Aug 21

(Credit:
Hafsteinn Juliusson)

A laptop bag that doubles as a pillowcase…now there’s an idea that rouses us from our dull-computer-case-induced stupor.

Unfortunately, the Napbook is currently only being sold in an Apple store in faraway Reykjavik, Iceland, the home of designer Hafsteinn Juliusson. But Juliusson does say he’s in the process of getting the bag manufactured more widely–which is good, as it could be very useful for late nights at the office or lazy afternoons in the park. It’s extra fluffy and fun to look at, too.

Plus, it definitely looks more comfortable than this designer briefcase that folds out into a stadium chair.

(Via Craziest Gadgets.com)

Aug 21

The first e-mail program I ever used was MCI Mail. When the IT administrator swung by one day, he told me “this was the future.” Maybe he had Blade Runner in mind.

Within a few weeks, my inbox was already swamped and I had no idea how best to proceed. I subsequently graduated to Lotus Notes and then later, a kludgy product from Microsoft whose name I thankfully can’t recall. These days I’m on MS Outlook, where I’ve become master of the mass block-delete.

Amazing that about two decades after e-mail became a must-have tool in the workplace that we’re still struggling how to avoid getting swamped by the daily crush of e-mail. I was reminded of this mess after Mike Arrington posted a late day question over at TechCrunch bemoaning his struggle to master the flow of e-mail correspondence accumulating in his inbox.

“I routinely declare email bankruptcy and simply delete my entire inbox. But even so, I currently have 2,433 unread emails in my inbox. Plus another 721 in my Facebook inbox. and about thirty skype message windows open with unanswered messages. It goes without saying, of course, that my cell phone voicemail box is also full (I like the fact that new messages can’t be left there, so I have little incentive to clear it out).”

How do I deal with email now? I scan the from and subject fields for high payoff messages. People I know who don’t waste my time, or who I have a genuine friendship with. Or descriptive subject lines that help me understand that I should allot a minute or more of my life to opening it and reading it.”

This is old stuff for anyone with a Internet connection. Unfortunately, the problem gets worse all the time and we deal with it the best way we can–usually in a ad-hoc, half-assed fashion. So it is that Arrington concludes his post with a what-if rumination.

“The long term answer to all of this isn’t that people need to try harder to respond to communication requests. The long term answer is that someone needs to create a new technology that allows us to enjoy our life but not miss important messages. If I knew what that solution was, I’d quit this blog and go do it. Someone out there, though, has the beginning of an idea on how we can better manage our electronic communications. And he or she may someday turn that into a product and save us.

If you are the person with the idea to save us all, send me an email and tell me all about it. Actually, strike that. Drop by my house and tell me all about it. I don’t want your message to get lost in my inbox.”

Actually, developers rolled up their sleeves to take a crack at the challenge a while ago. For whatever reason, though, the big e-mail providers offer little more than lip service.

Xobni (inbox backward, get it?) is an e-mail organizer (If memory serves, these guys actually were selected as part of the TechCrunch 40), but they don’t do prioritization. Instead, the program displays more information about the messages as you click on them.

One company that I’m familiar with is called ClearContext, which has been toiling in semi-anonymity here in San Francisco for the last five years. (Full disclosure: I know the principles and have tossed back a few suds on a occasions. So what? But I thought you should know.)

Anyway, they’ve already developed an add-in product to try to eliminate the e-mail overload crush by assigning priorities and topic categorization. The reviews so far have been good, but this remains a small start-up–three guys and a guitar–still waiting for that proverbial big break to come along.

The rub is that the majority of the corporate world still depends on the likes of Microsoft and IBM for their e-mail systems. If the big players want to resolve the problem, they can either buy some of these smaller startups for their technologies or tap the Brainiacs in the labs to come up with a fix. It shouldn’t be all that hard, can it? Or maybe I’m missing the point.

Aug 21

One of the most notable additions to Microsoft’s 2007 Office System was the Trust Center, which centralizes the security options in Word, Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, and the other applications in the suite. Of course, this being Office, it figures that many of the most important security features–including the new Document Inspector–also reside elsewhere.

