Aug 23

Rise and shine! Climate change is a real phenomenon, and carbon legislation is coming–let’s begin to deal with it!

The energy sector can’t claim they weren’t at the table. The principles were developed by the banks in consultation with a who’s-who of power industry giants: American Electric Power, CMS Energy, DTE Energy, NRG Energy, PSEG, Sempra Energy, and Southern Company.

But apparently, the willingness of these utilities to participate in the process of developing The Carbon Principles doesn’t mean everyone in the energy sector is yet reading the writing on the wall regarding climate change. In the February 4 Wall Street Journal, reporter Jeffrey Ball quoted Jeffrey Holzschuh, vice chairman of institutional securities at Morgan Stanley, as saying, “We have to wake up some people who are asleep.”

Given how Wall Street didn’t seemingly exercise any leadership whatsoever on the subprime mortgage debacles, it’s refreshing to see that they’re actually out in front (at least a little bit) on the climate change issue.

Put another way, Wall Street sees federal carbon legislation as imminent, and doesn’t want power sector executives to try to “sneak in” any last coal plants before the legislation whose economics might be threatened in a carbon-constrained world. The banks’ interest is not necessarily environmentally motivated–they simply don’t want to see any more loans go bad–but the effect of this announcement is likely to be positive.

Last week, three financial titans–Citigroup, J.P. Morgan Chase, and Morgan Stanley–announced “The Carbon Principles” to provide guidance to energy companies in managing carbon risks. The upshot of The Carbon Principles is that these big banks are stating explicitly that going forward, they will only provide debt financing to new power projects if proponents can prove that the proposed plants will remain economically viable under future climate change policies.

If a remarkable July 2006 letter (PDF) from Stanley Lewandowski, general manager of the Intermountain Rural Electric Association in Colorado is any indication, it would seem there’s still a number of Rip Van Winkels out there in the electric utility world.

Aug 23

A federal judge has granted authors worldwide four more months to decide whether to participate in a settlement involving Google’s online Book Search service.

Federal judge Denny Chin granted this four-month extension to a group of authors involved in a class action against Google over the search giant’s Book Search service. Click image to enlarge and read page one of his order.

Joanne Zack, an attorney for the author sub-class and the Authors Guild, said she had no comment on the settlement extension.

The source also suggested that Google and the plaintiffs have been working on the settlement for years, so whether the outcome is “years plus two months or years plus four months is neither here nor there.”

But, the source added, those involved in promoting the book service are eager to see it get off the ground and that the four-month extension just means delaying that for two months longer.”

As proposed, the settlement of the case filed by the Authors Guild and the American Association of Publishers in 2005, revolves around Google’s ability to include content from books online, and in particular “orphan” works that are still under copyright, but are out of print or written by authors who can’t be found.

In an interview given to Publisher’s Weekly, Gail Knight Steinbeck, one of the seven authors who asked for the four-month extension, praised Chin’s decision. “We now have (the) time to really sink our teeth into what this agreement will mean,” she told the magazine, adding that she felt that the authors now had the time they needed to figure out whether modifications to the settlement will make it suitable, whether to opt out or whether to fight the settlement.

Chin’s ruling Tuesday seemed to be a direct response to a request made last week by seven authors for a full four-month extension due to the proposed settlement’s complexity.

Chin cited a letter from the authors, as well as a separate letter from a group of academic authors in making his decision.

Update at 3:11 p.m. PDT: This story now includes a comment from Consumer Watchdog.

“This is my understanding of how this goes,” a source close to the legal matter told CNET News. “(Google, the Authors Guild and the American Association of Publishers) blanket the Earth and try to let everybody know about the agreement, and right now (they) believe (they) have blanketed the Earth.”

“Upon consideration of the letters, I will grant approximately a four-month extension,” Chin wrote.

But according to a law clerk in Chin’s court, as well as one of the lawyers in the case, the deadline to opt out of the settlement is now September 4, 2009, and the final fairness hearing in the case will be held on October 7, in New York.

In fact, though, Google may not be happy with the outcome, and some suggest that the very fact that the company asked for a delay at all indicated it didn’t have much faith in its ability to prevail in the end.

But some parties to the deal are objecting to Google’s proposed settlement.

“First, two months’ time is insufficient to understand the implications of a settlement of this scope,” the authors wrote in their request (PDF). “Second, substantial defects in notice of the settlement undermine authors’ ability to assess their rights; and third, more time is required simply to understand the complex terms of the agreement.”

“We’re excited about the proposed settlement agreement regarding Google Book Search,” said Gabriel Stricker, a Google spokesperson, in an e-mail to CNET News. “As we’ve said previously, the settlement is highly detailed, and we want to make sure rightsholders everywhere have enough time to think about it and make sure it’s right for them.”

