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At 2,000 miles, on the way to Memphis

24 Aug 2010

(Credit:
Daniel Terdiman/CNET News.com)

Looking back, it was really a crazy thousand miles.

I am running on fumes as the Road Trip 2008 odometer hits 2,000 miles even.

That’s all that’s been published so far. But stay tuned to Road Trip 2008, because I’ve already visited United Record Pressing, one of the world’s biggest makers of vinyl records; NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston; and Gibson’s specialty and custom guitar factory.

What will the next thousand miles bring?

If you think that’s enough for any thousand miles, you’re seriously underestimating me. I still had a several crazy days in which I experienced some of the most interesting Kentucky color, including the famous gold depository at Fort Knox; a museum of a century of cavalry and armor; and the well-loved Maker’s Mark distillery.

And all of that was within a thousand miles of driving what is turning out to be a really nice 2008 Subaru Outback 2.5 XT–though I will admit that I had to take a quick overnight flight to Houston for the NASA visit.

At 1,000 miles, I was on Interstate 65 on my way to visit Space Camp in Huntsville, Ala. I made it there and had a great time getting a taste of the astronaut training primer that more than half a million kids have gotten over the years. As well, Huntsville was the home of the Rocket park at the U.S. Rocket and Space Center, where the original Saturn V is on display, a very impressive piece of hardware indeed.

JACKSON, Tenn.–What a week.

Next up was the Louisville Slugger factory, where more major leaguers’ bats are made than anywhere else in the world. And then it was time for two days of full UPS immersion.

(Credit:
Daniel Terdiman/CNET News.com)

To find out, please keep watching this blog, as well as my Twitter feed and my Qik channel.

First, I spent several hours on a tour of Worldport, the cargo company’s unbelievably big Louisville air distribution center. Then, the next day it was on to visits to several companies that are part of the larger UPS logistics system.

Road Trip 2008 hit 2,000 miles while on the way to Memphis. The last thousand miles have featured a wide variety of stops, from NASA in Houston to a Corvette factory to one of the largest makers of vinyl records in the world.

Alongside Interstate 65 near Jackson, Tenn., I hit exactly 2,000 miles.

There was also a visit to the General Motors assembly plant in Bowling Green, Ky., where I got to watch Corvettes get made.

I’ve spent the last week or so almost entirely in Tennessee and Kentucky, visiting some of the most interesting factories, museums, distilleries, and other destinations in the region.

After that, I took a couple hours to wander through Geek Squad City, a giant facility in Brooks, Ky., where the famous computer repair company has 700 technicians servicing thousands of machines every day.

Did Netflix really have to kill off Red Envelope

24 Aug 2010

Despite such successes, Netflix admits to giving at least 4 Red Envelopers pink slips. (Although I have also read that up to 75 employees might be released.)

It appears that the Red Envelopers were rather good at picking the right movies behind which to put money. Which made the fabulous munificent studios that put vast sums behind dreck rather than Shrek incredibly hulkish.

After all, Netflix relies on deals with those studios to distribute all of their content. So Red Envelope had to be killed off, before even reaching its Second Act as a company.

It so happened that over the last couple of weeks, I happened to have three Red Envelope movies fly from my Netflix queue, via a deeply philosophical USPS mailman, to my door.

Perhaps Red Envelope consistently outbid the studios, but then never made any money.

The End.

I got the first part of that last sentence wrong. It is precisely because of such successes that Red Envelope is being shut down.

But ‘No End In Sight’ (a documentary about a soupcon of Iraq War bungling), ‘Protagonist’ (a documentary about four men who latch on to strange obsessions in their lives. And none of them are techies) and ‘Private Property’ (a drama about a woman with a son more hideous than tasseled loafers) could all be termed, at the very least, classy.

I have no recollection whether the Netflix’s insidious secret service, with the deviously credible Stan Lanning as one of its chief agents, actually recommended these movies because of my predilection for, say, Talladega Nights.

With suitable tragi-comedy nuance, Netflix announced this week that it made more money in the 2nd quarter (yes, profit went up 4%) and that it was closing Red Envelope, its film financing and acquisition company.