To open the Trust Center in the 2007 versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Access, click the Office button, select the Options button at the bottom-right of the window, choose Trust Center in the left pane, and click the Trust Center Settings button in the right pane. In Outlook 2007 and Publisher 2007, click Tools > Trust Center.

The Trust Center in Microsoft Office 2007 apps centralizes most of security options in the programs.

The security options presented in the Trust Center vary from program to program, but you’ll likely want to start by clicking the Privacy Options button. The third and fifth options under Privacy Settings in the right window are checked by default: Download a file periodically that helps determine system problems; and Check
Microsoft Office documents that are from or link to suspicious Web sites (this last option is missing in Outlook 2007).

The 2007 versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Publisher list an option to remove personal information from file properties on save (this may be grayed out), as well as a Document Inspector button, which searches the file for comments, revisions, and hidden metadata. You can also access the Document Inspector in Word 2007, Excel 2007, and PowerPoint 2007 by clicking the Office button and choosing Prepare > Inspect Document.

Listed under the Trusted Publishers tab are the companies and organizations whose macros and add-ins have an approved digital signature. With Office 2007’s default security settings selected, you see a warning in the Message Bar at the top of the file window whenever a macro or add-in from an entity not on this list tries to run. Click the Options button on the bar to open the Security Options dialog box, which provides information on the blocked content. Here you can choose to let the add-in run, trust all files from the publisher, or block it (the default setting). You can also click Show Signature Details to view more information.

You can also choose to allow all files from specific folders or other locations to open with no security warnings. Just click the Add new location button in the Trusted Locations window and enter the folder or network path, if you check “Allow Trusted Locations on my network (not recommended)” at the bottom of the window. Microsoft warns against enabling this option for a reason: It provides malicious VBA scripts entering via this location unfettered access to your applications, where they can wreak all sorts of havoc.

Add folder or network paths to your Trusted Locations list in Office 2007 to avoid the security warning when files they contain open.

The other Trust Center Settings tabs let you disable all add-ins, or adjust your macro and ActiveX settings. The default settings meet the needs of most users: “Prompt me before enabling all controls with minimal restrictions” for ActiveX, and “Disable all macros with notification” (”Warnings for signed macros; all unsigned macros are disabled” in Outlook 2007).

Outlook 2007 adds the E-mail Security dialog box, where you can choose to encrypt outgoing messages and attachments, and to read your incoming mail as plain text rather than as HTML. This option helps prevent malicious content in a message from running automatically (see yesterday’s post), and you can view the HTML version of messages from people you trust by clicking the warning at the top of the of the window and choosing Display as HTML.

Many of the permission-restricting options in Office 2007 apps require Microsoft’s Information Rights Management/Windows Rights Management Services, but you can limit who can read and work on your files without these services in Word 2007 by clicking Review > Protect Document > Restrict Formatting and Editing. In Excel 2007, click Review and choose one of the “Protect” options in the Changes area of the ribbon. You can restrict the Word styles that can be used, or password-protect the file, though the user-authentication options once again require IRM/WRMS. You can also assign a password to a file in Word, Excel, and PowerPoint by clicking the Office button, choosing Save As, clicking Tools at the bottom of the Save As dialog box, choosing General Options in the drop-down menu, entering the password, and clicking OK.

Add a password to a file in Word, Excel, or PowerPoint via the Tools button in the Save As dialog box.

Tomorrow: keep your passwords in order, with or without a password manager.

Aug 21

Google’s U.S. paid click-through rate posted a strong performance in the month of April, while Yahoo and Microsoft gave up ground, according to figures released late Wednesday by ComScore.

Yahoo, meanwhile, saw a year-over-year decline of 4 percent and Microsoft’s MSN saw a drop of 9 percent.

“Paid click data released from ComScore is a positive read-through for Google’s second quarter,” Schachter said in his report. Shares of Google were up 2.91 percent in late morning trading to $584.80 a share.

