Aug 29

“The goal of this trial is to roll out a video and audio fingerprinting service that will allow content owners to manage how their intellectual property is used worldwide,” said BayTSP CEO Mark Ishikawa.

BayTSP, a service that tracks file swappers for the big music labels and Hollywood studios, is set to begin testing a new audio and video fingerprinting technology to see whether it can hunt down copyright infringement at sites such as YouTube, Dailymotion, and Yahoo Video.

Google CEO Eric Schmidt said a year ago that YouTube was working on a filtering system that would render the copyright issue “moot.” But that hasn’t happened.

The announcement didn’t mention whether YouTube or the other video sites are taking part in the tests or how long they might last. The press release did, however, say that BayTSP’s fingerprint library will be used “to determine whether user-generated content” at any of the sites “includes copyright infringing material.”

According to a statement issued late Monday night, BayTSP has partnered with Nippon Telephone and Telegraph Corporation (NTT). That company will combine its content-recognition engine with BayTSP’s authentication platform, and the companies hope the tests will lead to the opening of a commercial service that will help content owners guard against piracy at user-generated sites.

The No. 1 video-sharing site is full of pirated videos as Google engineers continue to work out the kinks in its filtering system.

Aug 24
Tech layoffs The scorecard
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on 08 24th, 2010| | No Comments »

If you want a real-time view into the world of layoffs, use this Twitter search. But we recommend having a stiff drink first.

Know of a layoff not listed here? Let us know on this form or e-mail us.

With the overall economy slumping, the tech industry is taking its fair share of hits. We’ll keep updating the chart below as news of company changes comes in. See our complete coverage of how the tech sector is faring here: Tracking the tech downturn.