Absent the ruling, made by Judge Denny Chin of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, authors would have had until May 5 to decide whether to join the settlement or opt out.

Google had sought an extension to the settlement of 60 days. On Monday, the company’s associate general counsel for products and intellectual property wrote in a blog post explaining the request for a 60-day extension that, “The settlement is highly detailed, and we want to make sure rightsholders everywhere have enough time to think about it and make sure it’s right for them.”

“The four-month extension is a big victory for those who oppose the Google Books settlement,” said John Simpson, a consumer advocate with Consumer Watchdog. “It’s a clear recognition by the judge that there are problems with the proposed deal. The extension also gives the Justice Department more time to consider the antitrust issues that we and others have raised and discussed with them.”

Aug 23

The moves are part of Microsoft’s effort to broaden the scope of its security offerings to incorporate data protection, access and management, all built around the concept of identity, Leland said.

The company also is changing the name of its Identity Lifecycle Manager product to Forefront Identity Manager and plans to offer a new set of technologies, code-named Geneva, for helping corporations improve the security of software and services, Microsoft said.

Updated 5:20 p.m. PDT with more details and comments from Microsoft executive.

The releases will follow the timeline of Exchange 2010, which entered public beta this week. More hosted security services will be coming but Leland declined to elaborate.

Microsoft also will finally release on Thursday a new, public beta version of its Stirling security suite, which is the next generation of the Forefront software.

Microsoft wants to offer the ability for corporations to set “fine-grained security policies and have a deeper understanding about who in the organization is trying to access data and what they are trying to do with it,” he said.

The initial beta version of Stirling was released a year ago and was supposed to be refreshed by the end of 2008. It will include client, server, and application security technology and offer a single management console.

The hosted service, which will cost $20 per user per year or less based on volume licensing, targets enterprise Exchange customers and includes a Web-based console for setting up policies for virus and spam protection, said Doug Leland, general manager of Microsoft’s Identity and Security Business Group.

Stirling components will come in staggered releases starting later this year with Forefront Security for Exchange and Threat Management and continuing through the first half of 2010, Leland said.

In addition, Microsoft said it is investing $75 million in a partner ecosystem, including making a strategic partnership with RSA. Other companies integrating with Stirling include Kaspersky, Brocade, Juniper Networks, Guardium, Imperva, Sourcefire, StillSecure, Q1 Labs, and Tipping Point.

The moves are part of the company’s strategy to provide “Business Ready Security.”

Microsoft will begin offering its first hosted security service under the Forefront brand on Thursday, dubbed Forefront Online Security for Exchange and designed to help keep malware and spam out of e-mail in-boxes.

Aug 23

It’s good to see TechCrunch picking up on Dimdim’s launch of its hosted Web-conferencing solution. But I think it misses the main driver of Dimdim’s opportunity:

What we do need are such platforms that can be expanded and integrated into other solutions. Open-source solutions that remain islands, developed and deployed by one company, are much less interesting than open-source solutions that are developed and deployed by a community. Community provides the opportunity for Dimdim.

The open-source strategy followed by Dimdim makes most sense when customers want to manage the software on-premise, and it’s not so important when everything’s hosted in the cloud. But it’s good to see competition nipping at the heals of giant WebEx.

No, it actually makes the most sense for manufacturers that are looking to embed Web conferencing into other solutions. The same is true for Ringside Networks. Arguably, we didn’t need another Web conferencing solution (Dimdim) or social-networking platform (Ringside).

commentary

In short, Dimdim isn’t cool because it’s open-source Web conferencing. It’s cool because of what open-source Web conferencing allows technology providers to do with Web conferencing that price and proprietary licensing hitherto precluded.

Aug 23

Ahh, would that Microsoft really were adding an easy button to its Windows Mobile software. But alas, Microsoft is only announcing that it has hired one of the marketing executives behind Staples “easy button” campaign.

Here’s hoping Peters and the Windows Mobile team have more up their sleeve than a large, non-functioning button.

Todd Peters, who has also worked at Intel, joined Microsoft on Monday as corporate vice president for Windows Mobile Marketing, reporting to mobile-business head Peter Knook. Peters fills the spot created after Suzan Del Bene left last August.

From my perspective, it’s not the marketing of Windows Mobile that needs work. It’s the software.

“Microsoft is gaining a real foothold with its mobile products and services in the consumer world,” Peters said in a statement. “I am looking forward to helping make Windows Mobile a brand not only that people recognize, but that they seek out when choosing the phone that’s right for them.”

After having played around with the latest Windows Mobile 6 software on a demo AT&T Tilt, I still find the software unnecessarily complicated.

Aug 23

Olympus E-520 with 14-42mm lens.

