Author: Serkadis

  • Majority Leader Reid Still Aims To Bring Health Bill To Senate Floor Next Week

    Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid continues to aim to get a health care reform bill to the floor next week, his spokeswoman said Friday, MarketWatch reports. “No date has been set to bring the bill to the floor for debate, she said, adding that Reid wants to bring it up ‘as soon as we can.’” In the meantime, Health Care for America Now has begun running ads urging Senators in Arkansas and Nebraska to let senators begin debate on the bill. “Sens. Blanche Lincoln, Democrat of Arkansas, and Ben Nelson, Democrat of Nebraska, haven’t yet agreed to let the bill come up for debate” (Schroeder, 11/13).

    Politico reports that Democrats are likely to kill the anti-abortion Stupak amendment that was attached to the House health care reform bill “if they go to Plan B on passing health care — using a filibuster-proof reconciliation bill — budget experts say.” Democrats would likely only use reconciliation if they fail to get close to the 60 votes they need to pass a health care reform bill. Using reconciliation “would require a bare majority but limit the scope of what policies can be adopted” (Allen, 11/13).

  • Game length, new features, and more in this Assassin’s Creed II video interview

    Assassin s Creed II is quickly shaping up to be one of the year’s blockbuster releases. We’re just days away from launch, but for those of you who st…

  • Moderncat Spotlight: Colony Cats Adoption Center, Plus Fundraiser Giveaway! Win a Set of Curve Perches!

    Colony Cats

    Colony Cats Adoption Center

    This Moderncat Spotlight focuses on a very special organization in central Ohio in celebration of their brand new cat adoption center. Colony Cats is an all-volunteer, non-profit organization whose primary mission is to address cat overpopulation in central Ohio through public awareness and spay/neuter efforts. Since 2002, the organization has facilitated spay or neuter of over 6,324 animals. They also have a network of foster homes for friendly, adoptable cats and kittens that have been rescued (as well as dogs and puppies that are encountered while assisting cats).

    Just last week, Colony Cats opened an innovative, contemporary cat adoption center in Columbus, Ohio. This adoption center is very unique! Instead of being in a free-standing building, the center is conveniently located in a storefront at a busy shopping center — what a great way to introduce the cats to potential adopters! The design of the facility is also quite special. Cats and kittens are not in cages, but rather in one of five open “living rooms” that provide open views and plenty of space for the cats to mingle with visitors. Potential adopters can visit the cats in the living rooms or take them into a private adoption room. The center offers a library with educational materials to help adopters fully understand cats and cat behavior, ideally reducing the risk of returns.

    Colony Cats Adoption Center

    The cat rooms are full equipped with some of the best Moderncat accessories available, thanks to some wonderful sponsors who donated items to the new center. A BIG thank you to Modern Cat Designs, Cat Livin’, Urban Pet Haus, Marmalade Pet Care, Square Cat Habitat, and Caboodle for contributing products for the new center! These kitties are definitely living in style while they wait for their new home!

    Colony Cats

    Here are some of the residents enjoying their accessories: a Wedge scratcher from Cat Livin’; several Cheeky Chaises from Marmalade Pet Care; a tall cat condo from Modern Cat Designs; Caboodle carboard cat habitats; Curve perches from Urban Pet Haus; and a Buddha wall perch from Square Cat Habitat.

    Colony Cats

    Colony Cats

    Fine art and photographs featuring cats adorn the walls at the center. The works are by local artists, who are donating 30 percent of the proceeds to the center for any piece sold. There is also a giving tree where people can add a leaf for each donation made. This handsome black kitty seems to enjoy the top of the giving tree.

    Colony Cats Adoption Center

    The interior design work on the new center was donated by John Wilson of CRI Interiors, Inc. What an amazing job! The Colony Cats adoption center is located at 2740 Festival Lane on the south side of Highway 161, east of Sawmill. If you’re ever in Columbus, please stop by and take a look!