Company
Date
How many
Further reading MySpace
06/16/2009
30 percent
MySpace slashes head count by 30 percent
Seagate Technology
05/13/2009
1,100 (2.5 percent)
Seagate lays off 1,100 employees
Microsoft
05/05/2009
3,000
Microsoft sends 2nd wave of layoff notices
Hutchinson Technology
04/28/2009
2,000 in total (44 percent)
Hutchinson Tech to cut more jobs
Freescale Semiconductor
04/23/2009
900
Freescale to cut 900 jobs
Yahoo
04/21/2009
675 (5 percent)
Yahoo plans layoff after profit plunges
Toshiba
04/17/2009
3,900 More job cuts at Toshiba
IDC
04/17/2009
82 (5 percent)
Analysis firm IDC cuts 5 percent of staff
Sony Ericsson
04/17/2009
2,000
Sony Ericsson to lay off 2,000 more workers
Wired.com
04/02/2009
3 (12 percent)
Wired.com lays off 12 percent of staff
Agilent Technologies
03/27/2009
2,700
Agilent laying off 2,700
Google
03/26/2009
200
Google cuts nearly 200 sales, marketing jobs
IBM
03/26/2009
5,000
IBM job cuts hit applications services unit, says union
OptiSolar
03/23/2009
200
OptiSolar closes plant
Energy Conversion Devices
03/17/2009
70
Solar stocks go red as gear maker warns
Nokia
03/17/2009
1,700
Nokia job cuts become reality
Spot Runner
03/14/2009
60
Spot Runner…another 60 to lose jobs
National Semiconductor
03/11/2009
1,725 (25 percent)
National Semi to cut a fourth of workforce
Dell
03/11/2009
unknown
Layoffs to hit another Dell plant
RIAA
02/26/2009
Up to 25
Sources: RIAA cuts up to 25 jobs
Enfatico
02/25/2009
80 (8 percent)
Dell ad agency Enfatico lays off workers
Nortel Networks
02/25/2009
3,200
Nortel cuts another 3,200 jobs
Spansion
02/23/2009
3,000 (35 percent)
Spansion cuts 3,000 employees
Micron Technology
02/23/2009
Up to 2,000
Micron to cut up to 2,000 more jobs
Google
02/12/2009
40
Google scraps radio ads
Pioneer
02/12/2009
10,000
Pioneer leaving the TV business
Nokia
02/11/2009
410; 500-700 rotating
Nokia cuts production, closes facility
Forrester
02/09/2009
50 (5 percent)
Forrester to lay off 5 percent
MPAA
02/05/2009
unknown
Source: ‘Significant’ layoffs at MPAA
Cisco Systems
02/04/2009
Up to 2,000
Cisco: Making lemonade from economic lemons
Panasonic
02/04/2009
15,000
Panasonic to cut 15,000 jobs
Electronic Arts
02/03/2009
1,100 (11 percent)
EA cutting 1,100 jobs
NEC
01/30/2009
20,000 (13 percent)
NEC to cut workforce by 20,000
Novell
01/30/2009
100 (3 percent)
Novell lays off just under 100 workers
Teradyne
01/30/2009
532
Boston.com: Teradyne will shed 532 jobs
Citrix Systems
01/30/2009
490 (10 percent)
Citrix to reduce staff by 10 percent
STMicroelectronics
01/28/2009
4,500
STMicro reports loss, lays off 4,500
AOL
01/28/2009
700
AOL to lay off 700 employees
SAP
01/28/2009
3,000
SAP plans job cuts, despite solid earnings
News Corp.
01/26/2009
100
News Corp. lays off 5 percent at digital unit
Texas Instruments
01/26/2009
12 percent
Texas Instruments cutting jobs as profits plunge
Sprint Nextel
01/26/2009
8,000
Sprint Nextel to cut 8,000 jobs
Philips
01/26/2009
6,000
Philips to cut 6,000 jobs
IBM
01/24/2009
More than 2,800
IBM quietly lays off North American staff
Microsoft
01/22/2009
5,000
Microsoft cutting 5,000 jobs on weak results
Ericsson
01/21/2009
5,000 (6 percent)
Ericsson to cut 5,000 jobs
Logitech
01/19/2009
550 to 600
Logitech to cut up to 600 jobs
AMD
01/16/2009
1,100 (9 percent)
AMD to trim 1,100 jobs, initiate temporary pay cuts
Autodesk
01/15/2009
750 (10 percent)
Autodesk to cut 750 jobs, lowers earnings outlook
Cymer
01/15/2009
100 (10 percent)
AP: Cymer to cut jobs, spending as demand plummets
Motorola
01/14/2009
4,000 (6 percent)
Motorola plans another round of layoffs
Plantronics
01/14/2009
18 percent
Plantronics to layoff 18% of global workforce
PlanetOut
01/14/2009
50 percent
Sources: Heavy layoffs at PlanetOut
Google
01/14/2009
100
Google lays off 100 recruiters
Oracle
01/14/2009
500
Report: Oracle cuts workforce by 500
GreenFuel Technologies
01/13/2009
19 (50 percent)
Algae front-runner GreenFuel slashes staff
Lexmark
01/13/2009
375
Bloomberg: Lexmark sales miss forecast; 375 job cuts planned
Seagate
01/12/2009
800 (10 percent)
Seagate replaces Watkins as CEO
Dell
01/08/2009
1,900
Dell’s Ireland plant to shed 1,900 jobs
Lenovo
01/08/2009
2,500 (11 percent)
Lenovo to cut 2,500 jobs amid restructuring
One Laptop Per Child
01/07/2009
32 (50 percent)
OLPC slashes workforce in half, cuts salaries
Motion Computing
01/07/2009
30 (25 percent)
Motion Computing cuts about 30 workers
EMC
01/07/2009
2,400 (7 percent)
EMC to cut 2,400 from workforce
Turning Technologies
01/07/2009
31
Vindy.com: Turning Tech layoff hits 31
Borland Software
01/06/2009
130 (15 percent)
VMware hires away Borland CEO
HelioVolt
01/06/2009
15
