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  • Verizon May Cozy Up to the RIAA

    verizonlogoVerizon may be joining the ranks of Internet service providers that send subscribers who illegally download or upload music files notices on behalf of the Recording Industry of America, according to sources who spoke with CNet. Verizon has not responded to my questions on this issue, but the CNet story says the letters will only notify subscribers that they may have erred; it will not threaten them with disconnection. We covered this trend last March when AT&T began experimenting with these letters:

    AT&T reached out today to let me know that it doesn’t issue take-down notices to its subscribers, but merely forwards the notice from the copyright owner along with an AT&T cover letter. The cover letter informs the subscriber without actually accusing them of illegal activity how they might find themselves in the position of receiving such a letter, and reminds them of AT&T’s terms of service that prohibit sharing copyrighted material.

    If Verizon does plan to send notices on behalf of the RIAA or other rights organizations, it’s most likely because the ISP wants to get on the good side of content owners that it needs to make deals with in order to offer compelling content via its IPTV and even its broadband products. Is this the beginning of a three-strikes policy, whereby those accused of pirating content may find themselves disconnected, or is this is merely an effort to placate content owners?

  • AT&T sets the record straight in response to Verizon attack ads

    We’ve all seen the Verizon ads that make fun of AT&T’s network and the iPhone, and while it makes for a good chuckle, the folks at AT&T aren’t laughing. As a matter of fact, as you know, a lawsuit has been brought against Verizon to cease the airing of the ads. While the two rage on and settle the legal matter, AT&T has decided to take things into its own hands by publicly responding to the Verizon ad on its own site. Hit the jump for some of the key facts in that memo.

    • AT&T’s wireless data coverage reaches 303 million people – or 97% of the U.S. population, where they live and work. Our data coverage consists of 3 different types of technology:
    • 3G. 233 million people or 75% of the population are covered by AT&T’s 3G network, the nation’s fastest.
    • EDGE. 301 million people or more than 96% of the population are covered by EDGE. With both 3G and EDGE coverage, customers can access the Internet, send e-mail, surf the Web, stream music, download videos, send photos, text, talk and more. The only difference – with some data applications, 3G is faster than EDGE
    • GPRS. Covers 303 million people, allowing you to talk, text, e-mail and access basic websites optimized for wireless.

    AT&T is also dipping its finger into Verizon’s drink by stating that the latter can’t do data and voice at the same time, and its smartphone collection is nowhere near as popular as AT&T’s smartphone lineup (read: iPhone). AT&T kind of has a point, though. What do you guys think?

    Thanks to everyone who sent this in!

    Read

  • BBGeekcast: November 13, 2009 – Episode 90

    It’s a change of pace this week on the BBGeekcast. While we’re usually all over the latest devices, this time it’s about the software. RIM just held the second annual BlackBerry Developers Conference, and we got some interesting news that could enhance the BlackBerry platform. That’s going to be the next step for RIM, and that’s our main topic on the BBGeekcast.

    So click on over here to hear the BBGeekcast (12 min, 2 sec)

    And don’t forget to subscribe to the podcast so you won’t miss future episodes!

    You can also subscribe to the BBGeekcast in iTunes.

    Highlights include:
    (more…)

  • The secrets of the Apple Store iPod Touch

    apple-ipod-touch-retail-edition-0
    OMWOW! Pocket-Lint has some red hot pix of the iPod Touch used in Apple Stores to enable on-the-spot check out. It’s a standard Touch with a barcode scanner and credit card reader but it replaces the old EasyPay systems from Microsoft they were using until now.

    The Lint Boys only got three hot photos of the device because the guys at the Apple store were scared of getting placed into the special Education Room in the basement of every Apple store.


  • App Store Devs Flaunt Copyright Troll With Name Changes

    critter_credgeiPhone devs are a rebellious bunch, and they don’t like to be bullied by anyone other than their Apple, which both frustrates and affirms their existence. Now, in light of what some might call a campaign being waged against the App Store by a well-known trademark troll, many iPhone devs are protesting what they see as Apple’s cowardice in the face of unjust threats.