    Colony Cats Fundraiser

    Fundraising Giveaway: Enter to win a set of Curve perches from Urban Pet Haus!

    In conjunction with the grand opening of the new Colony Cats adoption center, we have another great fundraiser giveaway for you! The folks at Urban Pet Haus have generously donated a set of their brand new Curve perches for the giveaway! The set includes one large and one small perch. As you can see above, the Curve perches are quite popular with the kitties at the adoption center and I can tell you, we have some at my house, they are wonderful. The perfect size and shape! Your cats will love these and so will you.

    Curve Perches from Urban Pet Haus

    To enter the drawing, please visit the Colony Cats fundraising page on GiveForward and make a donation of any amount and you’ll be entered to win. The winner will be chosen in a random drawing on December 1 and notified via GiveForward. Let’s try to reach the goal of raising $1000 for this awesome organization and their new facility!

    >>Make a donation now and enter to win!


  • NPR’s ‘Tell Me More’: Abortion Debate Critical To Health Care Overhaul

    Listen to Audio Interview

    Julie Appleby on “Tell Me More”

    NPR host Michel Martin interviewed KHN’s Julie Appleby on the program “Tell Me More” about what the abortion amendment would mean.

  • Another Example Of Copyright Law Gone Mad: Series Of Lawsuits Over Telephone Jingle

    This one’s from a few months back, but still quite interesting. Danny submitted this story of a series of lawsuits between a musician and a town tourism board over a song the singer apparently wrote. The backstory is that the musician, Cheryl Janky, was a member of a doo wop band called Stormy Weather (perhaps that should have been a warning), who had, as a founder and singer, a guy named Henry Farag. Janky wrote a song called “Wonders of Indiana.” With Farag’s help, the song was modified to become “Lake County, Indiana,” “a doo-wop ode to the border county that rhymes ‘ethnic diversity’ with ‘Hoosier hospitality.’” Farag then did a deal with the tourism board of Lake County, who bought 1,500 copies of the band’s CD to sell in its gift shop, and used the song as hold music for callers. The tourism board also had the band (with Janky in it) perform at the opening of of the tourism board’s new center. That all happened in 1999.

    In 2003, however, Janky left the band, and suddenly was pissed off about how “her” song was being used. She filed a lawsuit in 2003, and since then:


    The case has spawned at least three lawsuits, thousands of dollars in judge-ordered sanctions against the woman’s attorneys, a three-day trial, estimated legal fees of more than $500,000, reams of paperwork and a subpoena issued to a federal judge.

    And for what? Farag notes that the band sold less than 2,000 CDs total (most of which seem to be from the tourism board’s purchase). And yet, Janky continues to pursue the case, with her lawyer insisting she needs to do this to “stand up for her creative rights.” Meanwhile, this is the same lawyer who apparently “has been sanctioned twice by separate judges in the case for filing frivolous claims and last month was ordered to put down a $5,000 deposit before filing more lawsuits on Janky’s behalf ‘to cover the high probability of additional sanctions.’”

    Ah, the crazy things that a misunderstanding of copyright makes people do.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Eye-Fi goes FTP

    greycardThe Eye-Fi card is famous for being a cool, fun way to upload, inadvertently, images of you and your friends naked or on the toilet. Now, however, you can upload those naked photos to your local FTP/FTPS server. This service allows you to bypass standard photo-sharing sites like Flickr and dump your stuff up unfettered by the limitations placed upon us by photo sites.

    Here are the instructions. Happy uploading and be sure to make those images public!

