Author: Serkadis

  • Sony’s TransferJet Hands On Experience


    Last week at CES Sony finally brought a couple of products embedded with TransferJet technology that are ready for the market and for you to play with. TransferJet is a new Close Proximity Wireless Transfer Technology enabling the high speed transfer of large data files (photos, HD images, etc.) between electronic devices such as mobile phones, digital cameras, digital video cameras, computers and TVs. Using this technology, data can be sent at speeds of 560Mbps. Here is a little recap for some of you who are not familiar with this amazing way of wirelessly transferring content from one device to another.

    TransferJet is an extremely simple wireless technology which eliminates the need for complex setup and operation. For example, just touching a TV with a digital camera enables photos to be instantaneously displayed on the TV screen. Alternatively, downloaded music content can be easily enjoyed by touching a mobile phone to a portable audio player. TransferJet can be used as a Universal Interface among a wide variety of consumer electronics devices.

    At CES we have only witnessed wireless photo and video transfer between two devices. Currently Sony will be pushing two digital cameras to the market that are TransferJet compatible: DSC-TX7 and DSC-HX5V. To enable those cameras you will need to purchase TransferJet Memory Stick (MSJ-X8G) that we have unearthed earlier from FCC. If you are going to own two of those cameras, you will be able to easily swap images between the two or share it with a digital photo frame. I remember I was able to do so before with my Sony CyberShot DSC-G1 cameras however it utilized Wi-Fi between the two and involved a bit more complex but doable process of sharing and exchanging pictures.

    Sony also came up with a TransferJet Station (TJS-1) – an external solution in the form of a USB dock that you can connect to your device (notebook, digital frame, TV, etc) and make it TransferJet ready!

    So with this TransferJet Station it is pretty easy to store, view and share content. Viewing content on a PC or HDTV is a snap, eliminating the need for extra cables. Just set your camera on the TransferJet Station and it will display your photos for you.Also saving photos to your PC or hard drive is going to be easier, simply place your camera on the TransferJet station and it will move the files to your PC or hard drive. I was thinking of getting one and pair it with my VAIO Server VGF-HS1. As far as I remember last year Sony showed it off embedded within this circular looking server as well as VAIO TP1.

    The last product that we checked out was a VAIO F series notebook with this techy embedded on its left-hand palm rest area (it so reminded me of Felica use on Japanese notebooks). It will work the same way, if you need to quickly transfer pics to  your notebook without any USB wires. Again I have done it before with DLNA enabled notebook and my Wi-Fi Sony G1 and G3 cameras, however the speed and simplicity of TransferJet beats Wi-Fi solution.

    Sony also showed off the Japan-only Sony Ericsson Cyber-shot S001 KDDI/au phone with built-in Transfer Jet, which you can see more of in the video.

    OK, big question…will this technology take off and will the consumers be utilizing it? Definitely time will tell and if the prices come down and more manufacturers jump on this trend, therefore more (let’s call it TJ) products will be out there, the results will be good! Meanwhile check out the video and let us know if you have any questions.

  • REPORT: US Officials Hunting Two Islamic Militants Who May Already Be In US Planning Attack

    Soldiers Anti-Terrorism

    The White House and the U.S. National Security Council may reveal new intelligence about a possible follow-on attack in the United States by al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, Stratfor is telling its subscribers. The report cites “a source.”

    “It is believed that the Dec. 25 failed attack by a Nigerian against a U.S. airliner was a test run,” Stratfor reports. “According to the source, authorities are searching for two militants who are either en route to the United States or already in the country to carry out an attack.”

    The alert from Stratfor is not available on the non-subscription part of its website.

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  • BoomTown’s 1998 Rob Glaser Profile: A Web Pioneer Does a Delicate Dance With Microsoft [BoomTown]

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    BoomTown did an interview last night with outgoing RealNetworks (RNWK) Rob Glaser, after the announcement yesterday of his departure as CEO from the company he founded and led for 16 years.

    That will be posting that later today, but here is a profile I did of Glaser when I was covering the Internet for The Wall Street Journal, after spending time with him in Seattle.