(Credit:
Olympus America)

Like the E-420, the E-520 incorporates the same sensor as in the higher-end E-3. It also seems to use the same viewfinder and LCD as its little brother, and also includes support for face detection (still unusual for a dSLR), wireless flash and tonal-range correcting Shadow Adjustment Technology.

 
Olympus E-420 (body only)
Olympus E-520 (body only)
Pentax K200D (body only) Sensor
10-megapixel Live MOS
17.3 x 13.0 mm
10-megapixel Live MOS
17.3 x 13.0 mm
10-megapixel CCD
23.5 x 15.7mm Sensitivity range
ISO 100 - ISO 1600
ISO 100 - ISO 1600
ISO 100 - ISO 1600 Focal-length multiplier
2.0x
2.0x
1.5x Fastest continuous shooting
3.5fps
6 raw/JPEG unknown
3.5fps
8 raw/JPEG unknown
2.8fps
4 raw/4 JPEG Mechanical image stabilization
No
Yes
Yes Viewfinder
95 percent coverage
0.92x magnification
14mm eye point
95 percent coverage
0.92x magnification
14mm eye point
96 percent coverage
0.85x magnification
Eye point n/a Autofocus
3 points
11 points contrast detection
3 points phase detection
11 points Live View
Yes
Yes
No Wireless flash controller
Yes
Yes
Yes LCD size
2.7 inches
176-degree viewing angle
2.7 inches
176-degree viewing angle
2.7 inches
160-degree viewing angle Price (body only)
$449.99
$599.99
$699

The company also announced a new f4.0-5.6 9-to-18mm wide-angle lens (19-to-36mm equivalent), shipping this fall, though at $599 I think my idea of an “affordable consumer lens” and Olympus’ diverges a bit. Slated to ship in July, a body-only version of the E-520 will run about $599.99, while a kit with an ED 14-42mm f3.5/5.6 Zuiko Digital Zoom Lens (24-to-48mm equivalent) has an estimated street price of $699.99.

The following product is available:

On Sale Now: $449.95 - $990.08
View the latest prices for Olympus Evolt E-520 (with 14-42mm lens)

Today, Olympus announced the E-520 dSLR, the replacement for the E-510 and step-up model from its E-420. The feature set is very similar to the E-420, but for the extra dough you do get some significant capabilities, such as sensor-shift stabilization (including an updated system with a mode that accommodates panning while vertically oriented), a larger continuous-shooting buffer and a deeper grip.

Aug 23

CNET Reviews will have more on the new applications shortly.

iTunes version 7.7, available now for Windows and Mac, includes the App Store, a method for delivering third-party iPhone applications.

The Facebook application

(Credit:
Apple)

The download appears to have some quirks: for this user, the version number remained at 7.6.2, and no direct link to the App Store was available, but it could still be reached by linking here.

(Credit:
Apple)

Apple's new App Store

The App Store has 27 pages of applications, including games like FreeCell and Sudoku, as well as applications for Facebook, MySpace, The New York Times, Pandora, PayPal, and Twitter.

Apple has launched the latest version of its iTunes Store a day earlier than anticipated.

The newest version of the iPhone is due out Friday. The App Store will be preinstalled on the new
iPhone 3G, but it will also be available as a download for owners of the current iPhone.

Aug 23

(Credit:
Rockstar)
Grand Theft Awesome: The main attraction is the city itself, and it’s beautifully rendered and full of activity. The game’s random characters occasionally get involved in amusing bits of action–we saw a pedestrian get hit by a
car, and a minute later, an ambulance pulled up and a paramedic got out (he just stood around after that, but it was still impressive).
The game starts out slowly, giving you a chance to get comfortable with the environment and controls, and giving the story and characters a chance to breathe. The on-foot segments of the game no longer feel tacked on. A decent targeting system and the ability to take cover behind objects is a huge plus and makes shootouts fun instead of frustrating. The dialog and voice acting are about as good as you’ll find in a video game, and long, talky scenes give the characters a chance to develop. Multiplayer is not as an integral part of the game as it was to Halo 3 or Call of Duty 4, but the ability to play various multiplayer modes online over the entire city map is great. The in-game radio stations are still a big highlight, and we loved that the on-air DJs include cult figures such as Roy Ayers and Femi Kuti.

Grand Theft Annoying: Main characters like Niko Bellic and his cousin Roman look great, but many of the secondary characters are sometimes ugly, looking a bit like clunky PS2 holdovers. The camera still has a little trouble with tight, indoor spaces, making navigation difficult. Some of the cars are especially hard to control, and using the handbrake to pull off hairpin turns is more difficult than in previous GTA games. We wouldn’t play most of the mini-games, such as bowling and darts, more than once or twice, and activities like shopping for clothes have an awkward interface, making it a chore to try on different looks.
One area that hasn’t really been updated is the save system. Missions can be long and complicated, and often require split-second timing, so not having a more modern save-anywhere system can turn off mainstream and casual gamers (or anyone who only has 15 to 20 minutes at a stretch to play).

