Author: Serkadis

  • Arbitrators Says Groovle Not Confusingly Similar To Google

    In domain name arbitration disputes, it often seems like the big name almost always wins — but apparently not always. Canadian search engine Groovle (which actually uses Google as its underlying technology) has won a domain name dispute with Google, as the panelists reviewing the dispute said that Groovle wasn’t simple enough to confuse people, and people probably thought of the word “groovy” or “groove” more than Google when they saw Groovle. This really is a bit surprising, since it’s pretty rare for the small players to win these sorts of disputes.

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  • Nine startup dreams and industries Google crushed in 2009

    google-robotIf you’re an ambitious young tech entrepreneur with a compelling product hacked together and a slide-deck in hand, there’s always one giant elephant in the room to worry about.

    That, of course, is Google.

    The search giant has made a ton of product announcements this year, ranging from minor tweaks to major new applications. It even came out with a brand-new operating system. In doing so, Google left a lot of collateral damage. A lot of folks, from tiny startups with high-fallutin’ dreams to established industries, have found themselves in the path of the search behemoth.

    Who did Google make cry this year?

    google navigationThe navigation companies: TomTom, Garmin, and TeleNav charge for mobile applications that offer turn-by-turn directions, often for a sizable fee. The TomTom app, for example, normally costs $100, though there’s a holiday discount cutting the price to $49.99. Then Google decided to get into the market, and its app wasn’t just a little cheaper — it’s free. In its IPO filing, TeleNav even acknowledged that this was a major risk. The one piece of good news for competitors is that Google’s directions are currently limited to phones using its Android operating system, but how long will that last?

    And let’s not forget TeleAtlas: But this is for a slightly different reason. Google used to rely on TeleAtlas for mapping data, but it decided this fall that it would go it alone. Now Google relies on public data, StreetView and user-generated content, controlling the entire process. Google’s user-generated map efforts have been so successful that the company has been able to create street maps in developing countries where no professional ones existed before, like in India and Vietnam.

    The cloud OS startups: Jolicloud and Good OS wanted to take advantage of the increasing interest in netbooks (the cheap laptops that are used mainly to access the web). They created operating systems that were dubbed “cloud OSs,” to reflect a shift away from applications on your computer and towards applications that run in the Internet cloud. Then Google announced its own operating system, Chrome OS, which is launching next year on select netbooks. And while Jolicloud said the news “validates” the market, this is one area where I’m betting startups will have a particularly steep uphill climb. I’m fine using a website from a company I haven’t heard of, but trust and name recognition mean a lot more when it comes to something as crucial as an operating system.

    The real-time search contenders: We profiled about a dozen startups including Topsy, Scoopler, CrowdEye and OneRiot, that were competing to be the top gun in the emerging space of sifting and sorting real-time data. Google was relatively quiet in the beginning of the year, with co-founder Larry Page admitting the company had fallen behind on indexing content on a per-second basis. That raised a whiff of unspoken hope that either it or its arch-rival Microsoft’s Bing might make an acquisition in the space. Or that a young and hungry player with quality filtering technology could start attracting large audiences looking for real-time content. But by October, it became clear that Google was hard at work behind the scenes when it signed a deal with Twitter for the full firehose of its data. Then in December, Google unveiled its work, showing real-time search results that streamed down the page, Friendfeed style.

    So what of the real-time hopefuls? Scoopler is shifting its focus to discovery and surfacing unexpectedly interesting real-time content. OneRiot is busy building an ad system against its results and trending topics. Both it and Collecta are putting their heads down and focusing on distribution with application programming interfaces and developer partners. Twitter, while maintaining a search engine, signaled that it wouldn’t try to monopolize the space when it signed distribution deals with Google and Microsoft.

    murdochRupert Murdoch: Okay, the Australian media kingpin is definitely not a startup. But we’re throwing him on the list anyway because the empire he spent more than half a century building is not so impenetrable in the Internet age. He tried to kill the messenger, but Murdoch’s posturing and threat to remove News Corp. content from Google indexing only amounted to a few cosmetic concessions from the search giant. The company changed its first-click free program, which lets you read a page of walled content for free if you click through in Google search results. It now limits how much non-paying subscribers can access even more. Boo hoo.

