Category: News

  • Google Tweaks The Blogger Template HTML Editor

    Google announced that it has made some adjustments to the template HTML editor for Blogger. It now supports line numbering, syntax highlighting, auto-indentation and code folding.

    In a post on the Blogger Buzz blog, Google software engineers Samantha Schaffer and Renee Kwang walk you through the steps for moving the date of a blog post from above the post title to underneath it, as an example.

    “Finally, we’ve added a ‘format template’ button that automatically cleans up the indentation of the template, and made it possible to search for text by pressing ‘Ctrl+F’ once you’ve clicked into the editor,” they write. “To find and replace text occurrences one by one, use ‘Ctrl+Shift+F’ or to find and replace all occurrences at once, use ‘Ctrl+Shift+R’.”

    According to the engineers, this project was conceived as part of Google Australia’s BOLD Diversity Internship Program.

  • Apple licenses $10 million in patents, including Palm patents Steve Jobs called worthless

    Apple Patent Licensing Deal Palm
    Apple (AAPL) has struck a new deal to license patents from Access, according to a document published on the patent holding firm’s website. The IP covered in the small deal includes patents originally filed by Palm, Bell Communications Research and Geoworks. As 9to5Mac points out, former Apple CEO Steve Jobs once told then-Palm CEO Ed Colligan that the company’s patents were “not that great,” and that Apple had passed on an earlier opportunity to acquire them to protect the iPhone because they were basically worthless. To be fair though, the Apple-Access licensing deal is valued at 1 billion yen, or about $10 million USD, which is indeed practically nothing to a company with more than $140 billion in cash on hand.

  • Rackspace helps developers create mobile apps on the cloud

    Enterprise-hosting service Rackspace has launched a new cloud mobile partner ecosystem that brings together various trusted solutions to make it easier for developers to design, build, test, deploy and scale mobile applications on Rackspace’s open cloud.

    According to Rackspace, developers can start building mobile apps on a pre-configured cloud backend, without needing to reinvent the wheel every time they start work on a mobile project.

    Partners in the new initiative include StackMob, for mobile backend-as-a-service (MbaaS), SDKs, push services and app usage analytics; Sencha, a mobile HTML5 toolkit; New Relic, for real time performance metrics; and SOASTA, for load and performance testing across the mobile app lifecycle.

    “Mobile technology is disrupting all industries. Businesses, from startups to enterprises, are aggressively building out their mobile presence. By launching a powerful new ecosystem, we are enabling mobile developers to innovate faster,” John Engates, CTO of Rackspace explains. “Our pre-configured mobile stacks were developed based on our experience with hosting thousands of complex applications. These stacks are reducing complexity for mobile developers who no longer have to reinvent the wheel every time they build and deploy mobile apps. By wrapping Fanatical Support around these new mobile tools and capabilities, we’ve created a unique developer experience that’s unmatched in the market.”

    Speaking about becoming one of Rackspace’s new mobile application developer partners, Ty Amell, CEO and Co-Founder of StackMob adds: “Entrepreneurs and enterprises need a quick way to create apps but they also need a platform that is reliable and supported. StackMob and Rackspace will provide a rock-solid open cloud platform for mobile application developers to create the very best apps for their customers with confidence”.

    Photo Credit: Minerva Studio/Shutterstock

  • Oculus Rift Teardown Reveals The Secrets Of On-Your-Face 3D Gaming

    oc-rift

    I always wanted but never got a Virtual Boy, but I’m glad I waited since the Oculus Rift looks like a much better goggle-based gaming platform. The gadget got the teardown treatment over at iFixit today, thanks to a developer edition secured by the site. The Rift was remarkably easy to pull apart, earning it a very high repairability score. Rare for an iFixit teardown, the Oculus Rift one also includes some hands-on gameplay before the team pops the case.

    iFixit offers a great video of the view from inside the Rift, showing exactly how it manages the 3D effect by offsetting the image slightly for each eye, which are then combined by your brain and give the illusion of depth. The rest of the teardown shows the Rift’s core parts, like the 1280×800 resolution LCD that outputs the 640×800 image to each eye, supplied by Taiwan’s Chimei Innolux. iFixit dubs this “good news,” as Chimei Innolux is Taiwan’s largest LCD supplier.