Google’s paid click-through rate climbed 20 percent in April, compared with year ago figures, marking its best performance since November, according to a research note by Ben Schachter, a UBS analyst.

Google and Microsoft, however, both posted double-digit increases in Web search queries. Google posted a 33 percent year-over-year increase in April, while Microsoft’s MSN climbed 22 percent, compared with the previous year.

“With fewer advertisements and more paid clicks, it appears that Google’s advertising relevancy initiative is beginning to work,” analysts Clay and Fred Moran of the Stanford Group stated in their research report.

Google’s relevancy initiative aims to reduce the number of advertisements that appear on the right side of its search results, yet make the advertisements that it does carry target the desired audience with greater accuracy. As a result, Google hopes to charge a higher cost per click.

The coverage rate for Yahoo also fell in April to 69.4 percent from 70 percent in March, while Microsoft’s MSN dropped to 63.8 percent in April from 65.5 percent.

In sizing up Yahoo, the Stanford Group stated: “Overall, there was nothing to get excited about for Yahoo…Queries also fell on a year-over-year basis, down 3 percent, suggesting that any initial year boost from Panama (has) tapered off as the company continues to struggle to maintain share in the market place.”

And on the click-through rate, which takes the total number of searches divided by the sponsored clicks, Google’s rate fell slightly in April to 10.5 percent, compared with 10.9 percent in the previous month. Yahoo posted a 12.5 percent click-through rate for April, verses 13.2 percent a month earlier. Microsoft, however, noticed a slight increase to 10.3 percent in April, compared with 10.2 percent, in the previous month.

Meanwhile, Google’s coverage rate, which takes into account the percentage of search pages delivered with at least one paid ad on them, fell to 44.1 percent in April, compared with 45.5 percent in March.

Aug 20

Only in the United States, or in one jurisdiction.

Shamos: What we really want are end-to-end verification systems. I want to be able to tell that my vote was counted. These paper trails do not provide end-to-end verification. No serious manufacturer is working on end-to-end verification. We’re not making any progress toward that end except in the theoretical journals. Why? Because the idea of paper trails has completely gummed up the works.

The word “paperless” is really insidious. The word “less” is meant to imply that they’re thereby missing something. Whoever decided to come up with the term “paperless” deserves a left-handed prize for their imagination. It’s wonderful for them. Paperless.

I’m not saying you can’t make a reliable paper trail. You can use ATM technology. The reason we don’t use ATMs is that they cost 10 times as much as voting machines.

What’s happened (in discussions of electronic voting) is that a strong, loud populous advocacy voice said “We are computer scientists and know quite well the vulnerabilities of electronic voting systems and those vulnerabilities are so severe that the democratic process is at risk.” I don’t think those conclusions are justified.

The naysayer thinks it’s throw-the-election-to-Republicans code. That’s not there. It’s horrible spaghetti code, lack of software engineering. These things have to satisfy every quirk of the voting laws in all 50 states.

The fundamental difficulty with paper trails is that they’re ridiculously kludgey. The problem is that once you mandate paper trails, it cuts off research. There would be no reason to use anything else because it would be illegal.

The security on ballot boxes is much lower than the security on voting machines themselves. In order to do anything with those pieces of paper, they have to be handled by people. What do you think happens?

If you have voter-verified paper audit trails, voters can actually look at a physical representation of their cast vote, which provides a check against election fraud or malfunction. Without that paper trail, an intentional or unintentional glitch in the machine can skew the election and not be detected.

Shamos: The theory of the voter verified paper trail is that, at the time the voter is in the booth, the voter sees double. They’re assured that their correct choices are recorded on the physical medium. Regardless of what’s on the machine, it’s on the paper. The paper drops into the box, nobody has any clue what’s in the box, how many pieces of paper are going to be added to the box, subtracted to the box.

If the codes were published, there would be a period of time when these vulnerabilities would be found–a lot of buffer overflow errors–and then they would be fixed. And everyone would know it’s fixed.

