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Nokia N95 mobile phone gets Wordpress publishing application

Posted in News (January 16, 2008 at 6:31 pm)

Today sees the launch of a new blogging application for the Nokia N95 mobile phone. Developed by Telewaving, Wavelog is a native Symbian C++ application which will allow users to post to both Wordpress.com and self-hosted Wordpress blogs.

It’s able to upload text, images, audio, and video over any network connection. Alternatively, it can store pages ready for publication when a network signal isn’t available.

There’s not much more information about the software at present, but a free trial is available to download, with a license costing US$10, so it’s not likely to break the bank.

Product page

Tiinker is Like a Personal Digg for Feeds [Feed Readers]

Posted in News (January 14, 2008 at 7:03 pm)

tiinker_scaled.jpg

New feed aggregator tiinker aims to help those feeling overwhelmed by their news portals and their own feed readers chop down their lists. Using Digg-style “thumbs up” and “thumbs down” controls, tiinker “learns” what types of news and sources you find relevant and interesting and mixes its content for you accordingly. Tiinker’s technology page reshaped itself pretty quickly to a little test-voting with an eye for Linux items, but what’s missing right now (and used to be offered) is a way to bring in RSS feeds not offered by the tiinker mix. Still, for those seeking out a decent, customized news portal, Tiinker might be a good way to keep on top of what’s happening.


$16.99 for unlimited streaming from Netflix library of 6,000+ movies

Posted in News ( at 7:02 pm)

First three rentals from Hollywood Video: Epic Movie, Ball's Fury and Hot Rod

Last night we signed up (again) for the unlimited Hollywood Video DVD rental plan 3 DVDs out at a time which runs $19.99 for the first 30 days and $29.99/mo. thereafter, but I’m feeling buyer’s remorse after reading Netflix has expanded their streaming option.

Yahoo News:  Netflix expands Internet viewing option

With Monday’s change, virtually all Netflix subscribers will be able to stream as many movies and TV shows as they want from a library containing more than 6,000 titles. There will be no additional charge for the unlimited access.

So essentially we paid $3 more + gas and travel time to/from to be able to cycle through the Hollywood Video inventory of movies we haven’t seen. I’m certain the quality of the DVD streaming will be less than watching DVDs, but will it be worth the extra $$? We’ll be canceling at the end of the month and going back to Netflix to try the streaming option.

Netflix move looks intended as a spoiler to Apple’s expected announcement that they will be offering movie rentals for $3.99 a movie at their annual MacWorld event which kicks off today. This pricing is similar to the Xbox Live movie service which our family has enjoyed, renting over a dozen movies. Good quality and convenient. Getting in the car to go back and forth to the video store might be exercise of sorts, but it gets old. That’s why we only do the unlimited Hollywood Video in one month surges once a year or so.

Another downside of Netflix deal is selection. 6,000 titles available for streaming versus 90,000 DVDs. On Xbox Live the selection of movies is even smaller. No idea yet how many movies will be available from Apple. Selection and video streaming quality will ultimately decide how long we stay subscribed to Netflix.

From the photo at the top of this movie you can see our first three movie picks at Hollywood: Epic Movie, Ball’s Fury and Hot Rod. Epic Movie was one of the stupidest movies I’ve ever seen. Ball’s Fury was medicore, but had some funny parts. Will be watching Hot Rod later today but it won’t be difficult to be better than the other two.

CoverItLive.com brings Live Blogging to your blog

Posted in News ( at 7:00 pm)

Sometimes when you attend a conference you want to Live Blog It, or share in real time activities that are going on and important conference notes with viewers who can’t make it to the event but are actively checking your blog for updates. CoverItLive offers a solution.

CoveritLive’s web based software takes your next live blog to a new level. Your commentary publishes in real time like an instant message. Our ‘one-click’ publishing lets you drop polls, videos, pictures, ads and audio clips as soon as they come to mind. Comments and questions from your readers instantly appear but you control what gets published. Try our software for your next live blog. Your readers will love it.

Source: CoverItLive via Mathew Ingram

A Global Movement From Blogs To Books

Posted in News ( at 7:00 pm)

I’m stepping in briefly on an interim basis to fill Tony’s shoes. One of the stories that has touched my heart of late is the crisis that bloggers face overseas a freedom we take for granted here in the United States. Freedom of Press. However as one Egyptian blogger notes in a recent post there is a movement going on.

In the first decade of the third millennium a new kind of artistic movement has emerged - a movement that wasn’t known before - and it’s now known as blogging. The writings in this movement took different shapes on the various blogging sites available on the web.

