Archive for May, 2010

Report Apple to stream video to iTunes users

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

Apple would certainly need to secure licenses from TV networks and movie studios to offer the service. Almost as certain is that entertainment companies would require compensation.

An Apple spokesman declined to comment.

The source declined to provide details but did confirm a report published Wednesday by the blog AppleInsider, which broke the news.

According to the report, Apple is working on a feature for iTunes 8 that will enable users to stream movies and TV shows “for playback anywhere,” and in this way help them avoid having to store large video files on their hard drives.

The service will be called iTunes Replay, according to AppleInsider. It’s unclear whether Apple intends to charge a fee for the streaming feature.

Apple is preparing to allow iTunes customers to stream video from the company’s servers to any Web-enabled device, according to a film industry source.

Netflix includes the ability to stream video in the price of most of its subscription plans at no extra charge. Is it possible Apple plans to compete with Netflix’s streaming rental service?

I don’t know that there’s a need for this service just to save people room on their hard drives. But as AppleInsider points out, there are other benefits to the service. Owners wouldn’t have to sync to Apple TV or download files to their computer in order to watch a movie or show, so it could also improve the experience of Apple TV. However, it’s hard for me to believe that Apple would go to the trouble of securing complex licensing agreements just to streamline the download process.

Photos Meet Berti the robot

Monday, May 24th, 2010

Photos: Robots get friendly with humans

(Credit:
Tim Ferguson/Silicon.com)

Check out photos of Berti, along with a smiling bot-head named Erwin, from our colleagues at Silicon.com.

Oh, what a tangled web we weave/When dextrous robots we conceive.

The path to the eventual robot domination of humankind may begin with a simple game of rock, paper, scissors.

A robot called Berti (short for Bristol Elumotion Robotic Torso 1) showed off its skill at the game last week at London’s Science Museum, randomly generating one of the three hand shapes and using sensors to tell whether the outcome was a win, loss, or draw. It’s apparently quite adept at moving its fingers and thumb in a variety of ways.

Obviously, the next skill to master is thumb wrestling.

Microsoft adds Windows version for cheap servers

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

CEO Steve Ballmer mentioned the product was coming and outlined the rationale at a meeting with financial analysts in February.

“From a revenue perspective, we are introducing a new low cost, low price, low functionality Windows server (version),” he said. “If you take a look at it, as server prices, hardware prices have come down, we don’t exactly have a Netbook phenomenon, but if somebody can buy a $500 server, they’re a little loathe to spend $500 for the server operating system that goes with it. So we have something that’s akin to Netbook at the server level, and we’ll be introducing our Foundation edition over the next month or two.”

Microsoft announced a new server for small businesses, though one should not confuse it with a new version of the company’s Small Business Server product.

“We see this as an opportunity not only to deliver a technical foundation for business growth, but also to create a financial foundation for community,” Ballmer said in a statement on Wednesday.

The latter is a bundle of Windows Server and Exchange, among other things, for businesses with 50 or fewer people while the new product, Windows Server 2008 Foundation, is only the operating system and is aimed at single-processor servers with fewer than 15 users.

Microsoft also said that, through the end of September, it will donate a portion of its revenue from Windows Server Foundation to TechSoup.org and Telecentre.org, two groups that help bring technology to nonprofit organizations.

The new Windows version is Microsoft’s answer to the server equivalent of Netbooks, ultra-low cost servers aimed at the smallest of businesses. The product will only be sold preinstalled on new machines.

Online spending doubles for weekend before Christm

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

The latest online retail spending report released Tuesday by ComScore shows that consumers last weekend spent almost double what they spent on the corresponding weekend before Christmas last year. U.S. consumers online spent $677 million last weekend, December 20 and 21, compared to $341 million the weekend before Christmas in 2007, which was December 22 and 23.