    Google_Wave_logo

    The Google Wave team: Wave was ballyhooed as a product that would change the way we communicate, merging the best-of-breed qualities from e-mail, chat and collaborative technologies like the wiki. Created by the team that developed Google Maps, Wave was like a startup in its own right. The team was given a lot more leeway and engineering resources than other typical Google projects and was in Australia, far from headquarters. It sounded really cool in concept, and the buzz was insane, but then people actually tried to use it. Wave was clunky and confusing in practice.

    Although its technical backbone was impressive, it was released before it had a well-designed user interface. Many users (including us) couldn’t even figure out why they needed to use it at all and gave up. That doesn’t bode well for the final product. So by overhyping Wave, failing to communicate how to use it, and inviting the public in too early, Google bungled its own dream here. To quote Nelson from The Simpsons, “Ha ha.”

    conan-year2000
    Picture 55
    And now let’s looks ahead to next year, Conan O’Brien-style. Here are some folks who need to watch out. Google has made moves that encroach on these startups, but it’s just too early to tell how bad the damage will be:

    Bit.ly: The link shortening startup is still the kingpin in its space for now. It handles about 58 percent of shortened links that pass through Twitter, according to eminent retweet button maker Tweetmeme. But that’s down from above 80 percent earlier this fall as Google and Facebook launched their own link shorteners and custom-made ones took hold. Some of those custom-made shortened links might be Bit.ly-produced though, as the company launched a professional service for publishers like The New York Times. This gives Bit.ly a solid revenue source even if Goo.gl or Fb.me eat into their market share. But they need more media companies to jump on the bandwagon. Will it work? Stay tuned….

    Picture 50

    Milo: The shopping site sent consumers to local stores by pulling information about what was on the store shelves. The site attracted 1 million monthly users and some big-name investors to its site, but Google just announced that it’s gradually adding similar features to its Product Search. This is one case where I actually had a chance to interview the startup’s chief executive Jack Abraham about why his company won’t be crushed by Google. Basically, he said that when Google pits its search against a more focused startup, it usually loses — for example, Google Local search results versus Yelp.

    Augmented reality browsers: Google stealthily launched an augmented reality product when it debuted Google Goggles earlier this month. It’s a visual search tool — meaning you can take a picture of the Eiffel Tower, Google Goggles will recognize it, and then search for it. Paired with GPS coordinates, that makes for a potentially powerful tool for navigating your physical surroundings. During the launch, the company showed off some basic augmented reality features. You can pan around and Google Goggles will overlay the names of businesses onto buildings around you. Although Goggles is imperfect and is still in Google Labs, that’s the essence of what could be the killer augmented reality app.

    Most of what’s available on the market today can be very gimmicky, and not useful, like putting 3-D animations in your mobile phone’s viewfinder while looking around. Companies like Mobilizy, Tonchidot and Layar are trying to stay ahead of the game by encouraging developers to add layers of useful information to their augmented reality browsers. But if Goggles gets any better, they should watch out!

    Picture 51



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  • Obama admin: Mandated exemptions can strengthen copyright




    The Obama administration has offered up a strange mix of copyright policies in its first year (both ACTA and Creative Commons, for instance), but it has at least made clear that “better copyright law” does not always mean “more copyright protection.” In the middle of December, for instance, the administration took a stand in support of a World Intellectual Property Organization treaty on copyright exceptions for the blind. The final bit of the US statement of support is worth quoting in full (emphasis added):

    We recognize that some in the international copyright community believe that any international consensus on substantive limitations and exceptions to copyright law would weaken international copyright law. The United States does not share that point of view. The United States is committed to both better exceptions in copyright law and better enforcement of copyright law. Indeed, as we work with countries to establish consensus on proper, basic exceptions within copyright law, we will ask countries to work with us to improve the enforcement of copyright. This is part and parcel of a balanced international system of intellectual property.

    It’s a call for “balanced” copyright taken directly to the WIPO—and it’s one opposed by the deepest-pocketed copyright holders. Here’s why.

    Read the rest of this article...


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  • I have a friend recently diagnosed with “Stiff Person Syndrome”

    He is in bad shape and his neurologist is not providing any answers or hope. He is unable to work, has to use a walker, can no longer drive, and when heavily medicated to ease the symptoms and pain he can barely complete a sentence… all at 55 years of age.