So here’s a plot twist.

(Credit:
CC SWRuler 9284)

One can only hope that the smart people this company employed can still practice their craft elsewhere. Such as in one of the fabulous munificent studios that put vast sums behind..ah, yes, we have a storyline dilemma here.

I will walk into the sunset and contemplate that one.

Did Netflix really have to take this depressing decision? All these three movies were surprisingly good.

Asus has a WiMax laptop, too

24 Aug 2010

Of course, the WiMax-enabled laptop will initially appeal to residents of Baltimore, where Sprint just launched its Xohm network. However, there will eventually be a broader market for such laptops; Sprint has plans to roll out the technology to other cities, including Chicago, Washington D.C., Philadelphia, Portland, Ore., and Dallas and Fort Worth, Texas.

Next-generation data connectivity aside, the $1,399 M50Vm-A1WM (catchy name, that) looks to be a fairly typical media-oriented mainstream machine. Its WXGA+ display should do just fine for watching movies, and we hope its Altec Lansing speakers will make it easy to enjoy music; the laptop is also HDMI ready and Dolby Home Theater certified. Inside the case, you’ll find a 2.26GHz Intel Core 2 Duo P8400 processor, 1GB Nvidia GeForce 9600M GS graphics, and a 250GB, 5,400rpm hard drive.

The company’s WiMax promotional page also lists a WiMax-enabled version of its 14.1-inch F8Va laptop, though that model doesn’t appear to be immediately available. So far, the company hasn’t announced plans to release a U.S. version of its WiMax-enabled Eee PC 901–but we certainly expect to see it happen, as the Netbook’s extreme portability seems the perfect match for next-generation wireless services.

Everyone else is doing it, so why shouldn’t Asus? Late Wednesday, the company announced the immediate availability of the M50Vm-A1WM, a 15.4-inch laptop with a built-in WiMax module for the recently launched Sprint Xohm data network.

GSMA Day 2 Wrap-up

24 Aug 2010

But let’s move on to what you really want to know about–all the new and shiny gadgets. We take a closer look at the Sony Ericsson Xperia X1, the first Windows Mobile smart phone by Sony Ericsson. It’s tricked out with a huge 3-inch screen, an arc sliding QWERTY keyboard, HSDPA/HSUPA, a 3.2-megapixel camera, GPS, and Wi-Fi. HTC, a well-known Taiwanese manufacturer of smart phones, also announced a couple of new devices. The first is the HTC P3470 (we highly suggest a nicer name), a Windows Mobile 6 smartphone that comes with built-in GPS and TomTom Navigator 6 software, plus a 2.8-inch touchscreen, and a 2-megapixel camera. HTC also announced a revamped HTC Advantage with TouchFlo software (a la the HTC Touch) and hints at a new version of Windows Mobile.

HTC P3470

Sony Ericsson Xperia X1

LG KF700

(Credit:
Crave Asia)

Phone madness continues on in Barcelona, Spain, as the second day of GSMA Mobile World Congress comes to a close. Vodafone’s CEO said he sees the mobile web as the future, Microsoft announced MSN Direct availability on Windows Mobile devices, and Yahoo launches OneConnect, a new tool that lets mobile phone users to aggregate their social-networking updates and messaging in one spot on their phones. T-Mobile also finally announces plans to launch 3G in the U.S. by summer 2008. There’s also hope for an Android phone, as well as an Austrian version of the
iPhone by the end of the year on T-Mobile. Nokia knocks out another announcement about Nokia Maps 2.0, a much improved maps application for its smart phones.

(Credit:
HTC)

Samsung made the biggest splash today though, with a huge array of new phones. We already mentioned the Samsung Soul on Day 1, and on Day 2, Samsung showed us the F400, the F480 and the F490. The F400 is a phone with a definite multimedia focus, complete with a music player, stereo speakers, an amplifier with Bang & Olufsen technology, and a 3-megapixel camera. Both the F480 and the F490 look a lot like a certain phone from Apple. The F490 has a large 3.2-inch touch-screen display, a 5-megapixel camera, Google Search, plus a 3.5mm headset jack that isn’t recessed. The F480 on the other hand, has a 2.8-inch touch-screen display, a 5-megapixel camera, FM radio, and e-mail.