(Credit:
ComScore)

It should be noted, however, that there are five fewer days this year between Thanksgiving and Christmas, making it harder to make perfect year-to-year comparisons. For example, the $677 million in sales last weekend–which was also the fourth weekend after Thanksgiving–is actually down 17 percent from last year’s corresponding fourth weekend after Thanksgiving, December 15 and 16.

Whether you see the glass half full or half empty, the statistics suggest “that many consumers opted for the cozier confines of online shopping rather than having to brave the severe cold and snowstorms affecting much of the northern half of the country,” ComScore Chairman Gian Fulgoni said in a statement. He added that the compressed shopping season probably resulted in some consumers buying online later than they did last year.

Regardless, the report is further evidence that holiday sales aren’t a total disaster and might even be holding their own, which is no small feat in the throes of a recession. U.S. online spending to date this holiday season (from November 1 to December 21) totals $24.71 billion, down 1 percent from the corresponding timeframe last year.

Here’s a little statistical cheer for online retailers bracing themselves for what many have been predicting will be a dismal holiday sales season.

Considering we're in the throes of a recession, online holiday sales appear to be generally holding their own.

Bookmarklet converts Web pages to CD sleeves

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

Paper CD Case - video powered by Metacafe

There is a little bit of elbow grease involved to make your printout actually useful. You can either take the easy way and cut out the square to put into a standard CD jewel case, or you can take this origami approach, which gives you a very slick envelope-like enclosure:

If you’re trying to do this with a few dozen albums or movies it’s clearly not the easiest way to go about it, but assuming you have a printer, some paper, and a lack of jewel cases–this is the next best thing. Coming in future versions is support for Picasa Web albums.

If you’ve got an old burned CD or DVD hanging around and want to give it a more attractive home than a 100-disc spindle where it currently resides, you should check out Liquid Mongoose. It’s a simple bookmarklet you can save to your browser and call up any time you want to print out a protective (and attractive) cover.

It works for both audio albums and movies as long as you’re accessing their information from either Netflix or AOL Music. Once on the album or movie’s page you simply click the bookmarklet, then print out the page (while making sure to keep the page scaling to 100 percent).

Q&A The formula behind FiveThirtyEight

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

It’s always easy to tell yourself the story you want–there are national polls with Obama at +2 and polls with Obama at +13 right now. We are trying to create a better-informed electorate by giving people the big picture. It’s only when you take the polls into context that they tell you a story, and that’s what we’re trying to do.

Even though Silver launched the site as recently as March, its straightforward approach, daring predictions, and short but impressive track record has put it on the map of political sites to follow. The Washington Post featured Silver in its 14th annual election prediction contest this year, and he’ll be reporting on Tuesday night’s results with Dan Rather on HDNet.

(Credit: FiveThirtyEight)

Do you plan to implement any other uses of technology into your site?
Silver: In some ways, the site’s not all that sophisticated. I use Microsoft Excel to design graphs and charts, and upload them with my Flickr account. I’m not an expert programmer, but we try to focus on making it a reasonably attractive site.

How did you team up with Sean Quinn?
Silver: He wrote to me, and I knew his writing from Daily Kos. He’s worked for campaigns and knocked on doors, so that’s been his point of view. I think that’s missing from a lot of political news coverage. They’ll talk about where the candidates are, and they’ll have buses and planes following them, but I think the more important part is what’s happening when the candidate isn’t there at the field offices.

You’ll be covering election night with Dan Rather, is that right?
Silver: Yeah, with HDNet. I’ll be in a war room, and have a laptop and a bunch of Red Bull, and I’ll say probably every hour how I think the night is going. We should know a lot fairly early. If the networks are able to call Virginia pretty early, McCain is in for a rough night.

So far, Silver’s methodology has held up well. His site became popular after he beat out most of the pollsters and pundits in predicting how the Indiana and North Carolina Democratic primaries would turn out.

(Credit: FiveThirtyEight.com)

(Credit:
HDNet)

But we do emphasize that the actual errors in presidential polls are a lot larger than the reported (margin of error). In the primaries, the average miss was six or seven points. When the polls miss, they all miss in the same direction, so to that extent, averaging them can only do you so much good.

