Monday, August 18, 2008

Cell-phone TV Is Great


This is one of the reasons the United States is behind several other countries when it comes to making television an attractive option for cell phones. Carrier business models are partly at fault, but choices about TV technology made long ago are largely to blame.

Most phones sold in Japan can tune in to free TV broadcasts, and there are tens of millions of viewers. Cell phones that can tune in to free broadcasts are also available in South Korea, Germany and China.


But only 3 percent of Americans regularly watched video on their cell phones late last year, according to a survey by the Pew Internet & American Life Project. That figure includes people who watched short, downloaded clips rather than broadcast TV.

For starters, you can blame the impending shutdown of all full-power analog TV broadcasts on Feb. 17, a deadline set by the government. That Chinese handset, made by ZTE Corp., can only tune in to analog transmissions. Because most of them are going away, there's no real point in selling phones like that in the United States.

China is keeping its analog broadcasts until 2015, six years longer than the U.S., so the phones are viable there. Ironically, the TV reception chip inside comes from a U.S. company, Telegent Systems Inc., based in Sunnyvale, Calif.

The analog U.S. broadcasts are being replaced by digital broadcasts, but there are no phones anywhere that can tune in to those.

When the U.S. digital TV standard was laid down in the early '90s by the Advanced Television Systems Committee, it was optimized for high-definition signals to stationary antennas, according to Mark Richter, president of the industry group.

At the time, cell phones had screens that could display eight digits and nothing else, so little thought was given making the broadcasts work with mobile gadgets.

The Europeans created their digital television standard later and made it a bit more amenable to mobile reception, Richter said. Thus, there are now phones sold in Germany that can receive local digital broadcasts intended for stationary TVs.

Weijie Yun, Telegent's chief executive, said it's theoretically possible to receive U.S. digital terrestrial broadcasts on a phone, but engineers have yet to overcome key technical challenges. For now, Telegent's chips can receive analog broadcasts in most countries of the world, and digital broadcasts in Europe and a few countries outside it.

Because U.S. phones can't receive regular broadcast TV, carriers have had to look to other solutions. Cell-phone technology company Qualcomm Inc. has created a network that broadcasts signals designed for cell phones. AT&T Inc. and Verizon Wireless sell some handsets that can tune in to these broadcasts.

Sprint Nextel Corp. has contracted with another company, MobiTV Inc., which streams lo-fi streaming video over the phones' broadband connections. The fourth national carrier, T-Mobile USA, doesn't have a TV service.

The common denominator for the existing services is that they cost money, limiting their adoption. AT&T and Verizon Wireless charge $15 per month for 10 channels. Sprint bundles MobiTV with some high-end plans and charges $9.99 per month as standalone service.

In-Stat analyst Michelle Abraham estimates that Qualcomm's MediaFLO has 100,000 subscribers. MobiTV has done better, with about 4 million subscribers.

Research director John Barrett at analysis firm Parks Associates points to the fees as a problem, and recommends that operators provide free content.

"A free taste would go a long way in making the consumer case for mobile TV," he wrote in a recent report. "Mobile TV services have taken off in Japan and South Korea, where service is offered free of charge. In Italy, where additional fees have been the norm, usage has been limited."

This month, Toshiba Corp. announced it would end a pay-TV system for handsets because of the popularity of free TV broadcasts.

"That's one of the key barriers," Telegent's Yun said. "Once you start charging consumers, they start getting turned off."

U.S. TV broadcasters are quite eager to provide free broadcasts to cell phones, just as they do to TVs with "rabbit-ear" antennas. They've formed the Open Mobile Video Coalition, which estimates that advertising-financed TV for cell phones could be a $2 billion market.

They want to reach cell phones through another wireless standard the ATSC is creating. It will use regular TV frequencies to reach mobile gadgets, meaning TV stations will be able to broadcast from existing towers.

The goal is to complete the new standard, called ATSC-M/H, by the first quarter of next year, Richter said. That could mean broadcasts will be operational before the end of next year.