When someone votes for Hillary, it prints out an invalid bogus code. We put it under a scanner later.

PITTSBURGH–Many computer scientists have been arguing for years that electronic voting machines absolutely must sport paper trails that can be verified by the voter and subsequently used in manual recounts.

Compared to paper and its vulnerability to after-the-fact tampering?

Shamos: I’m not advocating that we blindly trust machines. We have to have a way to make sure the (record is correct). If anything happens to that piece of paper, if it gets substituted or lost, there’s absolutely no way to reconstruct the election. that’s unlike an electronic system, which is if one memory fails you have the other.

It’s a formal policy position of the U.S. arm of the Association for Computing Machinery, the professional organization of computer scientists. Stanford University’s David Dill even created the pro-paper-trail Verified Voting Foundation and has co-authored an article for us that argues against Internet voting, too.

And in every election, we see paper ballots that don’t match up. It’s much worse with paper trails. This creates a severe legal problem in states where the paper trail is the official ballot, Ohio for example. Such states always ignore the law. They have to ignore the law. Twenty percent of paper trails (tend to be) missing or illegible.

But support of paper trails is not unanimous. Michael Shamos, a professor of computer science at Carnegie Mellon University who teaches an e-voting class and has been a consultant to the Pennsylvania government since 2004, believes that electronic methods of tabulating votes actually tend to be more secure than paper-based ones.

The real problem is reliability. The systems fail. Furthermore, the code isn’t good. The code is riddled with bugs, most of which don’t affect the accuracy of the tally. But we don’t know when those conditions occur.

Do you think an increasing number of your colleagues are coming around to your point of view?

Shamos: No. I wouldn’t expect them to. (They may be very good technologists, but) they don’t know anything about elections. They don’t know how votes are counted.

Carnegie Mellon’s Michael Shamos, pictured here in his home in Pittsburgh, says that paper trails are hardly the solution to worries about the security of electronic voting machines, and when mandated by law, stifle further research.

If they’re a computer printout, why would they be illegible?

Shamos: The real reason is that the printers are made in China and as you saw recently with Ed Felten, they can’t even produce legible numbers. They’re crap.

To believe that in the lack of evidence means that the first person who hacked an election got it right. Remember Robert Tappan Morris and the Internet worm? I would get worried if we start to see systematic evidence (of increasingly robust) attacks. But we’ve never seen any of those. That’s what consoles me. I have to believe that a really improbable event did not occur: that someone found the perfect hack the first time.

Does that mean that you think that some of the fuss over Diebold is overblown?

Shamos: The equipment is not as reliable as it should be. The software is not designed as well as it could be. The manufacturers are secretive. I’ve been involved in a number of source code audits of voting systems and these audits always produce a huge list of vulnerabilities. I’ve never found bugs that interfere with the integrity of an election. But you don’t want them there.

Isn’t it optimistic to think that officials and auditors will necessarily be able to detect the first real attack on e-voting machines?.

Shamos: Technology is always required in elections. The days of the hand-counted ballots are over. You can design technology in a way that makes the problems readily apparent or that they’re disguised. My position is that when a problem is found, it’s an engineering problem.

How many voting machines in Pennsylvania produce voter-verified paper trails?

Shamos: We don’t have paper trail systems in Pennsylvania. Please don’t use the term “paperless.” It’s a construction of the advocates and it’s false and misleading. They’re not paperless. They just don’t produce a contemporaneous paper that the voter can view.

Does that mean you’re suggesting that we should be voting from insecure home computers even if they’re running Windows 98?

Shamos: I can point you to a mechanism (in a paper by Avi Rubin and Dan Wallach) that would allow secure voting on insecure terminals. The notion that the Internet is just not secure enough to do anything important is just wrong. It’s not insurmountable. The right people aren’t thinking about it because you gotta have a paper trail.

If I want to screw up an election, all I have to do is modify five votes. Then we have to do a manual recount (which is vulnerable to tampering and ballot-stuffing).

