World

April 3, 2010

6vsy Debating the power of Google’s Wave_1164

Filed under: Ugg Boots — admin @ 8:42 am

So is it better than instant messaging?

Wave sounds confusing

But the what-everybody-else-is-doing visibility factor is also greatly diminished when you can’t see where others are working in the limited screen real estate of Wave. The immediacy of the visible edits vanishes as soon as the other work is happening elsewhere. With Wave, there are plenty of trees falling in the forest that you don’t hear. For example, in composing this document, I asked a question at the top of the Wave discussion thread. You didn’t see it, either because you were away from the discussion or working elsewhere, and there’s no notification about which particular part of the discussion changed. A green number next to the wave in the inbox provides some help.

Shankland: Right. Every Net communication technology goes through a honeymoon period where just you and your close contacts use it. Then the whole Net discovers it and your little paradise becomes just another conduit for spam, inane jokes, and trivia. Expect the same issues with Wave.

Needleman: I think Wave is a great platform for getting work done, but there are dangers. It can take a process that is deliberate and thoughtful and make it into a frothy and superficial back-and-forth. But there are some business process tools that could really benefit from real-time notifications and presence indicators, and from Wave’s capability to show people where others’ attentions are. I’m thinking of the Bugzillia platform, for example. It’d be great to know when a developer is working on a bug I’ve filed, so we can skip the e-mail ping-pong and work through problems in real-time.



Shankland: Wave feels like some crazy crossbreed of Docs, Gmail, and IM, but I overall I find that refreshing more than troubling. And it’s interesting that Google wants Wave to be not merely extensible through a programming interface, but also a brand-new communication protocol for the Internet. Google tries to use openness to advance its agenda, which is tactically intriguing.

How about as a collaborative editor?

Needleman: I did drop into regular IM. The wide-open structure of a Wave message might be a little too open. It’s easy to miss things.

People will see Wave in different ways. For some, it’s a clever take on e-mail. Others will see it as instant messaging with new features. Developers will look at Wave’s open specs and APIs, and see a framework for new collaborative apps. But is it really any of these things, or just a crazy experiment from Google’s Australian outpost?

We used Wave to write this story. It worked pretty well.

What’s next for Wave

(Credit:Screenshot by Rafe Needleman/CNET)

Needleaman: I’m in trouble. I don’t only think before I type. I think before, during, and after. My mother taught me that “writing is re-writing.” I hope Wave doesn’t prove her wrong.

Needleman: I didn’t see it. So I agree, Wave needs better notification features.

As we were writing this document, I found myself wanting to use regular old IM to see if you heard what I was asking about. Maybe that’s just a matter of getting used to Wave, but maybe it’s because it’s is so open-ended it’s hard to tell exactly when a response is sought or provided.

And just as Gmail works best if you only deal with one e-mail at a time, Wave is good at only one wave at a time. That’s fine for a lot of IM-like chats, but if you work in depth on multiple waves simultaneously, think about opening multiple browser tabs. There are boldface indicators of new activity in your inbox, which tell you who’s active, but with multiple tabs you won’t always see them–especially if your inbox gets crowded with new waves.

The user interface is also rough. Finding the vanishing button you need to click to edit a wave is a drag, especially when you lose your place in a wave by having to scroll up to the top when it occurs to you that you want to add some text.

Shankland: Welcome to the limits of Web apps. HTML 5 has some notification work under way, so perhaps that’ll improve in coming years.


Needleman: That’s easy to fix. A little arrow pointing up or down in a document could indicate where others are typing, if they’re off your screen.

Needleman: Wave does feel like modern e-mail, and it relies on the modern Internet to work. Unlike old-fashioned e-mail, which was created when servers didn’t have persistent connection to each other, Wave works because the machines on the Net are now, for the most part, constantly connected to each other. It also brings together different communication styles–e-mail, IM, chat, collaborative editing–into one app. I think that’s great, but I’m not sure how well this idea will scale or what will happen as a broader user base starts to adopt it.

Shankland: I acclimated rapidly, too, but I can see how the multi-edit chaos could be distracting even if you know what’s going on. If you’re the kind of person who can talk on the phone, send a text message, IM, and surf the Web at the same time, you’ll be fine with Wave, but most of us have only so much attention span to go around, and Wave has the potential to overtax.