    Other key components include the ARM Cortex-M3 microcontroller with a 72MHz CPU (most processing is handled by the host computer, of course), and there are a variety of motion, acceleration and gyroscope sensors on board to help the device follow and compensate for changes in head movement.

    The Oculus Rift was already one of the coolest, geekiest gadgets on the horizon, but now that it’s been pulled apart in a remarkably easy function to reveal its relatively simple, but very functional internals, I’m even more excited to get my hands on one.

  • CyberLink PowerDirector 11 GM5 adds RAW image support and better stability

    Taiwanese software developer CyberLink has released PowerDirector 11 Ultra GM5 (build 2707), a notable update to its powerful consumer video-editing tool for high-end Windows PCs. The update adds support for RAW images across a wide range of camera models, plus extends support to four additional languages: Danish, Swedish, Norwegian and  Finnish.

    The update, which is also available for the Ultimate and Ultimate Suite builds of PowerDirector 11, also promises improved stability and accuracy through a number of tweaks and bug fixes.

    Support for RAW images is extended to all supported camera models — an extensive list, which includes Canon, Nikon, Olympus, Sony and Fujifilm, can be found here. The update also adds a new 2.7K resolution profile (2,704×1,524) for 2D video production to AVC H.264, MPEG-4 and MKV video formats. This builds on the support for 2K and 4K profiles added to the recent GM4 build.

    Program stability improvements cover 16-threaded CPUs, the editing of 4K clips using shadow files and burning Blu-ray discs using DTS audio in supported builds. Also improved is the importing of MPEG-2 clips on Windows XP systems.

    An issue with the audio duration being miscalculated with variable bit-rate MPEG audio has been resolved, and the program promises improved seeking performance and response speed when using VOB and VRO video clips. Alignment accuracy when selecting multiple templates in Title Designer has also been implemented.

    CyberLink PowerDirector 11 Ultra and CyberLink PowerDirector 11 Ultimate are both available as free trial downloads now. The Ultimate Edition includes professional add-ons ColorDirector and AudioDirector.

    Users can pick up the full version of CyberLink PowerDirector 11 Ultra for just $69.99 through the Downloadcrew Software Store, a saving of 30 percent on the MSRP. Purchasing through Downloadcrew also entitles you to an exclusive free bundle of extras worth $69.94, comprising CyberLink LabelPrint 2.5, Holiday Pack Vol 4 seasonal templates, official 294-page tutorial book in PDF format and post-sales technical support from CyberLink.

    There’s also a 28 percent saving for those looking at CyberLink PowerDirector 11 Ultimate Suite, which comes with an expanded free bundle of goodies, including three Creative Packs and an additional 22 NewBlueFX effects to add to the extras offered with the Ultra edition.

    Photo Credit: Alex Kosev/Shutterstock

  • Google Play Music Hits Five New Countries

    Google announced this morning that Google Play Music is launching in five new European countries: Austria, Belgium, Ireland, Luxembourg and Portugal.

    “Music first launched on Google Play in Europe in November 2012, and the fast rollout to more countries today is due to the multi-territorial licensing process, as recommended by the European Commission last year,” explains Google Play head of international music partnerships, Sami Valkonen. “We have 14 multi-territorial licenses for composition rights covering Europe and representing the vast majority of the world’s music, and have recently welcomed the members of AKM/AUME in Austria, SABAM in Belgium, SPA in Portugal, and IMRO in Ireland into our growing list of author’s society partners.”

    Google is also launching Artist Hub in these countries. This is a platform for independent musicians to sell their music directly to fans. This is discussed a bit more here.

    In addition to the five new countries, Google Play Music is available in the following European countries: the UK, Germany, France, Spain and Italy.

  • Age of Empires 2: HD Edition Review (PC)

    There are many great real-time strategy franchises that appeared in the genre in the 1990s, like Command & Conquer or StarCraft, but many fans still fondly remember Age of Empires 2: Age of Kings, as well as its subsequent expansion, The Conquerors.