    This also, admittedly, allows you to run your own photo sharing service and to keep your photos completely private.

    via WiFiNetNews


  • Feds Overlooked Medicare Scam Warnings, The AP Reports

    The Associated Press reports that the Centers For Medicare and Medicaid Services “received roughly 30 warnings from inspectors (on suspected Medicare fraud) over three years during the Bush and Obama administrations but didn’t respond to half of them, even after repeated letters.” The news story was based on records received from Sen. Chuck Grassley’s office. “A July 2008 warning said organized crime had infiltrated the system and was costing more than $1 million dollars for each phony Medicare provider license the crooks obtained. The letter got no response, Grassley said.” Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said CMS usually responds promptly to fraud warnings, but that she was not satisfied that some fraud alerts were getting a sufficient response. “Grassley wants the agency to respond to future fraud warnings within two months and Sebelius agreed” (Kennedy, 11/13).

  • American Express to offer 50 $200 rebates on Best Buy purchases of $500 or more

    bbyamex

    I’m apprehensive to even post this since I, myself, have an American Express card and will absolutely be fighting against the rest of you barbarians for this very deal, but my commitment to reporting the news is just barely stronger than the urge to get $200 back on a $500 electronics purchase. Just barely.

    So the deal is that at some unknown, magical point of the day on Wednesday, November 18th, registration will open up for American Express card holders. There will be 50 slots available and the first 50 people who register their card will get $200 credited back to their statement when a $500 or more purchase is made at Best Buy using the card.

    Purchases must be made between November 18th and December 31st, and the $200 credit will apparently show up on your statement “within 3 to 5 days of the date you completed your qualifying purchase.”

    There will also be another similar deal going on the same day: $40 back when you spend $100 or more. There are 125 registration slots for that deal.

    Daily Wish [AmexNetwork.com]


  • Using Public Wi-Fi? Hop Into a Free VPN Tunnel First

    I spent several hours during yesterday’s NewTeeVee Live conference at San Francisco’s Mission Bay Conference Center sitting at the press table with tech writers from various publications who were connecting to the open Wi-Fi network. Before I connected to the center’s hotspot, I loaded a VPN (virtual private network) application, which provides a secure, encrypted tunnel within which I use public Wi-Fi. The one I use happens to be custom and proprietary, and takes about 15 seconds to establish a connection that will keep me completely secure on an open network.

    I noticed, though, that while some of the writers at the conference were probably using firewalls, hardly any of them used VPNs to keep their Wi-Fi sessions completely secure. And these were tech writers. That’s a shame, because there are a lot of good, completely free VPN applications available.

    One of the best choices out there is OpenVPN, an open-source, cross-platform VPN solution. The freeware world, too, includes many VPN applications that users swear by, such as iPig from iOpus and the free version of LogMeIn’s Hamachi. Cisco’s cross-platform VPN client is also widely used, although note that it’s incompatible with some firewalls. Hotspot Shield is also well-liked by many Windows and Mac users.

    Windows 7 actually comes with a built-in Agile VPN client, but it’s not said to be as easy as many of the free, time-tested clients. Snow Leopard Server also offers VPN functionality, and previous versions of the Mac OS have included it. For many users, though, especially ones who don’t have access to help from an IT department, simple, free downloadable VPN solutions–which usually have intuitive interfaces–are great choices.

    VPN applications couldn’t be easier to use. Once installed, you simply sign in to them, and your online communications are routed through encrypted tunnels. Problems with particular VPN clients are typically the result of firewall-related conflicts, but you can easily find an app that works for you.

    As is always true with security software solutions, user apathy is the biggest problem of all. So the next time you use public Wi-Fi, make sure you hop into a secure VPN tunnel first.

    Do you use a VPN application that you like?

  • MPAA has entire town’s municipal Wi-Fi shut down over single piracy allegation

    mpaawifi

    It’s getting harder and harder to be surprised about the MPAA’s silly tactics. So, surprise! The MPAA has successfully shut down an Ohio town’s municipal Wi-Fi network because one person was caught illegally downloading a movie. You know, peers and seeders and all that.

    The Wi-Fi network was set up around the Coshocton County Courthouse located in central-ish Ohio. The network has been up and running for about five yeas now, and serves up to 100 people on a busy day. (Not that I have any idea of what would cause such a commotion in the town!)