Shankland: OK, fair point, and I’ll withhold some criticisms of search syntax and contacts management that probably will be improved. But I think this issue could be bigger. One problem with Wave is that the servers have to know which waves are open for editing and when. It’s easy for Google to shut off a user’s editing privileges after a period of inactivity so the server can free up the resources required to keep a communication channel open, but it’s a pain for the user to have to re-enable the privilege frequently, as I had to do while working on this piece. My preference would be that the reply/edit button hovers over the top-right corner of the window even as you scroll so it’s always available.

Shankland: Such as the question I asked you twice that took you two hours to respond to.

CNET Senior Writer Stephen Shankland: Gmail users accustomed to conversation view, which stacks the back-and-forth discussion into a single view, will have an easier time adjusting to Wave’s ways.

Needleman: Lighten up. It’s a developer preview.

Needleman: It’s fun to play with now, but we don’t know what using Wave will be like once we start getting overflowing inboxes of waves.

CNET Editor Rafe Needleman: In some ways, it really is. With Wave, you don’t reply to a message with a new message, you instead add your reply to the message itself. When there are multiple people involved in a conversation, this can prevent a lot of confusion. There’s only one “wave” in a conversation, not a volley of messages flying around that repeat each other.

Wave as a business platform

Needleman: Wave is a lot like Google Docs. Several people can work on a document at the same time. Wave actually is more responsive than Docs and does a better job at letting people know who’s editing what and where.

Shankland: Expect businesses to go through an adjustment period as Wave arrives. There was a day when e-mail was a novelty, and later instant messaging, too, but now they’re settling down to be ordinary tools. Arguably Twitter and social networking are headed that direction for some work purposes, too, and I suspect Wave will go through the same growing pains. Just as with other electronic communications, one person’s active and engaging chat channel is another person’s annoying, productivity-sapping distraction.

Debating the power of Google's Wave

We’ve had about a week to absorb the Google’s pitch for Wave, its new experimental communication platform, and about a day to try the actual early “sandbox” build of the service. See our hands-on review. But there’s more to talk about with Wave. It’s not just an app, it’s an important evolution in the philosophy of written communication.

Is it better than e-mail?

Shankland: In my misspent youth, I used a Unix terminal command, talk, that was something of a precursor to instant messaging. I quickly grew to loathe the fact that every keystroke was visible. How many times have you had second thoughts about an instant message or e-mail? Think before you type.

Also, since Google will open up Wave’s code and its APIs, companies that want to bring Wave in-house without putting all that corporate data on the Internet or in Google’s servers could set up their own private Wave networks. And if they want, they can layer in any auditing or compliance features that Wave doesn’t ship with. Theoretically, anyway.

Needleman: It is at first, but I found that I acclimated to its concepts pretty quickly. What I really appreciate about Wave is how easy it is to move between different modes. You can start a message like an e-mail, and then see it become a chat or IM conversation, and then go into collaboratively editing a document. I know it sounds horribly confusing but I found that it didn’t take long to adapt to it.

Overall, it’s a strong entry from a company that understands what the Internet enables, even if Google itself isn’t a social network powerhouse. Google must convince people not only to sign up for Wave, but also to get their contacts to do so as well, which probably will be as much of a challenge as making the technology work. But the company is more likely to get ahead in the social realm by doing something different, like Wave, as it did with Gmail, and not by trying to out-Twitter Twitter or out-Facebook Facebook.

Needleman: The thing everyone is going to make a big deal of in Wave is that you can interrupt someone who’s carefully writing a message to you. You can barge into a message before they’re done with it, demand the writer’s immediate attention, and force them to shift from composing to replying. There will be a way to hide your real-time activity in Wave, but the default mode is real-time. It’s interruptive and very different. There will be people who hate it.

Needleman: Again, it’s different. In Wave, an e-mail conversation can become like IM, or a multiparty chat room. If there are multiple people in a thread, Wave does a pretty good job of making it clear who’s responding to what. One big difference is that you can reply to anything anybody said, anywhere, so you can end up with a big, hairy mess of threads in a single wave. Hopefully the developers will add a way to collapse threads.

