Archive for May, 2010

Google Maps now comes with YouTube (officially)

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

The feature is no different from the previous one except in presentation. Instead of pockmarking your map with little red dots, each video appears in thumbnail form. The interface has also been slimmed down to exclude the video information and view count, letting the player fit in a smaller amount of space.

(via Google Blogoscoped)

Google Maps now offers YouTube videos as an official part of the interface. To toggle it on just click the check box in the 'more' menu.

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

Just a few short months after adding videos as an optional add-on in Google Maps, Google seems pleased enough with the feature to have built it into the popular mapping tool. By choosing the video layer from the “more” menu, which also houses photos and Wikipedia entries, users can now browse and watch YouTube videos that have been geotagged.

What CL Desktop has on Craigslist (and what it doe

Monday, May 24th, 2010

CL Desktop has nice black themes and good navigation, but why is the listing cut off?

CL Desktop mostly mirrors Craigslist’s searching filters, down to posting records with photos only. However, local-level neighborhood search hasn’t been implemented in the U.S., which put a hamper on my house-hunting. Likewise, the text in some of the returned results cut off instead of wrapping to the next line, which made the interface look a little sloppy.

CL Desktop told us in an e-mail that the application, which houses a browser, gets its goods straight from Craigslist. Since the application only stores search queries and links to your favorite posts instead of actual Craigslist data, it appears to avoid violating Craigslist’s terms of use, which govern the ways in which a Web site or other service can reproduce Craigslist listings.

If you checked into Oscar night this year, you may have caught host Hugh Jackman’s brief but hilarious quip about finding the backup dancers for his opening number on Craigslist–dubbed ‘Craigslist Dancers’ in his ditty. Though Jackman’s dance troupe was likely anything but discount, the utility of Craigslist listings is, for many, no ruse. And the more important a service is, the more developers will create companion services to enhance the basics (take Twitter, to wit).

Being able to name and save searches was CL Desktop’s single biggest benefit. Choosing the number of records to show on a page is another win, as is being able to quickly save a posting as a favorite, read the full post from the app or online, and answer a classified post from the app. The listings displayed in CL Desktop, however, were never perfectly in sync with Craigslist.com. Although the results matched up after a few refreshes, we’d like to see them in lock step.

While some will prefer to stick with Craigslist’s slightly faster, sparer-looking original, the visually minded will appreciate the enhanced CL Desktop, especially the features that save search queries and bookmark favorite posts.

(Credit:
CNET)

CL Desktop is a new Adobe AIR application (for Windows, Mac, and Linux) that pulls Craigslist.com listings into to a skinnable desktop wrapper. CL Desktop has some nice perks overall, with a couple more baubles than you’d find online. However, a few other features are absent or could be improved.

Return of the $99 iPhone 3G

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

The mythical $99 iPhone has returned to AT&T.

What do you think? Are you liking this refurb deal, or is the iPhone still too rich for your blood? While you’re thinking it over, check out my six must-have iPhone freebies–a roundup of some of the latest and greatest free apps for the device.

Find more deals, coupon codes, and bargains on CNET’s Shopper.com.

Hey, remember the refurbished
iPhone deal I wrote about late last year? Well, it’s back! AT&T is offering the 8GB iPhone 3G (black) for $99. The 16GB model is available in black or white for $199. That’s a savings of $100 on both models.

Of course, the price tag of the phone itself isn’t what stops most people–it’s the monthly nut. The bare-minimum service and data plans will run you $70 per month (plus another few bucks in taxes and fees).

(Credit:
Apple)

Personally, I think it’s worth it. Much as it kills me to write that check every month, I can’t overstate how much I like–no, love–no, lurve–the iPhone. And, hey, the $100 you save on the refurb is like getting a month’s worth of service free.

As before, you have to sign up for a two-year contract, and you get a warranty of “at least 90 days”–which I suspect means 90 days. (AT&T’s site doesn’t seem to have any specifics on the warranty–anybody know the deets?).

