Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Samsung Invades HTC Territory With Android Handset

Samsung Electronics on Monday joined with network operator Taiwan Mobile to try to steal the spotlight from rival High Tech computer (HTC) by launching a handset with Google's Android mobile software, the , in Taiwan.

HTC, the Taiwanese company that worked with Google to develop the first smartphone based on Android, the T-Mobile G1 (also called HTC Dream) had already sent out invitations to a Tuesday press party to launch its third and latest Android handset in Taiwan, the .

HTC reportedly plans to team up with mobile service provider Chunghwa Telecom to market the Hero in Taiwan. The companies worked together to launch the HTC Magic, which with certain mobile service contracts.

Samsung announced the i7500, its first ever Android-based smartphone, in April. The device has a 3.2-inch touchscreen, a 5-megapixel camera and 8GB of internal memory, among other features.

The HTC Hero also sports a 3.2-inch touchscreen, 5-megapixel camera and other features.

Developed by Google, Android is a smartphone operating system that is meant to make Web browsing easy, especially on Google sites such as YouTube and Google Maps.

5 Netbooks Microsoft Has Crushed

Think most netbooks have single-core processors, 1GB of RAM, and a 160GB hard drive because their manufacturers like conformity? Right. The reality -- never officially acknowledged -- is that Microsoft its operating systems to netbooks with specs that are too good (see the limitations ). The result, as evidenced by the of Dell's Mini 12, is tiny netbooks with lesser hardware than full-sized laptops.

A handful of laptops, including the Mini 12, have broken the mold, but they all pay the price in some way. Here's a list of naughty netbooks that Microsoft is crushing with its hardware limitations:

Dell Inspiron Mini 12

dell inspiron mini 12 The crime: Dell's is one of a few netbooks with a 12-inch screen. While that's fine for licensing of Windows XP or Vista (the Mini 12 used the latter), cheap Windows 7 licensing will require netbooks to cap the screen size at 10.2 inches.

Punishment: With no clear explanation why, Dell announced the Mini 12's retirement over the weekend. I'm guessing the company saw the writing on the wall, and decided to discontinue the model rather than face more expensive operating system costs when arrives.

MSI Wind U115

The crime: great sin was packing an 8GB solid state drive and a 160GB hard disk drive together. While TechARP's list of limitations doesn't explmsi wind u115icitly ban hybrid drives -- it only says a netbook needs a certain size of one or the other -- .

Punishment: MSI's act of disobedience was dead in the water just as it began. A company representative in the U.K. that MSI would sell its current stock of U115 netbooks, and then cease production at Microsoft's request.

Archos 10 with Ubuntu

The crime: Archos went way over the maximum HDD size that Microsoft allows for archos 10cheap OS licensing, packing a 500GB drive instead of the maximum 160GB, along with 2GB of RAM. As such, this particular build of the Archos 10 runs on Ubuntu instead of Windows XP.

Punishment: The Archos 10 is living in relative obscurity, released with little fanfare . It's not clear when, if ever, the netbook will migrate into the United States or the rest of Europe.

Raon Everun Note

The crime: Though the Everun Note's screen measures only 7 inches, the notebook is a raon evrun noteparticularly egregious offender. It's the , spiting Microsoft's decree that netbooks should have single-core chips.

Punishment: The Everun Note was already on the pricey side, starting at $599 for a basic configuration, but that's without an operating system. Add an undiscounted copy of Windows XP and you've got a netbook that's even harder to market.

Dell Mini 9

The crime: Dell's added something that's desperately needed amondell mini 9g tiny computers: 2GB of RAM. But as with the Archos 10, this feature was available only for the version running Ubuntu, as Microsoft would not allow such vast amounts of memory when licensing Windows XP on the cheap.

Punishment: The Mini 9 is another netbook heading the way of the dodo. Though its screen size is mainly to blame, I'll bet the computer would still be in demand if it packed Windows XP and 2GB of RAM. In any case, the run on Windows XP.

Toshiba Planning Blu-ray Disc Players, Laptops

Toshiba is players and laptops with support for Blu-ray Disc later this year, it said Monday. The company was the primary backer of the HD DVD optical-disc format that until last year.

toshiba blu-rayIn a brief statement Toshiba said it had applied for membership for the Blu-ray Disc Association (BDA), the standards setting and licensing body and would launch products before the end of 2009.

"In light of recent growth in digital devices supporting the Blu-ray format, combined with market demand from consumers and retailers alike, Toshiba has decided to join the BDA," it said.

Long Time Coming

The move ends an almost that began in August 2002 when it and NEC proposed a blue-laser format to the DVD Forum as a replacement for DVD for high-definition movies. Sony and a group of other companies had announced their intentions to unite with Blu-ray Disc earlier in the year and the stage was set for a battle between the two.

