Thursday, December 6, 2007
Windows XP may come to the One Laptop Per Child project as Microsoft ports its operating system to flash-based devices such as Intel's Classmate PC, ASUS Eee PC and the XO laptop. But Microsoft's big motive is to stay relevant in emerging markets where officials are increasingly mulling over Linux-based devices. There's no reason to bash Microsoft's Unlimited Potential program, which aims to bring technology "to the next 5 billion people." However, it's really difficult not to read between the lines on this XP meets OLPC development. Let's weigh the different factors based on Microsoft's official statement, its comments about porting XP and coverage from Mary Jo Foley, Ina Fried and Techmeme chatter. Exhibit A: From Microsoft's statement: "Microsoft plans...
Friday, October 26, 2007
Sure, our environment is full of the staph bacteria. But when the CDC recently reported the virulent MRSA form is killing more Americans annually than AIDS, the public noticed. Then cases began being reported from schools around the country. It seemed especially prevalent among high school football players. This week a twelve year old died, apparently from MRSA. He had been a student in a New York City public school. Some parents kept their children hme from that school today. And the general media cannot resist reporting any and every local MRSA case now. A private school in Savannah. In Ohio three school districts reported cases. Four students in Blair County, Pennsylvania. Four more cases on Long Island. North Kansas...
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
The common wisdom about the Mac is that the iPod's "halo" coat-tails has been pulling the Mac along behind it — it's the Mac puppy that follows Windows customers home with their iPods. This halo tag line is now a constant refrain by the press and analysts that can be found in almost every story about the Mac. The problem is that it's mostly nonsense. This week Apple reported that it shipped 2,164,000 Macs in its fiscal Q4. That's 34 percent year-to-year growth. This is the most Macs ever sold in a quarter by 400K units. And at the end of the week, Apple will release Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard, which could spark a hardware upgrade cycle in the...
Tuesday, October 23, 2007
During his interview at the Web 2.0 Summit, AT&T Chairman and CEO Randall Stephenson explained why Apple went with the slower EDGE network in the U.S. instead of the faster 3G variety ("Steve Jobs wanted to be on the EDGE network. He wanted the broadest, most ubiquitous data network. It’s the only one that covers the entire country."), and said that AT&T would have a program for corporate that want to buy hundreds or thousands of iPhones (currently each employee must be buy a phone and have a separately billed account). Om Malik extracted some more data out of AT&T Chairman and CEO Randall Stephenson about the iPhone. Om chatted with Stephenson after his on stage interview at the Summit,...
Friday, October 19, 2007
Looks like "real soon now" turned into a few months. Regardless, Microsoft has now extended the beta of its Popfly mash-up tool to any and all interested parties. Popfly's competition includes Yahoo Pipes and Google Mashup Editor. Early testers of Popfly credited the Microsoft tool as usable by mere mortals (not just professional developers). Microsoft also rolled out this week a refreshed beta version of its Windows Live Photo Gallery service for Vista and XP users. The new beta allows users a choice of publishing their photos to Windows Live Spaces or Yahoo's Flickr.
Sunday, October 14, 2007
The New York Times is running (hah!) a story about the much touted Nike+ site, one of the best examples out there of what a lot of us have started to call the branded application. The Nike+ site is done all in Flash and is a rich Internet application that brings users together and gives them a great experience around running. It tracks the users runs (distance, time, etc) and let them compare with other people on the site. It brings users back to the web and also encourages them to buy Nike shoes. As the paper notes the combination of lots of shoes out there and the coolness of the site helped generate buzz for Nike. In the process...
Monday, October 8, 2007
IBM and Google are each shelling out between $20 million and $25 million to start college programs focused on cloud computing. According to the Wall Street Journal both Big Blue and Google have a shared vision on cloud computing. The vision goes like this: Run multiple data centers in parallel and allow users to share resources. Microsoft, Sun Microsystems, Hewlett-Packard and others all have a similar vision of computing in the cloud. IBM and Google will at first offer 400 computers to teach cloud computing techniques. The duo plans to expand to 4,000. So far, six universities--University of Washington, Carnegie Mellon, MIT, Stanford, University of California at Berkeley and the University of Maryland--are participating.