    While a full-fledged sequel followed in 2005, many people still consider Age of Empires II to be th… (read more)

  • ‘Breastaurant’ Trademark Registered by Texas Sports Bar

    Restaurants in which the waitresses wear skimpy outfits have been the norm in the U.S. for decades. Now, one Texas sports bar has taken the moniker “breastaurant” and made it its own.

    Doug Guller, the founder and CEO of Bikinis Sports Bar & Grill, this month trademarked the word “breastaurant” through the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. The Texas restaurant chain has long billed itself as “America’s Only Sports Breastaurant” but has now made the designation official.

    “We’re really excited about receiving this federal trademark,” said Guller. “Our team has worked hard over the last seven years to offer a unique experience to our fans. It just further solidifies that Bikinis Sports Bar & Grill is America’s ONLY ‘breastaurant.’”

    Bikinis offers the standard spread of sports bar fare, such as chicken wings, burgers, nachos, and a variety of beers. The catch is that all of their waitresses dress in cowboy boots, short jean shorts, and bikini tops. The restaurant even sells a yearly bikini calendar featuring its waitresses.

    This isn’t the first time Guller has used naming to gain publicity. Last year he purchased the ghost town of Bankersmith, Texas on Craigslist and renamed the location to Bikinis, Texas. Guller has stated that he intends to turn the town’s empty post office building into a Bikinis hall of fame.

    (Photo courtesy Bikinis Sports Bar & Grill via Facebook)

  • Facebook & GM Revive Advertising Relationship After Last Year’s Pre-IPO Breakup

    After a highly publicized split nearly a year ago, it looks like Facebook and General Motors are getting back together.

    GM has confirmed to Ad Age that they have decided to once again throw some advertising dollars into Facebook.

    “Chevrolet is testing a number of mobile-advertising solutions, including Facebook, as part of its ‘Find New Roads’ campaign,” said Chris Perry, VP Chevrolet marketing in the U.S. “Today, Chevrolet is launching an industry-first, ‘mobile-only’ pilot campaign for the Chevrolet Sonic that utilizes newly available targeting and measurement capabilities on Facebook.”

    Big news for GM, sure. But why is this big news for Facebook? Let’s take a brief walk through Facebook and GM’a relationship over the past year.

    In May of 2012, just days before Facebook’s IPO, GM announced that they would be pulling all of their Facebook ads. They stated that they simply weren’t convinced that Facebook ads were truly effective, and furthermore were unsure how they fit into their future marketing strategies. It was a high-profile move, at a time when Facebook’s ability to monetize was on everyone’s mind.

    Immediately, it felt like a pretty big slap to the face. A public vote of no confidence. A few days later, GM noted that they were making many big advertising decisions at the time. Basically, hey – no hard feelings. It’s all just part of a comprehensive retooling of the strategy. Of course, this did little to neutralize the sting, especially right around the IPO. Facebook’s stock price tanked, people started talking monetization issues, which led to talks about advertising strategies, which of course led to GM as the big example of a company who pulled the plug.

    A couple of months later, GM’s marketing head Joel Ewanick resigned – although it wasn’t really tied to the Facebook, specifically.

    Since then, multiple reports have suggested that Facebook and GM had reestablished talks. The most recent indicating that the two companies were “actively talking” about a return to a paid advertising partnership.

    “We’re still actively talking to them and looking at opportunities that come our way…I wouldn’t tell you that there’s a Mexican standoff here. We just didn’t see the value [in the ads],” said GM’s interim marketing head Alan Batey back in January.

    Ad Age says that part of the reason GM pulled out of Facebook in the first place involved the inability for the company to run bigger, “higher-impact” ads. Although that’s still not really possible, Facebook advertising has changed quite a bit in the last year – mainly with the launch of the real-time, cookie-based Facebook Exchange retargeting system.

    “We’ve had an ongoing dialogue with GM over the last 12 months and are pleased to have them back as an advertiser on Facebook. We look forward to working even more closely with GM in the coming weeks and months,” said a Facebook spokesperson.

    Any way you look at it, it’s a good thing for Facebook that GM has decided to try it again. There’s a chance that it could signify to other companies that it’s safe to open up their Facebook ad budgets a little bit. In the end, we’re not talking about a huge ad budget here that’s going to make or break either Facebook or GM. Before GM yanked their ads last May, it was reported that they had only been spending around $10 million on Facebook ads – hardly a game changer.

