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New online video options and placeshifting support

20 Aug 2010

Streaming video, audio, and podcast support: Also on the way to the 605 and 705 is the “Web TV and Radio plug-in.” Not to be confused with the old Microsoft “Internet on TV” set-top box, this $20 software upgrade will add dedicated streaming video and Internet radio support to Archos handhelds. The company promises support for more than 600 video streams, 9,600 Web radio stations, and 110,000 podcasts–just for starters. However, unlike the freewheeling Flash video options, this is a walled garden, so you’re stuck with the content providers that Archos aggregates. For instance: the BCAT (Brooklyn Community Access TV) station in the photo above is a New York-area public access station–not exactly HBO.

Paramount Digital Entertainment partnership: Archos has inked a deal with Paramount, allowing selections from that studio’s movie library to be available on Archos video products. In addition to being added to Archos’ online Content Portal for purchase, future TV+ units will be sold with several dozen movies preloaded on the hard drive, where they can be unlocked (purchased) for instant viewing.

Streaming Web video is just one of several upgrades coming to the Archos line of video products.

Flash 9 video support: A free firmware upgrade available in May will enable the 605 WiFi and 705 WiFi to stream Flash 9 video. Using the built-in Opera browser, Archos users can go to any Web site using the latest iteration of Flash video (Hulu, ABC, CBS, YouTube, CNET TV–you name it) and watch the video of their choice. That’s a major advantage over the YouTube-only walled garden available on the
iPhone and
iPod Touch. (If you’re keeping score at home: full Flash support is on its way to Archos handhelds, while it remains unavailable on Apple’s flagship portables.)

(Credit:
Archos)

CNET will be updating its reviews of the 605 WiFi, 705 WiFi, and publishing a new review of the Archos TV+; as soon as the relevant software updates become available. In the meantime: what do you think? Do these imminent upgrades make the portables a worthwhile alternative to the iPhone/iPod Touch? And does the TVportation feature make the TV+ a true competitor to a TiVo/Slingbox combo?

“TVportation” placeshifting: The Archos TV+ DVR is getting Slingbox-style placeshifting functionality. A downloadable plug-in (normally $50, but free if you register your Archos TV+ at the company’s Web site) available in May will add what Archos is calling “TVportation.” It’s a nice buzzword, but it basically means that the TV+ can stream your live TV programming to other Internet-connected devices, including (for starters) the Archos WiFi portables, Windows PCs, Windows Mobile smartphones, and Symbian smartphones. The viewing software will be free for those devices, and there’s no monthly fee associated with the streaming. (The Windows version of the software looked nearly identical to the viewing software for Hava placeshifting products, and an Archos rep confirmed that Hava was indeed contributing its software know-how.) The initial version of the software will only allow for the streaming of live TV and the ability to change channels; for now, you’ll be unable to access programs recorded on the Archos TV+, nor will you be able to manage your recording schedule.

The GPS accessory for the 605 WiFi was just the first of several product upgrades announced by Archos today. Also on deck are streaming Web video and audio and upgraded media support for the 605 WiFi and 705 WiFi; Slingbox-style placeshifting functionality for the Archos TV+ DVR; and a content deal with Paramount Digital Entertainment. Details are as follows:

From Live Mesh to the Open Mesh

20 Aug 2010

Canter recognizes that a completely unified and open mesh is more theory than practice:

“No one wants to give up control of their technology - so (by definition) the open mesh must be made up of a combination of open, free protocols and technologies with proprietary APIs and technologies.”

At this juncture the underlying plumbing, or mesh, for the social Web is under construction. It’s a good time to bring the issues to the forefront, before the mesh blocks out more than it lets in.

ID is at the center of the open mesh.

The open mesh is not Microsoft’s Live Mesh. The open mesh is “made up of vendors, standards, and glue code that connects a wide range of services, applications, and platforms together,” Canter said. And, it has identity at the center:

(Credit:
Marc Canter)

My friend Marc Canter has written a series of blog posts outlining the issues, constructs, technologies, and standards required to build out an “open mesh,” as he put it. It’s a kind of unified field theory for the Web.