There is so much information and disinformation on the Internet–do you think the explosion of political Web sites ultimately is making us more informed, or is it just easier to read what you want to read?
Silver: I think that people definitely filter certain information. It also happens in cable news. You can watch a Fox News or MSNBC report, and get all your news from there. I think that is a danger. I try and read right-leaning blogs and Web sites (as well as) left-leaning ones, sometimes in a critical way, sometimes not so. There are certainly reasonable opinions on both sides.

Silver joins Dan Rather on HDNet.

While a number of sites and other media outlets offer aggregated polling information that can give a snapshot of the state of the presidential race, Silver’s site takes things up a notch.

Political commentary on the Internet is nothing new these days. So how did Nate Silver go from blogging under the guise of a chili pepper to hosting Election Night coverage with Dan Rather in a matter of months? By focusing on one number: 538.

I think Sarah Palin helped a lot–people were obsessed with that. I think it’s why young voters are more engaged–because there are more compelling people running, not just white guys in suits.

As of Monday morning, Silver’s projections had Democrat Barack Obama winning the presidency, with about 340 votes, and gave Republican John McCain less than a 4 percent chance of becoming president. Silver is open on the site about his support for Obama, but he claims that it shouldn’t interfere with his methodology.

(Credit:
MSNBC)

Are you taking into consideration any exit polling or demographic trends from early voting?
Silver: Not directly–I wish we had some way to do that. Polls have different ways of accounting for the early vote. Some of these pollsters don’t even ask if you voted early. There’s some evidence there are factors to consider.

Silver’s methods are based on Pecota (short for Player Empirical Comparison and Optimization Test Algorithm), an algorithm he wrote to predict the performance of baseball teams. As an analyst at the sports media company Baseball Prospectus, he made a name for himself as a numbers guy with startlingly accurate results.

You also have different layers where users can access the site. If you want to read the FAQ, it’s 1,000 words, but we also present just simple red-and-blue maps. We want people who might hear about the site on the news or something to not feel intimidated by it.

What do you think have been the biggest surprises to come out of this election season and out of your work on FiveThirtyEight?
Silver: I’m surprised how many different kinds of people have gotten in touch with me. First the pollsters, and then others. The founder of Craigslist e-mailed me and said he likes what I’m doing. I had a meeting with the French ambassador in Chicago because he said he’d enjoy sitting down and talking about politics for 20 minutes. You become sort of an authority on this–in some ways, there isn’t much competition. Hopefully, the model will acquit itself on election night.

We might also branch out. Any time you have (a set of predictive models), there are different ways to use it, like predicting movies that are going to be successful. We’re really proud of the brand, and it’ll continue on in some form.

I don’t like people who think they are experts at everything. The New York Times interviewed some astrophysicists on the election, and I’m sure they’re great astrophysicists, but I didn’t like their election methodology. I do work in other areas, so I wanted to build out my own brand (in politics) before revealing myself.

You developed an algorithm called Pecota. Can you explain how it works and how you’ve applied it to your site?
Silver: There are a couple fundamental things we’re trying to do. One is take this big soup of polling and make sense of it. We rate the polls on how accurate they’ve been in the past and their sample size. We also look at whether polls tend to lean Republican or Democratic. Sometimes people think a state’s moving a certain way when really, they’re looking at results from a McCain-friendly pollster or an Obama-friendly pollster–but it may not be biased.

In Georgia, 35 percent of early voters have been African-American. That’s a really high number–in 2004, that number was 25 percent. I do think that’s another kind of margin for uncertainty to consider, especially since a third of the country might vote early.

Of course, the real test for FiveThirtyEight comes Tuesday. Silver discussed with CNET News what makes his site unique and what he plans to do with it in the future.