The movement has evolved quickly with the help of the first generation of bloggers, till the year 2008 when big publishing houses started to transform blogs into books.

Source: Dina Al Hawry

It brightens my day to know that folks overseas are bold enough to record events online and share them with the world and some publishers are brave enough to publish them. This week we saw tragedy strike as a fellow blogger/citizen journalist was slain in China. I see an ever pressing need to spread tools of social engagement and communication even more so than even last year or in years prior.

Hillary Clinton would have a government blogging team

Posted in News (January 10, 2008 at 6:56 pm)

During her closing campaign rally in New Hampshire, Hillary Clinton spoke of the need for greater government transparency, fully embracing the Internet and blogging.

“I want to put everything on the Internet! I want you to see the budget of every agency. I want you to track everything that goes on in your government — you pay for it, you should know about it!” she said.

And of blogging?

“We should even have a government blogging team where people in the agencies are constantly telling all of you, the taxpayers, the citizens of America, everything that’s going on so that you have up-to-the-minute information about what your government is doing, so that you too can be informed, and hold the government accountable.”

I’m not an American citizen, but I’m not sure that I’d want the British Government to be “constantly” blogging about what’s going on. Transparency is one thing, but blogging isn’t a catchall solution to… well, most things.

Nice bit of lingo, though. Apparently, she’s also now embracing Facebook.

(Via WIRED)

CES 2008

Posted in News (January 8, 2008 at 8:48 pm)

Ceslogo
I’m not going to CES this year but as usual, the best places to see everything from afar look to be Engadget’s CES page for all the general stuff and TiVoLovers’ CES page for the TiVo-specific and home theater specific news.

Personally, I haven’t seen anything too exciting out of CES this week (but it’s early), though I’m looking forward to the new logitech remote (anyone know if it does bluetooth?).

RSS in the living room: Samsung plasma TVs offers one touch access to USA Today

Posted in News ( at 8:46 pm)

One of the interesting trends being magnified at this year’s Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas is that of Internet connectivity for home entertainment devices.

In particular, Samsung has announced that two of its fairly high-end plasma TV series will feature “one touch” access to USA Today’s RSS news feeds.

Assuming their Series 6 / Series 7 TV is connected to the Internet (via the built-in Ethernet port), a viewer simply has to press the “RSS” button on their remote control unit to bring up a semi-transparent menu overlay featuring selectable newsfeeds covering a variety of customisable topics. The main TV picture remains unaffected.

I understand that Samsung is looking to do deals with other content providers, including Reuters, to expand the feeds available.

It’s an interesting move. Given that a lot of general consumers don’t really know what RSS is yet, and currently don’t have any “point-and-click” way of getting news and information from the Internet on their home TV, this could either be the start of something big for Samsung and other manufacturers, or a complete flop.

Putting “RSS” on the remote control may itself lead to confusion (because we all know that no-one reads the manual unless they really have to, either)

If this concept flies, it also has implications for bloggers. Should Samsung and other TV manufacturers not “do a Kindle” and restrict the scope of RSS feeds (and, heaven forbid, charge for reading them), then all the world’s blogs could soon be appearing on HDTV.

Oh yes, and so could the millions of splogs.

Perhaps Samsung is right to limit the offering to selected blogs, particularly as their first TVs only have one gigabyte of on-board memory to store information. In which case, how do you get on to their list?

Such a service is unlikely to appeal to heavy bloggers or seasoned blog readers (I tend to just have my laptop in the living room and keep the TV separate), but as blogging becomes more mainstream, and TVs serve up more than broadcast TV channels, your blog’s content could end up in all sorts of new places, and in front of many more eyeballs.

RSS is definitely coming to the living room.

Slash gets biggest applause in Gates CES 2008 keynote

Posted in News ( at 8:45 pm)

By the time you read this the doors to the biggest consumer electronics show in the world will be open in bustling Las Vegas, Nevada. For those who’ve never been there, this is also the technology swag mecca; tons of goodies. If you go to CES, plan to pack an empty suitcase worth of goodies to bring back.

Watch Bill Gate's CES keynote

CES 2008 kicked off last night with what is being billed somewhat sadly as Bill Gates “last” CES keynote. He’s hosted the CES keynote 11 times and 8 times consecutively, with the first in 1994. You can watch it at microsoft.com/ces using Microsoft Silverlight platform inside your browser.

Silverlight is Microsoft’s cross OS compatible answer to Flash and being widely toted (by them) as a viable alternative. While writing this post and listening to Gates keynote in a separate tab using Windows Vista Silverlight crashed Firefox. I decided to try Silverlight on the Mac with Firefox instead and see how that went. I’ll update before the end of this post if it doesn’t crash (Update: it didn’t on the Mac, go figure).

