Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

The problem with open-source surveys

Saturday, September 4th, 2010

With open-source software, on the other hand, a developer who sees a missing feature or an unfixed bug has her own skin in the game–or is connected to those who do. There’s a sense of personal responsibility….Perhaps we are all more critical of our own families than we are of others’.

Open source is all about responsibility, to oneself and to the downstream users and developers.

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…[W]hen you pay someone else to supply a box of shrink-wrapped software, you’re emotionally distant from it. You may rant about its inadequacies, but you’re essentially powerless to change them, and you have no expectation that your personal opinion will affect the product’s evolution.

Esther Schindler at CIO.com noticed that open-source databases made a poor showing in a recent Evans Data survey. When she asked Evans Data’s founder about it, however, he noted that the problem is not in the databases. The problem (with the survey results) is that open-source developers are more critical of their work than, say, Microsoft administrators:

There’s also personal responsibility because there’s transparency. I can’t hide behind a company brand. My name is on the line if I write the code, code that everyone can see. If I know I cut a corner, I’m going to own up to it in a survey like this and call out my error before someone else does, and then I’m going to work my rear off to fix it.

This is good insight. Proprietary software is all about the vendor. Open-source software is all about…us. You. Me. The community.

Quicken Online is finally free

Sunday, August 29th, 2010

Intuit has finally dropped the subscription fee on Quicken Online, its Web-based financial software that competes with Mint, Geezeo, Buxfer, and Wesabe. The company is still selling, as completely separate products, software versions of Quicken.

Intuit is also still preparing to release its
iPhone app that accesses Quicken Online data, as I wrote in December. No word on when that ships.

There’s more online financial news coming tomorrow morning from the Finovate conference. Check back here.

See also: Quicken Beam: Your finances made cute.

High customer support costs and an angry customer base (check out the user review scores for Quicken and Money) make standalone financial apps like Quicken and Microsoft Money questionable product lines for their makers, and when the online services take hold I will expect their demise. Devoted Quicken users like me, though, will need more capabilities (like bill paying and support for complex investment transactions) before we can make the transition, and the public at large has yet to be convinced that these online financial data storehouses can be trusted.

A quick snapshot of your cashflow (2007 version of Quicken Online)

(Credit:
Intuit)

When I last covered Quicken Online in December 2007, my biggest complaint was its price. In a market with free (and very good) competitors, there was just no reason to pay for Quicken Online. This is a smart move on Intuit’s part. But while Intuit Online is a solid service, the online competitors keep getting better, too. It’s unclear to me that Intuit’s history will translate into market share in this competitive market.

Adobe’s Flash comes to TVs, set-top boxes

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

“There are some products and services that offer a subset of online video for TVs,” said Anup Murarka, director of technology strategy and partner development for Adobe’s Flash Platform Business Unit. “But they don’t provide all the content. For example, a lot of devices play back YouTube content. But they can’t offer all the videos on YouTube.”

Yahoo is also offering widget technology for TVs, which it co-developed with Intel. The Yahoo Widget Channel provides access to Flickr, Yahoo News, Yahoo Weather and Yahoo Finance, USA Today, YouTube, eBay and Showtime Networks, among others. Motorola, Samsung, and Toshiba are all planning to add Yahoo Widgets on some of their new TVs.

Murarka said that Yahoo is not really competing with Adobe. He pointed out that both Adobe and Yahoo are working with Intel, and he said the Flash technology was actually complimentary to what Yahoo is doing with its Widget Channel.

From the PC to the TV, Adobe Systems wants to bring rich Web animation and video into consumers’ living rooms.

(Credit:
Adobe)

As part of the announcement, the company revealed a number of partners that plan to use the technology, including, Intel, Comcast, Disney Interactive, Netflix, Atlantic Records, and the New York Times Company.

The company has also adapted its technology to create a mobile version of Flash that is used on smartphones. The mobile version lets people watch Flash-enabled video on the go. Now Adobe is turning its attention to the living room and big screen HD TVs. This means that people could have full access to the entire YouTube library of video on their TVs instead of a subset that has been specially encoded for TV viewing.

The company will on Monday announce its latest version of its Flash multimedia platform that will essentially put its technology in Internet connected TVs, set-top boxes, Blu-ray players, and other digital home devices. The main purpose of the TV and consumer electronics optimized Flash is to allow viewers to see high-definition video, interactive applications and new user interfaces right on their TVs.

Developers will also be able to create “widgets” for TVs to help bring Web content onto the TV screen. Widgets are specially designed Web applications that can easily be added to consumer electronics devices.

“Yahoo supports Flash on desktops and our hope is that they will support Flash in TVs as well,” he said. “We see Flash as being valuable in a number of new frame works.”

A mock-up of what Adobe Flash for TVs would look like.

Until now, Adobe’s Flash Player has mainly been used on computers to make animation and video from Web sites like YouTube available in a Web browser. And the company has been very successful in this market. About 80 percent of online videos worldwide are viewed using Adobe Flash technology, according to comScore.