When you say “advocates,” who or what do you mean?

Shamos: Let’s start with VerifiedVoting.org. And we can go all the way to the EFF and the League of Women Voters. There are numerous organizations that have taken the position that paper trails are the only way to safeguard elections, no matter that they lose 20 percent of votes.

You could have a second machine created by a second manufacturer that validates the digital signature on a ballot.

Shamos: The voter could go over to a second machine and say, yes or no, this is a valid ballot. Then the (person who wants to throw an election) goes to the second machine and tampers with that component, too.

Over and over again, some number around 20 percent doesn’t exist or can’t be read. What the law requires is that the electronic count, presumed accurate, must be discarded, and 20 percent of the electorate must be disinfranchised. Yet advocates claim that a paper trail is the most reliable mechanism. How can it be reliable if 20 percent is lost?

(Credit:
Declan McCullagh/News.com)

The problem is that when you vote electronically, multiple copies of your ballot image are recorded in memory. (Once a memory card is removed it becomes virtually impossible to tamper with.) Those systems are perfectly safe from after-the-fact tampering. They may not be safe from before-the-fact tampering.

(Take the case of the reported problems with the Diebold GEMS tabulation system). I don’t think it’s utterly fatal to electronic voting machines in the United States. What the advocates will tell you is that that bug is just the tip of the iceberg and if they were granted access to the source code, they would find more. I would agree with them on that.

One way to address that problem is to use some kind of cryptographic mechanism, like a digital signature, on each piece of paper.

Shamos: You have stated that one can put various cryptographic codes on the ballots to ensure their authenticity. The fundamental problem is that they’re not human-readable.

The Holt bill failed. If it hadn’t failed, it would have outfitted these (voting machines) with cheap printer parts. You won’t hear that from the advocates. They will never admit that a paper trail machine loses votes.

So you’re saying it’s easier to hack an election with paper ballots than it is with electronic ones?

Shamos: I say, and the advocates are forced to admit it, that there’s never been any evidence that a DRE machine has been tampered with in an election. They say that doesn’t mean it never happened. I agree with that. But I believe deeply that if people were out there trying to hack elections we would see evidence of failed attempts.

We’re going electronic. The next generation is convinced they’re going to vote from their cell phones. (It’s going to happen.)

When a bridge collapses, do we outlaw bridges or do we inspect bridges of similar design? If the design itself is fundamentally flawed, then those bridges are going to have to be taken out of service and rebuilt. If there’s a fix, however, you can add a bracing member.

I sat down with Shamos on Friday at his home near Pittsburgh’s Shadyside neighborhood, a few blocks from campus, to talk about e-voting and the Pennsylvania primary that is scheduled to take place on April 22. Following is a lightly edited (I abbreviated some of my questions and some of his answers) transcript of our conversation.

Every manipulation of elections that’s been proven has involved the manipulation of paper.

Q: How many different e-voting systems does Pennsylvania use?

Shamos: The number of different systems we use in Pennsylvania has gone down one because one was decertified. We’re down to 9 or 10. We have one of the most diverse voting systems of any state in the country. We have only 67 counties.

It means that if you were to mount a statewide manipulation, you couldn’t do it. There’s some security in numbers.

In addition to reviewing the source code of some electronic voting systems under nondisclosure agreements, Shamos has been an e-voting consultant for Texas and Nevada. An April 2004 paper he wrote says that e-voting systems do have risks but paper isn’t the answer (and suggests alternatives). In it, he quips that out of a million or so computer scientists and mathematicians, only 100 or so have signed a statement calling for paper trails; it drew an angry response posted at Verified Voting’s Web site.

Should I try to answer that?

Shamos: You’ll give me an answer. It won’t be a good answer.

Would you agree that a paper trail is important?

Shamos: I wouldn’t agree to that. No. Why is it important?

(Often what happens) is that it jams and the printer overprints. The voters don’t notice because they’re not used to this. Another thing that happens is that the bag (of printouts is returned and can be manipulated).