    It’s from February 12, 1998–yes, that means Rob and I are genuine Web antiques–and focuses on Glaser’s decidedly complicated relationship with his former employer, Microsoft (MSFT).

    As you will see, it comes from a much different era of the Internet, which Microsoft was much scarier and the medium was still in its infancy. My favorite line was a description of him as “radiating so much intensity that his face resembles a clenched fist.”

    Here it is:

    Rob Glaser learned the software business as one of Bill Gates’s most aggressive proteges at Microsoft Corp. So he knows all too well the anguishing strategic decision that most software entrepreneurs inevitably confront: Go head-to-head against Mr. Gates and risk annihilation. Or cooperate with him–and risk annihilation.

    Now an Internet entrepreneur himself, Mr. Glaser thinks he has another strategy: A delicate dance with Microsoft that combines a little bit of competition and a little bit of cooperation.

    His newly public company, RealNetworks Inc., popularized the use of realtime audio and video on the Internet’s World Wide Web. It already has more than 18 million registered users of its free “streaming” software for receiving multimedia over the Net. It also has a rapidly growing business selling server software for transmitting audio and video to Website operators.

    But it stands squarely in the path of the strategy that has drawn Microsoft into trouble with antitrust regulators: Emulating innovative products, integrating them into its operating systems and then giving them away free. RealNetworks’ daunting task is to prove it can do a better job of outmaneuvering Microsoft than Netscape Communications Inc., the browser pioneer whose market share and profitability have been devastated by Microsoft’s integration strategy.

    Mr. Glaser insists he and the software giant can coexist. “I learned an amazing amount from Bill,” he says, speaking in staccato bursts and radiating so much intensity that his face resembles a clenched fist. “We knew we could either compete head-on like Netscape or do something a lot more interesting.”

    His strategy is known internally as “coopetition.” Out of mistrust, Netscape two years ago rejected an unsolicited offer from Microsoft to become a partner and investor. But Mr. Glaser approached his former colleagues last summer seeking just such an alliance. In July, he sold a nonvoting 10% stake to Microsoft for $30 million, and licensed RealNetworks’ technology to the software giant for another $30 million. Microsoft also agreed to bundle RealNetworks’ software with Internet Explorer.

    In making the deal, Mr. Glaser helped himself to Microsoft’s cash and prestige and calculated that Microsoft wouldn’t consider streaming technology to be as strategic to its future as the browser.

    “What we were trying to do in the partnership is to set it up so that our success would not disadvantage their core business,” Mr. Glaser says. “Microsoft is a very paranoid company and so we have tried to create an environment where while they might be covetous of some of our success, analytically they would not fear it.”

    The deal gave Mr. Gates the opportunity, if he so desired, to clone RealNetworks’ products during the period when they were licensed to Microsoft. “There’s no question they could use our own technology to become extremely vigorous competitors and try to put us out of business,” says James Breyer, a director and member of Accel Partners, a venture-capital firm that helped finance RealNetworks.

    So Mr. Glaser needs to stay ahead of Microsoft by rapidly improving his software, accumulating enough customers to become the standard for sending audio and video over the Internet and diversifying into related businesses.

    Last month, for example, he announced an agreement with one of Microsoft’s archrivals, Sun Microsystems Inc., to finetune his software to perform better on Sun’s popular Internet servers than on Windows-based servers.

    “They are neither friend nor foe, but Microsoft is most certainly the environment we live in,” says Mr. Glaser, now 36 years old. “It’s how we work within that environment that will make all the difference.”

    Mr. Glaser’s own personality seems suited to the relationship’s contradictions. He has been a committed liberal since his days at Yale University, where he wrote a column called “What’s Left” for the student newspaper. He initially named his company Progressive Networks to reflect his politics. And he donated 700,000 RealNetworks to causes related to freedom of speech and environmental issues after the public offering, and promises to contribute 5% of the company’s future profits as well.

    But he became a notoriously hardcharging and sometimes arrogant manager after he joined Microsoft in 1983, at the age of 21. Some colleagues dubbed him a “screamer.” When deadlines approached for projects, several former colleagues at Microsoft say he became increasingly revved-up, downing one Diet Coke after another and erupting at even tiny mistakes. “My intensity sometimes manifested itself in less positive ways,” Mr. Glaser concedes.