Two Austin employers announce job cuts
LiveJournal
01/06/2009
About 12
LiveJournal deletes ‘about a dozen’ jobs
Logitech
01/06/2009
15 percent of salaried staff worldwide
Logitech to slash 15 percent of workforce
Lenovo
01/05/2009
200 staff in Beijing offices
Lenovo rumored readying layoffs
Microsoft
01/01/2009
Unknown
Microsoft planning big layoffs for January?
AMD
12/28/2008
100 additional, making 600 total since November
AMD cites $70 million in fourth-quarter costs
Unisys
12/22/2008
1,300; 4 percent
Reuters: Unisys slashes 1,300 jobs
Western Digital
12/17/2008
2,500; 5 percent
Reuters: Western Digital warns on revenue, will cut jobs
Midway Games
12/16/2008
180; 25 percent
Reuters: Midway Games to cut jobs, take charge
Laird
12/16/2008
5,000; nearly 50 percent
Reuters: Laird announces 5,000 job losses as sales slump
WebMD
12/16/2008
4 percent to 5 percent
PaidContent: WebMD to cut up to 5% of staff
Gaia Interactive
12/15/2008
13 percent
VentureWire: Gaia lays off staff
Alcatel-Lucent
12/12/2008
1,000 managers, 5,000 contractors
Big revamp for Alcatel-Lucent, with Web 2.0 spin
CBS Interactive
12/11/2008
Undisclosed
All Things D: CBS Interactive/CNET Re-Org: The Complete Memo
SGI
12/11/2008
225; 15 percent
Silicon Graphics adjusts business plan
Yahoo
12/10/2008
1,520
Yahoo pink slips issued, recruiters circling above
Sony
12/09/2008
16,000 total
Sony to lay off 8,000 full-timers, 8,000 others
Netflix
12/08/2008
50 people
Neflix cuts 50 tech jobs; streaming issues linger
Level 3 Communications
12/08/2008
450; 8 percent
Denver Business Journal: Level 3 cutting 450 jobs
BMC Software
12/05/2008
350 (6 percent)
AP: BMC Software to cut 350 jobs, 6% of workforce
RealNetworks
12/04/2008
130 (7 percent)
Sources: Layoffs hit RealNetworks
Viacom
12/04/2008
850 (7 percent)
Viacom lays off 7 percent of workforce
AT&T
12/04/2008
12,000 (4 percent)
AT&T lays off 12,000
Adobe
12/03/2008
600
Adobe warns of shortfall, job cuts
Carlyle Group
12/03/2008
about 100 (10 percent)
Bloomberg: Carlyle Cuts 10% of Workers, Including U.S. LBO Jobs
Analog Devices
12/03/2008
about 20
EE Times: Analog Devices shutters DSP design center Sage North America
12/03/2008
150
Sage North America Reports 2008 Results
Gawker Media
12/02/2008
“a few”
Gawker Media’s rolling layoffs continue
Intrinsyc
12/01/2008
95 (30 percent)
680 News: Intrinsyc cuts global workforce 30 percent
Fring
11/27/2008
10 (20 percent)
Fring cuts staff by 20 percent
Technorati
11/25/2008
6 (12 percent)
Technorati trims workforce, cuts pay
TiVo
11/25/2008
7 percent
TiVo profits from EchoStar litigation
Palm
11/21/2008
up to 10 percent of 1,050
Palm orders layoffs as Apple and RIM take toll
Buzznet
11/21/2008
10 (11 percent)
Valleywag: Music community Buzznet lays off 10
LodgeNet
11/21/2008
170
Argus Leader: LodgeNet cutting jobs
Lam Research
11/20/2008
600 (15 percent)
Reuters: Chipmaker Lam Research cuts 600 jobs
Akamai
11/20/2008
7 percent
Akamai to cut 7 percent of workforce
Lawson Software
11/19/2008
200 (5 percent)
AP: Lawson Software shares tumble after job cuts
Pillar Data Systems
11/18/2008
150 (30 percent)
SJ Mercury News: Pillar Data Systems lays off 30% of staff KLA-Tencor
11/18/2008
900 (15 percent)
SF Business Times: KLA-Tencor to cut 15% of people Sun Microsystems
11/14/2008
6,000 (15 percent to 18 percent)
Sun restructures, lays off up to 6,000 Rearden Commerce
11/14/2008
10 percent
Valleywag: Rearden Commerce cuts 50 people Applied Materials
11/12/2008
1,800 (12 percent)
Applied Materials cutting 12 percent of workforce National Semi
11/12/2008
330
Reuters: Nat Semi cuts revenue view, plans job cuts Wired.com
11/11/2008
3 of 28
Wired.com trims editorial staff by 10 percent Current Media
11/11/2008
20 percent
Layoffs hit Al Gore’s Current Media Six Apart
11/11/2008
8 percent
Six Apart: Changes at Six Apart Tucows
11/11/2008
15 percent
Restructuring at Tucows Circuit City
11/10/2008
20 percent
Circuit City files for bankruptcy BitTorrent
11/10/2008
50 percent
After a tough year, BitTorrent replaces CEO again Insight
11/10/2008
240 (4 percent)
East Valley Tribune: Insight Enterprises lays off 240 Honeywell
11/07/2008
700
Phoenix Business Journal: Honeywell moving 700 jobs out of Phoenix Zappos
11/06/2008
8 percent
Letter to Zappos employees Veoh
11/05/2008
20 (20 percent)
Veoh lays off 20 percent of workforce LinkedIn
11/05/2008
36 (10 percent)
LinkedIn slashes 10 percent of its workforce Cadence
11/05/2008
625 (12 percent)
Cadence Design cuts 625 jobs Anadigics
11/05/2008
100 (15 percent)
Anadigics cuts 15 percent of workforce AMD
11/05/2008
500 (3 percent)
AMD slashes 500 more jobs Nokia
11/04/2008
600