Murarka wouldn’t say which consumer electronics makers plan to use the new version of Flash, but the technology is available to device makers and application developers now. And Flash-enabled TVs and set-tops should be out later this year.

Web 2.0 gets to work in Boston

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

You can get $100 off admission to the full conference, or a free exhibits-only pass, by signing up here with the priority code, “CMBMEB03.”

Our buttoned-down and moneyed East Coast friends might want to check out the upcoming Enterprise 2.0 Conference from June 9 to 12 in Boston, where businesses wonks will be arguing about how to get real work done with Web tools. Like the Web 2.0 Expo in San Francisco last month, this conference will feature a Launchpad session that pits a few Web 2.0 companies against each other in rapid-fire pitches.

Right now, the Conference is asking for video submissions for the Launchpad, and you can check out the entries as they come in on the Launchpad page. So far, there are only two entries (Truviso and Nuospace), both of which make online services geared for corporate needs. You can also submit your own company for the Launchpad session, but the deadline is coming up fast: it’s Wednesday, May 7.

SugarCRM moves 30 percent of its customers to the

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

Intriguingly, the web is going in the reverse direction, increasingly opening up its underlying code. It’s near certain that we’re going to end up meeting in the middle: A massive repository of open code and closed services…

I mentioned earlier this week that SaaS may well offer open-source vendors a way to write lots of free software, and still get paid. John Roberts, CEO of SugarCRM, underscores this possibility by noting that 30 percent of SugarCRM deployments are hosted, rather than on premise, as The VAR Guy notes. I talked with John a year or so ago and that number was closer to 10 percent back then.

Clearly, the “cloud” is growing for SugarCRM as more customers swap “bits” for service.

…and happy, cash-rich customers.

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Vonage to get new CEO

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

The newspaper cited people familiar with the situation. The news comes as Vonage secures funding to buy back some of its debt. On Thursday the company said it has a letter of commitment from the hedge fund Silver Point Finance to provide up to $215 million in private debt financing.

But even with a new chief executive in charge, Vonage still faces many challenges. The company, which pioneered the Internet telephony market, faces stiff competition from cable operators now offering phone service as well as the phone companies themselves who sell cellular services that can also be used as wired phone replacements.

Jeffrey Citron, who founded Vonage and stepped down as head of the company in early 2006, returned as interim CEO in April 2007. Over the past year, Citron has helped guide the company through a series of patent disputes and worries of bankruptcy.

Now that Vonage has settled its legal disputes and it’s regained its financial footing, Citron is looking for someone else to take over the day-to-day management of the company, the story said.

Internet phone company Vonage will name a new chief executive as early as next week, according to a story published in The Wall Street Journal Friday.

Vonage will use the cash, plus some of its own, to repurchase the remainder of its $253 million in convertible notes, the Journal story said. Vonage needed to raise money for the repurchase by December 16 or risk bankruptcy, according to the article.

Hands-on with SlideRocket, a PowerPoint killer in

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

The service has all the flash and fervor of some other Adobe Flex-based apps we’ve seen like BuzzWord, Scrapblog, and Picnik. The transitions and stock slide templates are enough to distract you from how potentially boring your presenter is and thought has been put into making things look good from the get-go, no matter your design prowess. In many ways, the final results are indistinguishable from Apple’s well-known presentation software Keynote, which has been a part of the company’s iWork suite for Macs for the last three years.

Speaking of local storage, SlideRocket has the beginnings of a very smart way to handle shared media. Similar to Keynote, all your files are put together in one place and can be sorted via keywords simply by name. The more time you spend categorizing it, the faster you’ll be able to parse it, but the built-in search is instantaneous–which is very helpful. Users get up to 3GB of storage to share photos, music, and videos. These asset libraries are shared in the business editions.

SlideRocket's editing interface is full of things to tweak and is friendly with Web media. Seen here is a Flickr photo and a Google map alongside standard text. (click to enlarge)

Linking up to each of these services is handled with some grace, although I found performance to take a hit when adding several Flickr photos to a single slide since the service will check in with Flickr each time you load up the slide. It can be set to do the same thing for Google Documents, but this is actually a good thing in case the source data changes. I’ve been told local copies of the files will be able to be stored on SlideRocket’s servers in the future to speed things up.

I spent some of this weekend using SlideRocket, a new service that’s aiming to replace your presentation software with its flashy (actually Flexy) Web-based tools. Is it a real PowerPoint or Apple Keynote killer in its current iteration? Not yet, but I think it’s off to a great start.

Presentation management is taken care of on one large screen. You can see thumbnail previews of each presentation you're working on, as well as the option to quickly play them if need be (click to enlarge).

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

The service is launching a public preview in a few weeks with a launch in July. We’ve got 500 invites set aside for Webware readers to give it a go, so just click here. Keep in mind the offline functionality isn’t available to free members, only to the personal, team, and business plans that run anywhere from $12 to $49 a month and can be seen here.