    [Image via Chevrolet.com]

  • Google Introduces ‘x-default hreflang’ Annotation For Webmasters

    Google introduced a new rel-alternate-hreflang annotation for webmasters to specify international landing pages. It’s called “x-default hreflang,” and it signals to Google’s algorithms that a page doesn’t target a specific language or location.

    “The homepages of multinational and multilingual websites are sometimes configured to point visitors to localized pages, either via redirects or by changing the content to reflect the user’s language,” explains Google Webmaster Trends analyst Pierre Far. “Today we’ll introduce a new rel-alternate-hreflang annotation that the webmaster can use to specify such homepages that is supported by both Google and Yandex.”

    “The new x-default hreflang attribute value signals to our algorithms that this page doesn’t target any specific language or locale and is the default page when no other page is better suited,” says Far. “For example, it would be the page our algorithms try to show French-speaking searchers worldwide or English-speaking searchers on google.ca.”

    If example.com/en-gb targets English-speaking users in the UK, example.com/en-us targets English-speaking users in the US, example.com/en-au targets English-speaking users in Australia, and exmaple.com/ tshows users a country selector and is the default page worldwide, then the annotation would something like this:

    <link rel="alternate" href="http://example.com/en-gb" hreflang="en-gb" /> 
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://example.com/en-us" hreflang="en-us" /> 
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://example.com/en-au" hreflang="en-au" /> 
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://example.com/" hreflang="x-default" />

    The annotation can also be used for homepages that dynamically alter their contents based on users’ geolocation or the Accept-Language headers.

  • Intel Updates Processor Roadmap for 2013

    intel-atom-s12x9

    Intel has a busy year of new processor product rollouts planned, as it continues to update its chips to take advantage of technology innovations. During her keynote at the Intel Developer Forum today in Beijing, Diane Bryant, senior vice president and general manager of Intel’s Datacenter and Connected Systems Group, unveiled details of upcoming Intel products targeting the server, networking and storage requirements of the data center.

    The company will refresh its Intel Xeon and Atom processor lines with new generations of 22nm manufactured products. In coming months Intel will also begin production of new Intel Atom and Xeon processor E3, E5 and E7 families, featuring improved performance per watt and expanded feature sets, Bryant said.

    Intel Atom for the Data Center

    In December 2012, Intel launched the Intel Atom processor S1200 product family. Today, Intel revealed details of three new low-power SoCs (system on chip) for the data center, all coming in 2013.

    • Intel Atom Processor S12x9 product family for Storage. Intel announced the availability of the low-power Intel Atom processor S12x9 family for storage deployments. This SoC shares several features with the Intel Atom S1200 processor product family, but contains technologies specifically geared for storage devices. With up to 40 lanes of integrated PCIe 2.0, or physical paths between I/O and the processor, the capacity demands of multiple devices can be handled more efficiently. Of the 40 lanes of PCIe* 2.0, there are 24 Root Port lanes and 16 Non Transparent Bridge lanes, for failover support.
    • Avoton. In the second half of 2013, Intel will deliver the second generation of 64-bit Intel Atom processor for microservers, codenamed “Avoton.” Built on Intel’s leading 22nm process technology and new microarchitecture “Silvermont,” Avoton will feature an integrated Ethernet controller and expected to deliver significant improvements in performance-per-watt. Avoton is now being sampled to customers and the first systems are expected to be available in the second half of 2013.
    • Rangeley. Intel will expand its presence in the network and communications infrastructure market by delivering an Intel® Atom™ processor based SoC codenamed “Rangeley,” also built on the 22nm process technology. Rangeley aims to provide an energy-efficient mechanism for processing communication workloads and is targeted for entry level to mid-range routers, switches and security appliances. Rangeley is targeted to be available in second half of 2013.

    Intel Xeon processor E3 Family

    This year, Intel will introduce the new Intel Xeon processor E3 1200 v3 product family, based on Haswell architecture. Intel continues to lower the power levels on the Intel Xeon processor E3 family; the lowest TDP will be 13 watts, approximately up to 25 percent lower than the prior generation. The improvement from eight transcode to 10 transcode with Haswell’s graphics capabilities also results in up to 25 percent improvement in transcode performance per watt for hardware accelerated media performance.