Hundreds of Nokia jobs under threat THQ
11/03/2008
4 to 5 studios
Kotaku: THQ Shuttering Four to Five Studios? Tektronix
11/03/2008
150
Tektronix announces fresh layoffs Spot Runner
11/03/2008
115 (about 30 percent)
TechCrunch: 115 people lose their jobs at Spot Runner Nortel Networks
11/03/2008
1,300 (5 percent)
Nortel earnings tank YouSendIt
10/31/2008
20 percent
VentureBeat: YouSendIt trims 20 percent of staff Aliph
10/31/2008
25 people
Layoffs hit Bluetooth headset maker Aliph Motorola
10/30/2008
3,000
Motorola’s struggle for survival Freescale
10/30/2008
2,400 (10 percent)
Freescale dragged to loss; will lay off 10% Symantec
10/29/2008
4.5 percent cost savings
Symantec layoffs coming Avalanche Studios
10/28/2008
77 of 160
Avalanche Studios lays off nearly half of staff Revision3
10/27/2008
9 people, 5 shows
Video start-up Revision3 joins the layoff club Helium
10/27/2008
30 percent of 110
F***dStartups: Helium.com huge layoff BroadSoft
10/24/2008
about 12
GigaOM: BroadSoft cuts jobs as sales slow Comcast Spotlight
10/24/2008
300+ of 3,500
Broadcasting & Cable: Comcast Spotlight cuts positions ADC Telecoms
10/23/2008
300-350
AP: ADC expects fiscal 2008 loss, plans job cuts Xerox
10/23/2008
3,000 Xerox to cut 3,000 jobs Avid Technology
10/23/2008
500
Form 8-K: Results of Operations and Financial Condition… Nokia
11/04/2008
600
Hundreds of Nokia jobs under threat Tektronix
11/03/2008
150
Tektronix announces fresh layoffs Spot Runner
11/03/2008
115 (about 30 percent)
TechCrunch: 115 people lose their jobs at Spot Ru Circuit City
11/03/2008
17 percent
Circuit City to close 155 stores THQ
11/03/2008
4-5 studios Kotaku: THQ Shuttering Four to Five Studios? Break.com
10/23/2008
11 of 80
Break.com lays off 11 Eons
10/23/2008
8 of about 33
The Boston Globe: Eons eliminates eight jobs Dell
10/22/2008
8,900
The Register: Dell: ‘We will out-pace the rest of the industry’ SanDisk
10/22/2008
TBA
SanDisk layoffs in the works ManiaTV
10/22/2008
20 of 70
NewTeeVee: ManiaTV lays off 20, to reduce orig iMeem
10/22/2008
25 percent of 80
Imeem jumping on the layoff bandwagon Mahalo
10/22/2008
10 percent
Calacanis.com: Tough times, hard decisions HP
10/22/2008
24,600 over three years
HP to slash 24,600 jobs following EDS buy Ticketmaster
10/21/2008
35 percent
F***edStartups: TicketMaster.com laying off 35% Comcast
10/21/2008
300
AP: Comcast to cut up to 300 jobs in eastern di Manhattan Associates
10/21/2008
6.5 percent
Reuters: Manhattan Associates hit by slump Softchoice
10/20/2008
6.5 percent of 958
Toronto Star: Softchoice cuts staff by 6.5 percent Veoh
10/20/2008
0
UPDATE: Layoffs at Veoh, or not? Wikia
10/20/2008
3
UPDATE based on personal interview with Jimmy Wales Autotrader
10/20/2008
69
Orlando Business Times: Autotrader to close c Texas Instruments
10/20/2008
possibly 300
TXCN: Hundreds face pink slips at TI Sony Ericsson
10/17/2008
2,000 globally
Bloomberg: Sony Ericsson Reports Smaller Loss Than Anticipated Sprint
10/17/2008
ongoing
KMBC-TV: Sprint plans ‘gradual layoffs’ Jaxtr
10/17/2008
13
13 employees laid off at VoIP start-up Jaxtr Zivity
10/17/2008
33 percent
Zivity lays off a third of staff Zillow
10/17/2008
25 percent
Zillow lays off 25 percent of staff SearchMe
10/17/2008
20 percent
Search engine startup SearchMe cuts 20 perce Heavy
10/17/2008
14 percent
Downturn strikes again: Heavy lays off 14% Lenovo
10/17/2008
50 in Morrisville, N.C.
WRAL: Lenovo to lay off 50 workers at Morrisville headq MPC Computers
10/17/2008
200
Idaho Business Review: Details released on MP Hi5
10/16/2008
10 percent to 15 percent
No Hi5’s today Sirius XM
10/16/2008
50
Sirius XM makes cuts to XM in D.C. Pandora
10/16/2008
20
Pandora cuts 20 employees Adbrite
10/16/2008
40 percent
‘Layoffs are not a statement about performance’ Actel
10/16/2008
10 percent
EE Times: Actel cuts 10% of workforce Tesla Motors
10/15/2008
Detroit office
Automaker lays off Detroit office with blog post SkyRider
10/15/2008
All
P2P start-up SkyRider has shut down Appcelerator
10/15/2008
6
Tough times, tough decisions Jive Software
10/14/2008
33 percent
Jive Software lays off 1/3 of staff Redfin
10/14/2008
20 percent
Redfin blames economy in layoffs Qimonda
10/13/2008
3,000
Qimonda: Qimonda announces global restructuring program… Seesmic
10/10/2008
7
Tough times. Tough decisions Lulu
10/09/2008
24
Lulu cuts jobs as revenues slow Micron
10/09/2008
15 percent
Micron to cut workforce by 15 percent, slash flash output eBay
10/06/2008
1,000
eBay buys Bill Me Later, lays off 1,000 Gawker Media
10/03/2008
14 percent
Gawker Media to lay off 14 percent of editorial Entellium
10/03/2008
95 percent
Workers get ax at software maker Entellium

