $250 $300 $200 0
    % Blogs with Advertising 53% 64% 59% 100% 0%
    Average Monthly Unique Visitors 12,000 39,000 44,000 46,000 4,000

    Global Bloggers by Gender

    Demographics Female
    (N=438)
    Male
    (N=852)
    Personal Blog 83% 76%
    Professional Blog 38% 50%
    Age
    18-24 years old 9% 15%
    25+ 91% 85%
    Single 29% 36%
    Employed full-time 44% 56%
    Median Annual Investment $30 $60
    Median Annual Revenue $100 $200
    % Blogs with advertising 53% 54%
    Sell Through a Blog ad Network* 16% 7%
    Have Affiliate ads* 41% 32%
    Have Contextual ads* 61% 73%

    * Among those with advertising on their blogs

    The Blogosphere is Continuing to Evolve

    We asked some of the leading minds on the Blogosphere to give us their thoughts on where blogging is headed:

    “In 2004 when Technorati started, the typical reaction to the word ‘blog’ was ‘huh – can you repeat yourself?’ Today, blogs are everywhere —even presidential candidates have blogs. The blog has forever changed the way publishing works —now anyone can be a publisher. The issue is no longer distribution; rather, it’s relevance.”

    “The idea of blogging will never disappear, but the process by content is created for one blog or a series of blogs will continue to undergo radical upheavals. This past year, we saw the introduction of countless “microblogging” platforms, to the point where they (themselves) have become a commodity —further pushing individual voices to the Blogosphere’s melting pot. Brand will continue to decentralize, and micro-communities will form within any one of the loosely-structured services (like FriendFeed, which values the continuation of conversation as much as it does the initiation portion).”

    “Video will also become increasingly important to convey complex messages that are often lost in text – while audio will continue to fall away to this new medium, save those ‘casts with high production values. YouTube will continue to be the place where most people will view their on-demand Internet video. Live video events will soon saturate the landscape, and our attention will become even further fragmented —lending more credibility for the need to archive and index certain video clips and wrap them with text for Google and other search engines to discover.”

    “I blog in Spanish and English for different reasons. In English I blog to communicate my ideas and views, in Spanish, where for some unknown reason many more people comment, I write to learn. The collective intelligence of my commentators is greater than mine.”

    “Blogs will fill every niche in the ecology of public writing. They’ll be good examples of blogs and a far larger range of sites that are sort-of, kind-of blogs. This is as it should be. It’s also as it already is.”

    “Blogging has gone from a cutting edge, mostly American phenomenon to a global main-stream activity generating an increasing larger share of the world’s ‘user generated content’ and the sharing economy driving up the value of search and advertising worldwide. In addition to increasing in scale, bloggers continue to become increasingly diverse become both a core economic as well as social driver online.”

    • Joichi Ito
    • CEO, Creative Commons
    • Venture Capitalist
    • joi.ito.com

    “From a journalistic perspective: Blogging and other conversational media are entering a new phase when it comes to community information needs — they’re growing up. Traditional media are using these tools to do better journalism, and are beginning to engage their audiences in the journalism. Entrepreneurial journalists are finding profitable niches. Advertisers are starting to grasp the value of the conversations, and so on. The big issues remain, including the crucial one of trust. Here, too, we’re seeing progress. The best blogs are as trustworthy as any traditional media, if not more. The worst, often offering fact-challenged commentary, are reprehensible and irresponsible. But audiences are learning, perhaps too slowly, that modern media require a more activist approach. We need to be skeptical of everything, but not equally skeptical of everything. We need to use judgement, to get more information — and to go outside our personal comfort zones.”

    • Dan Gillmor
    • Director
    • Knight Center for Digital Media Entrepreneurship
    • Kauffman Professor of Digital Media Entrepreneurship
    • Walter Cronkite School of Journalism & Mass Communication, Arizona State University
    • startupmedia.org

    “The word blog is irrelevant, what’s important is that it is now common, and will soon be expected, that every intelligent person (and quite a few unintelligent ones) will have a media platform where they share what they care about with the world.”