    I bring this up here because from what I have read, Stiff-Person’s Syndrome is related to diabetes. Yet when I ask him if he has been diagnosed with diabetes or if it has been ruled out, he says no. My friend is not the sharpest knife in the drawer. He has been in and out of the hospital three times since early September and each stay was for a week or more with him being moved for another week or two to rehab centers. They have done lots of test, but they are primarily neurological in nature as his current physician is a neurologist who seems most interested in research, I fear she is treating the neurological symptoms when the root cause of those neurological problems maybe are being ignored…. if you are a hammer every solution to a problem looks like a nail, and all that.

    The problem is I can just about guarantee he is diabetic. He was diagnosed with diabetic neuropathy about a month ago, he was put on a “diabetic diet” while in the hospital the 2nd time in mid October, and this last hospital stay in early December they were giving him insulin injections!!!!! Yet he is dismissed once again without any direction other than take a bunch of pain pills, tranquilizers, neurological meds similar to seizure medications, and oh yeah, watch the fats and cholesterol. So my assumption is he has been living, and continues to live, as an untreated diabetic suffering from diabetes complications.

    I spent the better part of an hour one on one with him explain why I suspect he is an untreated diabetic and what all that means. Another mutual friend and I asked him if he would like for us to prepare a list of questions to take to his primary care physician. He said he would really appreciate that. My friend is not the sharpest knife in the drawer and under the circumstances I wonder about his wife too. I asked him as subtly as I could if his wife was always present when he talks to his doctors. She is. I am afraid that in an odd sort of way that might be a problem. I fear she knows he is diabetic and isn’t telling him. You would assume that is ridiculous but our mutual friend who is a health professional with numerous connections (he is a PhD but not a M.D) is just as suspicious as I am. We will know more about that when we deliver the questions and see if she is willing to ask them and get real answers.

    If any of you have experience with Stiff-Man’s Syndrome I would appreciate your advice.

    All the best

    Ed B

  • Biggest Delayed Games of 2009

    If one trend defined 2009, it was heavy delays on some of the year’s most anticipated games. Though we had the usual holiday flood this year, it would have been much bigger if not for all the pushed back games that are set for early 2010. We even published a feature on the trend in August, and the delays just kept coming. So as we close out the year, let’s take another look at some of the titles delayed this year, and when they’re due.

    Alpha Protocol

    One way not to delay a game can be found in an example from Sega. Rumors spread of an Alpha Protocol delay as reviewers noticed the company hadn’t sent any copies of the game; but it took until the game’s release day to finally confirm it. Now it’s set for spring of 2010. On the other end of the spectrum, Bayonetta was pushed into early next year to “maximize [its] potential,” but seems to have leaked to the public by major retailers already. So to be clear: one game waited until its release date to announce a delay, and the other was delayed but unofficially came out early.

    The delay of BioShock 2 wasn’t quite as storied. It seemed to be a necessary move to improve the quality of the game, and now it’s due early next year. Dark Void, meanwhile, was more bluntly delayed to avoid the “crowded fall season.”


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  • John Mayer Wants You To Defragment Your Brain With A Digital Cleanse

    Anyone who follows John Mayer on Twitter knows that he’s a smart guy. A bit kooky at times, sure. But he’s definitely not just shooting his mouth off with self-promotional drivel. He’s built up quite a following on the service too, with over 2.8 million Twitter followers. So when he invites all of his fans to give up Facebook, Twitter, and other social networks for a week, you know there are a lot of people paying attention.

    Tonight, Mayer has announced a One Week Digital Cleanse. The purpose? To ring in the new year with a slightly less chaotic mental state. In his post announcing the Cleanse, Mayer likens our increasingly scattered lifestyles to fragmented hard drives. It’s an apt comparison — between sites like Twitter, Facebook, and multiple Email boxes, most of us have data and friendships scattered across a dozen different places. Mayer thinks giving some of these up for a while might be a good way to “defragment” our minds. He’s not quitting these services the way Trent Reznor and Miley Cyrus did, he’s just taking a week long break, and he wants his fans to join him.