“The key foundation set of constructs, web services and APIs to support when building the mesh - is the area of profiles, personas, friendships, relationships, social graphs and groups. It all starts with humans and every construct, element and component of the open social web we’re building has to do with people.”

Marc Canter

Canter has been an evangelist for a Web without walled gardens. He also has a financial stake in the open mesh. He runs a company called Broadband Mechanics that has developed a white label social network and Web site creation service that depends on open standards.

“Coming out of all this is an awareness of a new kind of infrastructure - which simulates the blood veins, nervous systems, skeletons, fire hose and neural networks of the open mesh. Its about RSS, Friendfeeds, XMPP, attention, two-way APIs, OpenID, DNS-like backbones and an international approach.”

(Credit:
Dan Farber)

Amazon CTO on AWS outage Like you can do better

19 Aug 2010

On February 15 this year, Amazon S3, the “cloud” storage service that’s part of the Amazon Web Services suite of infrastructure applications, failed. Web 2.0 entrepreneurs who had been attracted to AWS based on its promised reliability and low cost had their confidence shaken. Several lost revenue when the service seized up.

Last week at the Under the Radar conference, Amazon CTO Werner Vogels sat down to an interview with Robert Scoble. The discussion of course came around to the S3 outage, and Vogels explained what happened. It was, he says, a “provisioning” and “logical” problem. Translated: They didn’t program S3 to handle the load they got. It has since been fixed. Amazon also recently upgraded its hosted computing service, EC2.

But while Vogels expressed unhappiness at the outage, he also believes that Amazon’s cloud services are still more reliable than any collection of servers a budding Web start-up could marshal. While that may be true, that’s not what companies who signed up for AWS signed up to hear. We think a simple mea culpa would have gone over better.

Get a Soyo 22-inch LCD monitor for $199.99

17 Aug 2010

It’s pretty rare to find a 22-inch LCD selling for below $200 with no rebate required, but that’s exactly what CompUSA has this morning: the Soyo DYLM2284 for $199.99. It’s a new unit, not a refurb, and did I mention there’s no rebate?

So, how’s the picture? Alas, reviews are as rare as a 22-inch LCD for under $200, though it did receive five stars from one user on CompUSA’s site. Plus, there’s a 30-day money-back guarantee, so the risk is fairly minimal. If you’re still suffering through your workday with a 19- or (horrors) 17-inch display, here’s your chance to upgrade on the cheap.

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

(Credit:
CompUSA)

The monitor features VGA and DVI inputs (alas, no HDMI), built-in speakers, a 5ms response time (great for games and movies), and a native resolution of 1680×1050. Ground shipping will run you about $15.

UrbanDaddy heads south to Miami

17 Aug 2010

UrbanDaddy, which has about 315,000 subscribers and says it’s doubling that year-over-year, is particularly notable for two quirky reasons: one, you have to be referred by a friend to join, which puts a choke on viral growth and keeps subscriber numbers on the low end, but gives it cachet. Two, it’s a New York-based newsletter start-up that’s never been affiliated with the Pilot Group–more unusual than you might think. That investment firm, headed by former MTV and AOL exec Bob Pittman, has quite the penchant for the newsletter niche: it took a majority stake in and then flipped Ideal Bite to Disney earlier this year, and reportedly has just sold DailyCandy to Comcast for $125 million.

Since the new-media press has been gushing about e-newsletter start-ups for the past few hours, here’s another tidbit: UrbanDaddy, a daily missive about luxury culture for the young and hedonistic, is set to announce its Miami regional edition, adding to New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, and a “Jetset” travel edition. (For the record, that’s “daddy” as in “mack daddy,” as this e-newsletter clearly has zilch to do with parenting.)

It’s likely that a sizeable portion of UrbanDaddy’s readership can’t actually afford the bottle-service nightclubs, private islands in the Baltic, and travel packages to eco-friendly Caribbean golf resorts that are detailed in its daily e-mails. But the company can score advertisements from high-end fashion and liquor brands that are within reach of the guys who want Ferraris, and that’s what brings in the cash. (The site has not disclosed revenues.)

UrbanDaddy also operates a small men’s fashion blog, Kempt.