    “Blogging is getting easier and easier and some day, we’ll all have blogs of one sort or another. Most won’t look like my blog, maybe more like mytumblog or my twitter feed, but even more likely they’ll look like something else.”

    “Earlier this year I wrote on my blog [http://www.avc.com/a_vc/2008/06/my-vision-for-s.html], ‘Honestly I am not envisioning anything other than this; every single human being posting their thoughts and experiences in any number of ways to the Internet.’ That’s where we are headed and blogging is a big part of that.”

    “Although today’s form of blogging is a volunatary form of self-expression, in the future our experiences, actions, locations, and preferecnes will be auto-recorded directly to the web.”

    “The future of blogging will be an auto-synching of our lives directly to the web —often a quiet recording in the background”

    “Although new ‘right-now’ web tools like twitter and lifestreaming aggregators like friendfeed have shifted some attention from classic blogging, they’ve actually deepened the conversation and made the blog, as a place to comment, reflect, and analyze, more central than ever. Blogging has become part of the daily discourse within many communities, and more and more essential is a growing number of disciplines outside of the technosphere.”

    “Blogs represent the best chance for companies to inform the conversation.”

    “Until recently, ‘the Blogosphere’ referred to a small cluster of geeks circled around a single tool. Now it refers to hundreds of millions of people using a vast warehouse of tools that allow people to behave increasingly online like they do in real life. We have entered the Age of Normalization in the Blogosphere.”

    “The Blogosphere has added spice to our democracy, making it more appetizing to more people.”

    • Michael Powell
    • Senior Advisor
    • Providence Equity Partners
    • Former FCC Chairman

    “The future of blogs will have arrived when you check your favorite blog for sports news in the morning, instead of your local paper.”

    “Blogging is all about the sharing mindset and voice being expressed. In the future, it will look different and take many forms, but it will always feel the same.”

    “Blogging isn’t defined by a technology or the way words are laid out on a page. Rather, it’s a mindset, and as such, will be around for a long, long time, evolving and improving.”

    “The Blogosphere continues to evolve – with micro-blogging, long blogging, video blogging all taking off this year. Of course, more and more companies and politicians are playing with blogs but most importantly, it’s becoming something that more and more ‘civilians’ do – ordinary folk. And that’s what’s going to change its impact from here on in.”

    • Mark Earls
    • Consultant
    • HERDmeister
    • Author, Herd: How to Change Mass Behaviour by Harnessing Our True Nature
    • Former Chair, Global Planning Council, Ogilvy Worldwide
    • herd.typepad.com

    “Blogging continues to splinter into many different categories, providing an incredibly rich ecosystem of self expression tools and compelling content for readers. The prototypical personal blog, where a single writer simply writes their daily thoughts on their life and/or topics that interest them, will always be hugely popular. But multi-author blogs will continue to thrive as well. And a huge percentage of blogs focus on single topics of interest, from tech news to wine to knitting. Whatever it is you are interested in, it’s likely to have a community of people who share that interest.”

    “But perhaps the most interesting development is the steady evolution in the definition of a blog itself. Today photo and video blogs are already common. Microblogging platforms like Twitter and Friendfeed are the fast food equivalent of the blogging world, and continue to gain popularity because they let people update multiple times per day with 140 characters or less on what they are doing, how they’re feeling, etc. Not only is microblogging a terrific method of self expression, the value of the raw data that’s created is enormously important. The Twitter messages I read during the two presidential conventions gave me a good idea on how people reacted to the various speeches. It’s not statistically relevant, but pollsters will be watching that data more and more closely over time.”

    “Whatever happens next with blogging, it’s here to stay. And I can’t wait to see what comes next.”

    “In many ways the proliferation of blogging has transformed the ? venture business — entrepreneurs expect a level of transparency ? that simply didn’t exist before venture investors started blogging.”