    Unlike some similar campaigns I’ve heard of, which asked you to quit just about everything with a digital display, Mayer’s drive is probably doable for a lot of people. It doesn’t ask you to give up Email, and you can still use your cell phone for some things. Here are the guidelines :

    Begins on January 1 at 9AM and runs until January 8 at 9AM
    *email only from laptop or desktop computers
    *cell phones can only be used to make calls, and no text messages or e-mails are allowed – if you receive a text, you must reply in voice over the phone. E-mails must be returned from a laptop or desktop computer.
    *no use of Twitter or any other social networking site – this includes reading as well as posting.
    *no visiting of any entertainment or gossip sites. (No need to detail which ones – you know what they are.)

    Work commitments keep me from engaging in the Cleanse myself, but you may want to give it a try, if only for a day or two. If nothing else, consider just how attached you’ve become to these online services. Last June, when I took a weeklong vacation to the Caribbean, I found myself suffering some pretty serious withdrawals when I couldn’t compulsively check my Email or the latest tech news. It took about two full days of perfect weather and endless beaches to kick the sense of impending doom. That’s a little weird. Technology is amazing, but getting some perspective is a good thing.

    Crunch Network: CrunchBase the free database of technology companies, people, and investors


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  • Nexus One trounces 3D benchmark, gets caught in high-res photoshoot

    Just when you thought you’d seen it all with Nexus One, along comes an old friend with some higher resolution shots of the handset (hooray!) and a pretty impressive 3D benchmark test using Qualcomm’s Neocore. Video’s after the break –that Snapdragon chip outputs a mean framerate, no?

    Continue reading Nexus One trounces 3D benchmark, gets caught in high-res photoshoot

    Nexus One trounces 3D benchmark, gets caught in high-res photoshoot originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Dec 2009 21:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • S. Korea ranks lowest in supply ratio of renewable energy – Balita News

    SEOUL, Dec. 31 (Yonhap) — The supply ratio of renewable energy in South Korea was the lowest among the world’s major economies, data showed Thursday, amid increasing calls for the development of eco-friendly energy resources. According to the data …


  • Ford dealers hoping to keep ‘Escape’ badge when Kuga based replacement arrives

    Ford Kuga - Ford Escape

    FoMoCo dealers are looking forward to a much-needed successor to the Ford Escape and if they can have their own way, the “Escape” badge would live on as the official name for the mid-size crossover.

    The current Ford Escape is scheduled to be replaced by a version of the European based Kuga, which will see production at Ford’s Louisville, KY, assembly plant starting 2011. Ford has not commented on whether it will drop the Escape badge and adopt the Kuga name for the crossover.

    “I believe the Escape is a great vehicle with a great reputation and that it would be a big mistake to kill the Escape name,” Owen Mossy, general manager of San Diego-based Mossy Ford, told WardsAuto.

    Of course if Ford ditched the Escape badge, it would be tossing away a name with significant brand recognition in turn harming sales of one of the best sellers for the Dearborn automaker.

    Your thoughts? Let us know in the comments section below.

    – By: Omar Rana

    Source: WardsAuto


  • Japanese firm buys Explay tiny projector startup for a song

    Japan’s ADM has purchased the Israeli startup Explay for $550,000. Investors put an estimated $7 million into the maker of pico-projectors, which can be used in cell phones or other devices to project bright images on walls. Texas Instruments, which makes digital light processing chips, is a leader in this market.


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  • Dutch embrace the digital strip search, U.S. next? (reader poll)

    privacyThe Netherlands will use full body scanners in screening airline passengers as a result of the lapse in security that allowed a would-be terrorist bomber on board a jet from Amsterdam on Christmas Day. The scanners will allow security personnel to see through people’s clothes and amount to what privacy advocates are calling a “digital strip search.”

    As I await my own flight plans for the Consumer Electronics Show, I’m not looking forward to this trend migrating to the U.S. I knew that I would be able to reuse the cover image from the Business Week story lamenting the loss of privacy, from a story published in 1989. But I didn’t know it would be so soon.

    The full-body scanners have been used on a voluntary basis in test markets in the Europe and the U.S. They can highlight hidden cash, drugs or weapons under someone’s clothes. But they can also show whether you’ve got breast implants or provide images of what your body really looks like under your clothes.

