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Invent, Invent, Invent

June 28th, 2009 No comments

Op-Ed Columnist – Invent, Invent, Invent – NYTimes.com

I was at a conference in St. Petersburg, Russia, a few weeks ago and interviewed Craig Barrett, the former chairman of Intel, about how America should get out of its current economic crisis. His first proposal was this: Any American kid who wants to get a driver’s license has to finish high school. No diploma — no license. Hey, why would we want to put a kid who can barely add, read or write behind the wheel of a car?

Now what does that have to do with pulling us out of the Great Recession? A lot. Historically, recessions have been a time when new companies, like Microsoft, get born, and good companies separate themselves from their competition. It makes sense. When times are tight, people look for new, less expensive ways to do old things. Necessity breeds invention.

Therefore, the country that uses this crisis to make its population smarter and more innovative — and endows its people with more tools and basic research to invent new goods and services — is the one that will not just survive but thrive down the road.

We might be able to stimulate our way back to stability, but we can only invent our way back to prosperity. We need everyone at every level to get smarter.

I still believe that America, with its unrivaled freedoms, venture capital industry, research universities and openness to new immigrants has the best assets to be taking advantage of this moment — to out-innovate our competition. But we should be pressing these advantages to the max right now.

Russia, it seems to me, is clearly wasting this crisis. Oil prices rebounded from $30 to $70 a barrel too quickly, so the pressure for Russia to really reform and diversify its economy is off. The struggle for Russia’s post-Communist economic soul — whether it is going to be more OPEC than O.E.C.D., a country that derives more of its wealth from drilling its mines than from tapping its minds — seems to be over for now.

At the St. Petersburg exposition center, showing off the Russian economy, the two biggest display booths belonged to Gazprom, the state-controlled oil and gas company, and Sberbank, Russia’s largest state-owned bank. Russian companies that actually made things that the world wanted were virtually nonexistent: Two-thirds of Russia’s exports today are oil and gas. Gazprom makes the money, and Sberbank lends it out.

As one Western banker put it, when oil is $35 a barrel, Russia “has no choice” but to reform, to diversify its economy and to put in place the rule of law and incentives that would really stimulate small business. But at $70 a barrel, it takes an act of enormous “political will,” which the petro-old K.G.B. alliance that dominates the Kremlin today is unlikely to summon. Too much rule of law and transparency would constrict the ruling clique’s own freedom of maneuver.

China is also courting trouble. Recently — in the name of censoring pornography — China blocked access to Google and demanded that computers sold in China come supplied with an Internet nanny filter called Green Dam Youth Escort, starting July 1. Green Dam can also be used to block politics, not just Playboy. Once you start censoring the Web, you restrict the ability to imagine and innovate. You are telling young Chinese that if they really want to explore, they need to go abroad.

We should be taking advantage. Now is when we should be stapling a green card to the diploma of any foreign student who earns an advanced degree at any U.S. university, and we should be ending all H-1B visa restrictions on knowledge workers who want to come here. They would invent many more jobs than they would supplant. The world’s best brains are on sale. Let’s buy more!

Barrett argues that we should also use this crisis to: 1) require every state to benchmark their education standards against the best in the world, not the state next door; 2) double the budgets for basic scientific research at the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energy and the National Institute of Standards and Technology; 3) lower the corporate tax rate; 4) revamp Sarbanes-Oxley so that it is easier to start a small business; 5) find a cost-effective way to extend health care to every American.

We need to do all we can now to get more brains connected to more capital to spawn more new companies faster. As Jeff Immelt, the chief of General Electric, put it in a speech on Friday, this moment is “an opportunity to turn financial adversity into national advantage, to launch innovations of lasting value to our country.”

Sometimes, I worry, though, that what oil money is to Russia, our ability to print money is to America. Look at the billions we just printed to bail out two dinosaurs: General Motors and Chrysler.