    “I can not imagine staying current in this fast moving, high tech world without using blogs and bloggers as a powerful filter of the ? overwhelming torrent of information we all face.”

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    State of the Blogosphere / 2008

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    Bosses ?should embrace Facebook?

    October 30th, 2008 No comments

    Bosses ’should embrace Facebook’

    Ed note : i love how ” pop ” media jumps on a bandwagon soon as some overpaid ” think tank ” researcher gets up on stage and avers what we internet users have known for about 10 years .. LOL … these dunderheads are the keepers of the economy and that is precisely why its tanking …

    any fools donkey can tell you that any programmer can help you circumvent the IT rules of the house … not allowing people to communicate may help keep the office quite but it will ruin business because anybody with a real idea has to communcate it, the ones that are following your company rules and reciting after you are sucking on your oxygen at a time when 500 million Indians, 600 million Chinese, millions of South Americans, millions of Russians are doing everything they can and more to improve life at home by working on the cheap for anyone who cares to pay -

    Businesses in the EU and the US ( the so called West ) that choke access to these idea rich, capital starved idea pools are only hastening their inevitable downfall, schools in the West are hard pressed to find good engineers, doctors, scientists, programmers and mathematicians  ( Mr Bill Gates himself is on record saying he has never met so many young, bright, educated professionals as he has in India .. )  because the average student is gearing up to slot himself into some unionised median wage job where he is only a consumer, a monkey to turn that wrench; neither has the West invested in creating future – proof engineering jobs, nor has it invested in renewable energy, nor has it spent enough to educate its populace on the advantages of Information technologies, nor has it re structured its schooling to allow the best ideas to stay in the country – the best ideas are getting shipped to China and India for research and develop enabling these economies to learn, adapt and catch up, its an exponential growth – since the mid 80s when IT started to take off more dollar millionaires employees have been created in India than the US or the EU ( as of 2000, India had 80 million Dollar millioanires, thats the entire population of Germany ) – why ? arent Americans smart enough ?

    The West does not know how to save its income, they blow it all up on stupid entertainment ( Im not sure how else to categorise 200 million USD spent on making tripe like ” Titanic “at a time when millions of children starve to death in Sub Saharan Africa – the EU and the US have built their capital markets, lifestyle and consumer spending by preying on poor economies – now these same Western societies – economies are hoping that their former prey will open their purse strings to help them maintain the former opulence.

    The head of Infosys India has no 300 million yatch; I personally would prefer that the Western economies that profited from years of growing consumer spending fulled by low interest rates just die out, lets replace them with a global economy where your idea comes from smart people ( not white or yellow or blue or offshore ) , where you capital comes not from speculative players but from savings and solid business plans, where you develop and keep markets abroad and at home via innovation ( thus engendering a culture of free thinking and innovation ) and one where the future is what you make it rather than what you are forced to inherit after each economic bubble – we can do it.

    And to make it happen all we really need to do is install an IM and tap into the Billion people on the Internet, atleast 5 % of who are really smart. It wasnt the Industrial Revolution that opened up the world for the common man, it was the Movable Type; it wasnt capitalism or socialism or government intervention that drove the French Revolution, it was ideas.

    Ideas are to be gifted. If you dont whats the idea worth anyway ?

    I hope I have made my stance on IMs clear – set the herd free … they arent your slaves, if your staff is under producing due to IMs then you have the wrong people in the wrong jobs; any noob can show you how to ignore messages that decrese productivity, you dont need to be Albert Einsten to hang out a ” Do not disturb ” sign.

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    Bosses ?should embrace Facebook?