Summarizing Gates Keynote
In case you don’t want to sit through the Gates keynote, here’s a brief rundown on what happens.

The Xbox 360 is showing prominently in the living room in the “if you believe in magic” video opening as Microsoft chairman Bill Gates enters the stage. He’s dressed in typical Gates attire, a drab purple sweater. He segues into a spoof video of his last day at Microsoft which is funny. Did he just play Mario on a Guitar Hero guitar? Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, Bono and others are included.

Afterwards Gates shares statistics that PC sales have increased 13% over the last year and then has offers a demo of a program that makes panaromas out of pictures, looks baked into Windows. And then to Microsoft’s perceived geek tabletop of the future: Surface. I love the idea behind touchscreen activity but touch doesn’t work very well for everything.

A keyboard is really important for typing. I wonder if Surface will display a QWERTY keyboard and let you type on it? How will that would feel typing on a flat surface? I see IGT (disclaimer: I own IGT stock) is one of the Surface partners. Does this mean we’ll see this used a lot more in future slot machines?

Robbie Bach comes out on stage next and shares stats on Xbox Live and other media properties. Microsoft has now passed the 10 million subscribers mark and they currently sell more online content than the Wii and PS3 combined.

Zune - The new versions are doing well according to Bach. Microsoft believes Zune has become a clear alternative to iPod. Zune Social now has 1.5 million members. There is some discussion of Zune cards which are similar to Xbox Live gamer cards, only focusing a la last.fm on activity around/inside Zune like your favorite songs and artists (e.g my zune card is located at: http://social.zune.net/member/XBoxTDavid).

Next up: Gates on the future - he holds a device that you can point at people, places and things and it recognizes them. Reminded me of scanning bar codes on the useful inventory program Delicious Library.

Close on a rocking note
Bach and Gates bring out Guitar Hero in a $20 bet. Bach has a famous Xbox Live player playing Welcome to the Jungle and Gates brings in a ringer: Slash! The crowd has what sounded like to me the biggest keynote applause of the night for the former Guns ‘N Roses guitarist. Microsoft upstaged by a guitar legend?

The Slash applause factor sums up the keynote which was lackluster. Nothing that new or revolutionary. If this is Gate’s last keynote ever, it went out with a whimper.

Update 1/7/08 10am PST: Wow, looks like I’m not the only one unimpressed with the keynote. Duncan at Techcrunch says it sucked. Let me save you some more time by showing you one of the best parts: the Gates last day video below:


Video: Bill Gates Last Day CES Clip

2008 Bloggies open for nominations

Posted in News (January 4, 2008 at 11:43 pm)

The blog nomination phase for the 2008 Bloggies Awards has just opened. Now in its eighth year, visitors have until next Friday, 11th January, to nominate their favorite weblogs.

Several categories have been removed or combined. The “Best Craft Weblog” is now part of the “Best Art or Craft Weblog”, while “Best Asian Weblog” incorporates the Middle East. “Best Web Development Weblog” has gone, and presumably fits into one of the technology categories.

Interestingly, “UK and Ireland” has also lost its category — supposedly now we’re lumped in with Europe, despite the fact that Canada and the USA still have separate categories. Sure, it’s only a blog award, but I think Canadians would probably feel peeved at being merged with the USA, just as many of us Brits don’t feel a part of Europe. Oh well, never mind.

Usual rules apply for voting.

2008 Bloggies

Netflix/LG set-top box announced

Posted in News ( at 11:42 pm)

Netflix
After the long-rumored (from 2004) Netflix/TiVo deal fell through (in 2005), it looks like Netflix and LG are going to create their own set-top box to facilitate downloads of Netflix movies. Even better is a mention that they might just bake it into existing dual format HD-DVD/Blu-ray players.

It’s interesting that Netflix found a new partner and a way to get studios on board to allow them to do it — I suspect TiVo was seen as a hostile force for the studios a couple years ago when the Netflix/TiVo deals were first discussed. Also it’s obvious that the landscape has changed since 2004. People have broadband and are willing to buy downloadable movies, and the companies that offer them aren’t huge sources of problems or piracy.

Another interesting aspect is that LG is already thinking of how to add it as an added feature to their existing product line. That’s a great approach because I have to admit that I’ve played with a Vudu box and it’s incredibly dumb to think people will pay $400 for a box that only plays $2-5 rentals and holds a limited number of $10-20 movies permanently. It’s good to see LG recognize this from the outset and not strive to build dedicated PPV boxes you have to pay for.