    The machines cost about $150,000. The steep price and the privacy concerns have held off widespread deployment of the machines. And some security experts say they’re also not as good as a good old-fashioned strip search. The Dutch authorities can of course blame this all on Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, a 23-year-old Nigerian man who tried to blow up a bomb hidden inside his underwear on a Northwest Airlines flight from Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport.

    digital strip searchIn the U.S., the Transportation Safety Authority says it has 40 scanners at 19 airports and has ordered some 150 more. The scanners are made by Rapiscan System, a division of OSI Systems in Hawthorne, Calif. Right now, the TSA blurs images of passenger’s faces and operators are stationed far from the passengers. The scanners do not store any data and so they can’t keep a record of a person’s image. I think this is a case of an invasive technology that’s going to drive a deep wedge between people. Is it the answer?

    Please take our poll about whether you think these scanners are a good idea or not. [scanner photo: Discover Magazine]

    Should security personnel use full body scanning technology?(polls)


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  • Modern Warfare 2 wireless PS3 mod

    Can’t put down your Modern Warfare 2 even when the real world is beckoning you? Modder Techknott has found a solution to that dilemma with his homemade handheld device which sends control signals to a PS3, which

  • Make it Sir! Patrick Stewart attains knighthood

    Sir Patrick Stewart — I like the sound of that. Just for the record: he deserves it. Also, if you haven’t read his piece on domestic violence, go do so now.


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  • PSA: Watch for the blue moon this New Year’s Eve

    a_blue_moon1250259866This isn’t part of our usual beat, but I thought I’d share it with you anyway. This New Year’s Eve has a very special event associated with it, a blue moon. No, that doesn’t mean a baby smurf is going to be born, if means that there are going to be two full moons in the same month.

    The last time this happened on New Year’s Eve was 1990 and it… well, really didn’t impact anything other then the themes of New Year’s Eve parties. So I guess file this one under something to talk about around the water cooler.


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  • Trade show shocker: Sling to out some new gear at CES

    Okay, you’re not surprised that some companies are going to have new gear at CES, are you? Well, we”re hearing that Sling — a company that’s not had much news this year beyond the release of its iPhone app — will definitely unleash some new stuff in Las Vegas, including “WiFi television, ultra-slim Slingboxes, and a next-generation touch screen device.” Now, we don’t want to get everyone overly excited this early in the day, but those all definitely sound like upgrades to us. We really don’t know if Sling will let slip any more specific info between now and CES, but as you know, we’ll be In Vegas when it all goes down, so sit back and be patient. It won’t be long, now.

    Trade show shocker: Sling to out some new gear at CES originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Dec 2009 21:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Apple tablet rumor party: Fox News, former Google China president, and the ‘iGuide’

    No words can stress how much we’re sick of Apple ‘iSlate‘ rumors right now, but when someone with powerful links speaks up, we gotta take note. Kai-fu Lee — former Google China president — has joined the Apple rumor mill by leaking what he claims to be insider knowledge of the device. Now, we’ve heard a lot of this same noise before: sub-$1000 price, an iPhone-like appearance, 10.1-inch multitouch screen, video conferencing, cellular connectivity, 3D graphics and virtual keyboard. What really got our attention is Lee’s link with Foxconn — the Apple OEM is one of the main contributors to Lee’s post-Google investment venture, Innovation Works, so there’s a good chance that Lee’s spoken to someone overlooking the manufacturing of a certain Apple device. Of course, we can’t abide Lee’s final proclamation that “Apple expects to produce near ten million units in the first year!” This is pretty bold considering Apple’s only sold five million portable computers so far this year (and ten million was the number of iPods sold in Q3 2009 alone), but hey, who knows if Steve Jobs has already worked out a subsidizing plan with some carriers to lure us all?

    Continue reading Apple tablet rumor party: Fox News, former Google China president, and the ‘iGuide’

    Apple tablet rumor party: Fox News, former Google China president, and the ‘iGuide’ originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Dec 2009 20:53:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink The iPhone Blog, CNET  |  sourceKai-fu Lee’s microblog, Fox News, Mac Rumors  | Email this | Comments

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  • Bugatti Renaissance Concept by Vicente makes us dream of a Veyron successor

    Bugatti Renaissance Concept

    The big bosses at Volkswagen currently have no plans to offer a successor to the 1,001-hp Bugatti Veyron (and we’re pretty sure it’s the last thing on their mind). However, if they ever do decide on a successor to the Veyron, we definitely think they should consult John Mark Vicente, a Canadian graduate of the Communication Design program at Emily Carr.