    According to TUAW, the trademark troll in question is none other than Tim Langdell, founder of the “gaming company” Edge Games. In reality, Edge Games produces very little beyond copyright infringement suits, which it launches against any and all games that feature the word “edge” in their title. EA’s Mirror’s Edge recently fell between Langdell’s crosshairs, for example, despite the fact that the game itself bears no similarity to any of Edge Games’ roster of “planned” titles.

    Apparently the App Store has been a prime target for Tim Langdell and Edge Games. Reports claim that all he has to do is contact Apple and let them know that a game is in violation of his trademarks — which again, basically means it has “edge” somewhere in the title — and Apple pulls the game without much fuss. No doubt Apple just doesn’t want to deal with yet another legal battle that could ensue if Langdell gets the opportunity to take things beyond the cease-and-desist phase, but this really seems unfair to honest game devs who actually work for their money.

    In protest, a group of iPhone devs are changing the names of their games to include “edge” in the titles, with the desired outcome being that Apple will realize that to continue just disallowing the word completely will significantly affect the App Store’s catalog of offerings. So, for example, Canabalt becomes “Canabedge,” the Eliss sequel becomes “Edgeliss” and Critter Crunch becomes “Critter Credge.” All of the changes mentioned haven’t actually been made to the apps in the store, but on developer web sites as a show of solidarity.

    Even though this particular protest limits itself to the area beyond Apple’s sphere of control, it does demonstrate a promising solution to App Store bully tactics. If developers could organize in a similar manner, but with bigger numbers and with the support of some of the pillars of the App Store, they could more effectively combat unfair policies. Apple will be less likely to anger content producers if it has potential ramifications across its catalog. Let’s see a developers rights advocacy group come to pass, so articles about the injustices of the App Store can become a more infrequent occurrence.


  • Would Google Be Liable Under The Pirate Bay Ruling?

    Michael Carrier, a law professor specializing in intellectual property law, was kind enough to let us know about a paper he recently wrote
    analyzing the Swedish court’s ruling in The Pirate Bay Case, and seeing how the reasoning set forth might apply to two other services: Grokster and Google. Grokster, of course, was a key player in a similar US lawsuit, that eventually resulted in the service shutting down. While many believe that the Supreme Court said Grokster was illegal, in reality, the ruling on the case only found that Grokster could be liable as a third party. Grokster itself settled before the lower court could rule on the issue, though co-defendant Streamcast was eventually found liable.

    Carrier’s analysis suggests that the Swedish ruling over The Pirate Bay did not go into nearly enough detail on why it made its ruling. Many of the explanations are quite vague, and could be broadly applied to other services. The most interesting part of the paper looks at how Google would fare under the same conditions — and it finds that while Google has some distinct differences from The Pirate Bay, one could read the ruling in such a way that it absolutely would apply to Google as well — which has troubling implications. At the very least, it suggests that the Swedish court did not fully understand the technology or the implications of such a ruling, and was more influenced by the fact that it seemed like The Pirate Bay must be bad, and therefore decided to support that in the ruling. But without carefully highlighting why The Pirate Bay is different than Google, the ruling is too vague and potentially dangerous.

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  • Texas welcomes Predator to 147RW

    The small aircraft might fit in a two-car garage albeit with some tinkering with
    the wings, but as unassuming as it looks one should never underestimate the
    Predator’s accuracy and destructive power…

  • Nevada Guard kicks off solar energy project

    The Nevada National Guard held a groundbreaking ceremony on Nov. 9 for a new $17
    million solar energy project…

  • Federal officials pledge support for hiring veterans

    Senior federal officials today pledged their support of President Barack Obama’s
    directive to increase the hiring of military veterans…

  • Army Guard aviator, commander ends ground-breaking career

    A National Guard commander with decades of service flying fixed- and rotary-wing
    Army aircraft retired here this week amongst the aviators he served and the
    aircraft he put to the sky…

  • Three states respond to Ida flooding

    More than 160 National Guard members in three states have responded to flooding
    caused by heavy rains from Tropical Storm Ida today…

  • Dell’s first smartphone aids the Android onslaught

    By Tim Conneally, Betanews

    Dell Mini 3Now that it’s finally been launched in at least some parts of the world today, Dell is working to keep its new Mini 3 smartphone device closely associated with Dell’s computers, calling it “The world’s most compact Dell” directly on its packaging.