Lately, there has been way too much talk about minting dollars and too little about minting our next Thomas Edison, Bob Noyce, Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, Vint Cerf, Jerry Yang, Marc Andreessen, Sergey Brin, Bill Joy and Larry Page. Adding to that list is the only stimulus that matters. Otherwise, we’re just Russia with a printing press.
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Calgary : Motorolas´Android Phone

May 2nd, 2009 No comments

It looks like our ninja took it personally yesterday when we mentioned how eager we were for more info on Motorola’s Verizon-bound handsets. That said, consider us shut up. He swooped in with a few big updates that will definitely tide us over for a while — some good news and some bad — so let’s get right to it… First and foremost, the Calgary will indeed be Motorola’s first Android-powered handset. Some suspected it when rumors of a QWERTY-sliding Google phone from Moto emerged and it looks like that was a good call. The handset will likely focus on social networking to some extent and we’re pretty confident this could be a winner. The G1 and Magic are a bit, err, ho-hum and Samsung’s I7500 is basically just another full touchscreen phone. Moto could really knock it out of the park by introducing a unique, well-designed Android beast and the Calgary looks to be just that. We’re not yet able to confirm whether or not the Calgary is slated for Q2 as had been rumored regarding Motorola’s first Android offering.

More after the jump.

Now some bad news: The Flash and Inferno, each pictured above, have been canned. While the Inferno wasn’t really shaping up to be much of a stunner, we really wanted to see what Moto had in store for the Flash. The design is fantastic and it could definitely have translated to reality very, very well. Such is life however, and Moto is right to focus on the handsets it determines to have the most potential. Que sera sera.

Last up for the time being are a few tidbits surrounding a new handset in development at Moto — the Rolex. While little is known about it for the time being, our ninja tells us the Rolex is made almost entirely of hardened glass and it will sport the same display as the Aura. Sick. We’re not sure if this will be a mass-production unit or another pricey short run like the Aura but either way, we can’t wait to see it. A quick shot of the Rolex screen while we wait with bated breath for more:

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Calgary : Motorolas´Android Phone

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Microsoft debuts Vine in Seattle: Twitter+Facebook on steroids

May 2nd, 2009 No comments

Microsoft debuts Vine in Seattle: Twitter+Facebook on steroids

Posted by Brier Dudley

It’s been awhile since Microsoft introduced a game-changing social Web application, but Vine — a service that’s debuting today with a beta test in Seattle — could be a contender.

Vine is a hyperlocal, personalized message and alert system. It’s intended to be a dashboard that people can use to keep tabs of their family, friends, activities and major events in their community.

The dashboard — which appears as a widget on a PC screen — displays a map of the user’s community and the status of their contacts. It also has buttons to send alerts or reports, which can be sent and received on the PC or as text messages on a cellphone.

dashboard_01.jpg

Vine could be used by families, schools or soccer teams to notify people of schedules and changes. Individuals could use it as a central hub to keep track of local news and data feeds and updates from services such as Facebook.

But Microsoft’s main emphasis now is providing Vine to emergency management officials, who are intrigued by a new tool that could be used to broadcast and receive information during a disaster or other major event.

“I think long-term this is probably going to be a very valuable tool to help people keep connected, not only during times of crisis but on a daily basis,” said Hillman Mitchell, the city of Tukwila’s emergency management coordinator.

Mitchell, who has reviewed the product and will participate in the public testing, said emergency management officials are already trying to glean information from services such as Twitter and Facebook, but it’s challenging because they’re basically sending limited streams of text. Vine “provides an avenue to consolidate some of that information and analyze it in a more comprehensive way.”

“The underlying technology, where it provides a more structured data form, will long-term be a very valuable asset, whether it’s generated from Microsoft or others,” he said.

Seattle is the first place Vine will be publicly available. During a testing period that begins today, people can sign up at www.vine.net to be among more than 10,000 testers the company hopes to enlist. Similar tests will begin shortly in a rural community in the Midwest and an isolated island community, the locations of which haven’t been disclosed yet.

Inspiration for Vine came from the confusion during Hurricane Katrina. Tammy Savage, a Microsoft manager who has led experimental Web efforts for the company, spent two years researching technologies for communities to communicate and prepare for emergencies. That led to a concept Microsoft calls “societal networking.”

dashboard_03.jpg

Then she spent two more years developing the product and the business, which is an experimental venture under the guidance of Chief Research and Strategy Officer Craig Mundie. That means it’s not allied with any particular product group, giving Savage’s 25-person team leeway to easily blend technologies from across the company.