(Credit:
Samsung)

To round up the day’s coverage, we took a look at a funky looking Sony Ericsson Bluetooth speaker, plus a closer look at prototype phones running the Google Android operating system.

LG also announced a few new phones. One of them is a Symbian-powered smartphone dubbed the KT610, which has a 2.4-inch screen, a QWERTY keyboard, and HSDPA. Then LG introduced yet another touchscreen wonder, the LG KF600, which is essentially the GSM version of the LG Venus. Bonnia Cha took a closer look at the LG KF700, and marveled at its beautiful touchscreen, as well as its slider keypad. The KF700 has a music and video player, a 3-megapixel camera, Bluetooth, and 90MB of internal memory, and a microSD expansion slot.

Taking a departure from the touch-screen phones for a bit, Samsung also announced the G810, a slider phone running on the Symbian S60 operating system that has a 5-megapixel camera, TV out, GPS, and Wi-Fi. The P960 is a little on the lower end, with a 3-megapixel camera, an FM radio, and Bluetooth.

Samsung SGH-F490

(Credit:
LG)

In patent case, court sides with Broadcom again

24 Aug 2010

In May 2007, a jury found that Qualcomm had violated patents held by Broadcom that help cell phones process video and walkie-talkie conversations. And the judge in the case ordered Qualcomm to stop using the technology and to pay Broadcom royalties on existing infringing QChat products.

But it wasn’t a total loss for Qualcomm. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ruled that Qualcomm was not infringing on one of the three patents in question. This patent relates to video compression technology.

Chipmaker Broadcom has won the latest battle in a long patent war with Qualcomm.

On Wednesday a federal appeals court affirmed that Qualcomm is infringing on two cell phone patents. It also upheld an injunction against Qualcomm selling products with technology that infringes the two patents.

The permanent injunction contains a sunset provision that allows Qualcomm to sell its products and pay royalties to Broadcom through January 2009. But Qualcomm has developed technology that circumvents the disputed patents, which means newer QChat phones, which use the walkie-talkie technology, aren’t affected.

Qualcomm and Broadcom have been battling each other in court since 2005. In the past couple of years, the smaller Broadcom has aggressively defended its patents and won several victories. Last year, it won a major victory when the U.S. International Trade Commission ordered a ban on the import of all new models of 3G wireless handsets with Qualcomm chipsets that infringe Broadcom patents.

That said, the court affirmed the judgment of infringement on two other patents. One patent has to do with walkie-talkie technology and the other one involves cell phones that switch between multiple wireless networks.

In August a federal judge ruled that Qualcomm was in contempt of an injunction that bans the use of patented wireless technology owned by Broadcom. Qualcomm appealed the decision.

Alfresco’s sales up 320 percent, hits 30,000 activ

24 Aug 2010

Frankly, even Microsoft could use this model - as Marc Fleury pointed out to me earlier this week - without skipping a beat. It could adopt Red Hat’s model tomorrow without sacrificing its billions in profit. If anything, it should grow with a model that focuses on widespread, cheap distribution.

Surpassed the one million software download mark;
Grew community membership to in excess of 45,000 members;
Grew customer bookings by over 320 percent year-on-year with more than 400 enterprise accounts [including Activision, Electronics Arts, Boise Cascade, and Sony Pictures, as well as five of the top 10 investment banks world-wide and major government organizations globally];
Announced significant OEM partnerships - including a major deal with publishing giant Quark;
Exceeded 30,000 active deployments of Alfresco worldwide.

Yes, you can make lots of money with open-source software. Alfresco, a leading enterprise content management and collaboration vendor, just announced its 2007 financial results. The numbers speak for themselves:

As an employee of Alfresco, let me add some more local color to the numbers, which provide a glimpse into the power of open source as a distribution model (putting to one side its power as a development model for just a minute):

Something to consider.