It's not completely clear that the technology would be used for free TV — the possibility to charge viewers monthly fees will be built in — but it would be natural for broadcasters to simulcast their regular advertising-financed programming on the mobile channel.

The big question then, Abraham said, is whether broadcasters will be able to persuade carriers to sell TV-capable phones.

AT&T spokesman Michael Coe said it was too early speculate.

"If the answer ends up being 'yes,'" Abraham said, "then that opens up a very large market."

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Apple iPhone


The iPhone has proven quite popular in Japan, despite the fact that many phones in the Japanese market have most of the common features that the iPhone lacks. Because of this, a former NTT DoCoMo executive blames the industry for being too insular, designing phones only to carrier specifications.

Japan, which has long had 3G networks (still in relative infancy here in the US), has been in many ways years ahead in innovations compared to other markets. Most phones can scan QR barcodes, pay for items at vending machines, and use a complex system of "emoji" for messaging, all features that the iPhone currently lacks. But data access is built around the i-mode system, developed by NTT DoCoMo in 1999 as sort of an Internet "lite" that is speedy and easily transmitted over cell networks, and Japanese handsets are built to work with the i-mode network.


The iPhone, on the other hand, was built to access the "real Internet," using standard protocols and data formats. And since it wasn't limited to any carriers' specifications, Apple was free to design a device with an innovative interface and relatively open features. "I believe the iPhone is closer to the mobile phone of the future, compared with the latest Japanese mobile phones," Tsuyoshi Natsuno—former head of the i-mode division at DoCoMo—told Nikkei's TechOn. He compared Steve Jobs' vision in developing the iPhone to that of Sony's Ken Kutaragi, responsible for the Playstation and Playstation 2, and Nintendo's Satoshi Iwata, the man behind the Gameboy DS and the Wii.

The iPhone could really shake up the handset designs in Japan. At the same time, the iPhone's popularity there could result in requests for some of the features that are missing, which could lead to the features spreading to other parts of the world. iPhone OS 2.0 already includes an innovative character input method for Chinese and Japanese originally developed in Asia, so there's hope that new developments won't just work in one direction. I'm already having dreams of swiping my iPhone to hop on the CTA or pay my bar tab.

General 2G Network GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
Announced 2007, January
Status Available. Released 2007, June
Size Dimensions 115 x 61 x 11.6 mm
Weight 135 g
Display Type Touchscreen, 16M colors
Size 320 x 480 pixels, 3.5 inches
- Multi-touch input method
- Accelerometer sensor for auto-rotate
- Proximity sensor for auto turn-off
Ringtones Type Polyphonic, MP3
Customization Download
Vibration Yes
- 3.5 mm headset jack
Memory Phonebook Practically unlimited entries and fields, Photocall
Call records 100 received, dialed and missed calls
Card slot No
- 4/8/16 GB shared memory
Data GPRS Yes
HSCSD No
EDGE Yes
3G No
WLAN Wi-Fi 802.11b/g
Bluetooth Yes, v2.0, headset support only
Infrared port No
USB Yes, v2.0
Features OS Mac OS X v10.4.8
Messaging SMS, Email
Browser HTML (Safari)
Games Downloadable (firmware 2.0)
Colors Black
Camera 2 MP, 1600x1200 pixels
- Google Maps
- iPod audio/video player
- PIM including calendar, to-do list
- TV output (firmware 1.1.1)
- Photo browser/editor
- Voice memo
- Integrated handsfree
Battery Standard battery, Li-Ion
Stand-by Up to 250 h
Talk time Up to 8 h

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Friday, August 1, 2008

Apple to Seed OS X 10.5.5


Sources are reporting that Apple is close to issuing the first pre-release build of the next maintenance update to Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard). Mac OS X 10.5.5 is said to include support for new Mac notebooks due out later this year (autumn).


"People familiar with the matter say Apple Developer Connection members and other high-profile software makers could receive the first test builds of the software prior to the start of the weekend," AppleInsider reveals. "The first seedings will almost certainly arrive by the middle of next week," the site notes, citing the same sources.