Shankland: Google Docs has plenty of weak points, but I find its collaboration feature a more profound and powerful change than any new features in the last few iterations ofMicrosoft Office. And Google Wave is like Google Docs on steroids when it comes to collaboration. Wave can spotlight the very area where others’ attention is focused, which is important data when collaborating, even if you’re sitting side by side.

Shankland: To me, Wave felt more like an instant-messenger chat room than e-mail. E-mail gives time to pause and reflect, even in today’s everything-is-urgent world. Wave imparts a sense of urgency when multiple people are using it simultaneously. With Wave, you feel rude if you don’t respond to a question soon, at least when your contacts are actually in the wave at the same time.

2aly Deep-86ed ;Again – Halos Heaven_690

Filed under: Ugg Boot — admin @ 8:41 am

When it comes to the depression meter, that Game 5 of the pennant series spins off the dial.




Deep-86ed ;Again - Halos Heaven

If Magic and Nugget fans were bummed by those LeBron and Kobe three-pointers, they have nothing on 1986 Angel loyalists.

    Anaheim Stadium. Blue wall. No ads. Just an Angel logo. Natch, no rocks. Seats throughout, explaining the attendance that was 20,000 more than today’s capacity. And the light grass. Ag technology had to be weaker back then. The batters. ABC showed that the bottom third of the lineup was carrying the Angel load. The trio was Dick Schofield, Bob Boone and Gary Pettis, although Schofield hit second in Game 5. Missing was a graphic called Miss October. Reggie’s DH stood for Didn’t Hit. The one time he singled, he was picked off. TV’s Al Michaels evidently wasn’t tuned in. With Jackson leading off the bottom of the 10th, Michaels thought it was 1977. He said with excited anticipation: “Who wrote this script?” Answer: Boston. The pitcher. Mike Witt was a winner. Or should’ve been. No walks in 8 and two-thirds. One strike away from a pennant. Somewhere in there, ABC noted, “No pitcher has ever thrown two complete games in a championship series.” In the fifth, an MLB Network historical note posted his perfect-game numbers of 1984 at Texas: 94 pitches, 10 Ks. The broadcast. Good timing. While this 1986 gem aired, so did a look at the 1986 New York Giants on NFL Network. And MLB Network followed with Mets-Boston, exactly the World Series match-up after the Angels fell. The hero. Dave Henderson almost wasn’t. After Tony Armas hurt his leg in center, Henderson replaced him and pulled a goat of play in the sixth. Leaping for a Bobby Grich drive, the center fielder had the ball in his mitt, then ice-cream-coned it over the fence. Having given the Angels a 3-2 lead, Grich set a record for celebration. Michaels: “It may be one of the more memorable plays of the ’80s.” Unfortunately, not quite. The banners. “The Sox are at Witt’s end.” “Yes We Can” (did Obama steal that?). The slammer. With Boston’s Mike Greenwell up in the eighth, MLB Network added an amazing note: He had two inside-the-park grand slams in his career. Against the same pitcher, Greg Cadaret. Once when Cadret was with the A’s, once with the Yankees. The seer. “Remember that man, Gedman,” said Michaels in the eighth. Indeed, the Sox catcher who had homered and doubled would draw the hit by pitch in the ninth to set up Henderson’s shot. The traitor. Seven years after winning the Angels’ first MVP Award, Don Baylor stuck it to his old team. Now DHing for Boston, he nailed a one-out homer in the ninth to cut the Angels’ lead to 5-4. And he scored the winner on Henderson’s sac fly in the 11th. The pitches. Moore was thisclose to closing the door with two out in the ninth. He had Henderson at 1-2, 2-2, two fouls. Then goodbye, 6-5 Sox. More timing. Just as Henderson parked Donnie Moore’s forkball on MLB Network, A-Rod was hitting his dramatic homer in the ninth against the Phillies in real time. The out. Grich was inches from winning it with two out in the ninth. With the game tied at 6 and the bases full, Bobby pushed a 2-0 count against Steve Crawford. Two balls away from triumph. The next pitch looked outside, but the ump said strike. Bobby eventually lined out to the mound. Michaels would point out that Crawford was on the roster because Tom Seaver got hurt. The coach. Pitching coach Marcel Lachemann went to the mound for Angel pitching changes, not manager Gene Mauch. The look. The Angels played one guy born outside the country: Jamaica’s Devon White. Now Latin Americans dominate the roster. The shots. Pettis was a foot from handing the Angels the flag in the 10th. Jim Rice said no way, leaping and hauling in his drive at the wall. The next frame, Angel left fielder Brian Downing kept the deficit at one by grabbing Ed Romero’s rocket at the fence. Michaels: “Wow! Are we really seeing this game?” The call. Michaels: “Anaheim was one strike away from turning into fantasyland.”