Aug 24

Basis: 1(b)
First Use Date: (DATE NOT AVAILABLE)
First Use in Commerce Date: (DATE NOT AVAILABLE)

Oddly the application was not opposed and from what it appears on the Industry Standard it may be too late.

Basis: 1(b)
First Use Date: (DATE NOT AVAILABLE)
First Use in Commerce Date: (DATE NOT AVAILABLE)

From the trademark filing:
International Class: 040
Class Status: Active
Custom manufacture of computer hardware for use in data centers and mega-scale computing environments for others

Notice in the filing below that there is no first-use date associated with the claim whereas there are a number of articles etc. prior to the filing date that use the “cloud computing” term.

If Dell wins the application and enforces the trademark it could dramatically alter the cloudscape.

Sam Johnston, a member of the Cloud Computing group (Google Groups login required) posted that Dell had used “Cloud Computing” with TM in a press release and decided to do a little digging.

International Class: 042
Class Status: Active
Design of computer hardware for use in data centers and mega-scale computing environments for others; customization of computer hardware for use in data centers and mega-scale computing environments for others; design and development of networks for use in data centers and mega-scale computing environments for others; Consulting services for data centers and mega-scale computing environments in the fields of design, selection, implementation, customization and use of computer hardware and software systems for others; Consulting services for data centers and mega-scale computing environments in the fields of design, selection, implementation, customization and use of computer hardware and software systems for others

Aug 24

Potential iPhone 3G customers in the U.K. were apparently told that their new iPhones would be delivered by courier on Friday morning and activated at home, which is interesting given the strict in-store activation policy that seems to be in place for the U.S. launch on Friday morning. Each iPhone 3G transaction could take several minutes depending on whether the person is a new AT&T customer or an existing one, in comparison to last year’s quick in-and-out process.

If the online demand for the iPhone 3G in the U.K. is any indication, Apple, O2, and U.S. carrier AT&T could be in for a long weekend.

(Credit:
O2)

Even if it takes a while, however, strong demand in the U.K. is good for Apple, which did not see as much demand for the original iPhone in Europe as it did in the U.S. The lack of 3G networking and a GPS chip in the original iPhone were considered obstacles to European adoption, and those have been addressed with the second-generation model.

O2, the U.K. carrier of the
iPhone, had hoped to deflect some of the expected demand for Apple’s new iPhone, scheduled to launch Friday, by taking preorders for the phone. It sent text messages to existing O2 customers Monday morning informing them of a chance to upgrade to the iPhone 3G. But that prompt overwhelmed O2’s Web site Monday, forcing the carrier to halt the upgrade process just minutes after it began, according to a report in The Register. The carrier was likewise forced to pull a separate preordering system for new customers.

The preorder process for the iPhone 3G in the U.K. was taken offline Monday after a flood of interest.

Aug 24

On Sale Now: $25.00
View the latest prices for Altec Lansing BackBeat Titanium 326 headphones

On Sale Now: $23.49
View the latest prices for Altec Lansing BackBeat Plus UHP206 - headphones

When we reviewed Altec Lansing’s line of BackBeat earphones, we were pleasantly surprised that they sounded as good as they did for what they cost. Expounding on the bang-for-the-buck theme, Altec’s now introduced the line-topping BackBeat Pro UHP606 for $99.99.

The BackBeat Pros are available now for $99.99.

On Sale Now: $10.95
View the latest prices for Altec Lansing BackBeat Classic UHP106 headphones

The press release goes on to discuss how great this technology is and how it helps achieve professional “studio quality.” In other words, Altec’s setting the bar pretty high, so let’s hope the BackBeat Pros deliver when we get our hands on a pair.