Why did you decide to start blogging under the pseudonym Poblano?
Silver: It wasn’t really thought through. I just started writing on Daily Kos under that, and I kept that up for a while. Eventually, I started getting media requests. You can’t name yourself after a chili pepper and do much media stuff, so I had to out myself at some time.

How would you respond to criticisms that it’s impossible to build a good poll-based predictive model for elections?
Silver: If the polls are wrong, then we’re going to be wrong too. We can massage the data, but if there is some kind of a Bradley effect, for example, then our numbers are going to be wrong.

We want to see hard numbers; we don’t want to see exit polls. In the primaries, Indiana was called for Clinton, but Obama came within a half point, so I think some networks were getting nervous. The exit polls have been horrible.

We could use the site to understand which congressmen vote for which bills, and why. Based on this person’s district and history, we can say they should’ve voted for this bill and why. We can look at who are the swing votes in a piece of health care legislation.

What are your plans for the site, once the election’s over?
Silver: I think there are a couple different directions we could take it, and one will be to look at Congress. Whoever gets elected, you’re going to see less gridlock–especially if Obama gets elected.

Mostly, I’ll play it by ear and be honest with people about where I think things are headed. Most of my users are Democrats, but if things look bad for Obama, I’m not going to sugar-coat things. I hope to steer away from things like race, and explain who won the election and why.

Why did you start FiveThirtyEight?
Silver: I’d been writing on Daily Kos for some time, and by March, the outcome of the primaries was pretty clear. Obama had a lead it’d be hard for Clinton to overcome, so it was to see which candidate would match up against John McCain.

FiveThirtyEight is simple in design but crammed with numbers, graphs, and maps that deconstruct the data. The site also features a blog where Silver and writer Sean Quinn offer insightful commentary on campaign events.

How much traffic do you generally see on a daily basis, and when did the site really start taking off?
Silver: Right now, about a million unique visits per day. We’ll see hopefully maybe 3 or 4 million on Tuesday. It’s been a pretty steady progression upward. On the night of the Pennsylvania primary, we got 7,000 hits. After the conventions is when people really started to tune in–it’s also when polls become more important. We started getting numbers in the six figures, and it kept going.

I started really to lend some sanity to the media narrative about polls. There is so much hyperventilation when a poll moves in one way or another. People tend to look at polls that are outliers.

Silver joins MSNBC's Countdown.

We translate things in terms of the electoral college. It kind of boils down to that one number. That’s kind of the end product. People make the mistake of thinking the states where the race is closest are most important, but it’s only when the popular vote’s within a couple of points that this stuff matters.

Can you tell me about your text-messaging service with Credo Mobile?
Silver: We’ve been sending out a text message every time the polling thread is updated. Sometimes, it happens at 1 in the afternoon, sometimes it happens at 10 at night, so we send texts to people so they don’t have to be nervously checking at their desks all the time. It’s been a big success. We have 10,000 people signed up just for that service.

FiveThirtyEight.com–named after the number of votes in the electoral college–uses a predictive algorithm to determine the most likely electoral outcome based on polling data and other variables, such as pollster reliability and demographics.

Ex-Microsoft exec gets big bonus after joining Jun

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

Kevin Johnson

Microsoft’s online services results were lower than expected, but Windows sales were up 15 percent year-over-year in the fourth quarter.

The company’s proxy statement shows that Johnson’s fiscal 2008 salary was $620,800 and he owned more than 1.5 million shares of Microsoft stock as of September 5, which would be worth nearly $40 million at current prices.

The performance-based bonus reached 97 percent of the target because of Johnson’s work integrating Aquantive into the company, increased page views on the MSN portal, and other nonspecified achievements in the Windows and online services business that Johnson oversaw.

Johnson was set to receive a $5 million signing bonus when he arrived at Juniper earlier this month and a base salary of $800,000 a year.

Kevin Johnson, who left Microsoft to be CEO of Juniper Networks this summer, will be receiving almost all of his targeted bonus from Microsoft, or $600,000, according to Securities and Exchange documents filed Monday.