Moore’s Law limit hit by 2014

17 Aug 2010

Moore’s Law, named after Intel co-founder Gordon Moore, states that the number of transistors that can be placed on an integrated circuit doubles roughly every two years. For more than four decades, chip geometries have gotten smaller and smaller, allowing Moore’s Law to remain on track.

“The usable limit for semiconductor process technology will be reached when chip process geometries shrink to be smaller than 20 nanometers (nm), to 18nm nodes,” said Len Jelinek, director and chief analyst, semiconductor manufacturing, for iSuppli. “At those nodes (levels), the industry will start getting to the point where semiconductor manufacturing tools are too expensive to depreciate with volume production, i.e., their costs will be so high, that the value of their lifetime productivity can never justify it.”

And Intel on Thursday will show off new research that will demonstrate the company’s latest advancements with its chip manufacturing technology.

“A generation or two of continued exponential growth will likely continue only for leading-edge chips such as multicore microprocessors, but more designers are finding that everyday applications do not require the latest physical designs,” Anderson said in the EE Times’ report.

(Credit:
Intel)

While further advances in shrinking process geometries can be achieved after the 20-nanometer to 18-nanometer level, Moore’s Law will no longer drive volume semiconductor production, iSuppli said.

Moore’s Law may lapse by 2014, according to iSuppli. The high cost of chip manufacturing–not just the impossibly smaller geometries–may be the biggest threat.

There are examples of companies that have already found chipmaking prohibitively expensive. Facing possible bankruptcy, Advanced Micro Devices eventually spun off its chipmaking operations. Some Asia-based memory chipmakers have also faced possible extinction because they couldn’t invest the staggering sums of money necessary to update production facilities.

As a yardstick, Intel is currently in the process of moving to a 32-nanometer manufacturing process. While Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC)–the world’s largest contract chip manufacturer–has moved to 40-nanometer for chips it makes for companies such as Nvidia.

Until 2014, however, the race continues. Globalfoundries, the joint company owned by AMD and Abu Dhabi-based Mubadala Development, said Tuesday that “the semiconductor industry is celebrated for overcoming seemingly insurmountable odds to continue the trend toward smaller, faster, and more energy-efficient products” and, in partnership with IBM, announced research that will enable the continued scaling of semiconductor components to the 22-nanometer level and beyond.

Gordon Moore, former chairman and CEO of Intel

By 2014, however, the high cost of semiconductor manufacturing equipment will threaten Moore’s Law, “altering the fundamental economics of the industry,” according to a report released on Tuesday by iSuppli.

The end of Moore’s Law has been prophesied more than a few times in the past but chip equipment cost isn’t the only thing conspiring against the law. Exponential growth in every industry eventually has to come to an end, according to an April EE Times report quoting IBM Fellow Carl Anderson. He cited railroads and speed increases in the aircraft industry as examples where exponential growth eventually petered out.

Cypress’ T.J. Rodgers on solar, politics, and capi

17 Aug 2010

Even though it offers lower costs?
Not really. I’ll tell you why in a minute…We just installed the largest American solar installation ever outside of Nellis Air Force Base in Las Vegas–14 million watts on approximately 140 acres.

Having said that, there is one thin-film technology that is viable and it’s cadmium telluride, not CIGS. It works because the way it’s made is the substrate is a piece of glass. You put a piece of glass in a machine… It’s less than half as efficient as the best silicon cells, the one we make. It’s also cheaper for real because they get rid of the panel; the module becomes an inherent part of the framework.

If you would look at the people in Silicon Valley who identify themselves as Republicans, you’ll find that they’re free-market Republicans. What I think you’d find is that Silicon Valley Democrats have an economic free market base to them, and therefore look a lot like libertarians. Silicon Valley Republicans… aren’t restrictive on social issues. You’re not going to find any anti-gay, redneck Republicans in Silicon Valley.

T.J. Rodgers, chief executive of Cypress Semiconductor and free-market buccanneer

Because they don’t care that much about politics, they don’t get beyond the nuances. But if you took the next layer of detail, you’ll find that regardless of how they identified themselves, both sides are libertarian-ish in their leanings.