Sony BMG to start playing no DRM ball with “some” of their library

Posted in News ( at 11:41 pm)

AmazonMP3 may start seeing DRM-free tracks from Sony BMG at some point in 2008. Sony, a company with a checkered proprietary past is planning on dropping DRM on at least “some” of their library. The some with DRM-free tracks remains a big obstacle for all the music companies. Lots of library gaps. This could happen sooner than later too.

Business Week: Sony BMG Plans to Drop DRM

Sony BMG, a joint venture of Sony (SNE) and Bertelsmann, will make at least part of its collection available without so-called digital rights management, or DRM, software some time in the first quarter, according to people familiar with the matter.

From the sounds of this Sony is dipping toes in the water and not taking the full plunge, but we’ll have to wait and see how many artists and songs make it onto AmazonMP3 and iTunes.

Not sure about you, but I don’t want Sony to stop at DRM-free music. I’d like to see them get off the backs of the homebrew developers building games for the PSP. And what kind of content creation will be allowed, if any, on the upcoming Sony HOME service through the Playstation Network? Would be nice if they’d open that up as well and offer something similar to what Second Life offers.

Since Sony is the last of the four major music companies to agree to offer DRM-free tracks, the path has been cleared for a future of someday being able to legally purchase MP3 for all the music you enjoy. I’d say currently it’s maybe 30% of the music I like (rock and roll) is available legally for sale on MP3 at AmazonMP3. A lot of incomplete artist libraries at iTunes and AmazonMP3. Can’t blame the music companies for not offering every artist as there are still some holdouts like the Beatles (I thought the Beatles had promised to get their music out there digitally, what’s the hangup?).

It would be nice to see this number jump to 95%+ by 2010. How much of the music you enjoy is available via MP3?

Belkin intros new podcasting tool, offers free gift bag to CES attendees

Posted in News ( at 12:03 am)

If you’re lucky enough to be squeezing your way around the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas next week, and you’re a podcaster, you might like to head over to Belkin’s stand (booth #30368) with your iPod.

They’ve got a new podcasting tool, the beta version of which will debut at CES 2008.

Though the press release doesn’t give much detail away about the final product, it will work with most iPod models. The prototype works with the iPod classic, nano 2nd generation, and 30GB 5th generation.

All podcasters visiting the booth and demoing the product will get a gift bag that includes Belkin’s TuneTalk Stereo, a voice recorder for the iPod that records in full stereo.

More details are available online to delegates visiting the show.

Unreal Tournament 3 Mod Cooker Coming Soon [Unreal Tournament 3]

Posted in News ( at 12:00 am)

unreal3t.jpg

Epic’s Mark Rein dropped into the Epic forums last night to let people know that the PS3 cooker for the Unreal Engine 3 editor is in the final stages of testing and could be out as early as next week.

Folks,

I just wanted to give you an update:

We’re very close to releasing an update to the Unreal Engine 3 editor, that comes with the PC version of UT3, that will allow UT3 mod-makers to cook their mods into the required PS3 format. We’ve been doing some internal testing and we’re hoping to expand to a wider group tomorrow or Friday. If all goes well then we should see the update released next week which is what I expect will happen. Obviously the process works, as we put out a few mods before Christmas and people seem to be playing them, but it is the update to the editor that we’re testing.

Happy New Year!

I can’t wait until the mods start flooding the PS3, I’m hoping it could convince a lot of companies build in their own truly user-created content into console games.

PS3 mod cooking update [Unreal Forums, via Evil Avatar]


Man Uses Live to Stalk, Threatens Rape [News]

Posted in News (January 1, 2008 at 11:28 pm)

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A New York man was arrested Friday after allegedly stalking and threatening to rape two Spokane girls he met while playing a Halo game on Xbox Live, KHQ reports.

Joshua R. Stetar was arrested Friday in Spokane, Washington after the man drove 40 hours straight to the city and started texting and driving by the house of the 15-year-old girl and her sister, police said.

Police say Stetar met the girl in 2006 in “Halo” using Live and that he had sent packages and flowers to the parent’s home, but they were always returned. He also allegedly text messaged the girl hundreds of times and finally drove to the town.

Around 9:30 p.m. Friday night the suspect sent a text message to the victim saying he was driving by her house at that moment. In the message he even described his vehicle, a Gray Oldsmobile. The girl’s parents were outside the home and in fact saw the car driving past.

At 9:36 p.m. the victim received another text message from the suspect saying, “Tell the cops that I’m gonna rape you and your sister.”

The suspect had also mentioned that he was staying at a Days Inn in Spokane.

Police ended up picking up the suspect at a nearby Econolodge.