It’s a little hard to see how Vine will stand out from the multitude of networking and communication services available already, not to mention the carcasses of similar projects such as Seattle startup Trumba, an online calendar and notification service..

But Savage still sees a need and an opportunity for a comprehensive service like Vine, which is designed to become a hub or console for various services that people use.

“We don’t want to re-create things that already exist,” she said. “We’re looking for the opportunities that are particularly appropriate for Microsoft to bring its resources to bear.”

For example, the service is debuting with data feeds from more than 20,000 media sources and public safety organizations, including NOAA and the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.

Vine could end up competing with local media outlets, which are among the primary places people go for local information during a disaster or emergency. Microsoft is offering government agencies a way to directly communicate with residents during these events, but I wonder if users will be overwhelmed by the flow of data from emergency response agencies and miss the context, analysis and filtering of media sites.

It’s unclear where Vine could end up within Microsoft when it graduates into a full blown business, but it’s mostly likely to complement Microsoft’s suite of e-government software and its Sharepoint collaboration server.

Local officials who have seen the project are enthusiastic about what they’ve seen, but they’re waiting to see how it works and whether it’s widely accepted. Another big question is the cost, especially if Microsoft charges a significant amount for every home and business in their jurisidiction that uses the system.

“They’ve been talking about a few dollars per user ID for a period of time, maybe a month or a year,” said Seattle’s chief technology officer, Bill Schrier. “That doesn’t sound like much but if you spread it out across 300,000 premises, that’s a fair chunk of change.”

Schrier, an avid user of social networking tools such as Twitter and Facebook, said Vine has “really intriguing potential” for community communications and disaster preparedness. After talking to Microsoft about Vine for about five months, he’s planning to see how the service could work with Seattle’s block watch and neighborhood emergency management programs.

UPDATE: A few commenters asked about locking into a proprietary system.

I asked the public officials interviewed about this and whether it was appropriate for municipalities to use a system that requires using Microsoft’s platform and Live ID registration.

Tukwila’s Mitchell said Vine is probably part of “a new wave of technology that we’re going to see from a variety of vendors.”

Schrier said Seattle is particularly concerned about using a system that displays advertising, such as Facebook, because it could appear the city is endorsing advertisers.

Advertising is just part of the equation though. The bigger question surround propagation of Live ID registration/customer acquisition through governments.

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Expert to Expert – Erik Meijer and Lars Bak: Inside V8 – A Javascript Virtual Machine

May 2nd, 2009 No comments

54 minutes, 41 seconds
Formats:
Lars Bak is a virtual machine master. He and team have created a Javascript VM, V8, that takes Javascript syntax and produces optimized machine code directly. The result is very performant execution of Javascript. How does V8 work, exactly? What are the basic design decisions that have gone into it’s construction? Why is it designed the way it is? How fast can Javascript really run, anyway? How challenging is it to take a language like Javascript and produce highly optimized machine code?

Erik Meijer, language designer and fundamentalist functional high priest, discusses these questions and more with Lars. We also talk about the language to machine code translation versus having an intermediate step (like IL) that gets optimized further in runtime context by a JITer.

If you want to know the thinking behind the thinking of Javascript compilation, the current state of the art and future directions, then this is for you. Big thanks to Lars Bak for spending time with Channel 9!

Enjoy!

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Zmanda Cloud Backup for Windows

May 2nd, 2009 No comments

Zmanda Cloud Backup for Windows

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Samsung Alias 2 launching on May 11, E Ink confirmed?

May 2nd, 2009 No comments

We’re hearing that the Alias 2 is on track for a release in less than two weeks from now — May 11, to be exact — which would mean that we’re just a few short days away from seeing the very first E Ink handset launch in the States. Yes, that’s right, we said it — after all the heated debate over the technology powering the Alias 2’s configurable keypad, our tipster tells us that new information floating down from corporate confirms that the device is using E Ink, which would explain why it’s able to maintain state even with the power off. We still think it’s one awfully ugly phone, but this might be one of those all-too-frequent cases where cool tech ends up winning our hearts anyway. As for pricing, the tipster thinks it may come in at $79, which seems improbable even with deep contract discounting and a big mail-in rebate — but if by some miracle it does end up being accurate, they’re going to be selling tons of these to text-heavy geeks like ourselves.