    The town’s commissioner said: “It’s unfortunate that one person ruins it for those who use the service legitimately.” Yes, and when some maniac stabs another person we confiscate everyone’s kitchen knives. Or when a drunk driver kills an innocent motorist the government comes around and takes away everyone’s car.

    Collective punishment, anyone?

    The MPAA’s nonsense really isn’t going to be challenged until our elected officials have an understanding of basic technology, which I don’t think will happen any time soon.


  • October Marked First Decline For Twitter Visitors In A Year

    Before you read any further just lean back and take a deep breath. You are about to enter the “Research Zone”. You know the place well. It’s where we give you shocking numbers that someone has come up with using their “methodology” and it is then used to create shocking headlines around the Internet for your reading enjoyment. It’s almost like having an informant who whispers something in your ear then you get to blab it all over the place and set the masses running. It’s fun!

    Today’s “OMG stat” is brought to you by comScore via TechCrunch. Apparently, Twitter had a rough October.

    Ever since last summer, Twitter’s growth in the U.S. has been stalling. But in October, the number of people who visited Twitter.com from the U.S. actually declined for the first time by 8 percent month-over-month. Estimates released today by comScore put Twitter’s domestic unique visitors at 19.2 million, down from 20.9 million in September.

    On an annual basis, Twitter is still going gangbusters with 1,271 percent growth from 1.4 million visitors in October, 2008. And on a global basis, it still seems to be chugging away with 58.4 million visitors in September. But a hypergrowth company like Twitter cannot afford to slow down in its home market.

    Things to consider:

    • Evan Williams, Twitter’s CEO, has acknowledged the slowdown so there must be some validity to it. His hope is new features will help slow or stop this trend
    • These results do not measure those accessing Twitter via third party clients. Only Twitter knows how many actual accounts they have and which are showing activity. Of course, I challenge them to present a number of accounts that are real users and not spammers. What would the numbers look like then?
    • This could be a hiccup
    • Facebook is possibly cleaning their clock
    • US growth is one piece, albeit a very important one, to the grand Twitterscheme of things

    Here’s the pretty picture for you to look at wonder over.

    TwitterOct092

    So what’s your take? Twitter – thumbs up or thumbs down? Can adding new features attract more users or are they just tools that “preach to the choir” meaning only helping those already on board? Should anyone be worried about this?

    Comments

  • So much for that PC version Modern Warfare 2 boycott

    noboycott
    Thank you, PC Gamer

    How’s that Modern Warfare 2 boycott going? Well, judging by this screenshot, it seems that many of y’all were either bluffing, or simply couldn’t resist the temptation to, as Rock Paper Scissor put it the other day, Put The Cursor Over the Man’s Face. Boycotts only work when, you know, you follow through with your threats…


  • Smartbooks Have to Design Their Own Market

    lenovosmartbook21

    Qualcomm-powered Lenovo smartbook

    Qualcomm earlier this year introduced us to the smartbook concept. On paper, such a device sounds like the perfect bridge between a small smartphone and a clunky notebook — all-day battery life, a full keyboard and integrated data connectivity in an easy-to-carry package. Unfortunately, the best-laid plans often go awry, and the first expected smartbook looks like nothing more than an ARM-powered netbook running Linux.

    In order to carve out a market, smartbooks should offer the best features of the two devices they fit between. Smartbooks need all-day runtime, instant-on and smartphone connectivity melded with the keyboard and usability of a netbook. But at the same time, a successful smartbook must offer an advantage over these two devices — it must be usable, but not too big. Make the device too large and it will compete poorly against netbooks, which offer x86 program compatibility and nearly all-day runtime. That’s exactly what I see in the first smartbook design — a netbook form factor that fails to take advantage of using a lower-powered ARM processor in a pocketable package.