(Credit:
Juniper)

Before leaving Microsoft, Johnson was heavily involved in the company’s bid to acquire Yahoo. The merger was thwarted by Yahoo’s reluctance to join Microsoft and eventually the software giant withdrew its buyout offer.

BlackLight Power claims novel energy source

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

“They’re arguing a theoretical argument. We can show experimentally that we can create this new form of energy,” he said. “We’re not in academic discussions anymore. We’ve moved beyond that.”

New Jersey-based BlackLight Power said a subsidiary of a small New Mexico utility, Roosevelt County Electric Cooperative, has licensed its technology and the rights to buy its heat-generating equipment.

No doubt, the company will continue to have its detractors. In the meantime, we await to see whether other utility and industrial customers are willing to vet and take a chance on the company’s technology.

Mills said that the he has found a way to alter the state of stable hydrogen atoms in a new form, called hydrinos, and tap into the energy released during that change.

BlackLight Power, a company that claims to draw energy from a disputed form of hydrogen, said on Thursday that it has licensed its technology to a customer.

(Credit:
BlackLight Power)

In comments on articles about the company, many people dispute BlackLight Power’s claims. The Wikipedia entry on “hydrino theory” has a section devoted to the controversy around it and Miles’ claims, which he’s quick to defend.

The company’s claims have caused controversy because they challenge long-held notions in physics. It’s an example of how the surge in interest in energy technology has revived older technologies, like solar thermal, and inspired scientists to develop disruptive technologies.

A small company is making controversial claims about its process for making thermal energy by altering the state of hydrogen atoms in water through a chemical reaction. Here’s a diagram of how its technology would be used to make electricity with a steam turbine.

It’s not easy for an outsider to assess the merits of the company’s technology, but it appears BlackLight Power is being taken seriously by some people.

That heat, which power generators now produce by burning natural gas or coal, can be used to make electricity in a far more efficient manner and without fossil fuels, he said. About one liter of water is used per hour and the hydrogen can be recouped during the process to be used again, he said.

VentureBeat has written about BlackLight a few times now and offers a more detailed technical explanation.

The company has developed a reactor that uses a solid fuel–a form of nickel called Raney nickel–that starts a chemical reaction that brings a hydrogen’s electron closer its nucleus, releasing energy, he explained.

BlackLight Power has raised $60 million in funding and the company is in discussions with utilities to use its equipment, according to CEO and founder Randell Mills said. It employs 25 people, about half of which are PhDs. Its process has been peer-reviewed, Mills said, and the company has created a prototype 5 kilowatt machine.

Its business plan is to sell license its equipment broadly and have it sold to utilities. These utilities would use an electrolyzer to split the hydrogen from water and create a burst of thermal energy through the chemical reaction its equipment starts.

Take-Two settles stock options-backdating case

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

Take-Two agreed to the settlement without admitting to or denying the SEC’s allegations, the SEC said. The agreement is also subject to approval by the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.

A settlement agreement had largely been expected, after Take-Two announced two years ago that it had received a notice from the SEC’s staff that it would recommend that charges be filed against the company. Take-Two, at the time, said the company expected to pursue a settlement agreement, rather than fight regulators in court.

Take-Two Interactive Software reached a $3 million settlement agreement with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, relating to charges that the game publisher engaged in falsifying financial records as part of a stock option-backdating scheme, the SEC announced Wednesday.

The case centered on allegations that Take-Two backdated stock options for its officers, directors, and key employees that could be exercised at a strike price lower than where the stock was trading on the date the options were granted. The SEC alleged that Take-Two defrauded investors by failing to properly record the stock option compensation grant date and strike price.

Take-Two is just one of a number of companies over the past several years to pay multimillion-dollar settlements to the SEC in connection with stock option-backdating cases. Brocade Communications was among the first companies to become embroiled in the SEC cases, which also later affected security software maker McAfee, Apple Computer, and CNET News’ former publisher, CNET Networks.