    “Our entry into the smartphone category is a logical extension of Dell’s consumer product evolution over the past two years,” Ron Garriques, President of Dell Global Consumer Group said in a prepared statement today. “We are developing smaller and smarter mobile products that enable our customers to take their Internet experience out of the home and do the things they want to do whenever and wherever they want.”

    This is a wise marketing decision by Dell, as its brand is associated with fully powered computers and not mobile phones. So this approach makes it appear as if Dell isn’t trying something radically different, it’s just shrinking what it has already perfected into a small package.

    Further, the mental link consumers draw to computers can be beneficial when marketing “smart” devices.

    The Dell Mini 3 is a 3.5″ capacitive touchscreen device, and will be first available in China and Brazil. Dell has shown off the device in a number of places this year, but has stayed mostly silent about it in the English speaking world.

    Today, the company confirmed the Mini 3’s release, but added it will announce with each carrier individually.

    In China, Dell’s Mini 3 is one of China Mobile’s first “OPhones,” a line of smartphones running a custom Android build called Open Mobile System (OMS). Though it will be available to the largest mobile subscriber base in the world (China Mobile has 500 million customers), it is rumored to be without 3G connectivity.

    Before the end of the year, America Movil subsidiary Claro will bring the Dell Mini 3 to Brazil. That version will also be Android-based, but it will have a different interface from China Mobile’s and it will also support 3G.

    This is only the first of many announcements about mobile devices expected to come from Dell. The company has contracts to bring its new smartphones to Vodafone in Europe, Australia, and New Zealand, AT&T and Verizon in the US, M1 and Starhub in Singapore, and Maxis in Malaysia. Dates and details of each launch remain undisclosed.

    We reached out to Dell today to ask just how much consumers outside of China and Brazil should pay attention to such launches. A spokesman for the company reiterated that this is a global strategy, and that the launches will be up to the carriers, but also that the importance of China Mobile shouldn’t be understated.

    After all, the carrier’s subscriber base is greater than the entire population of the United States.

    Copyright Betanews, Inc. 2009



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  • Final Fantasy XIII hits North America (both PS3 and Xbox 360) on March 9, 2010!

    Final Fantasy XIII will come out in North America on March 9, 2010 for both the PS3 and Xbox 360. So says the official e-mail we just received. You can’t see it, but there’s a smile on my face right now.

    There’s only one thing in the announcement that I didn’t know before.

    • The game’s theme song, “My Hands,” will be sung by Leona Lewis. She sang the song “Bleeding Love.” Not that I’ve heard of her, but that’s not my scene, so whatever.

    There’s also three new screenshots, featuring Lightning, Snow and Vanille.

    lightningodin

    lsv

    s

    Four months to go~!


  • After the Intel + AMD armistice: Do we really want a level playing field?

    By Scott M. Fulton, III, Betanews

    Earth - North America top story badgeIf there were a psychiatrist seated across the room from us, and we were to present to her our feelings about information technology as a force in our lives, her diagnosis would be simple and immediate: We have an obsession. Maybe having nothing to do with technology itself at all, we’re obsessed with the notion of a nemesis with an unfair advantage influencing the decisions we make.

    In every major arena of information technology over the past five years, the principal topic of discussion has been the need to level the playing field, to restore something called “fair competition,” to ensure that the smaller player still has a chance. For the topic of PC operating systems, to this day, there’s a frenzied Pavlovian response to the notion that Microsoft Windows stole its ideas from Apple Mac OS — I moderated public, online discussions about that same topic 25 years ago. For Web applications, we’re beta testing the idea of shifting the Darth Vader mask from Microsoft over to Google, the dominant player in nine out of ten of the world’s queries; and we’re reveling in the irony of AT&T proclaiming Google an evil empire. For smartphones, we’re evaluating whether Apple fits the role of dominant player, whether that Halloween costume we used to fit on Bill Gates and that we’re testing on Eric Schmidt can be swapped out with Steve Jobs.