We routinely close six-figure deals with a relatively junior “inside sales” team…in 90 to 120 days (start to finish - that’s the sales cycle). The software sells itself, to a degree;
We almost never get on a plane to nurture or close a deal. Everything is done over email, phone, and Adobe’s Acrobat Connect. It costs us little to acquire companies.
Our renewal rate approaches 100 percent. I suspect this will go down over time (natural forces, strength of the product requiring less support, etc.), but we’re adding value to this with our Network product (similar to JBoss Operations Network and MySQL Network and Advisory Service);
We still do most things wrong. :-)

On this last point, I simply mean that we don’t do everything right. Internally, we’re hyper-critical and tend to see all the things we’re doing wrong. The point is that an open-source model doesn’t require perfection to be profitable. It just requires drive and execution. Zimbra seems to me to have done everything just about perfectly, but I doubt they felt that way. JBoss and MySQL? Same thing.

There’s apparently gold in them there open-source hills. Lots of it.

commentary

Disclosure: In case you missed it above, yes, I do work for Alfresco. Now you see why.

It’s great that Alfresco is doing well, but my point in posting this is to insist that open source offers an exceptional way for all software vendors to make money without sacrificing the well-being of their customers along the way. It is, quite simply, a better way to develop and distribute software.

Philippe Starck and design is dead

24 Aug 2010

P.S.: Those people with more intelligence than me would have gotten to this point much earlier. Perhaps I wasn’t smart enough and had to learn it the hard way. Ever from the beginning I had the feeling that ultimatively, product design was useless. It is because of this that I have tried to change this job into something else; into something that’s more political, more rebellious, more subversive. So maybe the most important thing that I have created is not a new object, but a new definition for the word “designer.”

P.S.: I do want to, for sure. I am definitely going to stop designing in two years. I will be doing something else instead, I don’t know for sure. But I know that it will be a new way of expression; a weapon that will be faster, mightier and lighter than design. Design is really a terrible way to express oneself.

Here’s what Starck had to say:

ZEIT: So why, then, have you become an industrial designer in the first place?

Philippe Starck: The ability to love. Love is the most wonderful invention of mankind. And then, one needs intelligence. Mankind, as opposed to animals, has managed to create a civilization based on intelligence. For this reason, no human can afford to not work on their intelligence. And humour, humour is important.

ZEIT: And you don’t want to stop designing?

ZEIT: Please explain this.

P.S.: We don’t need anything material. It is more important to develop one’s own ethic, and to stick to these rules. There is nothing else one would have to worry about.

P.S.: Exactly this is part of my Robin-Hood concept. I do use such projects like a lab. It allows me to try out new technologies and render them useful for the mass market. For this particular yacht, I developed a hull that wouldn’t cause bow washes at 20 knots. I applied this concept to a solar boat, which in turn could be the prototype for a Venetian vaporetto.

P.S.: A pillow maybe, and a good mattress.

And Nussbaum: “Design is wonderfully alive and well — and evolving fast. The tools and methods that were once the exclusive province of a handful of designers are now in the hands of millions of people who are shaping their own experiences on Facebook and MySpace, much less on the cell phones. This democratization of design, the open-sourcing of design is driving much of the field. Apple is pretty good at controlling the design of its products, but it too is giving in and opening up the design of applications to the
iPhone platform. I think the meta-trend is all of this is IDENTITY. It’s the next Big Thing after Experience and Emotion.”

(Credit: Microsoft)

Naturally, designers (and the watchdogs of ‘design thinking’ in particular) cried foul and tried to reconcile Starck’s design nihilism with their own beliefs. David Armano and Bruce Nussbaum, for example, refer to the democratization of design.

ZEIT: So this is the balance you strike of all your creating?

Philippe Starck had an epiphany, after all these years: “Everything I have designed is absolutely unnecessary,” the French star designer admitted in a recent interview with the German weekly DIE ZEIT. I had the dubious pleasure of hanging out in the Starck-designed Volar club in Shanghai last weekend, and my initial reaction to his statement was: yeah, right! I’ve never really liked his pompose celebrity design. But then I read his quote again in the context of the whole interview and realized: he is right, actually. In fact, his thoughts are so poignant and humbling that it is worth reprinting them in full length here (below is an excellent translation from the German original, courtesy of the mademoiselle-a blog).