    “Like Microsoft, Rob was smart, young, perhaps a little hard to take, and convinced he was absolutely right about a lot of stuff,” recalls Mike Slade, a friend of Mr. Glaser’s at Microsoft who now runs an Internet publishing company, Starwave Corp. “But that was what was rewarded at the company and everything was going too fast there for a lot of management training.”

    The pace did take its toll. Even though Mr. Glaser rose to become vice president of multimedia systems and one of Mr. Gates’s favorites, his last years at Microsoft were rocky. Some at the company point to an internal power struggle with Microsoft’s head of technology, Nathan Myhrvold. “They both wanted to be Bill’s boy genius and visionary for the company,” says a colleague. “Obviously, Nathan won.”

    Mr. Glaser dismisses tales of infighting, blaming his departure on a diminishing feeling of “joy” in his work. “I began to think that Bill had the best job of all,” he says. In 1993, at the age of 31, he resigned, with about $15 million of stock in his pocket.

    His retirement didn’t last long. Soon after, he saw a version of the Mosaic browser, the first graphical interface software for navigating the Web. He had an epiphany, he says, realizing that the Internet could eventually become a major purveyor of audio and video.

    Mr. Glaser sank about $1 million of his own money into a start-up that would first produce software for compressing and transmitting sound. With additional funding from friends, such as Lotus founder Mitch Kapor, RealAudio 1.0 quickly made its debut in April 1995.

    RealAudio was greeted with more than a little disdain from the Internet elite because it was a tinny and unsatisfying experience for most users. But it gave the Internet a voice, and Mr. Glaser kept plugging away, improving fidelity and striking deals with more content providers to use it on their Web sites. The hook: Free player software for consumers.

    He is attempting to repeat the process with RealVideo. It currently provides small, jerky moving pictures but will, he believes, someday transform the Internet as data transmission speeds increase. In a recent demo of the player, Mr. Glaser selected a music video by the languid singer Jewel, he joked, “because she doesn’t move around too much.”

    Meanwhile, Microsoft has been developing its own Media Player and NetShow streaming software, partly with technology acquired by purchasing VXtreme, a RealNetworks competitor.

    The Microsoft products are now free. But the company may decide to charge for the latest version of NetShow coming out this year, which would be good for RealNetworks. Meanwhile, Microsoft will continue to bundle RealNetworks’ player software with the Microsoft browser, also good for RealNetworks. And the day after RealNetworks’ Sun deal, Microsoft announced an agreement to make its own Media Player compatible with RealNetworks’ server software, yet another positive development for RealNetworks.

    “The user only wants it to work,” says Rich Tong, a Microsoft marketing vice president. “So it is good business to work with RealNetworks to set standards for compatibility and expand the market for all of us.”

    Skeptics assert that RealNetworks has forged only a temporary truce with Microsoft. Like Netscape, it must continually confront the challenge of trying to make money on technology that Microsoft gives away. RealNetworks charges $29.95 for an enhanced version of the player it gives away free, and $695 and up for its most powerful server software.

    Some large companies are snapping the products up. Mercedes Benz, Eastman Kodak and Lockheed Martin are buying RealNetworks’ latest software, RealSystem 5.0, to bring their internal networks to life. Boeing Co., for example, uses RealNetworks’ software to communicate with employees world-wide and conduct training sessions. A variety of media concerns such as Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, the Public Broadcasting System, AOL, Fox News’s 24-hour newsfeed and Paramount Pictures use it as well.

    Mr. Glaser recently cut a deal with Macromedia Inc., the largest provider of animation-editing software, to transmit animated material over the Internet. RealNetworks is also operating multimedia Web sites for other companies, and has a joint venture with MCI Communications Corp. to create a broadcast network on the Web.