    Image courtesy of Liliputing

  • PDC 2009 Preview: The move to Office 2010 and Visual Studio 2010

    By Scott M. Fulton, III, Betanews

    All next week, Betanews will be reporting from Los Angeles, at the scene of this year’s Microsoft Professional Developers’ Conference. Based on our experience with prior years’ shows, here’s the pattern we expect: Day 1 (officially next Tuesday) will center on self-congratulation for Windows 7, much of it deserved. Day 2 will likely bring out the bugle corps for the public introduction of Office 2010 Beta 1 — not the Technical Preview that’s currently being circulated, but a more feature-complete rendition that should have more Web- and cloud-related connectivity.

    But our coverage will begin on Monday with an unusual twist to “Day 0,” which is usually reserved for in-depth workshops that command extra attendance fees. This year, Microsoft is trying an unusual step by opening up its day-long “Windows 7 Developer Boot Camp,” headlined by Technical Fellow and SysInternals engineer Mark Russinovich, not only to all PDC attendees but to the general public. Here, we’ll see how much attention Windows 7 can get not just from developers, but from passers-by on the street corner.

    The coverage schedule for Betanews this year is the most feature-packed it has ever been, including 15 straight hours of sessions, speeches, and interviews scheduled for Betanews for Tuesday alone. We’ll be checking in with you throughout the day for updates, analysis, and live reports from the keynotes, then follow up with full analysis each evening. Then we’ll be bringing you complete interviews with conference newsmakers beginning the following week.

    The view from inside the Los Angeles Convention Center during the pre-convention proceedings at PDC 2008 Sunday afternoon, October 27.

    But every year, we like to put our reputation on the line and take some bets on expectations. Naturally, we don’t have to risk too much on a bet that Office 2010 will be given a lot of spotlight; but based on what we’ve seen thus far (especially the fact that this year’s show itinerary came together so late), here is our annual list of flashpoints (cue the network news music) that we expect will be the talk of attendees throughout the week:

    • Making up for UAC. Among developers — especially in the security arena — the fact that Microsoft let up a little bit on its default security settings for Windows 7 User Account Control, relative to where they were in Vista, has been an issue of some contention. Many are concerned that the company’s engineers will have had to engineer new and tighter security techniques into the operating system to make up for that lax setting; while others argue that UAC isn’t much of a barrier anyway, even at full throttle, compared with a decent anti-virus. Even though Windows 7 has already launched, there will be plenty of developers expecting to learn for the first time what new behaviors the operating system will exhibit, to raise the bar back to Vista’s level.
    • Why Windows Azure? It was October 2008 when Microsoft first demonstrated its cloud-based deployment platform for .NET applications, but many feel that since that time, the company has yet to actually demonstrate one single, real-world application for it. We’re seeing a lot more granularity in the topic breakdowns for sessions devoted to Azure this year, so we expect company engineers to make the case for Azure, as if for the first time. But that case will have to be for an entirely new class of apps, including some that are to some degree hybridized to work on local PCs and cloud processors simultaneously.
    • What will Office Web Apps do? It looked at first as though Microsoft had solved a very important dilemma, with its plans to release Office Web Apps to the general public — reversing an earlier decision to market Office WA only to Office 2010 licensees. But then came indications that Office WA would not have full functionality, or perhaps not offer full functionality to general users anyway, making users wonder not only what Microsoft’s plan was, but whether it really had one. The fact that Office WA does not play a prominent role in this year’s PDC schedule, indicates that questions about the latter possibility are still justified.
    • Making the case for Office 2010. We expect to see a much tighter relationship between the next version of the traditional Office software suite, and online collaboration functionality such as SharePoint. The use of SharePoint in collaboration will very likely be built directly into the new O’10, in an in-your-face way designed to help advertise SharePoint. But we also expect a more consumer-oriented level of collaboration to be built into the suite, perhaps in conjunction with Office Live or Windows Live, not just for collaboration and portable storage but things like synchronization and live annotation. These will likely be presented not just as add-ins or attachments, but full-scale features of the product.
    • The new flavor of Visual Studio. Although what’s currently being distributed as Visual Studio 2010 is officially a beta, with respect to developers’ tools, it’s usually the beta that is the most often deployed — VS 2008 is already being back-burnered. It’s the obvious goal of VS 2010 to move developers toward a programming model that’s more conducive to Silverlight, XAML, and dynamic scripting. The real question is whether developers actually want or need to move that direction. With Silverlight being the carrot, we expect the “stick” next week to come in the form of changes to the principal low-level languages — C# and Visual Basic — to incorporate more componentized features that could drag developers kicking and screaming into Microsoft’s idea of the future.
    • Will virtualization envelop Windows? Hyper-V is almost a standard component now in installations of Windows Server, especially the new 2008 R2 variety. But technologically, Microsoft is a generation (at least) behind VMware in making virtualization versatile and ubiquitous — note, for example, the lack of 64-bit virtualization capability in Windows 7, a feature that even Sun’s VirtualBox has in spades. Microsoft has an opportunity here to remake the server operating system into a virtual envelope that runs not just applications and services, but operating environments, in terms of roles — the broader functions that servers perform. We’ll see next week how far Microsoft is planning to move toward that model.
    • The push toward online identity. Here is the wildcard of the week. We’ve already seen this week the discovery that Microsoft has been applying for patents for methods to secure localized privileges for software components using authentication tools and passwords — something Windows has desperately needed for over a decade. And we’ve also seen questions as to Microsoft’s “sinister motives,” especially questioning whether it’s some exclusionary tactic with regard to Linux. That’s all probably smoke. The real innovation here, I feel, is a genuine effort to deploy a kind of single-sign-on with scalability in two directions it’s never had before: from the wide scale of multiple online Web sites and services, to the narrow scale of COM components in one processor’s memory. There’s the potential for a huge achievement here, but we’ve seen this kind of thing fizzle before. So we have hopes for an opportunity to get our hopes up.