Apple's latest maintenance update for Leopard, Mac OS X 10.5.4 was released on June 30, just a month after the first beta build had been seeded to the Apple developer community. The update included a major patch that fixed some issues with Adobe's Creative Suite 3.0, but also contained references to the MobileMe service replacing .Mac. The MobileMe requirements list revealed that users would need to run Mac OS X 10.5.4 with iTunes 7.7 in order to benefit from the new features. The same requirements list also noted that 10.4.11 users would be able to use the service too, but not to the extent of Leopard users.

Recent rumors about an upcoming, touch-based Apple portable have given rise to speculation on the MacBook-hardware-upgrade front. Apple's plans for an overhaul are said to include Intel Centrino 2 chips, 16:9 screens, which come in slightly bigger sizes: 14 inch and 15. 6 inch with different resolutions, and a 45nm processor to extend battery life. However, this is the first time that speculation surfaces on OS updates occurring in parallel with hardware upgrades.

While Apple is almost certainly revamping its MacBook line, a new Leopard update is most likely in order as well. As soon as the first seed notes for Mac OS X 10.5.5 emerge, clues to a possible release date are likely to be spotted as well. Just as the AppleInsider post reveals, next week would be a good time to keep an eye out for said documentation.

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Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Windows Codename Mojave


Microsoft has thrown the old Windows Vista in the same arena of public perception as a "new Windows operating system codenamed Mojave." And surprisingly, Windows Vista won. Well, the new Windows Vista at least, now complete with Service Pack 1, not the RTM version that hit the shelves on January 30, 2008. Microsoft's latest Windows operating system is finally getting a much needed breath of fresh air, with the Redmond company focusing to generate positive publicity around the platform, in a move that is long overdue.


"94% of respondents rated Mojave higher than they initially rated Windows Vista before the demo. 0% of respondents rated Mojave lower than they initially rated Windows Vista before the demo," Microsoft revealed. In fact, that Mojave experiment was nothing more than masquerading Windows Vista as the next version of the Windows operating system.

But what the Mojave Experiment really shows is Microsoft's failure to build a brand out of Vista. At this point in time, the characteristics that have become inherently associated with the Vista brand are too well rooted into public perception to be dislodged by any marketing campaign. Microsoft is at a juncture where it might as well throw buckets of money at marketing campaigns and run experiments labeled after all the deserts in the world, Vista will remain Vista.

The Mojave experiment is about 140 people. But not counting the 180 million users that have already made the jump to Windows Vista, the largest past of the 1 billion Windows users will not be that easy to convince, or reach for that matter.

"Of the 140 respondents polled the average pre-demo Vista score was 4.4. The average post-demo Mojave score was 8.5. Many said that they would have rated it higher, but wanted more time to play with it themselves," Microsoft added.

But the Redmond company is right to assume that public perception has impacted and hurt Windows Vista like nothing else. But at the same time, it might just be too late for Vista. But not for Windows 7, the real next version of the Windows client. Experiments like Windows Mojave could at least give Windows 7 a clean slate, because, having Windows Vista at its basis, the next Windows platform is bound to inherit its sins.

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Steve Wozniak on Humans and Machines


Steve Wozniak will be one of the speakers at the next Intel Developer Forum (IDF) held August 19-21 at the Moscone Center West in San Francisco, according to MacsimumNews. The subject of debate will be "Crossing the chasm between humans and machines". Schedule and other sessions are disclosed below.


More than 180 leading companies will feature hands-on demonstrations of their newest innovations and future technologies at the IDF Technology Showcase, spanning sessions like "Inspiring innovation," "Where will 'on-the-go' go?", "MIDs: platform for innovation," "I love TV," and "Developing for the future of computing".


Enlarge picture"Intel Developer Forum (IDF) is where Intel and the ecosystem come together to share their latest innovations and vision for the future of technology," says Intel. "Come hear industry news, learn about trends, and discover opportunities to integrate what is discussed into your projects."