NYC man arrested after traveling to Spokane to stalk girls [KHQ, via Gaming Today]


Benazir Bhutto assassinated: proof positive of Twitter’s utility?

Posted in News (December 28, 2007 at 11:11 pm)

Via Dennis Howlett of ZDNet:

If anyone needed convincing of Twitter’s business utility, today is that day.

Questions:

  • Was getting the Bhutto information faster via Twitter than say Google News?
  • How many people would one have to follow on Twitter to get all the relevant news they need?
  • and…

  • How many “I’m eating chocolate chip ice cream right now” tweets would one have to parse through to obtain the important data?

  • Tagged: information dissemination, news, Twitter

    AmazonMP3 DRM-free picks up Warner music, Wal-Mart DRM-laden video dumped

    Posted in News ( at 11:10 pm)

    A success and failure in legal online downloading to discuss. I’ve done business with both AmazonMP3 and Wal-Mart video, the former being a more satisfying customer experience.

    Superman Returns video download

    AmazonMP3 grows by adding Warner Music to their library of online songs being sold DRM-free in MP3 format. This adds artists like Van Halen, Green Day and Led Zeppelin and brings their total to nearly three million songs. The iTunes store only sells DRM-free music from EMI while AmazonMP3 now offers EMI, Universal Music Group and Warner. If Sony offers their catalog to AmazonMP3 and that’s a big if, they’ll have four major music outlets licensing digital music for download legally.

    This is a positive story for expansion of DRM-free legal digital music delivery. Conversely, Wal-Mart trying to sell digital video with DRM on the same day the DVDs release has failed. Wal-Mart might be good at offering cheap prices in their retail stores, but at least some of their online retail efforts aren’t successful, as shown on December 21 when they killed their online video service launched back in February.

    Yahoo News: Wal-Mart cancels movie download service

    Wal-Mart will continue offering physical DVDs for sale at its stores and online … Wal-Mart’s attempt at downloading came two years after it pulled out of online DVD rental and directed its subscribers to Netflix Inc, and months after it protested Walt Disney Co’s move to sell movies on Apple Inc’s iTunes online music store at below-retail prices.

    We bought one movie through Wal-mart Video and had trouble with the video software backed by HP. We were able to watch the movie one time but it remains a stinging $15 memory that might as well have been two tickets to a crowded theater because it was a one watch only experience. This remains the major danger with buying any DRM-infected file and the reason we buy very little music and video this way.

    Apple Matters Five Years Later

    Posted in News (December 27, 2007 at 11:37 pm)

    When I started Apple Matters, there wasn’t this thing known as the blogosphere, or blogging. At least not that I was consciously aware of. My how things have changed!

    I have been an Apple user since the age of 13 when I received an Apple II compatible Peach…

    iPhone Bytes

    Posted in News ( at 11:37 pm)

    In which I contemplate losing fingers, discover the significance of the number 0.09, and ponder the philosophical question of iLife and iDeath. That is to say, can the iPhone be killed?

    Winter iPhone Blues
    My first question for you is: how do you use an iPhone…

    Apple stock takes bite out of $200 mark

    Posted in News ( at 11:34 pm)

    AAPL Stock: Apple stock makes $200 mark for the first timeThe day after Christmas is as good a time as any to go over the $200 mark for the first time and now Apple (AAPL, disclaimer: I own stock) is part of the 200 club. I’ve been watching here and there this morning waiting to see this happen.

    Apparently news that Apple cut a deal to get to the Apple rumor site Think Secret shutdown has had no bearing on the stock price, nor the fact that Leopard crashes more than Vista (for me anyway, YMMV).

    2007 has been an outstanding year for AAPL stock performance, making the list of top tech performers for the year at +116%. Apple was beaten by Amazon +120% and Gamestop +121%.

    Man Stabbed in Fight Over Game [Crime]

    Posted in News (December 22, 2007 at 2:57 am)

    antcastillo.jpg

    A 37-year-old Tennessee man was arrested yesterday for allegedly stabbing his uncle in the head and stomach after the two got into a fight over a video game, Chattanooga Police say.

    Antonio Castillo is charged with attempted first-degree murder and aggravated assault. He was also wanted on an outstanding warrant out of Philadelphia for aggravated assault. His uncle, Luis Alberto Santana, was listed in critical condition Thursday night.

    Reports of the fight don’t mention what game they were fighting over, referring to it just as a “Playstation game”, or what started the argument. Brilliant reporting, screw the details, sensationalism full-steam ahead.