(Credit:
Declan McCullagh/CNET News.com)

Does this mean the Democrats have now developed a spine?
The question implies that their reaction finally might be one of principle. I ascribe no principle to any action that goes on in Washington, D.C. Basically the wild dog pack of Democrats detect that the wild dog Republican is on his back and has his belly exposed, and they’re going for him.

When you were elected to the board of your alma mater, Dartmouth College, a few years ago, you said about being assimilated by other board members: “One thing that I will say is that I’m a fairly indigestible person.” Did you ever think you’d be involved in a lawsuit?
No. When I was elected, one thing I knew was that I wasn’t going to do was go on the board and be a good ol’ boy and fit in. That was my quote about being indigestible. If you polled the board and asked them if the quote was true, you’d get a 100 percent vote that it was true.

Why the antipathy toward McCain?
There’s an article in Reason magazine about McCain. He’s anti-free speech. He’s a war guy. Those are about as bad as you can get from a libertarian perspective.

How much of your future revenue growth is going to come from solar cells and panels from SunPower vs. your traditional product line?
In the last couple years, all of our growth has been SunPower. In our semiconductor business, we’ve divested something like six businesses to (focus on SunPower). We’d be over a billion dollars this year if we had not divested businesses. We’ll still be over $800 million this year because we grew while we divested business.

I got turned off by him in a personal meeting. I made a presentation to him that the government is wasting hundreds of millions of dollars in (technology-related) pork barrel spending. I showed that the pork barrel spending is not only fundamentally bad, but also harmful to the people getting the money, the semiconductor industry. When I got done with the presentation, he labeled the pork barrel spending “peanuts.” He poked his finger in my chest and said that he’s “going to get rid of your big fat stock options.”

Democrats in Congress left town without passing retroactive immunity for telecommunications companies that illegally opened their networks to the National Security Agency. Good or bad?
Those companies that broke the law knowingly should be prosecuted. Invading people’s privacy to me is a lot worse of a crime than a lot of these so-called white-collar, stock-based crimes that Washington loves to scream about.

The thing that separates Silicon Valley from the east coast is that in Silicon Valley, you think almost nothing about politics. That means not only national and state politics but also politics inside organizations. Companies in Silicon Valley are transparent and non-hierarchical–if they’re not this way they get snuffed. They prize above all else succeeding in the marketplace.

Who am I going to vote for? You have to know what the choices are, which are not yet known. In my value system where the good guys are libertarians and the bad guys are totalitarian, there are two bad guys–McCain and Hillary. I would vote against them for anybody else. For example, I’d vote for Obama.

What do you think of Suntech, the Chinese solar company, that’s making international inroads?
Every company does something they do well. They’ve got a country behind them and they do super low cost manufacturing. They’re good. They make medium efficiency cells, say 15 percent. But they make stuff real cheap. And it’s real panels like this that you can walk on and have long-time environmental life.

q&a SAN JOSE, Calif.–T.J. Rodgers is an unapologetic capitalist who happens to be the chief executive of San Jose’s Cypress Semiconductor. The two roles, as you’ll soon see, are deeply intertwined.

This buccaneering, free-market spirit makes Rodgers an interesting fellow to interview, so I did. Here’s a lightly edited (I abbreviated some of my questions and some of his answers) transcript of our conversation from last month. Part two will follow Friday.

You see giant concrete buttresses holding the panels against desert winds. You see tracking motors moving large panels left and right to follow the desert sun. You see conduits. You see switching centers where the power comes together. If that thing were made out of CIGS, it would be 420 acres. If would have three times as many trackers, and they’re expensive.

Today in Silicon Valley, though, Rodgers is just as well known for his role in buying and building up SunPower, which sells rooftop solar systems that provide power at prices competitive with utility rates. SunPower’s market capitalization is more than $5 billion, which isn’t bad for a company that Rodgers kept alive with his own money until his board came around.

Cypress’s product catalog includes things like programmable logic devices, USB controllers, and SRAM chips–the basic building blocks of modern gadgets and computers.