Phone or mortgage, you decide

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

In these penny-pinching, market-tumbling times, we audaciously bring you the $4,400 Skeleton Gold Phone from Russian electronics maker Gresso. Yes, yes, that might sound like a lot to pay for a mobile phone, but 18-carat-gold function keys aren’t going to pay for themselves, now are they?

Other features that keep the Windows-powered Skeleton Gold firmly planted in the luxury column are the hand-polished 42k sapphire glass framing the phone’s screen and the sapphire glass back panel. The phone opts for additional high-end materials like titanium alloy, African Blackwood, and ceramic. Keys feature Roman numerals. Did we mention it’s Bluetooth-enabled and has a 2-megapixel camera?!

(Credit: Unwired View)

In your face, recession.

It is a limited-edition model, however, with only 50 being made, according to the company. So if you’re pondering this one, you might want to start sacrificing now.

Related stories:
Gresso takes another cut at diamonds
Gresso’s new phone line takes the high road

Gresso previously brought us uber-luxurious gadgets including the White Diamonds Collection, which one-ups the Skeleton Gold Phone with diamond-topped gold keys and prices ranging from $14,000 to $52,000. Suddenly, the Skeleton Gold seems like a regular budget item.

Yahoo to expose its wiring to developers next week

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

New developer tools
Yahoo has opened some developer-oriented projects already, notably BOSS (Build Your Own Search Service) for repackaging Yahoo search results, and SearchMonkey for adding new depth and pizzazz to Yahoo’s search results, but those were narrower in scope. At some point next week–Yahoo won’t promise which day exactly–the more powerful tools will go live at the Yahoo Developer Network.

One level above the social plumbing is the foundation for running applications, called the Yahoo Application Platform. Initially, Yahoo will house standalone applications, but as third parties’ products mature, they’ll also be able to run on Yahoo users’ profile pages, My Yahoo pages, and other locations. Some will even run on the Yahoo.com home page, as long as they can meet tough requirements for high performance.

“That starts changing Yahoo from a walled garden to the best of the Web,” said Ash Patel, executive vice president of Yahoo’s Audience Product Division, speaking to reporters at Yahoo’s Brickhouse site here Friday. Patel has a heavy burden: in his new role, he’s responsible for a major part of Yahoo’s attempt to reverse its fortunes amid a rough economy.

If the strategy works, more people will use Yahoo, and they’ll use it more deeply. “We should see a lot more time spent and bigger engagement with the front page and mail and My Yahoo,” Patel said. “The average Yahoo user who may use two or three things (today) will now start using four or five or six things.”

Neal Sample, Yahoo's chief architect for platforms

Overshare?
Of course, users might get the willies thinking about just how much their own activity is becoming part of the information flow of the Internet. Do you really want an application sharing what you do with your friends or indeed the entire world?

For example, when a commenter is posting on a publisher’s Web site, the publisher could offer the commenter an option to have that activity broadcast on his stream of activity on Yahoo. That would let the commenter share what he’s up to with his contacts while exposing the publisher’s site to more potential readers.

Yahoo, of course, hopes receiving invitations from Yahoo members effectively will upsell those outsiders to Yahoo services. “It’s valuable for Yahoo to have a way to draw more users into Yahoo,” Rossiter said.

(Credit:
Stephen Shankland/CNET News)

And users will have fine control over what’s shared or not. People will be able to broadcast what music they’re listening to publicly while confining their movie habits only to close friends, for example.

Yahoo doesn’t want any privacy surprises, though. Each new application must declare to the user exactly what Yahoo services it wants to use and must obtain the users’ permission to do so through a “scary” warning screen: the more services, the more exclamation mark alerts are shown–an interface designed to encourage developers to use the bare minimum and to ensure that users know what they’re getting into, said Neal Sample, Yahoo’s chief architect for platforms.

This diagram shows various components developers can use to work with the Yahoo Open Strategy.

Ash Patel, head of Yahoo's Audience Products Division

One oft-cited example is a revamped Yahoo Mail that spotlights mail from people’s close contacts. If you spend a lot of time e-mailing your boyfriend, mom, or college roommate, chances are you’ll want to know when they e-mail back.