    Known as the Bugatti Renaissance Design Concept, the study builds on the current Veyron, throws in some Audi R8 touches and steroids.

    Love it or hate it? Let us know in the comments section below.

    Bugatti Renaissance Concept:

    Bugatti Renaissance Concept Bugatti Renaissance Concept Bugatti Renaissance Concept Bugatti Renaissance Concept

    – By: Kap Shah

    Source: JMV Design (via CarScoop)


  • iPod bedding set redefines ‘touchably soft’

    Filed under:

    All you really need to do is ask yourself three things: Do I have a kid bed? Could my kid bed be so much cooler with an iPod touch duvet and pillowcase? Can I afford 349 Swedish kronor (about US $45)?

    If you answered ‘Yes! Yes! Uh… yes!’ to this informal product survey, Swedish retailer Ellos has exactly what you need. Questions raised in the TUAW offices like “Is that a touch-based capacitive sleep-enabled UI?” and “I wonder if that surface is oleophobic?” may require firsthand testing.

    The bedding set looks to be a pretty faithful iPod touch reproduction, with the exception of the misspelled legend for the Calendar icon. It’s so faithful, in fact, that I wouldn’t be surprised if the company heard from Apple’s Swedish legal representation in short order, with a suggestion that this product be sent to sleep with the fishes.

    OK, I grant you, this is no Tauntaun sleeping bag — but if you’re raising a household full of Apple geeks, it might be worth a look.

    Thanks Bertil!

    TUAWiPod bedding set redefines ‘touchably soft’ originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Wed, 30 Dec 2009 21:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Wednesday Night Dawg Bites: Mike Leach/Gene Stallings/Romeo Crennel/Billy Bob Thornton Edition

    We’re now into the thick of bowl season and there are a lot of stories swirling around the world of college football, both locally and nationally. Here, for whatever they might be worth, are a few random observations regarding events this week:

    • Prior to the Independence BowlI mentioned the fact that the Georgia Bulldogs had been the lone victims of the Texas A&M Aggies in Bear Bryant’s first season in College Station. What you may not know about that 1954 game is that Coach Bryant brought just 31 players with him to Athens, Red and Black quarterback Jimmy Harper did not complete a pass until the game was deep into the fourth quarter, and the game’s only touchdown was scored on a 16-yard reception by Texas A&M end Gene Stallings, who would later coach both the Aggies and the Alabama Crimson Tide.
    • I know many prominent figures in the blogosphere are openly rooting for Mike Leach, who was fired earlier today as the head coach of the Texas Tech Red Raiders. Personally, I am torn. On the one hand, I have always viewed Coach Leach as rude rather than colorful, but it is equally tough for me to side with Craig James, who comes across as a smarmy character and who played for the SMU Mustangs during the scandal-riddled era that ultimately earned Southern Methodist the death penalty. I feel badly for Adam James, but, beyond that, I throw up my hands.
    • Earlier today, I received an e-mail that once again raised the name Romeo Crennel as a possibility to be Georgia’s next defensive coordinator. I can’t represent with anything approaching certainty that there is anything to the rumor at all, and I certainly would not tell you I have inside information or anything of the sort, but I can’t help noticing that a candidate whose name is off the radar keeps being mentioned as a possibility. (Incidentally, the first guy who mentioned the name Romeo Crennel to me did so after first mentioning the name Bud Foster, shortly before Coach Foster’s name surfaced publicly as the recipient of an offer.)
    • Is it just me, or did Idaho Vandals head coach Robb Akey sound like Billy Bob Thornton’s character from “Sling Blade” in his postgame interview following the Humanitarian Bowl?
    • Although the Aggies still lead the all-time series with Georgia with a 3-2 record, the ‘Dawgs lead the overall scoring by a cumulative margin of 118-80. That translates to an average score of 24-16 over the course of the series, but the Red and Black have won the last two meetings by an average margin of 43-10. The five series games have been played in four different cities, but the Bulldogs have never faced Texas A&M in College Station at “The Home of the Illegal Participation Penalty,” Kyle Field.

    Look for the latest installment of my “Don’t Bet On It!” postseason picks to be coming your way sometime tomorrow, but bear in mind that I jumped out to an impressively awful 1-7 start before the USC Trojans got me back on the winning track in the Emerald Bowl. Perhaps this reflects poorly on me, but, hey, I do warn you not to bet on it, so lighten up, slafa.