In the political world, Rodgers is famous for his plain-spoken approach and verbal skewering of his opponents, who have included everyone from Jesse Jackson (complaining about the so-called digital divide) to a nun from the Sisters of St. Francis on Philadelphia. Sister Doris Gormley wanted racial and gender quotas for Cypress’ board; Rodgers responded in detail, saying her advice was “immoral” and “we pursue talent–and we don’t care in what package that talent comes.”

When you asked your lawyers to come up and read the contract during the ceremony, did they know about it in advance?
The lawyers knew in advance what I was doing. The legal blurb that I read was revision No. 4 of a document that I worked on creating. Our corporate counsel wrote it and I edited it.

I assumed that even though I wouldn’t be anybody’s buddy, I didn’t think I’d get involved in public controversy. But I didn’t think my efforts, including talking to you or publishing in the Wall Street Journal, would be met with (attempts to limit independently elected trustees in speaking their mind).

The mistake that CIGS people have made is that they look at cost per watt of a solar cell and assume if they have some sort of advantage, they’ll win.

Overwhelmingly (SunPower) has been our growth. Overwhelmingly it’s been the focus of our attention. We’ve earned it. People talk about SunPower as if it was an independent entity that’s not connected to Cypress. That’s really not true.

Switching to politics, who will you vote for in the 2008 presidential race?
In terms of president, Ron Paul is a non-nut and I voted for him. It won’t happen in my lifetime that a third party is going to become important. Ross Perot–I didn’t support him–showed that when both parties get out of touch and arrogantly refuse to listen, a third party can rise up temporarily.

What do you think of the supposed progress in CIGS (copper indium gallium selenide) as an alternative to silicon?
CIGS is a loser. I’ve been saying it’s a loser consistently for a year and a half. I don’t think it’s going to make it. I don’t think any of them are going to make it. The reason is low efficiency.

Editors’ note: The second part of this two-part interview will be published on Friday.

A 5-acre warehouse with a flat roof in Los Angeles, it makes sense to go for the lowest cost for watt. (Cadmium telluride ) is going to make it. CIGS is not. Silicon will continue to dominate in the future.

SunPower’s Web site lists some case studies showing there’s near-parity with electrical utility pricing, at least in California.
For a system on your house, let’s say the full retail price prior to subsidy is $10 per watt. Of the $10, $3 is the solar cell and $7 is everything else–the frames, the panels, the modules. So somebody comes along and says my product’s half the cost, so take your panels, empty them out, and I’ll give you solar cells at half the efficiency but half the price. Your $3 per watt goes to $1.50. Your $10 per watt total goes to $8.50. Oh, and your 10 panel system went from 2,500 watts to 1,200 watts. It got cut in half.

Q: Why get married now, after you and your bride have lived together for 22 years?
If you’re not married when you die, half of your property goes to the state. That’s not going to happen to me. The way we’ve lived together hasn’t changed. She’s been with me since 1985.

Rodgers recently married Valeta Massey in a ceremony at the Fairmont hotel in San Jose. In a choreographed ceremony, he had a faux IRS agent stand up and object to the nuptials on grounds that the U.S. treasury would lose money. Silicon Valley uber-lawyer Larry Sonsini provided some on-the-spot legal advice, and bagpipers provided a counterpoint.

Should the New Hampshire state government get involved in the Dartmouth College administration vs. alumni dispute?
That question puts me between a rock and a hard place…If you think about World War II, my enemies’ enemies are not my friends. I would prefer that Dartmouth is independent. Having said that, Dartmouth is trying to get away with some awfully anti-democratic behavior. The administration is trying to pack the board of Dartmouth College with insiders, illegally, I believe. Sometimes you need intervention from the state, in this case the court system…

He’s in favor of stifling free speech. He’s in favor of the war. He doesn’t truly care about lean government. You’d have difficulty picking between him and George W. Bush.