    So it was painful to watch Saturday as MLB Network replayed all 11 innings of the Angels’ 7-6 loss to Boston. Still, a wild time warp.

    3nyw Dell acquires Allin’s Microsoft IT consulting

    Filed under: Ugg Boots — admin @ 8:41 am



    Dell acquires Allin's Microsoft IT consulting business
    

    Correction, 2:02 p.m. PST: This story misstated the number of Allin’s businesses being acquired by Dell. It is two.

    Dell has acquired Allin’s Microsoft IT consulting business, as well as its collaboration and business applications services business, in a $12 million stock deal.

    The acquisition does not include Pittsburgh-based Allin’s interactive media and business process consulting units.

    The acquisition, announced Friday, aims to bolster Dell’s consulting work in the areas of designing and implementing scalable networks and application architectures via Allin’s technology infrastructure business, as well as in the areas of collaboration and business applications.

    The acquisition will further increase Dell’s services business that it has been expanding since early 2000, as a means to further sales of its hardware.

    Dawn Kawamoto covers enterprise security and financial news relating to technology for CNET News. E-mail Dawn.


    “The expertise we gain from Allin further deepens our ability to help customers exploit Microsoft technologies for business advantage,” Stephen Murdoch, vice president of Dell’s Global Infrastructure Consulting Services, said in a statement.

    April 2, 2010

    jycy Cook County- Craigslist’s ‘erotic’ section mu

    Filed under: shoes — admin @ 2:06 pm



    “Just to prove my point we put our own ads on Craigslist,” Dart said. “One of them read ‘15-year-old looking for sex,’ and it got three hits including one from a convicted sex offender. We put up ‘14-year old looking for sex.’ Nobody filed any complaints and that one was left up. So its clear there’s no policing going on. Craigslist, part of your site is being misued. Work with me to rectify it. Monitor it and I’ll go away.”

    Sheriff Tom Dart has asked the court to force Craigslist to remove the Web publication’s erotic section. Cook County also wants $100,000 in compensation for the man hours the county has had to pay police to investigate alleged criminal services being advertised on the site.

    In an interview with CNET News following a press conference, Dart made clear that he isn’t blaming Craigslist for prostitution in his county and said Craigslist is great for renting rooms or sellingcars and hundreds of other legal uses.

    Craigslist, the Web’s biggest publication of classified advertisements, promised in November to begin cracking down on ads for prostitution after coming under fire by several state attorneys general.

    Cook County: Craigslist's 'erotic' section must go
    

    Craigslist's San Francisco headquarters

    But he said all the statistics shows Craigslist is the country’s biggest marketing tool for the illegal sex trade and also makes it harder for law authorities to catch bad guys.

    Greg Sandoval covers media and digital entertainment for CNET News. He is a former reporter for The Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times. E-mail Greg, or follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/sandoCNET.


    “Near as we can tell they have a total of about 24 employees,” Dart said. “They freely admit that their policing and monitoring is all done by the participants. As I said, we can all act like we’re idiots here but that gets old after a while. Are you trying to tell me that the people going to a prostitution site are going to be so horribly offended that they’re going to register a complaint? No they’re not.

    As for its potential defense in the sheriff’s civil case, Craigslist can claim to be immune from liability under section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which says: “No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider. “

    Dart, who is sheriff of one of the most populous counties in the United States with about 5.3 million residents, said he has asked for help from Craigslist and done everything possible to negotiate with managers there. He said he held off filing suit to see whether the deal between the state attorney general would have any impact on the problem.