[Image via PhoneArena, thanks ehjun]

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Samsung netbooks could offer full Windows 7

March 26th, 2009 No comments

Samsung netbooks could offer full Windows 7 | News | TechRadar UK

Future Samsung netbooks could feature fully blown edition of Windows 7

Towards the end of our day at Samsung’s European Forum in Vienna, we were ushered into a small room to interview Samsung’s Head of Worldwide Sales and Marketing (Computing Division), Kyu Uhm.

samsung-forum

As well as talking about the state of the netbook market, Uhm hinted at some interesting developments with Windows 7, not least that the company may consider shipping better versions – rather than Windows 7 Starter Edition – depending on the royalties Samsung would have to pay Microsoft.

When asked whether Samsung was actively developing Windows 7 netbooks, Uhm was certain. “Of course, of course.” And what of better versions of Windows?

“Currently Microsoft provides Windows XP for netbooks. For Windows 7 they would like to give us Windows 7 Starter Edition for netbooks. That’s the current plan.

“[Different versions are a] matter of how much we need to pay to Microsoft. It is an open issue. So we can ship other Windows 7 versions, but it is a matter of royalties.”

When we pressed further, Uhm became cagey. “We need to ask Microsoft first.”

Uhm also had some observations on the netbook market and how the market will pan out. By the way, Samsung confusingly refers to netbooks as mini notebooks.

“Mini notebooks are one of the key drivers for Samsung’s growth in the short term period,” he said.

But are netbooks a flash in the pan? “It’s difficult to say. Short term is last year… we didn’t even know the mini notebook market is growing so fast. We [hope] to grow faster than our competitors. But we don’t know about tomorrow. Until then, we will do our best to expand our current capability.”

Future plans for Samsung

Patrick Pavel European Product Manager, was also in our meeting and gave us some insight into how Samsung sees itself in terms of its market share. We asked him whether he believed Samsung is where it wants to be in terms of computing sales in Europe – it’s currently down the pecking order in sixth place for notebook sales.

“Let’s say we have a short term and a long term strategy. In the long term we want to be, let’s say in the next two or three years, top three. Recently in the mini notebooks, we reached number one position in the UK. At the same time you see the customer who was maybe hesitating to put our brand towards their shelves, there is this very nice mini notebook.”

Pavel added that he expected a 6.5-7 per cent market share in Europe this year.

On Linux and Apple…

Speaking about Linux, Pavel said it was now unlikely the company would make a Linux netbook, but added that Samsung would do one if users demanded it: “[Linux netbooks] made a certain community very happy.”

Referring to Best Buy’s reputed 40 per cent return rate on these devices, he added: “The normal user, they are used to XP and how to install a printer and so on. We can do Linux if the market is demanding it. If there’s demand, let’s do it. We even started to develop some Linux platforms.”

On a different tack, Pavel also made it clear that Samsung isn’t considering launching a secondary brand like Dell’s Adamo. “If we are doing advertising, if we start now doing some other brand… rather than splitting the funds. As you know, the margins in the PC market are not that big. We decided to use the Samsung brand, which is obviously a strong brand.”

Pavel added that the company wouldn’t be held to ransom by trying to compete with Apple in the design space. Referring to the X360 thin and light notebook, he said: “We do such a flagship product not because of sales but more a marketing tool. Yes, we’re going to continue to do such stuff, maybe one or two products, but in order to make the money and make the volume it’s not so important, but maybe we’ll be more aggressive in this area.”

Uhm added “We will continue. Apple? Different market sector, different users. We are targeting Windows users.” He refused to be drawn when we pointed out that Apple was now targeting Windows users itself.