Tuesday, October 2, 2007
Peter Zencke, a member of SAP’s Executive Board and head of R&D, spent the last fours years developing Business ByDesign, a new foundation for SAP's ERP software. I caught up with him during SAP TechEd ‘07 and asked about the origins of the product and what will differentiate it in the marketplace. (See earlier coverage of Zencke's TechEd '07 keynote and more SAP coverage here.) DF: What was the genesis behind Business ByDesign? PZ: "Four years ago, in 2003--exactly 10 years after R3 was introduced--we decided to go for new architecture, which we called "Ether" and then later "Enterprise SOA." The first year we were figuring out how to do enterprise SOA. We built a prototype but decided not to...
Monday, October 1, 2007
Microsoft is expected to announce on October 2 that it has released to manufacturing (RTM'd) that its Response Point small-business phone-system software, according to sources close to the company. Response Point, the product formerly codenamed "Edinburgh," will be brought to market by handset vendors. It is targeted at companies with one to 50 employees. When Microsoft initially announced Response Point, it said the first phone units would come from three OEMs, D-Link, Quanta and Uniden. According to sources, Uniden has decided against producing Response Point handsets. (I've contacted Microsoft for comment; so far no word back.) Response Point phone systems from Quanta and D-Link are expected to be priced at under $5,500, according to sources. Response Point is just one...
Thursday, September 20, 2007
Where is the Windows Vista Service Pack (SP) 1 beta and the Windows Server 2008 Release Candidate (RC) 0 test builds that many testers expected to have in hand by now? Microsoft isn't saying anything, other than Microsoft promised to get these builds out "in a few weeks" at the start of this month and that the code is on its way. (I was pretty sure that the Windows Client team told me "in two weeks," not "in a few weeks" back on August 29, but OK...) On the server side of the house, some testers said were expecting to get code last week, given that Microsoft delivered to Technology Adoption Program partners an RC0 build a couple weeks ago....
Tuesday, September 18, 2007
The eHealth Vulnerability study released today sounds self-serving, but does make clear that health IT is something of a technology backwater where security and patching has yet to catch up with supply or demand. The group represents existing players in health care, security and IT, rather than the groups seeking to mandate use of electronic health records. What their report (PDF) finds, basically, is that routine patches often aren't made to hospital programs, that standard security monitors often aren't used, and that no one group has yet established best practices, especially in the area of securing the data. In some ways this is a chicken-or-egg situation. You need a market before you can build the bureaucracies needed to monitor it -- even...
Friday, September 14, 2007
Apple's just posted details on how to obtain a $100 store credit if you've purchased an iPhone before August 22. What I find interesting is the inclusion of the term "may be eligible." Is that lawyer-inserted CYA? Quite likely yes. If you want to learn how to get that $100 store credit, click here. But I am more interested in the fine-print exceptions. Why? In technology, as well as almost any other business sector, the fine print is more important than the big type. So let's get to the fine print about the exceptions to a $100 iPhone store credit. With that caveat put out there, here are the steps Apple recommends to get $100 back if you paid...
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
Apple's iPhone has stirred both delight and angst amongst the tech digerati. On one hand, the iPhone is darned cool; on the other, ATT has an exclusive (and expensive) deal to provide cell phone service contracts for the iPhone. As reported by fellow ZDNet blogger Jason D. O'Grady, solutions which break the ATT service lock are now available. Is Apple secretly happy about this? ATT's response to the iPhone hacks is fairly straightforward (from Telecommunications Industry News): ATT spokesman, Mark Siegel, said that could not speculate on the legality of hacking the iPhone, but hastened to remind users that by purchasing the device, they become contractually obliged to ATT. “When people buy the iPhone it’s clear from our materials it’s...