Altec says the earphones include “high-end armature technology, engineered to deliver an in-studio sound experience at a price level far below competing headphones costing several hundreds more.”

These earphones are are actually shipping now–they’re available at Best Buy and www.alteclansing.com.

The following products are available:

On Sale Now: $22.99 - $24.46
View the latest prices for Altec Lansing BackBeat Pro UHP606 headphones

(Credit:
Altec Lansing)

Aug 24
Taking mobile publishing for a spin
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on 08 24th, 2010| | No Comments »

Those grainy videos and photos you take with your mobile phone have a simple way to get off of your device and onto your blog, eBay, YouTube, or elsewhere.

The same process can be done with photos, notes, and audio recordings. The content is all archived at an individual profile page at CellSpin.net.

CellSpin is a mobile application with a fairly simple interface to directly publish your content to the Web. Once a video is taken, a window appears with options to publish to Blogger, Facebook, Flickr, LiveJournal, YouTube, eBay, and several other blogging tools. After the content is posted, you see a brief ad, and then the application’s home page pops back up.

Aug 24

As nice as the local cache is, it’s a long ways off from offering users the chance to manage files locally as some other iPhone storage apps have done. You cannot download anything back to your device from the app, save for photos, which can only be saved using the iPhone’s screenshot feature–not the superior copy and paste. There are also no previews before or after you’ve downloaded something to view locally, which means you better have named your files properly.

The good:
• Lets you quickly access files you have stored on your iDisk in a native application.
• Streams in audio and video, letting you bypass file size restrictions.
• You can view files in portrait and landscape modes.
• Your log-in is saved between sessions, so you don’t need to re-enter your user name and password.
•You can view files your friends have stored online if you know their MobileMe user names.

The bad:
• Certain files are capped at 30MB–even over Wi-Fi.
• There are no visual previews of what photos, videos, and docs contain.
• No way to save files for offline viewing. There’s a local cache, but as soon as a newer file needs some space, old files are removed.
•Copy and paste doesn’t work.

Some of the nicer features include being able to view and send any native file types. This includes music, so if you’ve got a bunch of tracks stored on iDisk, you can stream them from the app. Movies work as well, although they have to be formatted to play on an iPod or iPhone.

After more than a month of waiting, Apple has finally brought its MobileMe iDisk application to
iPod and
iPhone users. Originally announced during Apple’s Worldwide Developer’s Conference in early July, the free iDisk app offers users of Apple’s MobileMe service a way to access files they, or their MobileMe contacts have stored on Apple’s servers.

I applaud Apple’s efforts for giving users a first party way to access their files, it’s just too bad it offers so much less than third parties have provided. Besides local file downloading, I would love to see omissions like copy and paste, and quick visual previews offered. It would also be fantastic to let users copy a file from the app into a mail message without having to use the built-in e-mailer, which wraps each file in MobileMe branding.

MobileMe iDisk for the iPhone weighs in at 2.2MB and requires users to have an active subscription to MobileMe, along with an iPod Touch or iPhone running OS 3.0.

Apple says that some files over 20MB won’t load, although I successfully managed to get a 198MB MPEG4 movie file to stream in. Things that require downloading, however, such as documents and photos, are capped at 30MB–even when you’re on a Wi-Fi connection. The application must first download those types of files to your device before you can even see what they are. This process is made faster by a cache you can adjust to allow for more local storage, all the way up to 200MB. Not included in that cache are audio and video files, which are simply streamed, meaning that you’ll need to be on a solid connection for the entire listen or watch.

Aug 24

Alliant Techsystems has 30 days to appeal the government’s decision.

The Canadian government has put the kibosh on the $1.3 billion sale of a Canadian satellite company to a U.S. firm for fear that such a deal would give the U.S. government too much control over sensitive satellite images.

The government said Thursday that it was blocking Alliant Techsystems’ bid for MacDonald Dettwiler and Associates to protect Canada’s sovereignty. The New York Times noted this was the first time in 23 years that the Canadian government has blocked such a sale to a foreign company.

The satellite, called Radarsat2, is owned by MacDonald Dettwiler, but the Canadian government financed a good portion of the construction and launch. It is uniquely positioned over the Arctic with views of the Arctic sea passage ways that could one day be used for shipping. In exchange for its investment, the Canadian government has access to images from the satellite.

Opponents of the deal fear that if the company were sold, U.S. officials would be able to ask Alliant Techsystems to let them see images of ships traveling through the Arctic. Canada has long claimed sovereignty over the Arctic sea passages, but the U.S. maintains that those waters are international.

Aug 24

If you are looking for “Albany,” you might want to try heading to Circuit City.

Equipt bundles a subscription version of Office Home and Student with Microsoft’s OneCare antivirus product for $69 a year–just $20 more than the suggested price of OneCare alone.