Over several years Sony, Toshiba and a handful of other heavy hitters in the consumer electronics industry pitched products against each other. An increasingly heated debate on the formats left consumers confused, and most people stayed away from either until a winner was decided.

That came in February 2008 when Toshiba, seeing its final few supporters jump ship to Blu-ray Disc, chose to throw in the towel on HD DVD.

Although now over, the effects of the battle continue to be felt today. A recent poll by Harris Interactive found many U.S. consumers are not excited about a high-definition video disc despite the popularity of high-definition TV.

Among consumers who don't own a Blu-ray Disc player, only 7 percent said they are likely to purchase one this year while the rest are not likely to take the plunge, the online poll found. It surveyed 2,041 U.S. adults between April 13 and 21 this year.

On the software side Harris found only a quarter of consumers were planning to switch exclusively to Blu-ray Disc with the remainder still picking up DVDs. In the year since the format battle was decided, U.S. sales of Blu-ray Discs have only managed to double, according to figures from industry association The Digital Entertainment Group.

Sunday, August 9, 2009

Microsoft's SharePoint thrives in the recession

Hang around at Microsoft's Redmond, Wash., headquarters for 5 or 10 minutes and someone dressed in khaki pants and a blue shirt is bound to tell you about the wonders of SharePoint--one of the company's most successful and increasingly controversial lines of software.

Think of SharePoint as the jack-of-all-trades in the business software realm. Companies use it to create Web sites and then manage content for those sites. It can help workers collaborate on projects and documents. And it has a variety of corporate search and business intelligence tools too.

Microsoft wraps all of this software up into a package and sells the bundle at a reasonable price. In fact, the total cost of the bundle often comes in below what specialist companies would charge for a single application in, say, the business intelligence or corporate search fields.

It can't do everything. Executives at Microsoft will readily admit that the bits and pieces of SharePoint lack the more sophisticated features found in products from specialist software makers."We don't claim we do everything," said Chris Capossela, a senior vice president at Microsoft. "If we do 50 percent of the functions that these other companies do, but they're the ones customers really want, that's fine. The magic is that end users actually like to use the software."

This strategy seems to have worked even during the recession.

While Microsoft's Windows sales fell for the first time in history this year, its SharePoint sales have gone up. Microsoft declines to break out the exact sales figures for the software but said that SharePoint broke the $1 billion revenue mark last year and continued to rise past that total this year, making it the hottest selling server-side product ever for the company.

Companies like Ferrari, Starbucks, and Viacom have used SharePoint to create their public-facing Web sites and for various other tasks. All told, more than 17,000 customers use Sharepoint.

In many ways, SharePoint mimics the strategy Microsoft took with Office by linking together numerous applications into a single unit. This approach appeals to customers looking to save money and also represents a real threat to a variety of business software makers.

Many of these specialists like Cognos, a business intelligence software maker, and Documentum, a content management software maker, have been gobbled up by larger players looking to create their own suites. IBM, for example, , while . Other companies like Autonomy, a maker of top-of-the-line corporate search software, remain independent.

Crucially, Microsoft has found a way to create ties between SharePoint and its more traditional products like Office and Exchange. Companies can tweak Office documents through SharePoint and receive information like whether a worker is online or not through tools in Exchange. These links have Microsoft carrying along its old-line software as it builds a more Internet-focused software line.

"SharePoint is saving Microsoft's Office business even as it paves the way for a new era of Microsoft lock-in," said Matt Asay, an executive at Alfresco, which makes an open-source content management system. "It is simultaneously the most interesting and dangerous Microsoft technology, and has largely caught its competitors napping."

Along these lines, Steve Ballmer, Microsoft's chief executive, has talked about SharePoint as the company's next big operating system.

Microsoft has managed to undercut even the panoply of open-source companies playing in the business software market by giving away a free basic license to SharePoint if they already have Windows Server. "It's a brilliant strategy that mimics open source in its viral, free distribution, but transcends open source in its ability to lock customers into a complete, not-free-at-all Microsoft stack--one for which they'll pay more and more the deeper they get into SharePoint," Asay said.

A number of smaller software companies have been eager to piggyback on SharePoint's success. Based in San Diego, Sharepoint360 provides consulting services and software development help around the product. The company started after employees at a construction company built some Sharepoint applications and decided to market the software to other construction firms.

The start-up has helped construction companies create systems for managing projects, allowing various people to check in on the progress of a building and keep track of documents tied to the site. It has also expanded beyond the construction area doing work for NASA, Nestle, and Toshiba, according to Paul West, a co-founder of SharePoint360.

The company offers to host SharePoint applications for customers. Microsoft too wants to host more software for companies as it moves toward the cloud computing model.