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the frugal Asian

February 6th, 2009 No comments

we arent going to see any ” economic recovery “, i have been telling friends and scaring them, luckily many are still in india and can smile at my views -

here are the facts :

  1. there are more people under the age of 25 in India than there are people in the US
  2. there are more dollar millionaires in India than there are people in Germany
  3. all of the worlds electronics, and most of its consumer durables come from Asia
  4. the average asian wage for SKILLED labour is 1 / 2 of what UNSKILLED labour is paid in the US
  5. to bring the knife to the bone – 5 years before the iPhone simialr devices were on the market in Hong Kong, where you have to change ur phone every 3 months if you want to have the latest, and flexible contracts make it possible
  6. for those of your reading in the US and the EU you know that 24 months is a normal contract here
  7. India produces 400 K engineers, china does 600K  per year the US produces under 80K, all of the EU produces 100 Keven if these figures are debatable, im not sure if they are of if they are not,
  8. my point is Micrsoft hires a graduate engineer for far less than it hires an engineer for in the US, with the current crisis its no secret where the hiring and where the firing will take place
  9. its also no secret that while the quality of education is dipping in the West it is steadily rising in Asia
  10. big govt. in the West ( read US ) is sucking up all the money it keeps printing, and to keep having an excuse to print more currency notes it allows un regulated financial market to float very dangerous instruments to manage this the fictional increase in GDP ( im not an economist but how you can use the vlaue of goods sold in a fiscal year to calculate GDP, when most of the sales are credit backed is beyond me )
  11. having bought and sold without money in the bank the West is today faced with a crucial dilemna – how do you exhort people to ” go out and shop”  when a ) they are out of work and strapped for cash and b ) how do you get banks to subsidise credit when the neither the instruments used to secure the credit nor the collateral are watertight ?
  12. and why arent they watertight ?
  13. bcos the west over taxed and over borrowed and over spent its way into this mess without bothering to educate its populace to compete against the frugal Asian.
  14. no, there will be no recovery, the West has mortgaged itself to Asia; the GCC and China in particular. They need fresh credit to cover the pot they lost via stupid gambles. The house has your shirt, knows your cards, is keeping all its eyes on you and you are at the table so you can win big to pay back your huge debts. If you break even you will live, if you dont, well this is Vegas.

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Windows XP still powering 71 percent of business PCs

February 3rd, 2009 No comments

Windows XP still powering 71 percent of business PCs

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Live Nation can?t keep up with Phish demand

February 3rd, 2009 No comments

Music forums were abuzz all weekend about Live Nation’s inability to handle the millions of simultaneous online requests for Phish tickets. The fabled jam band is reuniting for a summer tour after several years off, and is playing some Live Nation-owned venues, which means that tickets for those shows were available only through Live Nation. Unfortunately, Live Nation (a spin-off of Clear Channel) is relatively new at ticketing and its Web ticketing service couldn’t handle the strain. The worst: apparently some would-be purchasers were offered seats, only to have the system break down when they tried to complete their purchase.

Error–tickets not found.

(Credit: Phish Dry Goods)

Maybe they should have tried the phone.

While I’ve never bought a ticket from Live Nation, I’ve turned to phone orders with Ticketmaster twice in the last year–for Bruce Springsteen and Sigur Ros–when the Web site was slow or offered only undesirable tickets. Each time, I got a much better seat than I could have gotten online. I imagine Ticketmaster allocates a certain number of seats at each purchase level for phone, and the lines aren’t nearly as busy as the Web site, meaning the decent seats last longer.

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.. in the space of a few tweets?

February 2nd, 2009 No comments

the world  has changed, in the space of a few tweets.

  1. i can reach about a thousand people with one 140 character message
  2. if im looking & am priced right i can find a project to work on in a matter of hours
  3. if i have the following that has the following, i can get any peice of news out there in seconds, Robert Scoble follows me on Twitter, fancy that ! ( name dropping, sorry, but you get the point )
  4. this is fundamentally differnt from YAHOO or MSN or GTalk
    ( to be cont ´d in a few mins )

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.. in the space of a few tweets?

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Netbooks could be the next hit cell phones

January 29th, 2009 No comments

AT&T looks to sell mini-laptops, bundled with wireless data contracts, for prices like $99 or less. Is the gambit brilliant or foolhardy?

By Jon Fortt, senior writer
January 28, 2009: 10:28 AM ET

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(Fortune) — Glenn Lurie knows Silicon Valley better than most telecom industry types. As AT&T’s point man on the iPhone, he was the guy who camped out in Cupertino and hashed out the blockbuster iPhone launch with Apple. The next big game in his sights? The netbook.