    All these initiatives are running up big bills. Earlier this month, RealNetworks reported that revenue more than doubled for 1997, to $32.7 million from $14 million the year before. But heavy research and development spending tripled losses to $11.2 million, or 40 cents a share, from $3.8 million, or 14 cents a share. The company’s high costs, plus the looming threat of Microsoft, have depressed the stock, which hovers at around $16 a share, only slightly above the $12.50 a share it opened at when it went public in November.

    But Mr. Glaser exudes confidence. His intense personality seems calmer these days. Once divorced, he now has a steady girlfriend and is traveling more frequently, including a summer trip to New Zealand, Australia and French Polynesia, where he made the decision to take RealNetworks public. His 13.5 million shares are worth $218.5 million. And he thinks he has Microsoft figured out. “People in Silicon Valley see things unnecessarily in black and white: You either hate Microsoft or you are a vassal of them. I am saying there is a third way.”

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  • Real Networks Share Price No Longer *BUFFERING* [Digital Daily]

    rnwkInvestors have met RealNetworks founder Rob Glaser’s decision to step down as CEO with a ringing endorsement. At $4.54, the company’s shares are trading up well over 17 percent on the news, which spiked them to a 52-week high of $4.59 Wednesday when it was first announced.

    Real’s (RNWK) share price Wednesday when we first broke the news of Glaser’s departure? About $3.80.

    Clearly, investors are hoping a shift in strategy will follow this sudden management reorganization and that it will transform Real into a more profitable company. “There is clearly a lot of work still to be done at Real, but Glaser has set the foundation, leaving a pristine balance sheet, at least one business that is in great shape today (TPS), one that has tremendous value potential in the future (games), a couple of cash cows (RealPlayer, Superpass),” Morgan Keegan & Company Tavis McCourt wrote in a note to investors today. “Glaser and Real management have also returned Rhapsody to a cash flow neutral position after years of significant losses, and based on an 8K, may be looking to divest more of its ownship in this business in the near term. In any event, there are plenty of opportunities for new leadership to create value from a base of some very unique businesses and capabilities.”

    Indeed. First step, unload Rhapsody and the games business.

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  • Apple confirms the tablet in letter to Gawker, but doesn’t

    tablet

    In case you were unaware, Gawker and Valleywag have announced a “Scavenger Hunt” offering some serious dough for pictures, video or hands-on time with the Apple tablet. It didn’t take long for Apple’s representation to respond. In a letter to Gabriel Snyder of Valleywag, Apple says that Gawker has “crossed the line” and that Apple “insists that you immediately discontinue the Scavenger Hunt.” Perhaps the most damning evidence, if you can even call it that, is the line in the letter that says, “The information you are willing to pay for, such as photos of a yet-to-be released product, constitutes Apple trade secrets.”

    Without showing a stutter-step in its hubris, Gawker’s offer still stands even after the letter was sent. Gawker has also made it abundantly clear to would-be martyrs to stay “within the bounds of the law” even though the nature of the Scavenger Hunt is entirely questionable. Do you think someone will step up with the proof? Has Apple’s legal team already outed the unannounced device? Let us know your thoughts and hit the break for a copy of the legal document.

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  • Combine the NBC Late Night Battle with Famous Sci-Fi Movies [Photoshop Contest]

    This Conan/Leno/Zucker/NBC shitshow that’s currently going down is pretty fascinating stuff. Do you know what would make it more fascinating? If it the whole thing took the guise of your favorite sci-fi movies.

    So go ahead and mix up the major players of the NBC story with classic sci-fi. Then send your best entries to me at [email protected] with NBC Sci-Fi in the subject line. Save your files as JPGs or GIFs, and use a FirstnameLastname.jpg naming convention using whatever name you want to be credited with. Send your work to me by next Tuesday morning, and I’ll pick three top winners and show off the rest of the best in our Gallery of Champions. Get to it!







  • 2010 Detroit: Nelly’s album cover to feature tricked out 2011 Mustang GT

    Nelly Talks To Press at 2010 NAIAS

    Hip-hop star Nelly dropped by the 2010 Detroit Auto Show to let us know that his upcoming album’s artwork will feature the 2011 Ford Mustang GT 5.0L V8. The album, set to launch this later this year, will feature a tricked-out 2011 Mustang GT customized by DUB Magazine.