    For applications software, the discussion continues to be over whether “Darth” Microsoft devised the now-standardized XML-based format ISO 29500 as an evil scheme, camouflaged as a fairness initiative, to wrest control of the format for all the world’s documents from…itself. But that discussion has died down somewhat in recent months. There’s still a discussion over whether the agreement between Microsoft and Novell, now almost three years old, is an evil scheme to infuse Linux with elements of Microsoft, like a bad Star Trek: Voyager episode (Trekkers will recall exactly which one I’m referring to). But that discussion has died down somewhat in recent months.

    For Web browsers, the notion that the littlest player in the field, Opera Software, is slowing down, is a topic that arouses suspicion among users — is there some type of sabotage going on? But the notion that the biggest player in the field, Microsoft, is slowing down, aroused the largest, most concerted, most pointed, loudest, highest concentrated, most vehement, and occasionally the most personally directed, chorus of orchestrated chants of “We Don’t Care!” that I’ve received in a quarter-century of covering IT. It’s as if no one wants Darth Vader to die before the climactic battle.

    (Dozens of you, like a movement, almost radical, in harmony over your apathy. Noted.)

    Scott Fulton On Point badge (200 px)The public identity of the open source movement is founded on the ideal of the underdog fighting against the odds. Nowhere has the need for Linux to be heard as the lone voice of fairness in the wilderness been more pronounced than on Groklaw, the blog of my friend and colleague, Pamela Jones. Its substantive user base and high level of legal and intellectual discussion were founded around the SCO v. IBM battle, which has smoldered down now to a pathetic remnant prosecuted now by a carcass of a once-zombie company that bore a resemblance to something whose former identity used to be linked to a once-great company. And yet somehow it remains the symbol of everything Linux users believe they try to stand for; this while Linux publications that concentrate on the Linux OS and its software struggle to maintain an audience and eke out any revenue whatsoever.

    But that discussion has died down…and perhaps you’re noticing a pattern.

    In the current state of the global economy, recovering or not, major market players — especially the larger ones — are realizing they do not have the disposable income necessary to wage a full-scale assault against competitors in the courtroom. In another of the centrally defining, polarizing battles that define many folks’ personal involvement in the IT field, yesterday, Intel admitted as much outright. The company’s executives said that it could not afford to prosecute a course of legal action against AMD that one Betanews reader correctly described as “mutually assured destruction.”

    The gloves are coming off, but for a different reason. The information technology industry can no longer afford to maintain the polarizing influences that used to define each and every facet of it. In a steady, measured, intentional transition, IT is becoming a fair and open market.

    What the hell happens now?

    Are we truly ready for an IT landscape where relative leadership is ascertained using something resembling one of Betanews’ CRPI charts? How will Linux be able to cope with victory, with forces that are at this moment sweeping the unwanted Windows Mobile off of smartphones and replacing it with a Linux distro championed by a dominant market player with a high-salaried CEO, rather than two guys in tie-dyed T-shirts? And now that AMD is guaranteed by its own rival the market stature to competitively bid for prominence, how will Europe’s politicians be able to realign their re-election strategies around less popular, more boring topics like global unemployment, fair trade, and the wars in the Middle East?

    Victory — the actual start of a movement toward a level playing field, fair competition, dominance determined by the customer — is not the outcome that everyone was counting upon. If a psychiatrist were analyzing this situation rather than an IT market expert, she would say that we’re relying too much upon our dependence on victimization as a tool to establish our identity. In the absence of an active assault — of any substantial reason for us to claim that anyone is Darth Vader and anyone else is Cosmic Muffin — how will we learn to get along? When we can no longer yelp like dachshunds wishing our tails had been run over by vehicles that passed us by, will we be able to realign our interests, our ideals, our itineraries, our lives…around interoperability? Equality? Alliances? Fair chances? Little, everyday defeats through failure with no one to blame but yourself? Second chances to come back and win again?