    Intel Xeon processor E5 Family

    Intel’s next-generation Intel Xeon processor E5 family will be based on the 22nm manufacturing process, and will be available in the third quarter of this year. These processors will support Intel Node Manager and Intel Data Center Manager Software. Security will also be improved with Intel Secure Key and Intel OS Guard which provide additional hardware-enhanced security  Intel OS Guard protects against privilege attacks by preventing malicious code from executing out of application memory space, in addition to data memory.

    Intel Xeon Processor E7 Family

    To support in-memory analytics and rapidly respond to scaling data sets, Intel is on-track for production availability of the next-generation Intel Xeon processor E7 family in the fourth quarter of 2013. Featuring triple the memory capacity – up to 12 Terabytes (TB) in an eight-socket node – this processor is ideal for data-demanding, transaction-intensive workloads such as in-memory databases and real-time business analytics.

    • With the Intel Xeon processor E7 family, Intel is also announcing Intel® Run Sure Technology which will deliver greater system reliability and increased data integrity while minimizing the downtime for businesses running mission-critical workloads. These RAS features will be available with the next-generation Intel Xeon processor E7 family, and will be comprised of Resilient System Technologies, Resilient Memory Technologies.
    • Resilient System Technologies includes standardized technologies integrating processor, firmware and software layers, including the OS, hypervisors and databases to allow the system to recover from previously fatal errors.
    • Resilient Memory Technologies includes features to help ensure data integrity and enable systems to keep running reliably over a longer period of time, reducing the need for immediate service calls.
  • The Happiest People Pursue the Most Difficult Problems

    Lurking behind the question of jobs — whether there are enough of them, how hard we should work at them, and what kind the future will bring — is a major problem of job engagement. Too many people are tuned out, turned off, or ready to leave. But there’s one striking exception.

    The happiest people I know are dedicated to dealing with the most difficult problems. Turning around inner city schools. Finding solutions to homelessness or unsafe drinking water. Supporting children with terminal illnesses. They face the seemingly worst of the world with a conviction that they can do something about it and serve others.

    Ellen Goodman, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist (and long-time friend), has turned grief to social purpose. She was distraught over the treatment of her dying mother. After leaving her job as a syndicated columnist, she founded The Conversation Project, a campaign to get every family to face the difficult task of talking about death and end-of-life care.

    Gilberto Dimenstein, another writer-turned-activist in Brazil, spreads happiness through social entrepreneurship. When famous Brazilian pianist Joao Carlos Martins lost the use of most of his fingers and almost gave into deepest despair, Dimenstein urged him to teach music to disadvantaged young people. A few years later, Martins, now a conductor, exudes happiness. He has nurtured musical talent throughout Brazil, brought his youth orchestras to play at Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center in New York, and has even regained some use of his fingers.

    For many social entrepreneurs, happiness comes from the feeling they are making a difference.

    I see that same spirit in business teams creating new initiatives that they believe in. Gillette’s Himalayan project team took on the challenge of changing the way men shave in India, where the common practice of barbers using rusty blades broken in two caused bloody infections. A team member who initially didn’t want to leave Boston for India found it his most inspiring assignment. Similarly, Procter & Gamble’s Pampers team in Nigeria find happiness facing the problem of infant mortality and devising solutions, such as mobile clinics that sent a physician and two nurses to areas lacking access to health care.

    In research for my book Evolve!, I identified three primary sources of motivation in high-innovation companies: mastery, membership, and meaning. Another M, money, turned out to be a distant fourth. Money acted as a scorecard, but it did not get people up-and-at ’em for the daily work, nor did it help people go home every day with a feeling of fulfillment.

    People can be inspired to meet stretch goals and tackle impossible challenges if they care about the outcome. I’ll never forget the story of how a new general manager of the Daimler Benz operations in South Africa raised productivity and quality at the end of the apartheid era by giving the workers something to do that they valued: make a car for Nelson Mandela, just released from prison. A plant plagued by lost days, sluggish workers, and high rates of defects produced the car in record time with close to zero defects. The pride in giving Mandela the Mercedes, plus the feeling of achievement, helped the workers maintain a new level of performance. People stuck in boring, rote jobs will spring into action for causes they care about.