That’s right, the netbook, that shrunken, low-priced laptop that lately has been a rare bright spot in the moribund PC industry. To hear Lurie tell it, AT&T’s next hit phone might not be a phone at all, but a netbook with built-in Internet access that works anywhere you can get a cell signal.

Get ready for the clincher: Sign up for a two-year contract, and you might get your new PC for $99 or less.

The upshot is that the “free phone” phenomenon that helped make handsets ubiquitous in the U.S. isn’t just for phones anymore. The first signs of change came this past holiday season when, working with AT&T (T, Fortune 500), Radio Shack offered a $99 deal on an Acer netbook, a promotion that went “extremely well,” Lurie says. “That Acer one’s a great example of how partnerships are going to work. That was Radio Shack coming to us saying, ‘We’ve got an idea. Can you help us?’ ”

As president of AT&T’s new Emerging Devices division, Lurie hopes to do a lot more of those deals. His mission is to get just about everything except phones connected to AT&T’s broadband network — laptops, GPS devices, cars, games, medical equipment, “all the way to dog collars,” he quips.

It’s only January, but he’s off to a fast start. At the annual Consumer Electronics Show gadgetfest earlier this month, Lurie teamed with Sony (SNE) and Dell (DELL, Fortune 500) to announce that a new Sony camera will use AT&T’s wireless network to automatically upload photos, and Dell will discount its $449 Inspiron Mini 9 netbook to $99 when buyers sign up for an AT&T data plan. (Of course, there’s a catch: The price gets to $99 only after a $349 mail-in rebate, so you’ve got to front the money and trust the fickle Rebate Fairy to follow through.)

Why is AT&T helping to fund netbook discounts? Well, such deals have already proven popular in Europe and Asia, and U.S. carriers are looking for effective ways to lock customers into data contracts. Even in this tough economy, carriers are spending billions to boost their network speeds and out-duel the competition. But the carriers know bragging rights to the fastest data connection aren’t worth much unless customers actually sign up. They have a hunch that cheap netbooks will get customers to commit to two-year data plans, just like free phones did for voice.

The plan could backfire. AT&T doesn’t know yet whether netbook users will prove to be as loyal (and profitable) as, say, iPhone users. If they’re not, the discounts could turn out to be a waste of money. And there’s certainly no guaranteed that even the lure of a cheap netbook will get the masses to increase their monthly phone bills in the midst of a punishing recession.

But the titans of the PC industry certainly seem to be rooting for the idea of signing on with carriers. Kevin Frost, who runs the consumer notebook division for Hewlett-Packard (HPQ, Fortune 500), said last year that part of the company’s vision is to make laptops as ubiquitous as cell phones, and working with folks like AT&T fits in perfectly.

What about Apple (AAPL, Fortune 500)? Lurie won’t offer specifics of course, but during our chat he mentions that he just sat down with Apple Chief Operating Officer Tim Cook a few minutes earlier. Will AT&T ever sell a discounted MacBook? “We’re having conversations with lots of folks,” Lurie says. “I would very much like to do more business with Apple, and hope that we do.”

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Skateboarding in Afghanistan Provides a Diversion From Desolation

January 27th, 2009 No comments

Tyler Hicks/The New York Times

Afghan youth have taken to skateboarding since Oliver Percovich of Australia introduced it in Kabul.

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Published: January 25, 2009
KABUL, Afghanistan — It looked like an ordinary neighborhood playground: six children tumbling off their skateboards to the tune of laughter. But only hours before, just 20 yards away, the body of a suicide car bomber was sprawled beside a glistening pool of blood.

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Tyler Hicks/The New York Times

Oliver Percovich’s current skateboard park is a decrepit concrete fountain. His Skateistan school will be eight miles away.

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Afghan youth have learned to recover almost instantly from such routine violence. One person determined to inject some normalcy into their lives is Oliver Percovich. A 34-year-old from Melbourne, Australia, he plans to open this country’s first skateboarding school, Skateistan, this spring. He sees sport as a way to woo students into after-school activities like English and computer classes, which are otherwise reserved for the elite.

“Teenagers are trying to dissociate from old mentalities, and I’m their servant,” Percovich said. “If they weren’t interested, I would’ve left a long time ago.”