West recognizes that Microsoft may begin stepping on its partners' toes. "It may certainly come to pass that they pull the switch," he said. "That would have implications for us."

In the meantime, however, Microsoft subsidizes training courses and consulting work for companies like Sharepoint360.

Next year, Microsoft plans to release a new version of the software packed full of more advanced features, including stronger ties to the corporate search technology it acquired in the $1.2 billion purchase of Fast Search and Transfer, a Norwegian start-up.

Best Buy uses the Fast technology today to provide on-the-fly pricing information to customers performing product searches on its Web site.

By making these more sophisticated tools available to customers, Microsoft thinks it can keep pushing niche software makers out of the way and give business people, rather than just the tech folks, a way to work with business applications.

"We believe customers can turn off some of these point solutions," said Kirk Koenigsbauer, a general manager in Microsoft's business software group. "With SharePoint, we can deliver a very, very approachable application to end users."

Mozilla issues first Firefox 3.6 alpha version


Mozilla has released the first alpha version of , a browser with speed improvements and new features the organization hopes to finalize faster than its predecessor.

"Unlike the year that passed between Firefox 3 and , we expect that this will be released in a small number of months," Mozilla evangelist Friday.

, has a variety of changes, but it's not as dramatic a departure as 3.5 was from 3.0. Among the 3.6 features are faster JavaScript, the Web programming language Firefox executes with its ; faster page-rendering speed; some new features for technology for controlling some of the look of a Web site; and a feature called the that handles complicated layout circumstances better.

Performance is a big issue with browsers these days as people spend more time using them and programmers create more sophisticated sites and applications that live on the Web. All major browser makers are emphasizing performance improvements in their newest versions.

Google Voice Can Sneak onto iPhone

Despite , Google Voice will soon be available for iPhone -- as a Web-based app, says .

google voice apple app storeThe all-things-phone-management application (which was widely for threatening AT&T profits on calling plans) will be remade as a stylized Web site that offers everything the rejected app would have.

It is unclear if Apple would reject a repurposed Google Voice app. But earlier in the year Apple did allow Google to promote as a Web app after it was rejected from the App Store.

Considering their recent decision has managed to draw attention from a wide range of people, including some at the , it probably wouldn't be the best choice to block a rethought Google Voice app.

apple iphone google voiceWeb apps can be bookmarked on the iPhone interface and appear like an app purchased from the App Store. You can browse available Web apps, ranging from Facebook to BPlayer (which "allows you to listen to your favorite Belgian radio stations") .

It should be noted you can currently visit a text-heavy version of Google Voice on your iPhone by pointing Safari to .

Saturday, August 8, 2009

Windows 7 Bug Is No Showstopper

Microsoft released the RTM version of yesterday to the Microsoft technical community. The initial excitement quickly turned to sensational headlines about a "showstopper" or excitement and cause people and businesses to shun the new operating system as they did Windows Vista. Those headlines are the very definition of FUD (spreading fear, uncertainty, and doubt).

Windows 7 bug

The "critical" bug is related to a memory leak issue with the CHKDSK utility, with one caveat- it's not an issue…or a bug really. Soon after the RTM version of Windows 7 was available to the technical community reports started to pop up that a flaw had been discovered. Apparently, when running CHKDSK, a disk integrity checking and repair utility that has been included with virtually every version of Windows, the system would grind to a halt or even produce the notorious BSOD (Blue Screen of Death).

The bug does not occur just any time you run CHKDSK though. According to reports, the issue only arises if CHKDSK is run on a drive or volume other than the primary boot volume, and only if the '/r' switch is used as well. The '/r' switch tells the utility to locate bad sectors and attempt to repair them and recover the data they contain. When these conditions are met, CHKDSK apparently eats up all available physical memory and slows the system to a halt or crashes it entirely.

, has pointed out that the reported behavior is by design. When the '/r' switch is used the CHKDSK utility is supposed to use the maximum amount of resources available to complete the repairs as quickly as possible. CHKDSK is designed to use all but 50Mb of available memory when the '/r' switch is invoked and users should not expect to be able to continue using the computer for other functions during the CHKDSK repair process.

That doesn't explain the BSOD reports, but those reports are actually much more obscure. It seems that there may be certain hardware configurations that result in a BSOD during the CHKDSK process. Those are isolated incidents though related to specific hardware setups. Microsoft has recommended that those experiencing severe problems such as the BSOD first ensure they have current drivers installed before declaring that the sky is falling.

So, to clarify, many headlines have declared Windows 7 potentially dead on arrival as a result of an obscure utility performing as designed and possibly resulting in a system crash in certain isolated situations. I think we can call off the coroner and not cancel the Windows 7 victory parade just yet.