Notable headlines: Robin Harris: Build a $50 DVD burner. Larry Dignan: NTP: We sue the (wireless) world. George Ou: Sun shows 2U 16-core Barcelona server with FSB1600. David Berlind: Insight into why Europeans get multi-factor authentication and we don't. Microsoft awarded patent for watermarking form of DRM. But can it really work? David Morgenstern: Dell and the wish for Apple’s cool. Parallels Desktop 3.0 for Mac Updated. Jason O'Grady: Let the unlocking begin! Engadget: iUnlock released: the first free, open source iPhone SIM unlock software. Matthew Miller: Software unlock your Apple iPhone for free. Running the numbers on Vista. VMWare: Not just hypervisor revenue. Mary Jo Foley: Microsoft firms up its Viridian hypervisor rollout plans. Citrix and Microsoft make nice...
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
As most people probably know Sun Microsystems changed its NASDAQ ticker symbol from SUNW to JAVA just a few weeks ago. That change elicited quite a lot of internal comment and relatively little external comment. The more obvious issues raised were, I believe: whether this signalled a major strategic shift at Sun (no); whether Solaris package naming conventions would change too (no); whether not subscribing to the value of Java would be career limiting at Sun (for a while); and whether Sun's customers would care (probably not). The more subtle issues include things like whether a customer seeing a Java label on a third party product would recognise Sun's role in delivering that product (no) and what the word Java...
Monday, September 10, 2007
About a week ago, there was an interesting discussion going on in the Blogoscoped forums about what appears to be a mobile version of Google Docs. Today, Steve Rubel noticed that when he goes to Google Docs on his iPhone, there is a link at the bottom that pointed to http://docs.google.com/m -- usually a good indication of a mobile offering. Now the question is, will it only be for iPhone? I don't think there are many other mobile devices that can handle (or at least that you would want to handle) a full read/write version of Google's word processor or spreadsheet service, but a read-only version could likely be made to work on all mobile devices.
Sunday, September 9, 2007
In a previous post I vented about iPhone's recessed headphone jack in the iPhone and mentioned that "I haven’t heard a single rational explanation as to why Apple would do this." A source with contacts at Apple sent me this explanation: Apple found, prior to the iPhone, that a lot of service repairs for iPods were for busted headphone jacks caused by headphone plugs being constrained, pulled, or bent in pockets or other tight areas. This is why they recessed the iPhone's headphone jack into the casing. Phones go through even more abuse than iPods, I'm willing to bet, so getting this right was important. The downside, of course, is that normal headphones don't fit into the iPhone's recessed jack....
Repercussions from the biggest reported data breach incident in history are still being felt. Last month's arrest of a dealer in stolen credit cards in Istanbul is just one example of how information stolen from TJX Companies is still being used by criminals. As I prepare for a talk I am giving at tomorrow's Security Standard event in Chicago I realize that TJX, the holding company that owns TJ Maxx, Marshalls, and a bunch of other retail operations is being less than transparent about the breach they first announced last January 17. According to TJX's official communications through their press releases and an SEC filing they first become aware of the presence of " unauthorized software" on their computer systems...
Thursday, September 6, 2007
Apple just released a bunch of new products, including iPods and an upgraded iPhone. But for many people, the new iPhone price cut was more significant than Apple's splashy product announcements. By significantly lowering the iPhone price so soon after its introduction, Apple alienated legions of loyal early adopters. You know the ones: they stand outside Apple stores in rain and sun, waiting to buy new products created by STEVE. These loyal followers felt they were getting royally screwed by Apple, having paid a couple hundred bucks extra just two months earlier. In response to growing criticism, Steve Jobs has placed an apologetic open letter to iPhone owners prominently on the Apple web site. The apology includes store credit...
Wednesday, September 5, 2007
Today starts a week-long money dance for health care companies as Thomas Weisel and Bear Stearns hold their annual health care conferences. Weisel starts things off today in Boston with over 150 companies presenting. Most are small and private, in keeping with the fact this is a venture capital conference. William Hawkins, the new CEO Medtronic, will be the exemplar of what's possible and the focus of eager business-card wielding entrepreneurs seeking a buy-out. James Surowiecki of The New Yorker will provide the entertainment. Bear Stearns has even more presenting companies -- over 180 -- and they are (by and large) public. The confab will start Monday at the Grand Hyatt, whose outer shell was the Hotel Commodore when built...