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    The Entire Video of John Doerr Giving 10 Tips for Start-ups to Avoid the Econalypse

    October 30th, 2008 No comments

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    The Entire Video of John Doerr Giving 10 Tips for Start-ups to Avoid the Econalypse

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    Android is now available as open source

    October 26th, 2008 No comments

    Android is now available as open source

    The rest is here:
    Android is now available as open source

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    Intel shows off working Moorestown MID device

    October 20th, 2008 No comments

    Intel on Monday showed off a prototype handheld based on Moorestown, its upcoming Mobile Internet Device (MID) platform designed to enable a new generation of ultra-thin, touchscreen devices with extensive battery life.

    Presenting at the Intel Developer Forum in Taipei, Intel vice president Anand Chandrasekher said Moorestown will consist of a system-on-a-chip (SOC), codenamed “Lincroft,” which integrates a 45nm processor, graphics, memory controller and video encode/decode onto a single part.

    The chip will connect to a southbridge I/O hub codenamed “Langwell”, which supports a range of I/O ports to connect with wireless, storage, and display components in addition to incorporating several board level functions.

    When it arrives sometime in the 2009-2010 time, the Moorestown platform will introduce a more than tenfold reduction in idle power consumption when compared to Intel’s first-generation MIDs based on the Intel Atom processor, Chandrasekher said.

    Intel is targeting Moorestown at the smartphone space, claiming the technology will serve as a catalyst for new developments that will extend the full Internet experience into into a new generation of handsets with advanced wireless communications.

    The platform will support a range of wireless technologies including 3G, WiMAX, WiFi, GPS, Bluetooth and mobile TV. Chandrasekher said Intel is collaborating with both Ericsson and Option on new 3G HSPA data modules that will come in 25×30×2.x mm small size and provide an “always connected” Internet-based experience.

    In the videos below, the Intel exec can bee seen demonstrating the first working Moorestown-based handheld, which Engadget claims is “little more than a validation board running fresh from the factory, three-dayold Moorestown silicon in an Intel lab.” A similar device had been flaunted by the chipmaker in recent years, though those versions are said to have been non-functional mockups.

    At one point, it was reported that Apple would embrace Intel’s MID platform as the foundation for its own next-generation mobile Internet device, sometimes referred to as a next-generation Newton handheld or Internet tablet.

    Moorestown
    Intel’s vision of a next-generation mobile Internet device looks something like this.

    However, the company’s recent acquisition of chip designer PA Semi to build proprietary ARM chips for iPhones and iPods may signal a change of direction on the part of the electronics maker.

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    Intel shows off working Moorestown MID device

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    Start-up developing new Web interaction paradigm

    October 15th, 2008 No comments

    In the midst of the financial meltdown and a contentious upcoming election, you might think the U.S. government and taxpayers are just funding wars, bank bailouts, and bridges to nowhere or somewhere. But this is the same government that funded the Internet way back when and is also funding the next generation of technologies that will make the current Internet seem like a Model-T.

    Over the last several years, the U.S. government–via DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) grants–has invested hundreds of millions of dollars in PAL, an acronym for “Personalized Assistant that Learns.” Smarter software and networks and augmenting human intelligence are useful in times of war and peace.

    As part of the PAL project, more than $200 million of DARPA money has been poured into CALO (Cognitive Assistant that Learns and Organizes) over the last five years. CALO has been run out of SRI International with the assistance of 25 research organizations and 400 researchers.

    Several companies, including Radar Networks, Farecast (acquired by Microsoft) and Adapx, have been spun out of SRI based on some facet of CALO technology. The latest, Siri, was founded in December last year and has raised $8.5 million in series A funding from Menlo Ventures and Morgenthaler Ventures.At this point, Siri’s management is being secretive about what the company is developing. The elevator pitch goes something like, “Users’ online lives are becoming more complicated and getting out of control for mainstream users. What if there was an easy way for normal users (non-power users) to ask the Internet to help them.”

    According to the Siri PR pitch, the product is “a new interaction paradigm for the consumer Internet experience that applies intelligence at the interface.” The company expects to release a beta version of its initial product in the first half of 2009, according to Dag Kittlaus, a former Telenor Mobile and Motorola executive who is a co-founder and CEO of the company.