    Man stabbed in fight over PlayStation [Times Free-Press]


    First reports of the Comcast-TiVo box

    Posted in News ( at 2:56 am)

    motoroladvr.jpg Steve Garfield, a blogger in the Boston area is one of the lucky few to get the first deployments of TiVo’s software on the Comcast/Motorola boxes (reviewed here in 2005). The comcast/tivo deals were announced a couple years ago and pushed back time and time again, but it’s finally becoming real.

    Steve’s story of signing up and receiving the software mentions that he was actually the very first customer to get it. His story mirrors a lot of my experiences with first deployments like this (I’m getting FiOS internet/TV today after waiting for two years), with customer service people confused and claiming the service isn’t available.

    He’s also posted a bit about how fast forwarding is different and has an entire gallery of screenshots over on flickr. For comcast customers waiting the past couple years for this deal, keep an eye on his blog to hear how it works out. It just may be that the Motorola box running TiVo is a better deal than buying your own TiVoHD and paying the monthly price.

    Google, Yahoo and Microsoft ante up $31.5 million in fines for promoting online gambling

    Posted in News (December 20, 2007 at 11:14 pm)

    If you operate a web-based business in the United States that shows advertising and haven’t gotten the stern message about online gambling ads, you might want to read this post carefully.

    Microsoft took the biggest hit from the justice department for promoting online gambling between 1997 and 2007, having to pay $21 million, followed by Yahoo who’s penalty was $7.5 million and finally Google with $3 million.

    via ABC News:

    “These sums add to the over $40 million in forfeitures and back taxes this office has already recovered in recent years from operators of these remote-control illegal gambling enterprises,” U.S. Attorney Catherine Hanaway said in a statement.

    Even cursory Hmm readers already know I think the government is missing a huge opportunity with online gambling, on a fool’s errand going after recreational gambling in people’s homes and that internet gambling will be legalized in the United States at some point in the future. But in the present fellow US citizens, and it disturbs me to write this, it is not a good idea to be putting up internet gambling advertising on your websites or doing any gambling online yourself.

    Washington HB 1243

    Washington State House Bill 1243
    If you live in Washington state where gambling online is a class C felony, you might also be interested in this comment which talks about proposed Washington State House Bill 1243 which seeks:

    to quash the felony charge language in last year’s legislation addressing in-home internet gambling.

    Being that was back in February 2007, I checked up on the progress of HB 1243 which, if passed, will provide legal defense for those adults who gamble online in their home for “recreational purposes.” The bill further defines (PDF) that as:

    … for the defendent’s own enjoyment and not as part of an enterprise that derives income from operating an internet web site that transmits or receives gambling information.

    Sadly, it appears that the bill is languishing, still (anybody got an update?) awaiting a hearing in the House Commerce and Labor Committee. How is it that the bill to make this a class C felony got passed in less than six months and the bill to defend what people do for recreation has taken 11 months and gone nowhere? Punish fast, defend slow, ain’t politics grand? Oh, and let’s not forget that shortly after passing this law to punish recreational online gambling, they voted to expand tribal gambling in our state.

    Is your state sending mixed message on gambling like Washington state?

    The war on our home soil against internet gambling must end. It’s a fruitless battle that should be redirected into legalizing and taxing the proceeds. Let’s use this money to improve our schools, reduce the debt, enhance the roads, bulk up the problem gambling services (remember, there are already legal gambling on indian casinos and state sponsored lotteries). I may not be interested in playing poker online personally, but I don’t believe in preventing other adults from doing so. I can see why the indian reservations and those who stand to lose money (or political support?) from gambling in this state are against this, but don’t see why any reasonable thinking adults are in opposition.

    I’m sure somebody will mention the social ills of gambling, let’s put that violin away. We’ve already got legalized gambling here and getting rid of all the advertising for online gambling while leaving the billboards for legal terrestrial gambling isn’t going to help the social problems.

    Think Secret settles lawsuit with Apple by shutting down

    Posted in News ( at 11:13 pm)

    Apple and Think Secret have settled their lawsuit, reaching an agreement that results in a positive solution for both sides. As part of the confidential settlement, no sources were revealed and Think Secret will no longer be published.

    “I’m pleased to have reached this amicable settlement, and will now be able to move forward with my college studies and broader journalistic pursuits,” Nick Ciarelli, Think Secret’s publisher, said.

    Apple had claimed that the blog revealed Apple’s trade secrets.

    Sirius employee tells customer Sirius + XM merger has been approved (audio)

    Posted in News ( at 11:13 pm)

    Sirius + XM Merger

    I can’t find any credible news source to back this information up so I hesitantly am putting in the “news” category, but please keep that in mind before getting too excited. This morning a Sirius employee told me, a Sirius customer, that regulatory approval of the Sirius + XM merger has been approved. It’s especially interesting how the discussion came up because it was totally unrelated to what the call was about.