    Heart-wrenching emotion also helps cultivate a human connection. It is hard to feel alone, or to whine about small things, when faced with really big matters of deprivation, poverty, and life or death. Social bonds and a feeling of membership augment the meaning that comes from values-based work.

    Of course, daunting challenges can be demoralizing at times. City Year corps members working with at-risk middle school students with failing grades from dysfunctional homes see improvement one day, only to have new problems arise the next. Progress isn’t linear; it might not be apparent until after many long days of hard work have accumulated. It may show up in small victories, like a D student suddenly raising his hand in class because he understands the math principle. (I see this from service on the City Year board. You can find dozens of these stories on Twitter under #makebetterhappen.)

    It’s now common to say that purpose is at the heart of leadership, and people should find their purpose and passion. I’d like to go a step further and urge that everyone regardless of their work situation, have a sense of responsibility for at least one aspect of changing the world. It’s as though we all have two jobs: our immediate tasks and the chance to make a difference.

    Leaders everywhere should remember the M’s of motivation: mastery, membership, and meaning. Tapping these non-monetary rewards (while paying fairly) are central to engagement and happiness. And they are also likely to produce innovative solutions to difficult problems.

  • Don’t want to give out your real phone number? Burner app will now cover Android users too

    Ad Hoc Labs CEO Greg Cohn was blown away by user response after he launched Burner, the app that gives you alternate phone numbers, last August. With everyone from John Gruber to Tommy Lee tweeting about it, the app saw a rapid rise in popularity. Now eight months later, the company plans to expand to Android  and make some changes in how you pay for its service.

    create burner phone screenshotIt seems there’s quite a market out there for extra phone numbers.

    “When we first went to market in August, we were hoping it would be interesting to people, and we were just totally blown away, so we’ve been sort of furiously updating since then,” Cohn said in an interview. “We’ve continued to be a regular in the top ten utility apps on iTunes, and we’re seeing all kinds of use cases, even more than we’d hoped we might.”

    Starting Wednesday, the app will be free to download (previously it was a paid app), and new subscribers will start out with one “burner,” or number they can give out that will re-direct calls and texts to their actual phone and existing number. Users can then pay to extend the length of time a burner number is active and how many calls and texts it can receive. The company raised angel funding back in October, although it started out as a boostrapped venture.

    At the time Burner launched, it seemed like a lot of people would want to use it for illegal activity, since even the word “burner” is usually associated with criminal activity. But Cohn said that hasn’t been as much an issue as company or the media thought it would be. Instead, Burner has heard of some quite creative uses for the numbers, he said.

    “We knew to anticipate more obvious use cases like Craigslist and dating,” he said. “But we’re also seeing plenty of activity among teachers and lawyers and doctors.”

    Users of the iOS app will also see some improvements on Wednesday, the company noted, including “customizable voicemail greetings; the ability to manage call history by starring, renaming or hiding conversations; improved notifications of in-bound calls, missed calls, and voicemails.”

    Even as a variety of messaging and chat apps have popped up recently, Cohn said he still thinks Burner offers something unique.

    “Part of our big value proposition is that you don’t have to join something to communicate with someone. You can steailthily interact with all of the cell phones that are in existence.”

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  • RemotePlay launches iOS app for cross-platform media sharing

    RemotePlay, the media sharing app that lets you send documents, photos or videos to anyone with a mobile device within the same network, plans to release an iOS version Wednesday that makes it possible to share media between Android devices, iPhones and iPads.

    Users of the iOS app can import media from iTunes, or access content shared by other apps, including Dropbox and Google Drive. I had a chance to try a pre-release version of the iOS app back in March and was impressed by the simplicity of cross-platform media sharing: take a look at my demo video below.

    RemotePlay has been developed by Piddas21, a Taiwanese startup founded by ODM giant Quanta Computer. Piddas21 CEO and Founder Joe Lin told me back in March that the idea behind Piddas21 was to find additional revenue opportunities for Quanta customers who don’t want to just rely on hardware sales alone anymore. Quanta Computer manufactures three out of four laptops worldwide.