And the third level is the services level. Here, Yahoo provides the Yahoo Query Language, a close relative to the Structured Query Language many use to extract data from databases. YQL is designed to make it easier for programmers to extract and process data from Yahoo and many other Web sites, and Yahoo says it’ll do the heavy lifting to make the data workable through YQL.

There are three broad categories of technology that developers will get access to next week. At the base is a social platform that applications can use to draw upon Yahoo users’ social connections–as long as users have given permission. While sites such as Facebook, LinkedIn, and MySpace capitalized on the social-networking phenomenon, Yahoo argues that it already has the social data built into its properties. It’s now a matter of bringing it to the fore so applications and users can draw on that information.

(Credit:
Stephen Shankland/CNET News)

“The idea is to create a single social experience that can be shared,” said Jay Rossiter, head of the Yahoo Open Strategy.

Some socially connected services will require signed-in participation from both a Yahoo user and outsiders. For example, a person could selectively share photos without making them public, and those viewing the photos would have to sign in. Today, such a move requires that all people be Yahoo members, but the company will add a fast, lightweight registration process that can use any e-mail address.

“Yahoo’s going to put up essentially another skull and crossbones” for each service the application uses, Sample said.

Applications using the Yahoo foundation can run at Yahoo or outside it, and Yahoo will release a software developer kit to help programmers get started.

(Credit:
Yahoo)

SAN FRANCISCO–Phase one came last week, when Yahoo launched its new profiles site. Phase two begins next week, when Web developers can start sinking their teeth into Yahoo’s attempt to replace its present static design with one that’s customizable, application-rich, socially connected, and woven into other parts of the Internet.

Another example–indeed, the winner of the Yahoo Open Hack 2008 programming contest augmented Yahoo Mail to present all photos a person has sent or received into photo albums. More photos are shared daily on Yahoo than are uploaded to the company’s Flickr photo-sharing site, Patel said, so moves like this could open new windows of activity on Yahoo properties.

Developers are essential to what the company calls the Yahoo Open Strategy. Yahoo is building the foundation, but it will be the arrival of others’ applications that will show whether Yahoo’s transformation attempt is fulfilling those hopes.

Open Sources Twit-cast Sun and IBM

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

mjasay: @daveofdoom I think more BigCos will see OSS startups as a way to acquire new customers. Sun wasn’t too far off w/ its "adoption" story 20 minutes ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

daveofdoom: @botchagalupe Sun’s got nothing meaningful in the cloud yet. Is this just a media frenzy to make the deal seem attractive? 10 minutes ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

daveofdoom: @mjasay I think the culture clash is overblown. I bet Sun would be fine with Apache-style. Plus maybe they would stop CDDL. 19 minutes ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

mjasay: @daveofdoom @botchagalupe Will a Sun+IBM combo make any material difference to Microsoft’s dominance in the next 3 years? 7 minutes ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

botchagalupe: @daveofdoom @mjasay 1 of IBM’s acquisition models is to leave the acquired comp alone for a few yrs. My bet is this one will go that way 16 minutes ago from web · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

daveofdoom: @mjasay @botchagalupe I don’t see how it matters materially in next 3 years. But sooner or later it would have to be meaningful. 4 minutes ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

cote: @botchagalupe @daveofdoom @mjasay you guys should put down the Twitter and record a podcast right now. Seriously. You can use my conf line. 4 minutes ago from twitterrific · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

daveofdoom: @mjasay What do you think about this Sun Cloud nonsense? Just cause they made an announcement, now they’re a cloud provider? 11 minutes ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

Instead of our normal Open Sources podcast, Matt Asay and I decided to use Twitter (@daveofdoom and @mjasay) this morning to discuss the news surrounding the rumor that IBM is acquiring Sun.The full transcript is below for your enjoyment.