    “I don’t care where you grew up, everyone knows the Mustang. At some point, you’ve had a conversation about a Mustang – and it was probably one about you wanting to get behind the wheel of one,” says Nelly. “I’ve always loved the Mustang; the vehicle has power to the point where you can’t help but want to hit the pedal. And the newest one? More power, hotter style.”

    Nelly’s 2011 Mustang GT features a custom gloss black paint job with flat black racing stripes and a Street Scenes body kit complete with 22- and 24-inch wheels and Pirelli tires. The vehicle also gets a billet grille, hood scoop, tinted taillights, angel eyes headlights and a Borla exhaust.

    Nelly says he can’t wait to hit the streets in his new 2011 Mustang GT.

    Click here for our post on the 2011 Mustang GT from the 2010 Detroit Auto Show.

    Nelly’s 2011 Ford Mustang GT:

    2011 DUB Edition Mustang 5.0

    2010 Detroit: 2011 Ford Mustang GT:

    2010 Detroit: 2011 Ford Mustang GT 2010 Detroit: 2011 Ford Mustang GT 2010 Detroit: 2011 Ford Mustang GT 2010 Detroit: 2011 Ford Mustang GT

    All Photos Copyright © 2009 Stephen Calogera – egmCarTech.

    – By: Kap Shah


  • Tiger Woods Haitian Earthquake Relief Donation?

    Is billionaire golfer Tiger Woods emering from obscurity to lend a hand to the earthquake-stricken island of Haiti?

    Russell Simmons sure thinks so!

    russellsimmonsTiger Woods Oprah Interview

    The hip-hop mogul has been encouraging his Twitter followers to donate to Haiti relief funds, and he claims that shamed sportsman Tiger Woods is so moved by the tragedy in the Caribbean, he’s donating to the effort.

    “Tiger woods is doing something AMAZING!!!!” Russell Tweeted early Thursday, later adding, “I heard Tiger Woods [is] donating to send a cargo plane with a mobile hospital out there. Keep ur prayers high!”


  • Official MobileMe Gallery iPhone App Released by Apple

    Apple released a dedicated MobileMe iDisk app not too long ago for those of us who stubbornly continue to pay good money for a subscription, but iDisk, as the app is called, is really just a file manager and nothing more. Today, Apple unveiled another MobileMe-specific iPhone application, this one called Gallery (iTunes link). You can probably guess what it does.

    Gallery allows you to browse your MobileMe photo galleries, something you aren’t able to access using iDisk. The app has all the polish and intuitive UI design you’d expect from Apple, and it keeps things simple and to the point. Even if you’re an avid MobileMe Gallery user with many albums, you should have no trouble browsing through albums and finding specific photos.

    My problem is, as you may notice from the screenshots, I’m not really an avid user of the Gallery feature of MobileMe. In fact, I had to upload a new album (“Dogs”) for the purpose of this post, having only had my Random one from before, with a grand total of four photos. Even using established platforms like Facebook and Flickr, I tend not to have or share too many pictures.

    That said, I like the way the MobileMe Gallery app works on my iPhone, and can see how it would be great in conjunction with iPhoto for both backing up and making it easy to share photos from events like family get-togethers and birthdays, etc. That way, I could store a lot less photos on my iPhone’s camera reel, and basically carry around my entire library in my pocket for showing off to friends and relatives anywhere I have Internet access.

    A feature that’s very promising is the ability to configure Safari to open MobileMe Gallery links directly in the app, sort of the way the new Facebook uses “fb://” links to open its own application. I say promising because although it seems terribly convenient, especially if you do a lot of mobile browsing, which I do, I’ve never actually visited another person’s MobileMe gallery in my entire year and a bit of being a subscriber.

    It wouldn’t be the first time an iPhone app has resulted in me actually using a service I never thought I would, and it likely won’t be the last, either. Plus it’s free, though you have to have a MobileMe subscription to use it, but it does help justify the cost of that by another couple of degrees. Good news for suckers like me.

  • Autoblog Podcast #161 – Detroit Auto Show recap

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    Click above for the Autoblog Podcast in iTunes, RSS or listen now!