If you’re reading this, there’s a good chance you’re very interested in a video game being released Tuesday, April 29, called Grand Theft Auto IV (actually something like the eighth game in the series, depending on how you count).

(Credit:
Rockstar)

We previously tried the game out a couple of times while it was still in development, and now that we’ve had a chance to give the final shipping version a serious run-through over this past weekend, here are our initial thoughts on the final game’s pluses and minuses.

Aug 23

Ozzie did hint at a technology that will create a seamless mesh out of PCs and connected services via the Web. Ozzie said:

After getting the Yahoo question out of the way, he outlined the various initiatives across Microsoft to embrace the cloud via connected devices, entertainment, productivity, business and development. He didn’t add much to what has already been said about Microsoft’s quest to embrace and extend the cloud with its technologies as well as the standard protocols that enable the Web to be useful.

Ray Ozzie on stage at Mix 2008

Just imagine the possibilities of unified application management across the device mesh, centralized, Web-based deployment of device-based applications. Imagine an app platform that’s cognizant of all of your devices. Now, as it so happens, we’ve had a team at Microsoft working on this specific scenario for some time now, starting with the PC and focused on the question of how we might make life so much easier for individuals if we just brought together all your PCs into a seamless mesh, for users, for developers, using the Web as a hub.

In the world of cloud and utility computing applications and the back end will need to be “refactored.” for this new world. Apps will take advantage of the unique strengths of each device. New front end development skills will be required, Ozzie says, along with back-end technologies.

(Credit:
Dan Farber)

In closing he told the crowd of developers, “I’d like you to bet on us, and on the power of Internet and the magic of software across a world of devices.” In other words, join the Silverlight, XAML revolution and become part of the Microsoft cloud.

Vince Mira, the 15-year-old reincarnation of Johnny Cash

Erick Schonfeld of TechCrunch found that Microsoft owns the Mesh.com URL, and it leads to a Windows Live ID sign-in page for a site that isn’t Live.

He noted the huge growth coming in search and advertising (which Yahoo can help Microsoft could intercept) and reference the talented engineering resources that Yahoo would bring to Microsoft.

As News.com’s Ina Fried chronicled in her play-by-play of the keynote, Ozzie offered carefully orchestrated nod to the bid for Yahoo. “I can say its [Yahoo] already added some interesting twists to what promises to be a really, really exciting year,” he said.

Following a most amazing pre-keynote performance by Vince Mira, a 15-year-old with the voice of Johnny Cash without the gravel, Microsoft Chief Software Architect took the stage to update the software and services strategy, in the context of content, commerce and community, for company.

(Credit:
Dan Farber)

Aug 23

As was heavily predicted, the new laptop is not quite an ultraportable, but still very small. Mimicking the 13-inch silhouette of the current MacBook line, it’s .76-inch thick at its thickest part. Apple calls it the “world’s thinnest notebook.”

With Macworld kicking off today, that tangled web of rumor, innuendo, and outright fabrication known as the Internet has been abuzz with all kinds of supposedly inside top-secret documentation, downloaded directly from Steve Jobs’ frontal lobe.

The MacBook Air includes the usual iSight camera, plus what looks like a fairly standard
Mac-like keyboard, an LED backlit display, an ambient light sensor, and a big touchpad that works with multitouch gestures, such as rotating a photo by twisting your fingers on the touchpad.

The MacBook Air is available for preorder now, and it ships in two weeks, starting at $1,799.

As for what’s inside this slim laptop, we’re looking at a 1.6GHz or 1.8GHz Intel Core 2 Duo CPU, custom-made by Intel to fit into the slim chassis, 2GB of RAM, and a choice of either an 80GB standard 1.8-inch hard drive or a 64GB SSD drive (which really should be standard for something so forward-looking). Bluetooth and 802.11n were expected, but the lack of an optical drive is a surprise–it’s a smart space- and power-saving move we expect to see in more ultraportable laptops. External drives will work, and the Air can connect wirelessly to an optical drive in another nearby computer.

Our own Michelle Thatcher is live on-site at Macworld, and will be bringing us her in-person take on the new Apple laptop very soon, so stay tuned for that.

(Credit:
Daniel Terdiman/CNET Networks)

The oh-so-slim Macbook Air

Naturally, we didn’t believe a word of any of the oh-so-fake “leaked” Steve Jobs keynote addresses and product spec sheets, but one area where most of the speculators were at least partially right was in Apple’s latest laptop, the MacBook Air.

The hype was already huge preshow, so it’s hard to say if anything could really live up to it, but this seems, at first glance, like a solid addition to the MacBook lineup. We’ll have to keep waiting for a true ultraportable, something missing from the Apple lineup for several years.

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