    Go ‘Dawgs!

  • No File! No Icon! Litl Is a Big Idea, but Still Cloudy [Personal Technology]

    One of the hottest ideas in the digital world now is the notion of dumping the traditional personal computer, where most programs and data are stored locally, for a stripped-down device that would operate primarily as a gateway to servers on the Internet, where your programs and data are accessed remotely. This approach is often called “cloud computing.”

    [ See post to watch video ]

    In fact, the original netbooks, the small laptops that have become very popular, were designed around this concept of relying mostly on the Web. They used low-end processors, shunned Windows, and had very little internal storage. But a combination of consumer sentiment and industry maneuvering pushed them back into the fold, so that today, most are simply cheap, small conventional Windows laptops.

    Now, a small Boston company, called Litl, is taking another shot at this idea, with a different twist. It is selling online a highly unusual laptop it classifies as a “webbook,” which attempts to meld cloud computing with a TV-like viewing experience—for the home. This shiny, colorful computer, named the Litl, is larger and more expensive than a typical netbook. It’s about the size of a small standard laptop, with a 12-inch screen and a weight of 3.4 pounds. It costs $699, or about twice the price of a netbook, at litl.com.

    Yet the Litl doesn’t use Windows, or directly run word processors, email, or photo or music programs. It can only perform those tasks via Web sites and services like Gmail or Flckr, Google Docs or Pandora Radio. About the only local program it has that can run without an Internet connection is a virtual egg timer. It has no hard disk or any other way for a user to store anything locally.

    The Litl’s user interface is a radical departure. There is no task bar or dock, no folders, no icons for files and programs; no traditional desktop. Instead, the Litl’s screen is filled with small cards that contain various kinds of Web content, from photos to news headlines, Facebook status and favorite Web sites. Click on a card, and its contents fill the screen.

    PTECH

    The Litl webbook

    And the Litl has another big difference from standard laptops or netbooks: something called “easel mode.” You can flip it around so the machine takes the form of an inverted letter “V,” with the screen facing outward. In that position, the machine can be used like a small Internet-based TV to display headlines, the weather, photo slideshows or videos from the Web. The company sells a $19 remote for controlling the computer in easel mode. You can also control it with a wheel built into the hinge.

    I’ve been testing the Litl and I have mixed feelings about it. Some of the bold concepts behind the machine are refreshing, including the cloud-computing idea and the very simple interface and operating system, which demand much less work and attention from the user than a traditional PC does. The company also is promising many improvements, delivered via frequent over-the-air updates, including iPhone-type apps developed by third parties. It even offers a two-year money-back guarantee.

    I was able to set up cards for Gmail and Yahoo Mail, and to send and receive messages. I also set up a card for Google Docs and was able to create and edit documents. I tapped into my Flickr account and could view slideshows of family photos I had previously uploaded. And I was able to watch TV shows via Hulu, both in easel mode and on my big-screen TV, once I connected the Litl to it.

    But, in my tests, I found the device a bit clumsy and unsatisfying to use. For instance, as you add cards for your favorite Web sites or headline feeds (called channels), it becomes more difficult to scroll through screen after screen to find the one you want. There is no easy way to organize things.

    In easel mode, when you see a headline that interests you, there is no way to click on it to read the whole story. Videos in easel mode too often stuttered. Worse, if you’re watching a video in easel mode, or through a TV, the Litl’s remote doesn’t let you pause, fast forward or back up. And the Litl doesn’t allow you to upload photos or videos to the Web.

    The battery life is awful. The company claims 2.5 hours. In my tests, it conked out in less time. The company says that isn’t a problem, because the machine is designed for home use and will likely stay plugged in.

    The company claims it is working on improving the Litl’s shortcomings. For instance, it plans a photo-uploading function and smoother video playback. So, it will likely get better. But, as of now, for $699, my feeling is that a standard laptop could perform many of these tasks in a more familiar, more versatile manner.

    Cloud computing may one day be the standard way of doing things digitally, but the Litl, at least in its current form, isn’t the answer.

    Find all of Walt Mossberg’s columns and videos online, free, at the All Things Digital Web site, walt.allthingsd.com. Email him at [email protected].

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