ZEIT: You have often stated that it was your goal to destroy design. How far have you gotten with that?

ZEIT: You said that we are undergoing a transition towards Postmaterialism. What does this mean?

Hmmm… this to me sounds like C is the next big thing after A and B, but hey, better a lukewarm notion of the future of design than no future at all, right? We get the message, anyway: Starck is wrong because “really good” design — in star(c)k contrast to “consumer excess” design, and defined as design by everybody for everybody, serving a good cause and solving a real human problem — is not dead, cannot be dead (because that would really mean the end of design, of human power, and all hope).

P.S.: No.

ZEIT: And you can’t think of something material?

P.S.: If you want to talk about objects: one certainly needs something to light a fire.

P.S.: There won’t be any designers. The designer of the future will be the personal coach, the fitness trainer, the nutritionist. That’s all.

ZEIT: Can you think of anything else?

P.S.: If one is fortunate enough to have a good idea, one has the obligation to share this idea with others. That is how democracy works. When I started to design, a good chair would cost about $1,000. Should a family that needs six chairs and a table have to pay $10,000, just to be able to have dinner? What an obscene thought. Four years ago, I designed a chair that would cost less than ten dollars. If you just strike three zeros off the price you change the whole concept of a product.

ZEIT: So you will only be switching the job.

ZEIT: And yet you recently designed that motor yacht for a Russian millionaire?

P.S.: Society is pursuing a strategy of dematerialization: it is more and more about intelligence and less about material. Take a computer, for example. In the beginning, computers were big as a house. Now there are computers in the size of only a credit card. In ten years from now they are going to be in our bodies - bionics. In fifty years from now, the concept of computers will have dematerialized itself.

P.S.: That is an interesting question. And I haven’t found an answer to it for myself yet. Look, I have designed so many things without ever really being interested in them. Maybe all these years were necessary for me to ultimately recognize that we, after all, don’t need anything. We always have too much.

P.S.: Everything I have created is absolutely unnecessary. Design, structurally seen, is absolutely void of usefulness. A useful profession would be to be an astronomer, a biologist or something of that kind. Design really is nothing. I have tried to install my designs with a sense of meaning and energy, and even when I tried to give my best it was still in vain.

ZEIT: So what else would designers create then?

ZEIT: You can’t be serious. Isn’t there so much else one needs in order to survive?

ZEIT: Is there any object that you like, then?

Armano: “No, design isn’t dead, especially the really good design that adds value to our lives. But the notion of design’s gatekeepers may need some additional thought as more of us begin to act like ‘professionals’ and take on the sacred role of design.”

P.S.: It is accomplished! When I started out, design objects were but beautiful objects. No one could afford to buy them; design stood for elitism, but elitism is vulgar. The sole elegance lies in multiplication.

ZEIT: So all the things you have created — unnecessary?

P.S.: Exactly. I have been a producer of materiality. I do feel ashamed for this. What I want to be instead now is a producer of concepts. This will be much more useful.

ZEIT: Monsieur Starck, you have designed everything, from toothbrush to spaceship. What do humans really need?

Hey, look Dell mobile workstations!

24 Aug 2010

The 15.4-inch Dell Precision M4400 will incorporate an Intel Extreme Edition processor and midrange Nvdia Quadro FX 770M graphics with 512MB of VRAM. The 14.1-inch Precision M2400, meanwhile, offers Core 2 Duo processors and an entry-level Nvidia Quadro FX 370M graphics card with 256MB of VRAM. Both systems support up to 8GB of memory and 7,200rpm hard drives in capacities up to 320GB. Both models are currently available on Dell’s site; the Precision M4400 starts at $1,569 and the Precision M2400 starts at $1,449.

A week ago, I wrote about mobile workstations from Hewlett-Packard and Lenovo that were on display at Siggraph 2008, but I left out one major competitor on the mobile workstation front: Dell. (Thanks, CNET commenter dman1000, for pointing out the oversight.) The manufacturer recently announced two new Precision mobile workstations and a “next-generation 17-inch mobile workstation concept.”