    CNET’s Declan McCullagh contributed to this report

    Best said that Craigslist managers have yet to receive a copy of the complaint issued by the Cook County Sheriff’s Office.

    Updated at 12:13 p.m. PST to include comments from Craigslist.

    “Craigslist is an extremely unwise choice for those intent on committing crimes since criminals inevitably leave an electronic trail to themselves,” Best continued. “On a daily basis, we are being of direct assistance to police departments and federal authorities nationwide.”

    (Credit:Greg Sandoval/CNET News)

    “Misuse of Craigslist to facilitate criminal activity is unacceptable, and we continue to work diligently to prevent it,” said Susan MacTavish Best, a Craigslist spokeswoman. “Misuse of the site is exceptionally rare compared to how much the site is used for legal purposes. Regardless, any misuse of the site is not tolerated on Craigslist.

    Updated at 1:55 p.m. PST to include quotes from Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart, who was interviewed by CNET News.

    The sheriff of Illinois’ Cook County, which includes Chicago, filed suit in federal court Thursday against Craigslist, alleging that the Web’s largest classifieds publication is “facilitating prostitution.”

    Updated at 12:13 p.m. PST to include demands made in civil complaint filed by Cook County sheriff.

    “I’ve said all along that I’m not blaming them for prostitution,” Dart said. “What I am blaming them for is that one part of their site is being horribly misused. Either shut that part of the site down or put some real monitoring in place.”

    aqzg Contract work fuels rise in tech job postings

    Filed under: Ugg Boots — admin @ 2:05 pm

    Employers are also issuing a more extensive wish list in what they seek in a high-tech contractor, Shandrow added. In the past, a prospective employer would seek three or four primary skill sets when submitting an order to hire a contractor. Now employers want additional skills for the same level of pay, as well as stipulations relating to the length of the contract, number of hours to be worked and money to be paid, he said.

    Although the overall unemployment rate reached 7.6 percent in January and for tech, the rate climbed to 4.8 percent, there are still opportunities for tech employment.

    (Credit:Dice.com)



    In the past, contractor jobs have also served as a leading indicator to the overall labor market, said Amar Mann, a regional economist at the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

    Last February, there were 94,423 positions posted on Dice.com, of which 39.1 percent were for contractors. But this year, as the number of February job postings fell 39.3 percent year over year, contractor positions accounted for 41.8 percent of the job postings.

    “In uncertain times, companies are looking for flexibility in their payrolls to continue with critical projects,” said Tom Silver, chief marketing officer for Dice Holdings, which operates Dice.com. Those critical projects often involve improvements to a company’s infrastructure and can offer near-term benefits, he added.

    There was a similar trend after the Internet bubble burst in early 2000, when the number tech jobs overall shrank but the slice of contractor positions soared to roughly half of all job postings on Dice by mid-2003.

    “For the last year or so, contractor jobs have accounted for 38 to 40 percent of the positions, but I expect that increase,” Silver said. He noted he wouldn’t be surprised if the percentage for contractor job postings eventually reached to 50 percent later this year.

    “In previous slowdowns, the first workers who were cut were temporary workers or contractors,” Mann said. “They are cut anywhere from three to 12 months ahead of a slowdown, and this could be seen as a leading indicator to job losses.”

    Tech job listings rose to 57,337 as of February 2, up from 55,609 in January, according to the company’s monthly report released Wednesday. But if you’re looking for full-time work with health benefits, you may not find the new data to be especially good news: Helping to drive that modest increase was a 7.3 percent gain in the number of contractor positions, which climbed to 23,955 listings as of February 2, from 22,333 a month earlier, according to the report.

    Dawn Kawamoto covers enterprise security and financial news relating to technology for CNET News. E-mail Dawn.


    Help wanted: Techies with Android skills

    Temporary-placement agency Manpower, meanwhile, finds some tech positions are still in demand, particularly for people skilled in mobile technologies. The problem is a surprisingly thin talent pool for those jobs. Adam Shandrow, area manager for Manpower, said there’s a shortage in finding tech workers who are familiar with Google’s Android smartphone platform and applications that can run on it.

    “We still see a slight demand for high-tech engineering jobs, but the timing of placing candidates in those jobs is now very different,” Shandow added. “Before, we could fill a job in three to four weeks, now it takes five to six weeks. And for a permanent position, it used to take a month to fill a high-tech job and now it takes almost two months.”