    Image courtesy of Flickr user Tsahi Levent-Levi.

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  • The iPhone 5S May Come In Multiple Sizes [Report]

    One of the most prevalent rumors surrounding the next iPhone is that Apple is working on a larger phone. Some suggest that the larger display won’t come into play until next year’s iPhone 6, but others are now suggesting that we’ll get a larger iPhone with this year’s iPhone 5S.

    Brian White, analyst for Topeka Capital Markets, said that Apple will release the iPhone 5S with three separate screen sizes. He reportedly got his information from a company in Apple’s supply chain.

    “We believe Apple is coming around to the fact that one size per iPhone release does not work for everyone and offering consumers an option has the potential to expand the company’s market share,” White said.

    This isn’t the first time that White has predicted the iPhone 5S will come in multiple screen sizes. He said the same thing back in January, while adding that Apple would be using Sharp’s new IGZO display panels for the larger screens. He also said that the iPhone 5S would be offered in more colors than just the traditional black and white.

    White also addressed the persistent rumor that Apple will be releasing a cheaper iPhone this year for the Chinese market. Some rumors suggested that Apple would go as low as $99 for the cheaper device, but White says that Apple can’t possibly go below $300 without a subsidy. The reason being that Apple never sells at a loss or at cost. Even if it’s cheaper, Apple has to make a tidy profit on every iPhone sold to keep investors happy.

    All of this is speculation for now, but we may find out more about the mythical iPhone 5S sooner rather than later. The latest rumors peg the iPhone 5S release date for June. If that’s the case, we could see a reveal in late May/early June.

    [h/t: Apple Insider]

  • Nokia Lumia 521 comes to T-Mobile in May

    At Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Nokia unveiled its entry-level Windows Phone 8 handset — the Lumia 520 — which will run for $185 before any applicable taxes. And today T-Mobile announced that it will carry a branded variant of the smartphone, dubbed the Lumia 521.

    Like its international sibling, the Lumia 521 comes with a 4.0-inch display, which T-Mobile says is “super sensitive, a 5MP back-facing camera with auto-focus and 720p video recording and the usual Nokia software add-ons.

    That means users will get access to Nokia collection in the app store, which features Burton, Cinemagraph, Creative Studio, HERE City Lens, HERE Drive, Here Maps, HERE Transit, Panorama, PhotoBeamer, Smart Shoot and other exclusive software.

    T-Mobile announced that the Lumia 521 will be available starting in May from Microsoft and T-Mobile retail stores and Walmart. The mobile operator says that other details, such as price and exact date of availability, will be announced later on.

  • Waterstones founder to help launch new e-singles subscription site, Read Petite

    Tim Waterstone, founder of the U.K.’s Waterstones bookstore chain, is involved in a new venture: Read Petite, a subscription site for long-form fiction and nonfiction. The site will be announced at the London Book Fair next week and will launch to the public in the fall.

    Waterstone is chairman. Read Petite was founded by literary agent Peter Cox and consultant Martyn Daniels. Neill Denny, a former editor of book trade magazine The Bookseller, is COO.

    Cox tells The Bookseller, “We are genuinely trying to expand the reading market, and bring publishers together under our aegis to do something new. Up until now short-form writing has not really been economic to produce, but we think we can unleash it.”

    Monthly subscription prices haven’t been set yet, but Waterstone tells the Guardian that they will likely be “a few pounds,” giving readers unlimited access to a library of long-form journalism and short stories. The stories will be submitted by publishers.

    Read Petite sounds similar to U.S. e-singles sites Byliner and the Atavist, both of which are experimenting with subscriptions that give readers access to all their titles for a monthly fee.

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    • Office 365 scores a big win with ABB

      Microsoft has been racking up contracts between Office 365 and businesses and governments recently, including eight new ones just announced in March. Now the company may have made its biggest score yet, partnering with world-wide power and productivity company ABB.

      According to Andy Tidd, chief information officer at ABB Group, “Office 365 and Yammer will enable us to transform communication and collaboration among our employees, surfacing the best and most innovative ideas across the organization”.