Some of the reasons one could be interested to attend the IDF include the chance to hear breaking news from senior Intel leaders in the seven Forum Keynotes, accessing more than 170 hours of invaluable expert training on the latest processor technologies, digital enterprise, ultra mobility, software etc., and discussing technology with the companies present at the Technology Showcase. "If you are ready to develop the next innovative product, to maximize the capabilities of your current projects, to invent the new reality, your next action is clear: register for IDF today," Intel advises.

Steve Wozniak, aka "Woz," will speak on Day 3 of the IDF alongside Justin Rattner, Intel chief technology officer, about "Crossing the Chasm between Humans and Machines". On the same day, Dr. Moira Gunn of NPR's "Tech Nation" and "BioTech Nation" will have "a candid conversation with one of the most influential pioneers of the technology industry," according to CDRinfo.

Steve Wozniak is an American computer engineer and the co-founder of Apple Computer, now known as Apple Inc. He has contributed greatly to the personal computer revolution of the 1970s, creating the Apple I and Apple II computers in the mid-1970s, with the latter gaining a good dose of popularity, eventually becoming one of the best selling personal computers of its time.

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Microsoft Applauds Victory Over Linux


Once the traditional anti-open source poster child, Microsoft is slowly seeing this aura eroding replaced as a direct consequence of the rise of new, more pressing, rivals such as Google and Apple. Furthermore, the Redmond company, once the epitome of the proprietary software business model, while still retaining its overall strategy, is more and more embracing open source with its own solutions mainly through its new found commitment to interoperability. Microsoft's relaxed approach to what used to be regarded as a fierce potential competitor was on display at the company's Financial Analyst Meeting 2008 the past week. The Redmond giant stopped nothing short of declaring an all out victory over Linux and open source.



"In the industry-standard computing space, a number of years ago we faced the challenge of what was going to happen with Linux and the growth of open source. And fundamentally we made a decision that business customers make rational business decisions, and the reason they choose an open source product is because they can solve the problem better than they can with a Windows-based product. So when you put it in those sorts of terms, the way we compete against Linux is very simple: we build a better product and we have a great value proposition. Today our customers know Linux isn't free and the overall cost of the solution is in fact in most cases quite a bit higher than a Windows-based solution. And if we can offer a better solution at a great price, then customers choose Windows -- and they are. So we are growing strongly," stated Bob Muglia, Senior Vice President, Server and Tools Business.

But Muglia wasn't the only Microsoft top executive to indicate that Windows and the Redmond company's products now have the upper-hand compared to Linux and open source. A similar perspective was offered by Kevin Turner, Microsoft Chief Operating Officer. Turner revealed that Microsoft considers the face-off with open source over the last couple of years nothing short of a success. The statement was based on the fact that the software giant managed to grow its shipments at a rate three times faster compared to Linux and open source.

Turner also added that Microsoft is by no means declaring peace. "And we're really getting the message out about the fraudulent perception of free in the marketplace as it relates to open source. IT pros and decision-makers are starting to get it, that it's not free, that there's a lot of TCO that goes along with that, and there's also substantial security risks that go along with it. And so we're really making some traction in this area, and we're going to continue to hit the gas and go more and more aggressive as it relates to winning share," he stated.

Microsoft Chief Executive Officer Ballmer tackled the same issue during his presentation. The company's CEO talked about the threat of open source technology and business model in the past tense. Ballmer pointed to five years back to open source as a potential threat. Additionally, the Microsoft CEO pointed out that Microsoft's focus is shifting away from keeping open source down and toward Software + Services and the online search and advertising markets.

"Today we live in a world where I think people worry about the risks in software plus services, and advertising. And what do I tell our people, the only way to really win this game is to go out there and do it every day. Nobody talks as much today about the risks in our business that come from Linux and open source. They're still there, they're going to be there every day, and yet we've done a very, very good job, I think, in the marketplace versus those risks," Ballmer stated.

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Internet Explorer 8 Reliability


"For Internet Explorer, reliability means that the browser should always start quickly, perform well, connect to the Internet, and show Web sites without crashing or hanging. Most users want their browser to work, recover smoothly after a crash, and display the Web correctly. Users are not as concerned with what causes the problem, whether that be a poorly functioning add-on or poorly performing website. As part of our ongoing commitment to improve reliability, we have done a great deal of work in IE8 to make the browser more robust in all of these areas: performance, recovery and display," stated Andy Zeigler, Program Manager Reliability and Privacy.