Let’s assume that 100 percent of voters verify the paper trial, though experimental numbers are closer to 8 percent. How are we going to make use of the paper trail? One is with an audit (that looks at statistical sampling and discrepancies). But if a discrepancy is found, we will not accept any of the electronic totals. That works, assuming that all of those pieces of paper got created correctly, and are subject to the same kind of security safeguards that the advocates insist on for electronic machines.

Aug 20

“Millions of people are already using iTunes,” Frencel added. “I think the PC is the most powerful interface to browse content anyway, so it makes sense to use it.”

For many application developers, creating applications for the mobile environment can be a time-consuming process. There are hundreds of different handset models with different processing capabilities and screen sizes. And there are dozens of operating systems. Mobile developers often find themselves developing various versions of their product so they can fit on a wide range of devices. As a result, it can take several months just to launch a single application.

There’s no question that Apple’s launch of the iPhone last year changed the handset market. The touchscreen device loaded with a full Web browser that allows people to shrink and enlarge Web pages set a new standard for what people can expect when surfing the Net on their phones.

“The quality of mobile applications for the iPhone is just so much better,” he said.

Getting “on deck” or embedded in a specific phone is often a long, arduous process. And once an application has made it this far, it’s no guarantee that it will be easily discovered by users. Embedded applications usually have an icon that may be prominently displayed. And applications in carrier decks can be buried beneath several layers of menu. Application developers are constantly fighting for a top spot in these menus.

“A device is nothing without applications,” said Ken Dulaney, an analyst with Gartner. “The one lesson you can take away from Microsoft is that once you attract the developers the rest is an easy coast downhill. And I’m incredibly impressed at the speed in which Apple’s application development platform has matured.”

The distribution challenge
There are other problems that application developers face that Apple promises to help solve, namely distribution. In a traditional model, application developers can either distribute their applications independently or they can work directly with mobile operators.

“The tool is amazing,” said Sam Altman, CEO of Loopt, one of several companies that has used the iPhone SDK to develop an iPhone application. “In two months, we were able to make the best version of Loopt we’ve ever created. It’s taken us nearly a year to create other versions of our software.”

The App Store isn’t yet available so it’s difficult to say for sure how it will work, but it’s likely that the interface will look very similar to the popular iTunes music and video store. iPhone users will be able to browse the store directly on their phones and download applications either over the cellular network or over a Wi-Fi connection. And for iPhone users who want to look for applications on their PC, they can use the PC-based iTunes to search, download, and purchase applications just like if they were looking for songs, videos, or podcasts.

Apple invited several developers to show off their applications. In addition to the friend finder Loopt application, Sega demonstrated a new version of Super Monkey Ball. eBay showed off a new application for keeping track of auctions. And others such as Modality showed an application that gives medical students up-close views of human body parts to help them study anatomy. Major League Baseball demonstrated an application that gives near real-time updates on games. And the Associated Press showed off an application that sends out local news based on a user’s location.

Apple wowed the cell phone industry a year ago with the first version of the iPhone. And now its new software development kit and soon-to-be-launched application store featuring third-party applications could change the game yet again. (To get a closer look at the third-party software unveiled Monday, click here: “Video roundup: New apps coming to the iPhone.”)


“Discoverability is a challenge for all application developers,” said Tom Frencel, president of Cabybara Games, a mobile games company. “Some of these menus are pretty deep and they’re difficult to navigate. “

Loopt’s Altman agreed.

The other option for application developers is to work directly with mobile operators so that their applications are either embedded in specific handsets or can be found on the carrier’s “deck.”

Loopt in the loop
Apple has tried to alleviate this problem with a simple-to-use tool that allows developers to create applications by simply dragging and dropping icons, slashing the time for development into a matter of weeks. During the keynote Monday, Scott Forstall, senior vice president of iPhone software at Apple, took the audience through the actual developer experience, demonstrating how quickly and easily a complex service can be created.