    “We have to be careful at this stage,” Kittlaus told me. “We don’t like to play these games, but we need to keep a tight lid on what we are specifically doing. We have some original ideas of what the product is going to do, but we don’t want to spark ideas among potential competitors.” Those competitors would likely be masters of the Internet with large Internet footprints and research prowess like Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo.

    Kittlaus did allow that Siri has more than a dozen partners, presumably large, well-established distribution players that can help build a consumer market for Siri’s product. Unlike most Web start-ups, Siri has a business model, Kittlaus claimed. “We have good business models, both existing and emerging. We think CPA (cost per action) is the future, and this specific application is good for CPA and we are partnering on that.”

    He also touted the pedigree of the company’s current cadre of 19 employees. “They are mostly engineers from Yahoo, Google, SRI, NASA, and Xerox PARC,” he said. The chief architect of the CALO project, Adam Cheyer is a co-founder and vice president of engineering at Siri, and Tom Gruber, a well-known artificial intelligence and semantic Web expert, is a co-founder and CTO.

    Cheyer described CALO as superset of what Siri is developing. “The CALO project is building an automated assistant to help manage and improve your life. The technology spans all aspects of interaction–natural language processing, speech recognition, and planning and reasoning capabilities–and interfaces with all kinds of systems, such as email and contacts,” he said.

    (Credit: SRI International)

    “Learning in the wild is core focus,” he continued. “We want it to improve over time and learn from users with no coaching and without changing any code. We are taking the key elements from the project to commercialize it in a form that will delight users. We are not building systems that do things but that learn how to do things.”

    CALO sounds like a representation of the famous Apple Knowledge Navigator video from 1987.

    “Siri is a subset of that concept,” Cheyer said. “We have to keep in mind existing user behavior. It will feel like something close to what people use a lot. We will add speech recognition and other features as we go. We don’t want to take such a leap that people cannot identify with it. We’ll do things similar to but more advanced than what we do now. The longer term vision is the Knowledge Navigator, although it is an early chapter now and it might look different than that.”

    According to Gruber, intelligence at the interface allows the computers to make recommendations, like a personal assistant:

    The interfaces we use to interact with the world’s information are getting smarter. Web portals gave us someone else’s idea of the content we should see. Then came search engines, which let us tell the system what we want, one query at a time. We are about to see the next wave — intelligence at the interface — in which the system knows about us, our information, and our physical environment. With knowledge about our context, an intelligent system can make recommendations and act on our behalf.

    (Credit: Tom Gruber)

    Siri may be working on more intelligent Web interfaces that can make inferences based a wide variety of user activities (the “lifestream”), learning over time on its own, and then taking actions on behalf of users. For example, if you are booking travel or looking for a restaurant, Siri would know your preferences and about travel sites or restaurants, integrating data and context from multiple sources to deliver personal assistance. This could be especially useful in mobile scenarios where you don’t want to wade through pages of search results or deal with complex interactions.

    Tom Gruber: “If we want our technology to have world-changing impact, bring it to the interface: get useful knowledge from all those intelligent people on the Internet give the benefit of this knowledge to everyone. “

    (Credit: Tom Gruber)

    We’ll have to wait for next year, if the company stays on schedule, to see whether Siri can really define a new paradigm for experiencing the Web.

    SOURCE

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    Google System

    October 15th, 2008 No comments

    get it here

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    Google System

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    Finally! Google to Offer RSS Feeds for Web Search Results

    October 10th, 2008 No comments

    googlelogo150.jpgA rumor that’s been floating around the web lately is that Google will offer RSS feeds for new results in basic web search. Today Search Engine Land confirmed that Google will “soon” offer this functionality. Why is this big news? Because there’s no better way to keep track of new mentions of a company, person or concept online than through RSS.

    digg_url = ‘http://digg.com/tech_news/Finally_Google_to_Offer_RSS_Feeds_for_Web_Search_Results’;digg_bgcolor = ‘#ffffff’;digg_skin = ‘normal’;As Search Engine Land’s Matt McGee points out in his post, Google is the only major web search engine to not offer feeds for basic web search, as they do in blog search and news. We’d previously recommended Live.com for web search feeds, but who really cares about Live.com search results? They’re terrible. Google feeds are good news.