Although Equipt is starting out at Circuit City, the deal is nonexclusive and Gordon sees options to go beyond stores and beyond the U.S. Gordon said Microsoft expects to expand to other retailers later in the year and eventually to offer it through other means, such as through computer makers or over the Web.

“It makes a lot of sense so it’s something you will likely see,” he said.

Also, for now at least, there is no way to upgrade from a OneCare subscription to Equipt, though Gordon said that may be in the cards.

Gordon said the company’s research indicates that those who opt for Equipt will be people who would not otherwise buy Office, but added “we are going to keep a very close watch on cannibalization metrics.”

Microsoft on Wednesday announced that Circuit City will be the first to offer a new Office subscription service, first known by its Albany code name and now dubbed Equipt.

On the main page of the Equipt subscriber center, users can see their subscription status and make changes to their account.

In addition to placing Equipt on retail shelves, Microsoft is also looking for it to be installed by so-called tech benches, the generic name for things like Best Buy’s Geek Squad.

Gordon said some less sophisticated users think they are getting a copy of Office as part of their PC purchase and are disappointed when they come home and find only a trial version of Office. “That’s when a lot of folks will start digging through the drawer for (an old copy).”

(Credit:
Microsoft)

The idea behind the subscription service is to convert more new PC buyers into Office buyers. It plays on the fact that although most people don’t buy Office at the same time as a computer, many do purchase a security software subscription.

I was curious just how Microsoft accounts for the revenue it expects to get from Equipt–i.e., how much gets counted toward Office and how much toward OneCare. Gordon wouldn’t say, other than to indicate it would be wrong to think that the Office unit only gets the $20 difference between Equipt and OneCare.

Microsoft is trying to tap into the fact that while many people would rather find a copy of Office that they don’t have to pay for (either an older version or a pirated copy) they are willing to pay for security software. “Security is basically the No. 1 thing that gets attached with a PC,” said Microsoft group product manager Bryson Gordon.

(Credit:
Microsoft)

The welcome screen for the new Equipt offering lists the products and services available.

Aug 24

To understand Mozilla’s potential, it’s useful to review a bit of its history. By the middle of 2005 the Mozilla Foundation was making around $4 million per month from Google…with only 10 to 12 people on the payroll. Those are revenues that any small start-up–open source or otherwise–would kill to achieve. Mozilla was largely doing it in its sleep through the Google relationship.

Weave. Think “cloud” services to the browser. It’s similar to Adobe’s AIR in blending the desktop experience with Internet-based services.
Statistics. Given Mozilla’s spread of customers, it could do an opt-in ComScore/Nielsen-type service. Even a low hit rate with its users would result in much better information for Operations than these other services provide. Mozilla recognizes that it must shepherd customer information carefully, but believes that allowing customers to determine how much information to share is the right model, and will provide plenty of data.
Mobile. I actually first discussed mobile with John years ago when he started and I was considering building an open-source mobile start-up. Not much has happened with Firefox and mobile since that day but John and Mike argue that things have changed to make a
mobile browser viable. While the carriers used to control virtually everything that was installed on their phones, Apple is forcing them to open up.

Importantly, Firefox’s mobile efforts have caught the attention of Nokia and other industry heavies, which are stepping up as significant code contributors. As the web blurs between desktop and mobile, mobile Firefox will be ever more important.
Mozilla as a platform. The items already discussed above suggest ways in which Firefox can function as a platform for Web innovation, but the possibilities are much, much broader. My browser knows (or could know) how I spend my money, where I spend my time, who I like, etc. Would I allow–indeed, beg–Firefox to collect information on these things in order to provide me more tailored advertising, social networking, etc.? Absolutely. The key is user control of her data.

Or maybe it’s as simple as building Facebook-like services as third-party plug-ins for Firefox? Perhaps Firefox wouldn’t operate such platforms so much as enable them. The meta-platform, as it were. Mozilla could take a transaction fee on the commercial exchanges it enables.

The first order of business for Mozilla, John suggested, will be to continue to orchestrate a better browser. The steps beyond the “vanilla browser” experience primarily involve Weave, mobile, Firefox as a platform, and Statistics. These are the four that John thinks about a lot.

But while competing, Mozilla is heavily focused on its customers first and its competitors second. As John indicated to me:

Besides, even if they didn’t, they’d have 165 million people yelling at them for getting it wrong. It’s open source. Things like “voice” and “choice” still matter in open source. Perhaps no more so than at Mozilla.

But Mozilla’s potential is anything but standard. The stakes are huge.