      ABB operates in 100 countries around the world and employs some 145,000 people. The company will be transitioning from multiple IT collaboration and messaging solutions to Office 365 to provide a single platform for productivity, communication, collaboration and enterprise social in the cloud.

      Microsoft’s Chief Operating Officer Kevin Turner states: “When you remove barriers to productivity and innovation and enable employees to collaborate and communicate even more freely and seamlessly across organizational and geographical boundaries, incredible things happen”.

      Microsoft goes on to promise a long-term cost savings of 15-20 percent in travel expenses alone thanks to the service’s online meeting capabilities. It’s a major win for Microsoft and another sign that the company is not going away anytime soon, despite what some would have you believe.

    • Cloud wars to rage on with dueling OpenStack, AWS events next week

      Neither of the principal parties would admit this, but the competition between the OpenStack cloud forces and Amazon Web Services will play out next week with the OpenStack Summit taking place in Portland, Ore. April 15-19 and Amazon Web Services Summit  in New York on April 18. Both events are sold out although realistically, can you remember the last tech event you attended that was not “sold out?”

      full openstack cloud software logoI have no numbers for the AWS event (at the Javitts Center) but as of Tuesday night, the count for OpenStack Summit is 2,400 registered attendees up from 1,314 for last year’s San Diego extravaganza, according to an OpenStack source with access to that data. (These numbers are supposedly public although darned if I could find them.)

      Rackspace, HP pack OpenStack show

      Rackspace, one of OpenStack’s granddaddies along with NASA — has registered 199 people — a number which one OpenStack member characterized as overkill. Hewlett-Packard, depending on how you count or spell it, has 169 people or so on tap. Here’s how that list breaks out: HP (85), Hewlett Packard with no dash (30); Hewlett-Packard with dash (22); HP Cloud Services (21) and HP Cloud (7), Hewlett Packard Co. (4). Seriously, HP, what’s up with that?

      Red Hat is on with 74, IBM with 72 and the list goes on. What I’ll be looking for, however will be real, live OpenStack customers which are starting to trickle out. OpenStack Foundation member Cloudscaling (which registered 14 summit attendees) just announced video game publisher Ubisoft as a customer and already has claimed LivingSocial and IBS Datafort as reference accounts.

      Structure 2011: Werner Vogels – CTO, Amazon.com

      Structure 2011: Werner Vogels – CTO, Amazon.com

      Some other interesting tidbits from the OpenStack Summit attendee list: Controversial foundation member VMware registered a whopping 4 people. VMware bought Nicira, a big OpenStack player in software-defined networking. And non-member Oracle registered 14 people. Interesting. Oracle is going its own way with cloud but recently buy bought Nimbula, an OpenStack member.

      Amazon to tout OpsWorks, other enterprise-class services

      Meanwhile, on the other coast, AWS CTO Werner Vogels will probably talk up AWS’ value to the enterprise and tout its new-and-improved cloud management features and services including OpsWorks lifecycle management offering and RedShift, Amazon’s inexpensive data warehouse alternative to Teradata, Oracle, IBM and HP products.

      AWS, a favorite among developers at startups and big companies alike, still needs to persuade  financial services companies and organizations in other heavily regulated industries that its public cloud infrastructure can be trusted for sensitive workloads — things beyond archival storage. And, there are indications — including the private cloud it’s allegedly building for the CIA that it’s getting over its aversion to private cloud deployment as well.

      OpenStack clouds are starting to gel — at least at some customer accounts. What remains to be seen is which of the many OpenStack cloud providers will gain traction. And meanwhile, AWS continues to chug along.

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    • T-Mobile offers iPhone 5 for $0 down to carrier-switching iPhone users

      T-Mobile Free iPhone
      Watch out, rival carriers: T-Mobile has its eyes on your iPhone subscribers. The so-called “un-carrier” on Wednesday announced that it would give new customers an iPhone 5 for $0 down if they trade in their iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S models. The iPhone 5 won’t be completely free, however, because customers will still have to pay monthly charges over a two-year period to pay off the cost of the device. That said, iPhone users who switch from other carriers will still be getting an iPhone 5 for $99 less than current T-Mobile subscribers who want to buy the device and for $199 less than what they’d pay on other carriers. T-Mobile’s full press release is posted below.

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