But it’s not just the ability to create applications more quickly and more easily that excites application developers; Apple has also created a rich environment in which to develop the applications. The APIs used in the SDK are the same ones Apple uses to develop applications internally. And there are many similarities between the iPhone’s operating system and the Mac OS X, making it easier for Mac developers to create rich applications.

Today, Apple’s iPhone makes up only a small percentage of the overall cell phone market. But it’s quickly gaining ground on smartphone competitors such as Research In Motion, Nokia, and Palm. The basic design and functionality of the iPhone has set the bar for a phone of this class. And if Apple can broaden the device’s appeal with thousands of cool third-party applications that are easy to find and just as easy to access, then it just might set the bar yet again in the mobile market.

“The underlying software platform for the iPhone is much more powerful than any other mobile device we’ve seen,” said Jeffrey Litvack, global product development director for the Associated Press. “It just makes it much easier for us to show off all our multimedia content, like videos and pictures. It’s more challenging on other platforms.”

But with the SDK and the soon-to-be-launched application store, Apple has shown the true power and vision of the iPhone, which goes well beyond simple Web browsing on the go. The company has created a powerful platform for developing new applications, plus a set of simple tools that can be used to quickly and easily bring new mobile applications to market. And it’s created an App Store, linked with its popular iTunes music and video store, where these applications can be easily searched for and downloaded.

Loopt already has its application on phones that use the Sprint Nextel and Verizon Wireless networks. These service providers offer Loopt’s friend-tracking application for a monthly fee. iPhone Loopt users will be able to get it for free.

During his keynote Monday, Jobs officially announced the upcoming iPhone App Store, which was first talked about in March when he announced the release of the iPhone software development kit.

The big news Monday at Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco was of course CEO Steve Jobs’ announcement of a 3G version of the
iPhone. But the company also made several software announcements that could set a new standard for getting new and innovative applications to market quickly.

Companies such as Handango have created application stores for devices like Research In Motion’s BlackBerry that developers can use to distribute their applications. There are also stores for Windows Mobile devices and ones created for the Symbian operating system, which is used by Nokia. But consumers are often unfamiliar with these stores making it difficult for developers to count on a reliable distribution chain.

Specifically he showed how he could merge contacts databases and location-aware services. He also showed how easily the completed application could be tested right on the
Mac for bugs or to make different aesthetic choices, such as whether to put things in the toolbar or within the regular fields.

Aug 20

Seesmic, aka video Twitter, is still in private beta, but CEO Loic Le Meur is here at Demo 2008 anyway, showcasing a few new features. Nothing revolutionary, just a few nice tweaks. First, you can now easily see video responses to a video post, and in fact play all the responses in a continuous stream. It’s like Friend TV.

As promised in an earlier version of this post, I have secured more invitations to the Seesmic private beta. Send an email to rafe@seesmic.com (which is not me; I won’t see these). The first 100 emails will get access codes. Good luck!

Seesmic gets N95 support. But you don't get Seesmic.

Also, there’s now a mobile application (Nokia N95 only so far), from which you can create and view Seesmic posts. Mobile Seesmics aren’t streamed live like they are with Qik or Flixwagon, but it does make it easier to play in the network.

See my previous review, Seesmic: It’s video Twitter and then some.

Aug 20

Researchers at Oklahoma State University are working with DARPA to deliver a sophisticated, unmanned aircraft small enough to fit into a soldier’s pocket, reports the Daily O’Collegian.

A state-of-the-art propulsion system, one that uses plasma thrusters with no moving parts, could provide power for micro and nano unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV.)This class of airplane can measure anywhere from a foot to less than 6 inches long.

“What we want the infantrymen to be able to do is pull a pack of six or so out of their pocket and have them ready for use,” Jamey Jacob, an associate professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering told the Daily.

(Credit:
Oklahoma State University)

The new line of aircraft would take over some of the duties performed by today’s UAV fleet, mainly surveillance of hostile areas, and would be a significant improvement over the UAV equipment available to soldiers today, according to Jacob.
OSU students are working on another DARPA project, an aircraft that can stay aloft for five years at a stretch.