    Whether we like it or not, our world too is getting flat.

    Copyright Betanews, Inc. 2009



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  • Google Eases Retrieval of Sidewiki Entries for Entire Sites

    Google has announced the release of a new feature for the Sidewiki API, which the company says makes it easier to retrieve all Sidewiki entries for an entire domain. It allows you to look for new entries created on any page of a site, and subscribe to them via RSS.

    If you are unfamiliar with Sidewiki, it is available as part of the Google Toolbar for Firefox and Internet Explorer or as a bookmarklet for Chrome, Safari, or other browsers that don’t support the Google Toolbar.

    When using Sidewiki, an expandable window can be viewed on the left-hand side of the web page. When expanded, you can see comments by users or contribute your own. This works for any web page. There is a good chance that your site has been commented on via Sidewiki, and you don’t even know about it.

    This actually brings up a pretty good reputation management point. If you are a webmaster, you may want to at least install the bookmarklet in your browser if you don’t use the Google Toolbar. This will allow you to keep tabs on what is being written about your site.

    These comments are out there for other Sidewiki users to view. More information about how Sidewiki works can be found here. Google has created a top ten list of ways that people are already using Sidewiki. It may give you some ideas:

    1. Jason Young speaks from personal experience and gives detailed insight into tuning a bass guitar on EMG’s Bass Tips site.

    2. Antony Carthy, a programmer in South Africa, wrote tips on how to find latitude and longitude coordinates on Google Maps.

    3. Google’s own Matt Cutts warns visitors about a deceptive website.

    4. Shalin Gala of PETA calls on readers to sign a petition next to an article about animal mistreatment.

    5. Ron Burk suggests a missing reference for a medical article.

    6. The Mayo Clinic uses Sidewiki to welcome visitors with a special webmaster entry on its homepage (this one requires Sidewiki to view).

    7. Jesse Poe from New York offers up great insights in a review of an iPhone app by Daniel Johnston, one of his favorite musicians.

    8. Alfonso Grandis from Italy talks about his eye-witness account of a recent earthquake.

    9. David Davis, a software engineer from California, improves a snippet of code in a programming tutorial.

    10. Michael Roizen from the Cleveland clinic adds his advice about H1N1 vaccinations.

    Google recommends commenters contribute expert insight, helpful tips, background information, and added perspective when using SideWiki. The company has said in the past that it uses "multiple signals" based on the "quality of the entry," what they know about the author, and other user-contributed signals like voting and flagging. They say they want to only keep the most relevant entries appearing in the sidebar.

    Related Articles:

    Google Turning the Web Into an Exclusive Social Network?

    You No Longer Need the Google Toolbar to Use Sidewiki

    Want to Get Your Google Profile Verified?

  • Apple Launches iTunes Preview

    iTunes

    This is one of those items I find so hard to get behind, rather like the infrequent (boring) updates to MobileMe. But here goes; Apple has ever-so-quietly launched a new web-based front-end to their iTunes music library titled “iTunes Preview.” It allows a visitor to view lists of music available on the iTunes Store via their web browser. There you go. That’s kinda it.

    I’m going to assume 99.999 percent of our readers already use iTunes, and are probably intimately familiar with the drill by now; you’re reading a web page and you’re presented with a link to some music, tv show or maybe an app inside the iTunes store. You click the link and, after your browser does a brief Redirection Dance, iTunes pops-up, opens the iTunes store and, as you’d expect, dumps you out on the correct product page. Which is nice.

    Except, this isn’t the case if you don’t have iTunes installed. If you’re one of the few people left in this crazy world who doesn’t have iTunes installed, clicking on one of those links previously dumped you (again, after the spastic redirection dance) on a web page commanding you to download and install iTunes. Which is not nice.