Now, when he pulls his motorcycle into a residential courtyard here, a dozen youngsters pounce before it comes to a stop, yanking six chipped skateboards with fading paint off the back. The children, most participating in a sport for the first time in their war-hardened lives, do not want to waste any time.

Their skateboard park is a decrepit Soviet-style concrete fountain with deep fissures. The tangle of novice skaters resembles bumper cars more than X Games.

But Percovich has raised the money needed to build an 8,600-square-foot bubble to house the nonprofit Skateistan complex, and the Kabul Parks Authority has tentatively donated land. He is still waiting for official permission to begin the project. And since a spate of kidnappings and the car bombing in late November, he has reduced his daily sessions at the fountain to once or twice a week.

Among those who look forward to his visits is Maro, an elfin 9-year-old girl who was terrified of skateboarding at first.

“It gives me courage, and once I start skating, I completely forget about my fears,” she said.

All the children spoke through an interpreter.

Maro’s glittery Mickey Mouse shirt indicated middle-class status. She stood out from the street children in muddied clothes who shared the skate space. Because the sport is so new and unusual here, Percovich said, it may help mend the nation’s deep social and ethnic divisions.

But for Hadisa, a 10-year-old girl from a conservative family, skateboarding has not been accepted. She said two older brothers beat her with wires for skating with poorer children in September. Several friends said they had seen blood flowing from her leg.

“I’m not upset with my brothers for beating me,” Hadisa whispered on a recent day when she did not skate because her oldest brother was nearby. “They have the right.”

But some girls cannot skate enough because their window for participation is short. When Afghan girls reach puberty, they must be veiled and can no longer associate with men outside the family. Percovich said his indoor skate park could be part of the solution, with boys and girls in separate classes.

“If my family doesn’t let me skate when I grow up, and they tell me I need to be at home, then I have to respect my family,” Maro said. “And I won’t be able to skate.”

Maro’s grandfather, Abdul Hai Muram, a retired political commentator, stroked her ponytail as he considered her future. He said he wanted her to be able to play outside when she turned 15 but worried about society’s reaction.

“Families are still careful and thoughtful about letting their daughters out,” Muram, 65, said. “We’re entitled to be very strict and afraid because negative consequences from the Taliban time are still out there, and men do whatever they want to women.”

He added, “It may take 10 years for things to be normal for women.”

Perhaps no one is more excited for the skateboard park than Mirwais, a 16-year-old boy who can do an ollie, an aerial trick that is the foundation for more advanced moves. Mirwais, who dropped out of school after second grade, first noticed the skate sessions from an adjacent parking lot, where he washed cars for $4 a day to support his family of eight. Percovich said Mirwais was often high from sniffing glue.

Now Mirwais looks more tidy and earns $8 a day working for the Skateistan project, repairing boards, running errands and assisting at the informal skate sessions.

“I want to improve as much as I can, and continue to support my family with skating,” he said. “It’s my future.”

Still, many middle- and upper-class youngsters complain that Mirwais ridicules them using foul language, evidence of the challenge with mixing social classes and ethnic groups here.

But Percovich is determined to overcome the obstacles. He arrived here rather impulsively in early 2007 because his girlfriend at the time had taken a job in Kabul. He gave up his bakery business, stuffed some clothes — and his skateboards — into a bag and left Australia.

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Tyler Hicks/The New York Times

“It gives me courage, and once I start skating, I completely forget about my fears,” one girl said.

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Unable to find work, Percovich did what he has done since he was 6. He rode his skateboard, undaunted by the military convoys, pushcarts, donkeys, a suffocating film of dust and occasional car bombings.

“Whenever I turned up, kids gathered around and asked, ‘What is that?’ ” he said, referring to his skateboard. “They’d ask to have a go, and I realized quite fast it’s an excellent way to interact with youth.”

Afghanistan has the highest proportion of school-age children in the world, 1 in 5, according to the United Nations. For a vast majority of these seven million youngsters, sports are virtually nonexistent.

Most public schools, stretched to provide basic materials like desks, do not have playgrounds. Boys play pickup soccer or volleyball games on dusty fields. But sports are an afterthought for most girls, who are discouraged from public gatherings.