    You can hear our discussion below and to be clear I didn’t receive a vague confirmation, I received several confirmations of this being a fact during the call. Listen and judge for yourself. It is possible this is just one misinformed employee, especially since no news sources are carrying the news, but is it possible they know something internally that the rest of the world does not?

    The call took place within the last hour and I informed Matthew the call was being recorded. Sirius also records calls with their customers so they have a record as well. I edited out the non-relevant portions of the call before and after the merger approval discussion in the audio below, but I do have a complete recording from beginning to end. I uploaded the edited recording to my Utterz account as well.

    Note: not only does Sirius employee Matthew confirm the regulatory approval but provides additional details about the merger that I couldn’t find anywhere else including siriusmerger.com. Was Matthew just making this up, being overconfident, misinterpreting some internal Sirius information or is this true?

    Virtual Worlds and Social Science: Conference

    Posted in News (December 19, 2007 at 11:35 pm)

    I’d like to let you know about a conference being held at Emory
    University on February 11. I know there are many virtual worlds
    conferences these days. This one is different. Let me set a historical
    context.

    There have been virtual worlds conferences for many years. The industry
    itself has run the Austin Game Conference, and there have been several
    academic conferences centered on the humanities: interesting
    discussions without the intent of having a practical impact one way or
    another. (And there’s nothing wrong with that.) Then came State of Play
    in 2003, at New York Law School, the most influential conference of
    that era. That conference produced a community of hard-headed people, a
    community that then developed the advice and reasoning that courts and
    legislatures are using today to deal with the virtual worlds legal
    issues we knew would come.

    Soon, firms became interested in virtual worlds, and a series of
    Virtual Worlds Conference and Expos have allowed that community to
    develop marketing methods, business models, and interoperability
    standards. Second Life has been the main driver in that area.

    Throughout this period, many of us said that the next thing would be a
    revolution in social and behavioral science. Virtual worlds will change
    society, making them a research subject in their own right. But virtual
    worlds would also be an important tool for researchers, a controlled
    environment for studying macro-scale questions, a social science petri
    dish. As such, virtual worlds would revolutionize the academy as well
    as society.

    These possibilities have now been thrust into the spotlight by the
    publication, in Lancet and Epidemiology, of research on the Corrupted
    Blood plague in World of Warcraft. A trickle of virtual world social
    science papers is appearing. It appears we are now entering the next
    phase, in which hard-nosed, quantitative, social and behavioral
    scientists will address the likely impact of virtual worlds across all
    society. A community is forming, and the first conference of this
    nascent community will meet at Emory University on February 11, 2008.

    The subject of the conference is the evolution of virtual worlds and
    their broad impact on society. Research fields include economics,
    business, political science, anthropology, sociology, psychology,
    public health, and more. Developers of virtual world-making software
    will be on hand to discuss
    and demonstrate the possibilities for building pocket virtual worlds
    for research. The full announcement is below. The public is invited.

    I think this is likely to be seen as a very important conference. If
    you have questions, please address them to the organizers: Benn
    Konsynski (Benn.Konsynski@bus.emory.edu), Holli Semetko
    (holli.semetko@emory.edu), and David Bray (dbray@bus.emory.edu).


    **** CONFERENCE ANNOUNCEMENT ****

    Virtual Worlds and New Realities in Commerce, Politics, and Society

    11 February 2008
    Emory University, Atlanta GA

    Virtual worlds are now a reality. Virtual worlds allow everyone to create
    a digital character representing themselves and interact with other
    computer-generated individuals, landscapes, virtually-run global
    businesses, and in-world institutions in real-time. Fascinatingly, both
    endogenously produced economies and social orders are emerging in these
    virtual worlds. Political candidates are campaigning in virtual worlds,
    while some sales of virtual assets are producing demand in the real world
    for equivalent items.

    On Monday, 11 February 2008 Emory University will host a public forum
    discussing both research and long-term implications of virtual and
    real-world interactions with regard to commerce, politics, and society.
    Four panels will be held, to include:

    (1) Evolution of Virtual Worlds
    (2) Emerging Virtual Institutions both in Business and Politics
    (3) Mirrored Influence of Virtual and Real-World Elements
    (4) Possible Futures of Virtual Worlds and Society

    Interested members of the public, practitioners, and academics from
    multiple fields (to include political science, business, information
    systems, public health, psychology, sociology, anthropology, library
    sciences, and more) are all invited to participate in the forum. As part
    of Emory University’s strategic plan, “Where Courageous Inquiry Leads”,
    this conference seeks to engage scholars in a strong and vital community
    to confront the human condition and experience and explore twenty-first
    century frontiers in science and technology, specifically involving
    virtual world phenomena.