(Credit:
Dell)

The company is also talking up a 17-inch mobile workstation concept that (assuming it comes to market) should dish up some hearty competition for the Lenovo and HP models I wrote up last week. The as-yet-unnamed Precision promises support for up to 16GB of memory, RAID capability with up to 1TB of storage, and graphics with a 1GB frame buffer. It will also feature an edge-to-edge glass RGB LED display, with a broad color gamut.

Being a concept, the 17-inch workstation lacks both a release date and pricing, though a video on Dell’s workstation site promises fall 2008.

WinDVD 9 adds support for Blu-ray, AVCHD–and even

24 Aug 2010

(Credit:
Corel)

The HD format war may be over, but don’t tell Corel. The company’s WinDVD 9 software plays both Blu-ray and the now-defunct HD DVD format–perfect for those few Windows PCs with HD combo drives, such as the HP Pavilion Slimline S3330f. The software supports the full range of features for both formats, including their next-gen audio soundtracks (Dolby TrueHD and DTS HD), Blu-ray Profile 1.1 (picture-in-picture commentaries), and–while it lasts–Web-enabled “In Movie Experience” features on HD DVDs.

Corel's WinDVD 9 software handles Blu-ray, HD DVD, and standard DVD discs.

WinDVD 9 is available Tuesday in three versions. The entry-level version ($50) handles standard DVD movies, along with QuickTime and DivX files. WinDVD 9 Plus ($80) adds better surround audio support and Corel’s “All2HD” upscaling, which aims to sharpen detail on low-resolution video. It also includes the ability to play back AVCHD files–ideal for anybody with an HD camcorder. The $100 version of the software is the one you want for playing Blu-ray or HD DVD movies. Owners of WinDVD 6, 7, or 8 can upgrade to that flagship version of the software for just $60.

Is BD-Live even necessary

24 Aug 2010

(Credit: Amazon)

On one hand, it’s good that content makers continue to add content, but on the other hand you could say, why wasn’t this available on the disc in the first place? We headed over to Blu-ray Statistics to see if Transformers possibly took up an entire 50GB Blu-ray Disc, but it only takes up 45.75GB–surely there’s enough room to fit an extra short. That’s not the only example. Walk Hard also has a couple extra shorts available via BD-Live, and that disc takes up 46.87GB. From what we’ve seen, we’re pretty sure the extra content could fit on the Blu-ray Disc if they wanted to. The movie already includes an extra Blu-ray Disc for special features, and we doubt the extra content fills up that much space.

What do you think? Will BD-Live eventually become a killer feature for Blu-ray? Or will disc makers just use it as a gimmick and make it more difficult to view special features?

While it’s easy to consider BD-Live a relatively unexciting extra feature of Blu-ray, we have started to see some potential downsides. For example, early this week High-Def Digest reported that the Transformers Blu-ray now has new BD-Live content available. Transformers on Blu-ray came out in September, so we doubt that the new short “Robot Ninjas” was created over the last month–more likely it was held onto to continue to generate interest in the movie.

In a lot of ways, BD-Live reminds us of Senior Editor David Katzmaier’s discussion about online HDTV firmware updates. While it’s great that companies can add functionality after a product is released, it also makes it easier to ship unfinished products. In a perfect world, we’d like to see standard special features on the actual disc–so that people without Internet-enabled Blu-ray players can watch them–and keep BD-Live to content that truly need to be served over the Web. In fact, BD-Live could actually be pretty cool if it’s used to serve up timely content, such as clips of the film winning an award or perhaps recent news about the actors. But as it stands now, it seems like more of a gimmick than a feature.

We’ve never been completely sold on BD-Live as a major selling point for Blu-ray. While special features on DVDs are certainly nice, the vast majority of people don’t have the interest or time to watch more than the main movie. Blu-ray movies also have special feature sections, plus some movies have even more features available via BD-Live, which you can access with an Internet-connected Profile 2.0 player. While there are certainly plenty of cinephiles that want to watch every deleted scene and featurette available, we doubt it will be forcing many people to upgrade from DVD.