    Jobs posted on technology jobs site Dice.com rose 3.1 percent in February, its first sequential increase since late last summer, just before the economy started to really turn sour in September.

    On the positive side, the figures can also indicate when permanent jobs may begin to pick up, Mann added. When the dot-com bust hit in 2001, for example, the number of contractor positions began to shrink. They began to pick up steam in the following year and posted year-over year growth in July 2003. Then four months later, the overall economy began to improve and job growth began in November. That followed a similar pattern in the 1991 recession, Mann said, pointing to a rise in the number of temporary and contract workers in January 1992, with job growth following three months later, Mann noted.

    Click chart to get a larger image.

    “Overall, tech is still an attractive place to be, even though the number of job listings are down roughly 40 percent,” because there are still over 57,000 positions that need to be filled, Silver said.

    Contract work fuels rise in tech job postings
    

Correction, 12:11 p.m. PST: This story inadvertently gave an incorrect number for the tech job postings at Dice.com in February 2008. The actual number for that month was 94,423. The percentages that stem from that number also have been corrected.

Xenl Contrarian Google launches investment fund_30

Filed under: Ugg Boot — admin @ 2:04 pm

Stephen Shankland writes about a wide range of technology and products, but has a particular focus on browsers and digital photography. He joined CNET News in 1998 and since then also has covered Google, Yahoo, servers, supercomputing, Linux and open-source software, and science. E-mail Stephen, or follow him on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/stshank.


So where will Google direct its attention?

Well, Google has said it’s confident of its cash position and ability to weather the storm. Also, a down economy is a good time to get better terms out of start-ups and to take on traditional venture capitalists who are leery of new investments during a time when it’s hard to extract funds from existing ones that no longer look so hot for acquisition or an initial public offering.

Contrarian Google launches investment fund

As expected, Google launched Google Ventures on Monday, following other Silicon Valley firms with a division to invest in promising start-ups.

Venture firms are relatively common among bigger Silicon Valley companies. During the fast-rising valuations during the dot-com bubble of the late 1990s, companies often found their investments doing better than their ordinary business. But the appetite for risk soured along with the economy.

Earlier Monday, the Wall Street Journal reported Google will fund the effort with $100 million in its first year.

Last week, Google announced an investment in Pixazza, an e-commerce company that hopes enlist profit-minded individuals to label photos on with sales-lead tags so they, Web site publishers, and Pixazza can generate revenue from online imagery. At the time, Google said it wasn’t yet ready to discuss Google Ventures.



But wait–isn’t there a recession? Venture capital firms have tightened the purse strings, with fourth-quarter investments dropping 71 percent from $11.7 billion in 2007 to $3.4 billion in 2008, according to the National Venture Capital Association.

“This is Google’s effort to take advantage of our resources to support innovation and encourage promising new technology companies,” said Google Ventures managing partners Rich Miner and Bill Maris in a blog post announcing the effort. “By borrowing the best practices of top-tier, financially focused venture capital firms and bringing to bear Google’s unique technical expertise and brand, we think we can find young companies with truly awesome potential and encourage their development into successful businesses.”

“We’ll be focusing on early stage investments across a diverse range of industries, including consumer Internet, software, clean-tech, bio-tech, health care and, no doubt, other areas we haven’t thought of yet,” the partners said.

“Economically, times are tough, but great ideas come when they will. If anything, we think the current downturn is an ideal time to invest in nascent companies that have the chance to be the ‘next big thing,’ and we’ll be working hard to find them,” the partners said.

Trtq CNET News Daily Podcast- Navigating the seas

Filed under: boots — admin @ 8:49 am

Apple patent filings hint at iPhone evolution

Leslie Katz, senior editor of CNET’s Crave, covers gadgets, games, and most other digital distractions. As a co-host of the CNET News Daily Podcast, she sometimes tries to channel Terry Gross. E-mail Leslie.


New York solicits taxicab tech ideas

Savannah’s offer: Free office space for game designers

That, and other headlines of the day, on Thursday’s CNET News Daily Podcast.