    All of Microsoft’s star players are on tap for next week — we mentioned crowd favorite Russinovich. There’s also Luca Bolognese, Ray Ozzie, Bob Muglia, Henrik Nielsen, Don Box, Jeffrey Snover, Dean Hachamovitch, Mike Neil, Brian Goldfarb, and programming giant Butler Lampson.

    This year, add one name to the list of giants: Burton Smith, the co-founder of Cray, and since 2005 a Technical Fellow at Microsoft. Smith will be on hand this year to profess on his favorite topic, one he helped create: parallelism, and how new processing techniques can be leveraged by better development methods.

    It will be a colossal week, and we invite you to stay with Betanews all next week and into the coming days as we sort it all out, live and direct from Los Angeles.

    Copyright Betanews, Inc. 2009



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  • Rock Band getting AFI and The Bangles, Dead Kennedys going Unplugged

    A five-song AFI track pack is coming to Rock Band ‘s in-game music store next week along with one from ’80s all-female band The Bangles. Handheld rock…

  • Video Game Developers Say That Piracy Really Isn’t A Big Threat To Business

    Well this is a bit of a surprise. For all the talk we keep hearing about how piracy is destroying the video game industry, and news stories with video game execs talking up DRM and the threat of piracy, a recent study of video game developers had only 10% saying that piracy was a threat to their business. Plenty were concerned about it as an issue they had to deal with, but most seemed to have some perspective on the relative risk of the threat. In fact, other parts of the survey note that about 50% are adapting to the marketplace, saying that “piracy” will change the way they do business, with it mostly meaning more “piracy-proof” business models. On the DRM front, there isn’t a whole lot of interest. 50% called it irrelevant with another 20% describing DRM as a part of the problem. I have to admit I’m a bit surprised by the findings (which makes me wonder a bit about the methodology), but it’s nice to see at least some suggestion that developers are adapting, rather than threatening and blaming.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • BlackBerry 9700s start infiltrating T-Mobile retail locations

    We’ve been told that T-Mobile retail locations have started receiving their shipments of BlackBerry 9700s in preparation of Monday’s national release. Though we doubt stores will sell them early, it’s always worth a try, no? We have also heard each store should be receiving a minimum of 25 units.