    It’s a North American International Auto Show recap for Episode #161 of the Autoblog Podcast. Chris, Sam and Dan mull the top five of the show before speaking more in depth about some unveilings. The new Chevrolet Aveo gets us started before we move on to another sharply styled General Motors concept, the GMC Granite. We touch briefly on the Honda CR-Z, and then Toyota’s FT-CH comes up next before we call it a night with the Volkswagen New Compact Coupe Concept.

    We’ll be back again next week with more Autoblog Podcast goodness. Until then, fill in with Joystiq and Engadget. Let us know what you think of our podcast by dropping us an email at Podcast at Autoblog dot com, reviewing the show in iTunes, filling out our survey, or even leaving us a voicemail on our Google Voice line 734-288-8POD (734-288-8763). Thanks for listening!

    Continue reading Autoblog Podcast #161 – Detroit Auto Show recap

    Autoblog Podcast #161 – Detroit Auto Show recap originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 14 Jan 2010 14:47:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Hughes Telematics takes us for a ride with Mercedes’ latest mbrace tech, demonstrates ‘OnStar in a box’ [w/video]

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    Click above to watch video after the jump

    You may not have heard of Hughes Telematics before, but this offshoot of the great Hughes empire provides the tech that, amongst other things, powers Mercedes’ latest mbrace technology, Benz’s response to OnStar. But that’s not all they do; the company is working on its own advanced infotainment system for the car, and also showed off a system informally called “OnStar in a box” – an easy-to-install device that will let you track exactly where your car is at any time, how fast it was going, and even what kind of mileage it was geting at the time. Somewhat more troubling, it also could allow others access to the same information, people like your insurance company. Good stuff, or Big Brother with an OBDII connection? Read on to find out.

    Continue reading Hughes Telematics takes us for a ride with Mercedes’ latest mbrace tech, demonstrates ‘OnStar in a box’ [w/video]

    Hughes Telematics takes us for a ride with Mercedes’ latest mbrace tech, demonstrates ‘OnStar in a box’ [w/video] originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 14 Jan 2010 14:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Report: Chrysler may abandon damaged Sebring nameplate

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    Chrysler Sebring replacement might not be a Sebring

    Remember when Ford thought so little of its longtime best-selling “Taurus” nameplate that it spent a fortune trying to push the replacement “500″ badge on customers? That lasted about as long as a “Project Runway” cycle. Well, Chrysler might be going the same route in the near future. Ward’s Automotive is reporting that Chrysler is about to drop its “Sebring” nameplate to shake the stink off its replacement expected later this year.

    Chrysler is about to launch nine models in the coming year that are so thoroughly upgraded they are calling them “new.” The Sebring is one of those models. The butt of many jokes within the industry and a slow seller to boot, the Sebring has become a symbol of Chrysler’s long, slow slide into near oblivion. It’s not surprising then to hear that when the heavily revamped vehicle appears at the end of 2010, it’s not likely to wear the “Sebring” name.

    We don’t think the name had much to do with Sebring’s failure, but we understand the desire to convince buyers that the replacement is a fresh start for this mid-size sedan, if not for Chrysler as a whole. A thoroughly reworked Sebring, however, might not be enough to capture new buyers if the name association is still so unpalatable. Maybe they should call it the Camry.

    [Source: Ward’s Automotive]

    Report: Chrysler may abandon damaged Sebring nameplate originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 14 Jan 2010 13:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Gran Turismo 5 demo hits 1M downloads in three weeks, game delayed indefinitely

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    GT Academy demo screenshots – Click above for high-res image gallery

    The GT Academy, the partnership between Sony’s Gran Turismo game and Nissan, released a time trial demo last month to begin searching for a racer good enough to jump from high-def screen to high-speed chicane. Last year Lucas Ordoñez was the first to go from gamer to racer, scoring a podium in his first race with the GT Academy team. You need to get on it if you want to follow in his footsteps, because you’ve already got a million competitors – that’s how many folks have downloaded the time trial in the first three weeks.