mjasay: @daveofdoom I would not want to be a Sun employee right now. Though @botchagalupe could be right, and IBM could leave them be for a bit 12 minutes ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

mjasay: @daveofdoom Do you think IBM even cares about Sun’s open source assets? 24 minutes ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

daveofdoom: @glynmoody Amazon APIs are overwhelmingly the dominant force. Word is Sun got scared of patent threats from AWS so went with CC. 5 minutes ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

Note: the top post is the last one, so you need to read from the bottom up if you want the whole thread.

daveofdoom: @mjasay I think IBM cares about MySQL. The rest of the software is not meaningful to them. 23 minutes ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

glynmoody: @daveofdoom interesting 4 minutes ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

mjasay: @daveofdoom I do think Sun+IBM has the potential to limit choice, but we’re already well down that path. Real q is whether key OSS bits … 25 minutes ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

daveofdoom: @mjasay How much of Sun staff gets whacked in that deal? IBM is bloated but Sun is over-the-top. 18 minutes ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

mjasay: @daveofdoom re fewer BigCos to acquire OSS startups - yes,but I agree w/ @timoreilly that most will be bought by proprietary vendors, anyway 22 minutes ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

daveofdoom: I think IBM cares about MySQL. The rest of the software isn’t meaningful to IBM 23 minutes ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet

daveofdoom: @mjasay This wraps-up our first Open Sources Twit-cast (I hate that I used that phrase). Thanks to @botchagalupe and @glynmoody 3 minutes ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

mjasay: @daveofdoom …within Sun (MySQL, Java, etc.) would survive. Glassfish? No chance. OpenStorage? Could be a good loss leader for IBM 24 minutes ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

mjasay: @daveofdoom Mostly, I think this gives Jonathan a reason to stop hewing so hard to the "F" in FOSS.I know MySQL has had a positive influence 11 minutes ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

daveofdoom: @mjasay Without Sun, there is one less large company to acquire open source startups 24 minutes ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

botchagalupe: @daveofdoom Agree and disagree. They both have not really done anything yet. However, Qlayer and TSAM will have to be reconciled. 9 minutes ago from web · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

botchagalupe: @daveofdoom @mjasay of course after they put an IBM’r in charge… 12 minutes ago from web · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

daveofdoom: @mjasay Who buys all the Java-based OSS companies if Sun is gone? I don’t see IBM doing it. 22 minutes ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

mjasay: @daveofdoom I’m not sold on Sun’s cloud strategy, but then, I’m not sold on anyone’s 10 minutes ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

botchagalupe: @daveofdoom @mjasay IBM is (IMHO) still bleeding from all the acquisitions over the last 5 yrs. Even IBM would have a hard time adding SUN 10 minutes ago from web · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

mjasay: @daveofdoom Do you think Sun’s OSS fervor would have any impact on IBM’s more buttoned-down, Apache-style approach to OSS? 20 minutes ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet · Show ConversationHide Conversation

In NFL deal, an extra point for Adobe’s Flash

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

Adobe Systems’ Flash technology may not have qualified for the Olympics, but it is in tip-top shape for the National Football League season just getting under way.

With the bulk of NFL teams hitting the gridiron in earnest Sunday, it’ll be Flash that delivers the live video streaming on the Web of NBC’s Sunday Night Football games. This marks the first time that full-length NFL games are widely available online in the U.S., according to Adobe and the NFL.

Its name notwithstanding, the Web-streamed Sunday Night Football Extra (delivered via NFL.com and NBCSports.com) made its debut Thursday, with the season’s inaugural game between the Washington Redskins and last season’s Super Bowl champions, the New York Giants. On Sunday, the streaming video will start up on its namesake day with the Week 1 nighttime contest between the Chicago Bears and the Indianapolis Colts.

As for the Flash-Silverlight competition, that will have to play itself out over time. As noted by Paul Glazowski at the Mashable blog:

We gave it a try and there were some hiccups. Inititally, we couldn’t get the live stream, and were told we had been placed in a queue ‘due to overwhelming demand.’

(Credit:
Adobe Systems)

The NFL-Adobe partnership wouldn’t normally be quite so notable–after all, Flash is one of the most well-established technologies on the Web. But it was only a few short weeks ago that NBC had delivered streaming video from the Beijing Olympics courtesy of a technology that’s looking to overturn Flash’s dominance: Microsoft Silverlight.