  • NASA: We found water on the Moon

    moon1Well, well. It looks like the Moon bombing went well as NASA just released a whole lot of data supporting the initial findings that there’s water on the Moon. Read NASA’s take and view a whole lot of line graphs I don’t understand at NASA.gov. Next up, moonQuest DSV.


  • Eliminate Pro Becomes First Free App in the Top Grossing List

    eliminate_proI’m not sure how many of you are playing Eliminate Pro on your iPhones, but I’m guessing it has to be a fairly high number, considering the app’s success since its recent launch. ngmoco’s ambitious first-person shooter for Apple’s mobile platform is third overall in the App Store’s Top Free list, but what’s more impressive is the number 22 spot it currently occupies in the Top Grossing list of apps.

    That’s a huge step for the micropayments business model made possible by the introduction of in-app purchasing in iPhone OS 3.0. It marks the first real evidence that developers can make good money offering a “freemium” model on the iPhone platform, with users getting the initial product for free, but paying for in-game rewards and additional content.

    ngmoco appears to have found the sweet spot in add-on content where users don’t feel like they’re being extorted by a game’s in-app purchasing system. Eliminate Pro uses a system in which players earn rewards for in-game achievements that can be used to purchase armor and weapon upgrades. The catch is that you only get a certain amount of time during which game play earns you points. You can keep playing for free, but in order to get more rewards, you have to pay for more usable time.

    Users can buy blocks of active time using the in-app purchasing system, in $1, $10 and $30 dollar increments. Players seem to have taken a shine to the system, since in-app purchases alone account for all of Eliminate Pro’s gross revenue. ngmoco also has a strong community and social media promotions effort in place behind the new title.

    The company’s other title that depends heavily on in-app commerce, Touch Pets Dogs, hasn’t yet mirrored the success of Eliminate Pro. It hasn’t been available in the U.S. store for quite as long as Eliminate Pro, but I suspect the fact that its target audience skews much younger has more to do with its weaker performance. Eliminate players are far more likely to be in a position to have access to a pay-capable iTunes account.

    No doubt ngmoco and other developers will try to repeat the success of Eliminate with other apps based on the same model. Personally, I’d be happy to see more games along the same lines, so long as developers remember that “freemium” does not mean “artificially handicapped.” Eliminate Pro works so well because it’s fun even if you don’t make use of the in-app purchases. As a result, users feel that ngmoco is operating in good faith and are willing to spend money on enhancing their experience.


  • Will We See Chrome Devices This Holiday Season?

    chrome_os2Google continues to pursue its ambitious Chrome agenda, confirming it will release a beta version of the Chrome browser for Mac in the next few weeks and reportedly preparing to make the OS available via download within days. The question for on-the-go tech geeks, though, is what kind of devices  we’ll see for the downloadable OS, and when.

    Google has said it’s working on Chrome OS with a host of hardware vendors including Acer, Hewlett-Packard, Lenovo, Qualcomm, Texas Instruments and Toshiba. And as James noted several weeks ago (GigaOM Pro, subscription req.), the platform  is being developed specifically for the netbook segment, leveraging a bare-bones interface optimized for performance — not frills. Google said earlier this year that netbooks running the OS wouldn’t be available until the second half of 2010, but that it would open source the code for download by the end of 2009.

    Despite all the hype surrounding Chrome — and the heavy-hitters teaming with Google on the project — the OS is likely to make a quiet debut and be targeted at a small number of devices. But Acer and Lenovo are rumored to be preparing to launch Chrome OS devices, Nvidia is working on Chrome OS Tegra devices, and as TechCrunch suggested, Eee PC netbooks could be endorsed by Google as Chrome-ready. If the Chrome OS’ debut comes off without a hitch, there’s a chance we could even see some hardware support for it in time for the holidays.