    If that isn’t convincing enough, there is another less appealing reason to download the demo: GT5’s release has been delayed indefinitely. Sony didn’t indicate on its web site what caused the delay, saying only, “We apologize for any inconvenience.” It was not, however, the previously attributed marketing issues. Some reports point to “production issues” with the $60 million game. London’s Times newspaper, however, said analysts think this could be a deliberate Sony strategy. They suggest that Final Fantasy XIII did so well that Sony wants to release GT5 in the next financial year, after March, to lengthen the sales boost.

    We’ll lean toward production issues as opposed to a deliberate strategy. Heck, we’d believe werewolves caused the delay before we’d believe this was planned. The game does look phenomenal but it’s already three years overdue, meanwhile Forza 3 eats into market share. On top of that, we have never heard of a successful business strategy that involved telling your biggest fans, repeatedly, “We don’t have it yet,” then switching to, “We don’t know when we’re gonna have it… um, we’ll call you.”

    Will GT5 do well whenever it shows? Of course. But we will wonder how well it could have done. For now there’s always the GT Academy demo, and among those million downloaders you’ll want to look out for the one who goes by the name Duke Nukem Forever (whose initials are, coincidentally, DNF). There’s a press release on the time trial after the jump, and a pretty bunch of high-res screenshots below. Thanks to everyone who sent tips!

    Gallery: Gran Turismo 5

    [Source: Reuters]

    Continue reading Gran Turismo 5 demo hits 1M downloads in three weeks, game delayed indefinitely

    Gran Turismo 5 demo hits 1M downloads in three weeks, game delayed indefinitely originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 14 Jan 2010 13:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • New Ping Feature in waze Due Shortly

    The good folks over at waze don’t like to stand still very long.  Today we received word that a new version of waze, the free, social mapping software, should be going live later today or tomorrow.  So what’s new in the app?

    Like practically all mobile app updates, this version includes new performance fixes, improved responsiveness and lower memory use.   The main, new feature in waze is called “ping a wazer” which gives users the ability to send pings directly through waze to other users.  The opt-in service allows other waze ping you and check on weather conditions, road hazards, or just to say, “hello”.  Oh, you can ping others without setting yourself up for pings.

    If you’ve already installed waze you’re advised to keep an eye out for the update.  If you don’t have waze yet, we’re advising you check it out!

  • Marchionne: Alfa Romeo U.S. launch put on hold

    Fiat had planned on reintroducing Alfa Romeo back to the U.S. market as part of the brand’s centenary celebrations later this year. According to Fiat / Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne, plans have now been put on hold.

    Speaking at the 2010 Detroit Auto Show, Marchionne said that Alfa must first prove it has “a right to exist as a separate brand” before being expanded into other markets.

    He said that if Alfa Romeo could not make a good product and business case for the North American market, it would remain a Euro-only brand.

    – By: Kap Shah

    Source: AutoCar


  • Blippy, the Twitter for credit cards, gets funding from Twitter co-founder

    blippyBlippy, a site where users can share their shopping habits, just raised $1.6 million in seed funding. What’s really impressive isn’t the size of the round, but rather the roster of investors, which includes famed venture firm Sequoia Capital, Charles River Ventures (where Blippy was incubated), prolific angel investor Ron Conway, Mahalo founder Jason Calcanis, Hot or Not co-founder James Hong, and Textmarks chief executive Ariel Poler. Most appropriately, given the occasional media description of Blippy as a Twitter for your credit card, Twitter co-founder and CEO Evan Williams also participated in the funding.

    The big idea behind the Palo Alto, Calif. startup is that a lot of the data from your credit card can be used socially. Whenever you make a purchase with the credit card that you’ve linked to the Blippy site, it shows up in your profile, so people following you can see, for example, that you bought a movie ticket from Fandango. Co-founder Philip Kaplan (who previously founded the Fucked Company blog and ad network AdBrite) said it wasn’t that hard to convince Blippy’s investors to come on board, since several of them (including Williams and Sequoia’s Roelof Botha) were already avid users of the site. Assuming Blippy takes off, there are a lot of business opportunities around the social aspect of the platform and the data it’s collecting.