Internet Explorer 8 will deliver, starting with the second Beta build, planned for August 2008, two critical features when it comes down to ensuring reliability: Loosely-Coupled IE and Automatic Crash Recovery. Both could have made the life of IE7 users much easier, but Microsoft is betting on "better late than never" with the introduction of the two items into IE8. However, the availability of the two features only in IE8 will continue to preserve and perpetuate the perception that Microsoft is still playing catch-up to rival products, especially the open source Firefox browser from Mozilla.

Loosely-Coupled IE is the foundation for IE8 Automatic Crash Recovery, and a feature which ensures that the browser is handled as a sum of its active components, with the tabs virtually isolated from the frames. Thanks to this architectural attribute, a crash caused by a website opened in a tab will not kill the entire browser process, but only that specific problem-area. IE8 Beta 2 will deliver Frame Process Merging, additional tab processes and virtual tabs.

"Automatic Crash Recovery: in the event of a crash, Automatic Crash Recovery is designed to get you back to browsing as quickly as possible. It uses LCIE’s tab isolation to help localize the failure to your tab," Zeigler added. "When you crash, we tear down the old tab process, create a new tab process and recover the stored data back into the tab. For many website this works well; however, there are other websites, such as sites with web forms, or sites that you need to login to, that we didn’t recover successfully," he continued revealing that with Beta 2 IE8 would be capable of recovering login information via session cookies and form data.

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New Apple iPhone

Shoppers lined up outside stores around the country this weekend to get their hands on the new Apple iPhone, and Vicksburg was no different. But, for many, they showed up too late.

"Hopefully next week," is all Cedrick Hubbard, 39, had to say Saturday morning as he walked out of the local AT&T store on Pemberton Square Boulevard. AT&T is the exclusive carrier for the new iPhone 3G, which went on sale in 21 countries Friday.


Hubbard, a Vicksburg resident, said he had gone to the store Saturday after a failed attempt at getting the new iPhone the day before.


Shoppers lined up outside stores around the country this weekend to get their hands on the new Apple iPhone, and Vicksburg was no different. But, for many, they showed up too late.

"Hopefully next week," is all Cedrick Hubbard, 39, had to say Saturday morning as he walked out of the local AT&T store on Pemberton Square Boulevard. AT&T is the exclusive carrier for the new iPhone 3G, which went on sale in 21 countries Friday.


Hubbard, a Vicksburg resident, said he had gone to the store Saturday after a failed attempt at getting the new iPhone the day before.

He went to the store at 7 a.m. Friday, about an hour before the it opened. Hubbard said he was wrong in thinking he'd gotten to the store early enough to get the new phone before he had to head to his daughter's soccer camp.

"There were already a lot of people in line, and eventually I had to leave," he said.

Hubbard said he later learned that the local store had sold all of its 40 iPhones that morning, and he was told to come back the next day when the store would have a new shipment.

But Hubbard was told Saturday at the store that the shipment didn't come in and he would have to wait seven to 10 days.

"I should have stayed in line Friday morning, I guess," he said, laughing.

While managers at the Vicksburg AT&T store would not comment on the iPhone shortage, Sue Berry, a spokesman for AT&T in Mississippi, said she didn't think it was as much due to a limited number of phones as it was an unprecedented number of customers.

"Vicksburg doesn't have a very big store," she said. "Apple sends us the shipment that we get. We did not expect in some of our smaller markets people lining up in the wee hours of the morning."

Meanwhile, as the iPhone flew off store shelves Friday it also hit a glitch. Customers across the nation were unable to get their phones working due to a global problem with Apple's iTunes servers that was preventing the phones from being fully activated in-store. Buyers were told to perform the last step at home by connecting their phones to their own computers.

However, iTunes servers were equally hard to reach from home, leaving phones unusable except for emergency calls.

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