Tuesday, September 4, 2007
Today Virtual Iron is announcing Virtual Iron version 4. John Thibault, President and CEO, and my old friend Mike Grandinetti, chief marketing officer, took time out of their very busy schedules to chat with me about the new release. I've always been impressed with the innovative thinking shown by the folks over at Virtual Iron and this conversation reinforced that feeling. Here's a quick description in of their announcement: Version 4 offers easy-to-use tools for creating, provisioning and managing the complete lifecycle of virtual machines across large numbers of physical servers. Virtual Iron states that "The new release continues to close the feature gap with VMware′s most comprehensive offering and is available at just a fraction of the cost." Version...
Monday, September 3, 2007
There's been no shortage of push and pull lately between those wanting to see smaller, grassroots SOA efforts versus those advocating more calculated enterprise designs. My colleague from the SOA Insights podcasts, Tony Baer, said while he agrees with the concept of "Guerrilla SOA" discussed here last week (inspired by Jim the World Wide Webber), he wonders out loud if the approach doesn't exacerbate the current dilemma facing many SOA efforts. That is, too many unconnected SOA efforts will simply lead to a lot of unconnected SOA efforts, with little to no value for the business at large. Tony also surmises that Guerrilla SOA has been around, at least in spirit, for some time. Lately, the operative term for this...
Sunday, September 2, 2007
If a crisp Alsatian Riesling is your plonk of choice, don't read this blog. It'll make you cry. The "Washington Post" today carries a piece on what global warming is doing to the French wine industry. Radically changing the time table is the conclusion. The picture above is of the staff at the Domaine du Clos St. Landelin. The Alsatian winery'e owner talked to the reporter for the Post's story. Here are some of the key points. The vineyard's harvest in 1978 was on October 16. Twenty years later it was on September 14. This year havesting began August 24th, earliest in the family records which go back 12 generations, to 1648. The warmer seasons bring more insect pests....
Computer scientist Peter Gutmann made a name for himself when he published his paper “A Cost Analysis of Windows Vista Content Protection” and got worldwide attention for outlining some serious concerns about Windows Vista DRM mechanisms. But Peter Gutmann admittedly doesn't use Windows Vista and he's publicly asked for others to confirm his theories and based many of his key assertions on web forum postings as his source. Note: As of April 2007 on Gutmann's website, Gutmann stated: "Can others confirm this? I don't run Vista yet, but if this is true then it would seem to disconfirm Microsoft's claims that the content protection doesn't interfere with playback and is only active when premium content is present". Peter Gutmann has...
Friday, August 31, 2007
I'm resuming my Microsoft Code Name a Day series that I started in December 2006. The goal: To provide the back story, each day in August, on one of Microsoft's myriad code names. Some of these code names might be familiar to Microsoft watchers; others (hopefully) will be brand-new. Microsoft code names offer some great clues about the Redmondians’ development priorities, not to mention a better understanding of which future Microsoft products fit together, from a strategy standpoint. And not every product group is moving to boring, numbered codenames (like Windows 7 and Office 14). Without further ado, let the codename games begin. Microsoft code name of the day: Scorpio Microsoft code name of the day: Scorpio Best guess on...
The social web weekly: a quick-fire roundup of some of the news, announcements and conversations that have occurred throughout the week… Yahoo's new social job network: Kickstart. Yahoo is currently seeking feedback from students on a new social network called "Kickstart" which aims to connect college students with alumni at the companies that they are interested in joining. Built around the central feature of showing students their "in" -- the alumni they need to connect with -- and how they are already related, the site also provides background information on companies, user profiles (with a resume), and how other users are connected to the each other and the company in question. Think of it as a part Facebook, part LinkedIn,...
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