(Credit:
Oklahoma State University)

Aug 20

An interesting note in Karnitschnig’s report is that the talks Monday in the Valley were held with only senior executives of the companies and no investment bankers from either side.

One source familiar with the talks told CNET News.com on Wednesday that Microsoft will keep a keen eye on Yahoo’s upcoming first-quarter results, when the Internet search pioneer reports its financial performance on April 22.

And while the Journal report notes that no other meetings between the companies have been scheduled since Microsoft gave its outline of the combined companies, that’s not to say the folks in Redmond don’t foresee another trigger point ahead.

As reported Thursday in News.com, the “radio silence” between the two companies has taken a shift and the parties have held informal merger discussions.

And while it’s not unusual for executives to chat informally about “what if” merger scenarios without bankers and lawyers hovering about, it was a particularly smart move on Microsoft’s part, said one former banker.

“Given they already have this offer out there, the dynamics are very different,” the former banker told CNET News.com. “By having bankers there, it lends an air of formal negotiations. Microsoft is trying to get Yahoo to buy into the concept of a combined business and then hope they’ll be more willing to negotiate…it’s like trying to win the hearts and minds of the enemy. And with the bankers there, it’s seen as more of a negotiating tactic than a friendly olive branch.”

Keeping tabs on Microsoft’s efforts to win Yahoo, Matt Karnitschnig of the Wall Street Journal reported Friday on some interesting events.

Aug 20

I can’t say that I was completely shocked. I’d read stories suggesting people receiving weak OTA signals might not be able to receive them come the switch to all-digital. Indeed, that was one of the reasons I wanted to try out a converter box in case a plan B or plan C was needed.

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Until recently, my interest in the upcoming demise of most analog over-the-air (OTA) TV signals was purely academic. I get cable where I live and have zippo TV reception otherwise. Thus, I’m unaffected by the switch to digital-only broadcasts–as is anyone who gets their signals from a cable company or from a satellite.

Apparently not. He said that the Bangor stations were broadcasting digital signals but at relatively low power and that a large area of the coast that picked up analog at least partially couldn’t tune in digital at all. Maybe they’ll boost the power before the February 2009 cut-off–or maybe they won’t–he said. In any case, as things stand, OTA won’t be an option come February.

As for my dad, he’s fine. In fact, he’s probably enjoying his 200+ channels of satellite by the time you’re reading this. But that’s not an option for everyone.

Put this down as another data point. I suspect that readers of this blog tend to get their TV via cable/satellite, live in urban areas where signals tend to be stronger, or make a big deal out of how they don’t watch TV. But there are still a fair number of people who receive only analog OTA signals (about 17 million households) and some percentage of those are going to get a surprise when this switch finally happens for real.

To skip to the bottom line, my dad called a local TV and antenna installer who had done some work on the house’s rooftop antenna in the past to see if he had any guidance to offer. Perhaps a new antenna or re-orienting the current one would solve the problem.

No signal. Not even on the two stations whose analog signals had seemed fairly strong. Double-check all the connections and so forth. Yep. Everything seemed to be working except for the no digital signal thing.

Getting the converter box was easy enough. It actually seems a sensibly administered program. The $40 coupon (for a device costing about $60) arrived promptly and the amount of the coupon strikes me as giving a nice discount without encouraging people to just pick up electronics that they don’t have a use for. I purchased the converter at a local big-box retailer and took it up to Maine with me. For someone with a modicum of experience with hooking up electronics (which would be me, if not my dad), getting everything connected was pretty straightforward.

There were.

However, I knew that I’d be visiting my dad who lives on the Maine Midcoast and he does get his TV (all four channels of it) over the airwaves from Bangor (the nearest city of any size) using an old analog TV set. So I figured that it made sense to get a converter box coupon, purchase the box (which converts digital transmissions to analog), and generally get things set up and figure out if there were any issues.

Only one problem.

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