My advice is to give it a spin and try out the things you’re used to doing in either of those two programs. In my case, even the free version of SlideRocket was more than capable of letting me build a good-looking presentation with a minimal amount of effort.

Let’s start by talking about what makes SlideRocket different from presentation software you might be used to. For one thing it’s very Web-friendly. As I mentioned last week in our coverage of the company’s demo at the Under the Radar conference (coverage), it’s been designed to integrate media and information services you’re already using. Big names on the list include Yahoo maps, Flickr, and Google Docs; I foresee others being added in the future–as long as the service has a data API.

So, to come back to my original question of whether or not SlideRocket is a worthy replacement of PowerPoint or Keynote depends on your intended use. If you’re a casual presenter, Keynote and PowerPoint are both pretty inexpensive (we’re assuming you picked up PowerPoint as part of Office, not the $200-plus standalone copy) and come packed with a huge list of features, a big support community, and teams of people working to make them better year over year. On the other hand, even SlideRocket’s free version likely does everything you need, with a very high level of finesse, and has the promise of new features that get rolled out all the time. It’s also got a higher convenience factor of letting you create and share presentations online, which is hugely helpful if you’re out on the road or something goes wrong with your computer.

Where Empressr, Google, Zoho Show, and Vyew have SlideRocket beat is the social side, but it’s an almost unfair comparison since SlideRocket has more of a business angle than the rest. You can set up private viewings of slide shows with attendees (minus live chat or telephony), and track viewings to potential customers or clients via the Salesforce.com app. There’s even a way to see if someone finished watching the presentation or if they gave up halfway through.

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

So, how does it stack up against other Web-based presentation tools? If you’ve ever used Empressr, the player user interface is nearly identical. Where SlideRocket shows its prowess is the creation tool, which is much easier to use and has a wider array of transitions, fonts, and build options that let you automate the presentation.

Need an image for that presentation? Grab one that has the right CC license right off of Flickr (click to enlarge.)

Picture this Four new Samsung digital photo frame

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

Samsung SPF-105V

10-inch screen
1024×600 resolution
64MB internal memory
Auto-rotation function
802.11b/g wireless photo frame
Rechargeable battery
SD/MMC/MS/XD card reader, USB memory slot
InfoLink free information service (news, weather, stocks, USA Today) Frame Channel service that gets more than 400 channels of news, sports, cartoons, and more

The 8-inch SPF-85V: save this one for the small, cute pics.

Each of the models feature Samsung’s Starlight Touch Controls, which integrate the onscreen display (OSD) and disappear from the bezel after 10 seconds of inactivity. The two Wi-Fi enabled frames, the SPF-85V and SPF-105V are optimized for use with Windows Live Spaces for photo sharing. Also, these two frames come with Samsung’s InfoLink feature, which offers the ability to receive RSS feeds from USA Today and Frame Channel.

Samsung SPF-85V

8-inch screen
800×600 resolution
1GB internal memory
Auto on/off function
Auto photo resize
SD/MMC/MS/XD card reader, USB memory slot

Digital photo frames. You love ‘em, I love ‘em. Well, actually I’ve only ever seen one in use before and that one was broken. Call me old-fashioned (or just old) but I guess I’m just not at the point financially where I can justify the price.

Apparently I’m slowly moving into the minority on this. On Wednesday, Samsung announced four new digital photo frames.

10-inch screen Rechargeable battery 1024×600 resolution
1GB internal memory
Auto photo resize
Rechargeable battery
SD/MMC/MS/XD card reader, USB memory slot

Actually, I don’t think I’m at the point morally. I mean come on, I don’t think I could sleep at night after spending $200 on a picture frame. Digital or not.

Samsung SPF-105P

Samsung SPF-85H

(Credit:
Samsung )

8-inch screen
Built-in wireless feature optimized for use with Windows Live
800×600 high resolution
64MB internal memory
Auto-rotation function
802.11b/g wireless photo frame
Rechargeable battery
SD/MMC/MS/XD card reader, USB memory slot
InfoLink free information service (news, weather, stocks, USA Today) Frame Channel service that gets more than 400 channels of news, sports, cartoons, and more

The SPF-85H and the SPF-85V will be available September 1 for an estimated price of $129.99 and $199.99 respectively. The SPF-105P will be released on October 1 for $199.99. The SPF-105V is slated for November 1 for $289.99.

Asus has a WiMax laptop, too

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

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

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

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

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

Rumor More iPhone rumors to surface between now a

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

For example this Sunday morning, the Internet suggests that Apple’s new iPhone might be cheaper. That it might be thinner. That it might have video chat. That it might have GPS. That it might come with a four-core chip. That it might be late. That it might be here already.

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

Hopefully, that clears everything up. Come back tomorrow for live coverage of Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference, when the company is expected to reveal actual details about its next-generation
iPhone 2.0.

I guess the thinking is if you toss enough possibilities in the air, at least one of them will come down right.

This is an iPhone. Tomorrow, there's probably going to be a new iPhone.

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