The Olympics deal no doubt stuck in Adobe’s craw; NBC has said that it initially expected to use Flash for the Olympics. Adobe’s press release on the NFL deal certainly doesn’t mention the upstart Silverlight by name, but it does get in a subtle bit of trash-talking–the widespread, existing installation of Flash on desktop PCs “will enable fans to access NFL games on the Web without having to download additional software.”

Beyond the live streaming, fans get some interactive extras, including alternative camera angles, in-game highlights, live statistics, and a live blog.

The experience may be something of a mixed bag. Writing at Silicon Alley Insider, Michael Learmouth had this to say about Thursday night’s streaming video:

It’s not an impossibility for Silverlight to grow, mind you. Given the right level of attention to the platform, Microsoft could mark its Olympic foray as only the first big starter in the long slog toward mass adoption. But ‘could’ is the key word. The hill climbs (yes, climbs plural) will be trying.

One key challenge, Glazowski says, is “to convince the public of its validity and utility in the presence” of a “semi-household” name like Flash.

Anyone who wanted to watch NBC’s online streaming of the Olympics first had to download Silverlight, an additional step that some folks may not have been ready to take.

Once the video began, it was pixelated and jumpy, and there’s no full-screen mode. But there were some cool features, such as a ’star cam’ trained on individual players like Fred Smoot and Plaxico Burress.

We were asked to watch a Sprint pre-roll ad to get to the video, and there were a few online ads within the broadcast, but not nearly as many as on TV. In fact, during most TV ad breaks, online viewers were sent to the NFL network studio for recaps of other games, which is nice but perhaps a sign advertising for the Webcast wasn’t sold out.

Electric-car maker Think gets rescue funds

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

“This interim financing is an important step for us to be able to recommence production as soon as possible and we are grateful for the support of Ener1 Group and our existing investors. We have encouraging engagement with a number of potential new equity investors for our recapitalization process,” Canny said.

Last month Think CEO Richard Canny told reporters that the company was running out of working capital and had to suspend production of its small all-electric car, the Think City. The latest version with lithium ion batteries, giving it a range of about 100 miles and top speed of 65 miles per hour, was slated to go on sale in Scandinavia early this year.

Think’s financial problems underscore the difficulty of bringing cars based on new technology to market during a bad economic downturn.

Electric town
car maker Think Global has been thrown a financial lifeline from battery maker Ener1 and other investors.

In a statement Ener1 CEO Charles Gassenheimer said the investment aligns with the company’s strategy to “invest in the future of electric drive.”

The Think City from Think Global.

On Monday, Think said that it has secured about $5.7 million in “interim financing,” led by Ener1, one of the battery suppliers for the Think City.

(Credit:
Martin LaMonica/CNET Networks)

Investors are cautious to invest in a new and expensive auto technology being used in a relatively young product category. Electric cars also require upgrades to the electricity infrastructure and more consumer education to take off, say auto industry executives.

In a statement, Canny said that the money isn’t enough to get the company operating at full speed again:

‘Values of n’ engineer heading to Twitter

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

Both products will shut down at 5 p.m. PST on December 8, according the Values of n blog. However, the Twitter blog says, “The technology…will live on and potentially re-emerge as part of Twitter’s systems.” It’d be pretty cool if the auto-concierge of I Want Sandy made it into Twitter somehow.

Chances are better that Dornfest’s engineering time will be taken up improving Twitter’s core services, and possibly working on ways to open up the platform further. Dornfest was co-author of the RSS 1.0 spec; he has some chops in creating universal content standards.

Rael Dornfest is joining Twitter.

For the Twitter product, this sounds like a good move. But we’re still waiting for Twitter’s business model to emerge. I bet Dornfest is, too.

Formerly an editor and a CTO for O’Reilly Media, his most recent project is a software house called Values of n, which makes the clever app (and Webware 100 winner) I Want Sandy and the virtual sticky note service called Stikkit.