If you go to the east coast and compare Fortune 100 companies, compare institutions at universities for example, there’s a much bigger component of politics. Who has power; who doesn’t? Who controls whom? Then there is here. I knew it was going to be that way going in. So I decided that I would deliberately reduce my cross-section to criticism going in. Therefore in writing and in deed and actually what I’ve done for four years I’ve only focused on two things. No. 1, making Dartmouth a better undergraduate college. It’s real simple: more teachers, better courses. Nothing controversial. I’ve assiduously avoided any left-right value judgment arguments…

You’re making libertarian points. Why aren’t there more libertarians, or at least out-of-the-closet libertarians, in Silicon Valley?
First of all, I think Silicon Valley people, if you gave them the world’s smallest quiz, my belief is you’d find that people in Silicon Valley are highly libertarian but they don’t even know what that phrase means. It’s not part of their vernacular. Silicon Valley people are highly apolitical. They’re worried about their businesses, they’re worried about growth, they’re worried about technology. Sometimes they get involved in politics. They get involved on both sides of the fence…

JumpTap scores 7-country search & ad deal

16 Aug 2010

Still, JumpTap and other white label search and advertising providers, such as Medio, are going head-to-head in this market against Google. Even though, some critics say that Google’s success in mobile isn’t guaranteed, the company is in a strong position, since it is the most well known search and advertising company on the desktop Web. And since many people around the world associate Internet search with Google, white label providers and the carriers that use them might have a hard time getting consumers to use their search tools.

BARCELONA, Spain–Mobile Internet search and advertising start-up JumpTap said Monday that it will provide search and advertising services for seven TeliaSonera mobile carriers in Europe.

Mobile search and advertising are relatively small markets today, but experts expect spending to pick up within the next few years as more mobile users figure out how to access the Internet from their handsets. Market research firm Gartner predicts that mobile advertising will grow from less than a $1 billion in revenue worldwide in 2007 to about $11 billion in revenue in 2011.

Under the terms of the deal, JumpTap will provide search and advertising technology for TeliaSonera’s operators in Sweden, Spain, Denmark, Finland, Norway, Estonia, and Lithuania.

This is a major deal for JumpTap, which already has deals with 16 carriers, including Virgin Mobile, Boost Mobile, AT&T and Telefonica.

JumpTap is what is known as a “white label” technology provider. It develops the technology and mobile operators license that technology and use it to provide a service with their own brand on it.

StandoutJobs Offload your recruiting site

15 Aug 2010

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Seen at: Demo 2008

Standout Jobs’ Reception is a hosted recruiting service for companies. It replaces the lame jobs pages that many companies run with a more developed service, including application forms, applicant tracking, support for videos, discussions, and so on. I like the idea, but I like JobScore’s (review) model even more: With permission, it puts applicants that aren’t hired into a general pool that hiring managers at other companies can pay to see.

MySpace fans should give Qbox a try

14 Aug 2010

Qbox has the concept right, but the overall experience is a little more awkward than it could be–you can conduct searches from the player, but the results appear in a separate Web browser window. Then, when you select an option like “play” or “add to player” from the Web page in the browser, it adds the song back to the Qplayer playlist. I’m not sure why this back-and-forth has to exist, given that Qplayer is basically a modified Web browser–why not just display the search results window in a separate tab within the player? It also has an annoying habit of asking you if you’re sure you want to close the player every time you try to shut it down–unnecessary dialog boxes are a pet peeve of mine. But I trust this is just a first iteration, and I’ll be keeping track as they improve the service and the software.

As the Qplayer plays this Sigur Ros video from YouTube, I can conduct a search for a friend's band, and add songs from their MySpace to my playlist. The only drawback: search results appear in a separate window.

(Credit:
Screenshot)

A follow-up to my previous post on Qbox: they fixed whatever was preventing the player from playing songs embedded in MySpace pages, and I can now happily recommend it anybody who frequently listens to music on MySpace, Bebo, or YouTube.

A quick recap: the Qbox Web site lets you conduct searches for artists across MySpace, Bebo, and YouTube simultaneously. When results appear, you click a small play button on the Web page and the Qplayer launches and begins playing the song or video. You can conduct other searches and add them to your currently playing list, mixing audio and video in whatever order you like. The service is interesting because–like many younger music listeners–it makes no distinction between multiplatinum artists and your best friend’s garage band. As long as they’re on MySpace, Bebo, or YouTube, they’re easily available from Qbox.