Listen now:

CNET News Daily Podcast: Navigating the seas of Pirate Bay trial

A verdict in the much-watched Pirate Bay file-sharing trial is due to be announced in Sweden early Friday. Erik Palm and Mats Lewan, two Swedish journalists spending several months as exchange reporters at CNET News, talk about the case, as well as its broader implications.



Ning hits 1 million social networks

U.S. PC market shows some resilience amid continuing decline

Download today’s podcast


Today’s stories:

Hey, Twitter guys, quit teasing us!

Waiting on the Pirate Bay verdict

oyse CNET News Daily Podcast- Mobile networks face

Filed under: Ugg Boot — admin @ 8:48 am

Video game industry roars in December

Also on today’s podcast, Circuit City finally calls it quits, Nintendo continues to crush its competitors in video game console sales, another lawmaker asks for the digital-television transition to be delayed, and we say good-bye to LaserDisc.

ISPs can profit from busting file sharers




Listen now:

Circuit City to close remaining stores

On Inauguration Day, will my cell phone work?

Erica Ogg is a CNET News reporter who covers Apple, HP, Dell, and other PC makers, as well as the consumer electronics industry. She’s also one of the hosts of CNET News’ Daily Podcast. In her non-work life, she’s a history geek, a loyal Dodgers fan, and a mac-and-cheese connoisseur. E-mail Erica.


CNET News’ Maggie Reardon, who will be in D.C. for the event, joins us today to talk about what steps providers are taking to keep their networks up and running.

Lawmaker seeks 3-month delay for DTV transition

AMD to cut 1,100 jobs, initiate temporary pay cuts

Net usage spikes after U.S. Airways crash

Download today’s podcast


Today’s stories:

Cue sad music: LaserDisc format officially dead

CNET News Daily Podcast: Mobile networks face logjam on Inauguration Day

More than 2 million people are expected to descend on Washington, D.C., this weekend for Barack Obama’s inauguration as president. To prepare for the crush of traffic expected on the network from those in attendance, wireless-service providers have pulled out the stops.

Fzpo CNET News Daily Podcast- MySQL founder leaves

Filed under: UGG — admin @ 8:48 am

Senate considers altered broadband provisions in ’stimulus’

Google helps form ‘white space’ database coalition


Marten Mickos to leave Sun in reorg



Courts split over police searches of handhelds


Listen now: Download today’s podcast

Erica Ogg is a CNET News reporter who covers Apple, HP, Dell, and other PC makers, as well as the consumer electronics industry. She’s also one of the hosts of CNET News’ Daily Podcast. In her non-work life, she’s a history geek, a loyal Dodgers fan, and a mac-and-cheese connoisseur. E-mail Erica.


CNET News Daily Podcast: MySQL founder leaves Sun

In Friday’s podcast, MySQL founder says goodbye to Sun, Google recruits a whole army of white-space soldiers, and Lenovo says it will focus more heavily on selling PCs in China. Also, what’s Sega up to with its patent filings? And the Senate might cut funding for broadband while trying to slim down the stimulus package.

Lenovo to refocus on Chinese market

Today’s stories:

Intel ships new Atom chip for Netbooks

Is Sega planning a return to the console market?

Dfrl CNET News Daily Podcast- Making sense of the

Filed under: clothing — admin @ 8:46 am

Congressional report: FCC chair abused power

Microsoft launches open-source blogging platform




Listen now:

Forrester Research reduces IT-spending forecast

Sony to lay off 8,000 full-timers, 8,000 others

Engelbart’s demo, 40 years later

Charles Cooper has covered technology and business for more than 25 years. Before joining CNET News, he worked at the Associated Press, Computer & Software News, Computer Shopper, PC Week, and ZDNet. E-mail Charlie.


CNET News Daily Podcast: Making sense of the changing cell phone constellation

Another 14 members have joined the Open Handset Alliance, including Vodafone, the world’s biggest mobile operator. That comes just as a new report shows that Motorola, though it remains the dominant U.S. handset maker, is becoming a lot less dominant. While the timing is coincidental, the two announcements are part of a larger context. CNET News’ Maggie Reardon explains the connection.

Download today’s podcast


Today’s stories:

Broadcom introduces combo 802.11n chip

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