John didn’t mean that Mozilla is just another commercial open-source company. It’s not. Clarifying that comment, John went on to point out that four out of its five executives are entrepreneurs. In other words, though Mozilla is tiny compared to its proprietary competition (and big by open-source project standards), Mozilla’s team and community are well-architected to compete. It’s not going to fall over at Microsoft’s feet anytime soon.

What are they?

The good news is that Mozilla’s team of “social entrepreneurs” is well-suited to take on the task. This isn’t a group looking to strip-mine open source for cheap profit. It’s a group of seasoned entrepreneurs that take open source very seriously as a disruptive influence, but also as an ethical influence.

Even so, it was hard to operate as a nonprofit. There was plenty of money but the Mozilla Foundation had no clear idea of how to build a sustainable business. In fact, the Mozilla Foundation found it increasingly hard to keep its hefty profits contained within the confines laid out by California’s nonprofit tax law. In 2005, Mozilla Corp. was born.

Our question is always, how do we grow in a way that is leveraged? We always lead with the user experience and think about the money secondarily.

A true community platform
John argues that the Firefox platform is actually more robust and easier to use than “rival” platforms like Facebook, iPhone, etc. Unlike these others, Firefox is a true community platform, reflecting the tastes, requirements, and whims of a broad array of users. It plays host to a wide array of third-party plug-ins.

To gauge this, I asked John and Mike where Mozilla is putting its resources. What are its big, strategic bets?

John and Mike were less forthcoming on this last item, or quite possibly are simply still thinking it through (more likely the latter as they were quite open and transparent). It is a massive opportunity for Mozilla, one that requires real discretion and forethought.

Still another way to look at it is through its quality assurance program. Mozilla employs a few people (8 to 10) internally to focus on QA, but 10,000-plus people download and install its nightly builds. The feedback from this community is immediate and very pointed: “You broke Thai on X page,” etc. Mike noted, “It’s a little bit unnerving at times,” but it’s also a significant indicator of the “outside” buy-in that Mozilla garners.

This community input is demonstrated by the last launch of Firefox. It came out of the gate localized into 37 languages. Mozilla wrote one of those, the English language version. By comparison, Microsoft’s Internet Explorer 7 launched only in English, despite having far more internal resources.

(Credit:
Matt Asay)

Weave: A Schematic

Clearly, Firefox has the community. But does Mozilla have the ambition?

But the community angle doesn’t end with plug-ins. 40 percent of the Firefox code wasn’t written by Mozilla. This has stayed constant as Mozilla has grown. This is exceptionally impressive when you consider that Firefox is 6 million lines of code.

Correction: This post was updated to correct the time line of John Lilly’s meeting with Jerry Yang.

That user experience is starting to evolve beyond today’s browsing experience. The most interesting topic discussed in our meeting was just how compelling Mozilla’s
Firefox will increasingly be as the platform for much that happens on the Web. Forget Facebook, MySpace, the
iPhone, and other so-called platforms. Firefox could well prove to be the most disruptive Web platform on the market. Here’s why.

commentary

(Credit:
Mozilla)

Mozilla’s organization chart, which John drew up for me, looks much like a normal software company’s organization chart. The office space feels like typical Silicon Valley office space. (People were playing ping-pong when I walked in and a woman was walking her dog out the front door.)

A visit from Jerry Yang
The $48 million run rate should have been a clear indicator that Mozilla had a huge opportunity on its hands. A visit from Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang in 2005, however, made it incontrovertible.

As it was related to me, Lilly had previously met Yang back in 2005. In John’s first few days with Mozilla, he paid Yang a visit. This was no courtesy call. Instead, Yang arrived 30 minutes late for the appointment and laid into John over Firefox’s tie-up with Google. In one fell swoop, scads of Yahoo customers saw their MyYahoo pages become Google landing pages. While troubling to Yang, this was the only reassurance that John needed that he’d made the right decision in joining the Mozilla Foundation.

I spent an hour Thursday with John Lilly, CEO of Mozilla, and Mike Schroepfer, Mozilla’s vice president of Engineering, and learned a few things. For one thing, I once argued that Mozilla should hire more “capitalist pigs.” John’s riposte Thursday was, “We have more capitalist pigs than you think.”

Now we start to get into the platform. In 2005, 15 Mozilla employees serviced 15 million Firefox users. In 2008, there are 150 Mozilla employees servicing 165 million Firefox users. Those employees are scattered around the globe: Mozilla Europe (30 percent market share), Mozilla Japan (10 percent market share), Mozilla China (3 percent market share but growing fast), and Mozilla US. With two-thirds of its user base outside the United States, Mozilla must be global, too.

John Lilly, CEO of Mozilla

Clearly Firefox mattered. And it mattered to many, many people.

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