    Since Blippy launched its private test in December, 5,000 people have tried it out, sharing information about an estimated $5 million worth of purchases. Now, Kaplan said he and his co-founders Ashvin Kumar and Chris Estreich are confident they’ve worked out the major bugs and put most of the basic features in place, so Blippy is open to the general public. Anyone can visit the site to either share their credit card purchase information, or to just see what other users are sharing.

    “The goal for the next month or so is to see how people are using the site and see not only what benefit they’re getting out of it, but also what benefit they want to get out of it,” Kaplan said.

    The Blippy team might also release an API that allows developers to incorporate Blippy data into other applications.


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  • Windows Mobile 6.6 (aka ‘not Windows Mobile 7′) set for February release?

    The sometimes-believable, sometimes-not fellows over at DigiTimes are reporting today that Windows Mobile codename “Maldives” is going to break out as version 6.6 (a name we’d previously heard associated with version 7) with native support for capacitive touchscreens next month — a launch window that would line up nicely with Mobile World Congress, where 6.5 was announced a year prior. HTC’s HD2 has already proven that it’s possible to cleanly support capacitive touch on a 6.x-based device, so it’s reasonable to think that this is legit — but what we don’t yet know is how this dovetails with 6.5.3, whether they’re the same thing, and if Microsoft is doing this simply to buy itself a few precious extra months to bake WinMo 7 to a crispy, golden brown perfection. We’d already heard before that 6.x and 7 will have an opportunity to coexist in the marketplace, so it’s entirely possible that 6.6 is the version that’ll carry that torch on the 6.x side of things — but if this gets announced alone without a mention of Robbie’s ground-up rewrite at MWC, we’d wager there’ll be riots in Barcelona.

    Windows Mobile 6.6 (aka ‘not Windows Mobile 7′) set for February release? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 Jan 2010 14:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Ableton, Serato announce ‘The Bridge,’ cause DJs to faint en masse

    Ableton and Serato — two of the biggest names in live music production — have been working in stealth mode over the past year to create what they’ve been billing as “the future of digital DJing,” and today that new product has been revealed as The Bridge. Basically, you’ve got a thin layer of software that sits between full versions of both Serato Live (or Itch) and Ableton Live that allows output from both products to flow into the other — DJ sets can be imported into Ableton with full control over effect parameters, tempo, pitch, and so on, and Ableton instruments can sit inside a Serato session. It’s an interesting advancement, and the way the companies are talking, this is just the first in a string of products of the partnership; the good news is that The Bridge will be free to owners of both products, but unfortunately there’s no release date yet, so raves are going to have to soldier on using last year’s technology for at least a while longer. Hang tight, we’re told it’s “coming soon.”

    Ableton, Serato announce ‘The Bridge,’ cause DJs to faint en masse originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 Jan 2010 14:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • The Hasselbecks Switch Jobs For A Day

    Elisabeth Hasselbeck and husband Tim Hasselbeck will be trading places next week.

    The View pundit will be taking over Tim’s gig as an ESPN NFL analyst next Tuesday, Jan. 19, while Tim will co-host the ABC morning gabfest, alongside Joy Behar, Whoopi Goldberg, Sherri Shepherd and Barbara Walters, on Thursday, Jan. 21.

    Elisabeth and Tim have been married since 2002 and are the parents of three.

    “Hopefully I can pull this off because I see her preparation on a regular basis each week — reading, and watching cable news shows, other television programs and upcoming movies. I will enjoy this because I know they will have fun with me at ‘The View’ and, of course, when I get back to work at ESPN. I’m sure I’ll have a greater appreciation for what she does on a day-in and day-out basis,” Tim says of his upcoming trip to The View.

    “So many times we ask, ‘How did work go today?’” Elisabeth says. “Undoubtedly we will be finding out the hard way as we switch jobs. The question then will be, ‘What have we gotten ourselves into?’ ”


  • Play MAG, earn these Trophies

    Zipper Interactive has laid out the target trophies for their 256-player online fragfest, MAG. The game’s 38 trophies break down to 20 bronze, 13 silver, four gold, and one platinum. Hit the jump to see what you’ll