    Google says that the new feeds will be part of the Google Alerts product, which currently delivers e-mail alerts for new search results in web, blog and other result types. Google Alerts are widely used but are, we’d argue, like training wheels for people not yet comfortable with RSS feeds. There’s nothing wrong with that, but many of us want our feeds.

    Though blogs and news sites are of growing importance, there’s still nothing quite like good old Web Search for getting a broad picture of who is linking where and what kind of online mentions are occurring. Google says it cannot confirm when the web search feeds will be available.

    We hope that Google web search feeds will include “site:” searches for new mentions of keywords inside particular domains (Live and Yahoo do), and that they will deliver nice clean direct URLs – which Live.com feeds do but Yahoo search feeds do not.

    There’s still no alerts or feeds available for Google Image Search, probably because the index is so woefully behind the web at large.

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    Google Puts Tunes From YouTube a Click Away

    October 10th, 2008 No comments

    Google Puts Tunes From YouTube a Click Away

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    Google Puts Tunes From YouTube a Click Away

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    Wordpress 2.7 is the Real Deal

    October 10th, 2008 No comments

    Wordpress 2.7 is the Real Deal

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    Wordpress 2.7 is the Real Deal

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    CBS : Social Viewing Room

    October 3rd, 2008 No comments



    CBS Labs
    has rolled out a labs version of a new product called Social Viewing Room, you pick a live show and chat about it with others.

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    CBS : Social Viewing Room

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    Obama releases iPhone recruiting, campaign tool

    October 3rd, 2008 No comments
    (Credit: CNET News)

    Sen. Barack Obama’s presidential campaign launched an iPhone application on Thursday that turns the vaunted device into a political recruiting tool.

    The most notable feature “organizes and prioritizes your contacts by key battleground states, making it easy to reach out and make an impact quickly,” according to the software.

    On my phone, the application ranked contacts in Colorado, Michigan, and New Mexico at the top; at the bottom was a friend whose cell phone has a Texas number, though she actually lives in California.

    The application anonymously reports back the number of calls made this way: “Your privacy is important: no personal data or contacts will be uploaded or stored. Only the total number of calls you make is uploaded anonymously.”

    The software is the latest effort by politicians to capitalize on technology, joining other examples such as ads distributed through YouTube, Web-based fund-raising, Facebook pages and fan groups, and e-mail recruitment drives.

    The Obama for America iPhone application is available for download through Apple’s iTunes store, said Raven Zachary, an iPhone consultant who’s directing the launch effort.

    A “get involved” feature uses the phone’s GPS-based location sensing to find the nearest Obama campaign headquarters, and “local events” likewise pulls up a list of activities sorted by proximity.

    A “media” section provides links to video and photos, but beware: YouTube showed errors following some of the links. Perhaps the newer videos hadn’t been prepared for iPhone display yet.

    The application also shows Obama statements to the news media and a guide to Obama’s positions on various issues.

    Update 8:50 a.m. PDT: The application shows how many calls have been made nationwide and how many you made. Those statistics are the kind that can motivate people–they can feel like they’re part of something bigger. That may sound a bit silly as a motivational tool, but consider that Smule’s Sonic Lighter application for the iPhone is popular, despite the fact that it costs 99 cents more than its free competition, likely because people can see where else on the globe people are using it and because the longer you run the application, the bigger your own spot on the map becomes. It’s a kind of competition.

    Update 9:28 a.m. PDT: The campaign added an Obama iPhone app Web site, too.

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    Obama releases iPhone recruiting, campaign tool

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