    Well, all that has (sort of) changed. iTunes Preview exists as something of an interim step designed to partially improve the overall user experience, and partially to get the last remaining holdouts among us to install iTunes. See, despite the “Preview” part of its name, iTunes Preview doesn’t let you actually preview anything beyond Music. And then it’s not actually a preview. It’s just track-listings and user reviews.

    If you want to listen to a bit of music before you part with your cash, you’ll still need to install iTunes. And, in case that wasn’t totally obvious already, the webpage provides ample linkage to get you downloading Apple’s venerable media software.

    iTunes Preview

    As it stands today, the value and usefulness of iTunes Preview is limited. I guess it’s sort-of useful if all you want is a user-friendly link you can stuff into an email to your significant other (To: Other Half, Subject: Buy me this for xmas). But I’m scraping the bottom of the barrel here in search of really worthwhile functionality. Right now, iTunes Preview verges on being almost entirely pointless. Sure, browse music by artist or album, view metadata like track duration or artist bios, and even find related artists… but anything more than that is reserved for the real iTunes.

    However, it’s early days. Who knows what Apple might do in the months and years to come? Is this, for instance, the first step toward freeing users from iTunes, in anticipation of a day when that bloated, lumbering beast will be replaced by a suite of modern, slimline, specialized apps?

    Nah, probably not. The music in iTunes might have been liberated from its DRM-shackles, but everyone forgets that iTunes itself is, for most people, one giant walled garden. With one hundred million active credit card accounts tied to the iTunes ecosystem, it’s unlikely Apple will want to break it apart any day soon without a proven, easy and established migration route to its successor(s).

    iTunes Preview might be the start of something interesting, but it just as easily might be nothing more than the result of a user-experience “tidy-up” by the iTunes dev team, an idea that languished at the bottom of their “might be nice” wish-list for the last few years and just got executed by their newest interns.

    If you’re keen to try it out, you’ll be pleased to learn it works on all the major browsers and is available right now. I’ll get you started with this link to the Michael Jackson artist page so you can see for yourself how it works. You can also access more content from the iTunes Charts page. But don’t get excited — there’s really nothing to see here, folks.


  • HUBO will tear you limb from limb

    HUBO Walking! HUBO Taichi! HUBO with sword! HUBO aiming for your heart and lungs!

    This clever Korean robot won’t kill you (yet) but it does move in a surprisingly life-life fashion. Seriously: how far are we until we’ve hit Surrogrates territory (an actually OK movie, by the way).


  • Adhoc Party finally coming to North America

    Adhoc multiplayer mode won’t be the bane of PSP owners who want the global reach of infrastructure mode anymore. If they have PS3s, that is. Sony has …

  • Google Headed To Swiss Court Over Street View

    The Federal Data Protection and Information Commissioner of Switzerland, Hanspeter Thür



    , still isn’t happy with Google.  Thür







    has argued that the Street View program doesn’t do enough to protect individuals’ identities, and despite receiving a concession or two, is now taking Google to court.

    Street View was introduced in Switzerland about three months ago.  Roughly one week later, Thür











    complained that certain faces and license plates weren’t indistinct enough.  He met with Peter Fleischer, Google’s Global Privacy Counsel, Google agreed to make portions of its photos blurrier, and the problem was resolved.  Or so we thought.














































    It turns out that Thür















    also objected to the height from which images had been taken, arguing that a normal person wouldn’t have the same vantage point.  He felt that people in more rural areas could be identified even if their faces weren’t visible, too.

    So, as announced in a formal statement, Thür



















    "has decided to take the matter further and to take legal action before the Federal Administrative Court."  According to the BBC, Thür























    wants a tribunal to make Google immediately take down all Swiss Street View images, as well (since the case won’t start or end soon).

    This situation could have a big impact on how other countries respond to Street View in the future.


















































































    Related Articles:

    > Google Street View Hits Hawaii, Mexico

    > Street View Coverage Of Two More Countries Goes Live

    > Street View: Soon With More Blurriness