About 20 embassies and nongovernmental organizations rejected Percovich’s financing proposal for a skateboarding school. After breaking up with his girlfriend, he said, he was down to $1,500 and had maxed out his credit card to pay the rent.

“I was banging my head against the wall, saying, ‘What am I doing with no money?’ ” Percovich said. “But in the afternoon, I was laughing and skating with kids running toward me saying, ‘Oli, Oli, Oli.’ ”

Even his successes have been somewhat frustrating. Last March, an Australian retailer donated 30 skate sets — including boards, shoes and body pads — but Percovich could not afford the $5,000 for shipping. The equipment remains in Melbourne.

Percovich’s break came last October, when the Canadian, Norwegian and German governments pledged a combined $120,000. The Kabul Parks Authority chose a site in a poor area of the city, about eight miles from the fountain.

Andreas Schüetzenberger, whose German company, IOU Ramps, has built 300 skate ramps in places like Israel and Mongolia, plans to install the platforms at no cost once Skateistan is built.

Percovich also recruited Titus Dittman, who delivered one ton of secondhand skate equipment this month. In 1982, Dittman transformed a parking lot in Germany into one of the world’s most well-known cult skate scenes, Monster Mastership, which has since become the World Skateboarding Championships.

The goals for Skateistan are a bit more grounded.

“Afghan kids are the same as kids all over the world,” Percovich said. “They just haven’t been given the same opportunities. They need a positive environment to do positive things for Afghanistan and for themselves.”

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Skateboarding in Afghanistan Provides a Diversion From Desolation

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Apple working 3D OS X UI

January 14th, 2009 No comments

Apple working on 3D OS X UI

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Memo to Intel: Netbooks morphing into notebooks

November 12th, 2008 No comments

Looking for signs that netbooks are catching on? And even morphing into notebooks? Here’s a few.

Netbooks were the big end-user gadget on display at the Windows Hardware Engineering Conference that ended Friday.

And all the Netbooks at a Microsoft booth were running Windows 7, Microsoft’s next-generation operating system due next year.

A Microsoft person on the floor said that a lite version of Windows 7 will run on 1GB of memory and 16GB of (solid-state drive) storage. Higher-end Netbooks will have a 160GB hard disk drive, according to Microsoft “guidance.”

Microsoft displayed netbooks running Windows 7 at WinHEC

Microsoft displayed Netbooks running Windows 7 at WinHEC

(Credit: Brooke Crothers)

This person also said something surprising. Dual-core Atom processors will be used in Netbooks. I tried to disabuse him of the notion that netbooks would get dual-core Atom processors. No, I said, it was Nettops (Atom-based desktops) that would get dual-core. But he assured me that vendors were planning to bring out dual-core Netbooks.

So, I contacted Intel. There are no immediate plans for dual-core Atom chips designed specifically for Netbooks, according to Intel. But what’s stopping a netbook supplier from using a dual-core Atom 330 (designed for nettops) in a Netbook? Answer: nothing.

At 8 watts, the chip has a higher power envelope than single-core Atom processors, but 8 watts is still low compared with a mainstream Core 2 Duo processor. Other specifications for the Atom 330 include a core clock speed of 1.6GHz, 1MB of level-2 cache, and support for DDR2 667MHz memory.

Beginning to sound more like a low-end notebook? I think so.

Netbook market share appears to be growing too. A little more than 5 million Atom processors shipped in the third quarter of 2008, according to Shane Rau of IDC, a market researcher. “Will it add to the total market or will it eat into the total market? Another question might be is Atom eating into another processor brand such as Celeron (Intel) or Sempron (AMD)?”

Rau says that the total market can grow while Netbooks eat into notebook market share. “The TAM (Total Available Market) can grow even as Atom eats into another brand. But we don’t know how it’s shaking out yet,” he said.

And here’s evidence of Netbooks penetrating the consumer consciousness. Best Buy now has a separate category for Netbooks on its Web site. Right under laptop computers you’ll see “Netbooks”. Interestingly, the Netbooks category is ranked above desktops and most other “computer” categories.

Other signs. Dell has a 12-inch laptop, the Inspiron Mini 12 based on the Atom processor. Is this a Netbook or notebook? You tell me.

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