    Co-chairs: Benn Konsynski, Holli Semetko, David Bray

    The FSM has Left the Building: Cory Leaves Linden Lab

    Posted in News ( at 11:35 pm)

    Our own Cory Ondrejka has left Linden Lab, and the SL blogosphere is abuzz. News reports can be found at CNET and InformationWeek, for starters. Best of luck to Cory — like many I’ll be eager to see what he does next (beyond take a cushy quasi-academic break somewhere, à la Al Gore ;-) ).

    As for Linden Lab, if interested folks would like to muse about what this might mean for it and Second Life, please feel free to weigh in.

    Performancing Announces Blog Awards

    Posted in News ( at 12:25 am)

    Performancing Blog AwardsPerformancing’s Ryan Caldwell has recently announced the 2007 Performancing Blog Awards, which aims to highlight the very best that the blogosphere has to offer. Starting December 17th, bloggers are encouraged to nominate blogs and/or bloggers for various fields and categories.

    Official Categories For The 2007 Performancing Blog Awards:

    1. The Best Overall Blog
    2. The Most Influential Blogger
    3. The Best Blog Design
    4. The Best Blog Typography
    5. The Best Blog Name
    6. The Best New Blog
    7. The Best Blog Community
    8. The Most Improved Blog of 2007
    9. The Best Blogs You’ve Never Heard Of
    10. The Best Blog Podcast
    11. The Best Use of a Corporate Blog
    12. The Best Video Blog
    13. The Best Writing/Blogging Blog
    14. The Best Science/Technology Blog
    15. The Most Controversial Blog
    16. The Best SEO Blog
    17. The Best Celeb/Style Blog
    18. The Best Business/Money Blogs
    19. The Best Photo Blog
    20. The Best Sports Blog
    21. The Best Blog WebHost
    22. The Best Family and Parenting Blog
    23. The Best Political Blog
    24. The Best Food/Health Blog
    25. The Funniest Blog
    26. It’s the people’s awards afterall…

    27. The Best Travel Blog
    28. The Best Education Blog

    Performancing has also asked the blogging community for any help or tips in deciding which among the nominees are deserving enough to be awarded in each category, whether as the winner, runners-up or honorable mentions.

    If you would like to make a nomination, please leave a comment at the Performancing 2007 Blog Awards page. You may also use the Award badge (direct hotlinking permitted) if you would like to help spread the word.

    Disclosure: Performancing is owned by Splashpress Media, the parent company of the Blog Herald.

    GameStop Outlines “Wii Certificate Program” [Wii]

    Posted in News ( at 12:22 am)

    WiiGuarantee-FOB.jpg

    Reggie Fils-Aime may have referred to it as a raincheck program, but GameStop’s official name for their pre-pay Wii program hitting on Dec. 20 is the Wii Certificate Program. There are a couple other things Reggie was a bit off on, according to the details released this morning from GameStop.

    The Wii Certificate program will run just one day, Friday, December 21. Customers will be able to go in and hand out the full $250 to reserve a Wii console for pick-up on January 25. Reservations must be made in-person at any GameStop or EB Games location in the U.S., including those in Puerto Rico and Hawaii. The number of reservations available at each store is limited and only one Wii can be reserved per a household.

    The certificate itself will be in a custom-designed DVD case featuring a picture of the Wii and Mario. Once the reserved Will arrives customers will receive a telephone call saying it’s available for pick-up.

    So let me get this straight, you give GameStop your $250 and they get to sit on it for a full month, earning interest, and in return you get an empty DVD case and eventually a Wii? The least they could have done is thrown in a T-Shirt that read: “My Parents Waited Too Long to Shop for Me So All I Got for Christmas was this Shirt and a Lot of Empty Promises. See you in Therapy in Five Years.”

    Hmmm, maybe that’s a bit too long for a slogan.


    E3 Returns to Los Angeles, But Remains Booth Babe Free [Feature]

    Posted in News ( at 12:22 am)

    e308summit.JPG The Santa Monica E3 is dead, long live the Los Angeles E3… again? Not quite.

    The Entertainment Software Association today announced that the E3 Media & Business Summit will be returning to the spacious digs of the Los Angeles Convention Center for next year’s event which will run from July 15 through July 17. But that doesn’t mean that the new E3 is returning to its old ways.

    ‘We are very much not going back to the old E3,” Rich Taylor, senior vice president of communications and research for the ESA, told me in an interview. “I think we are all on the same page for the industry on what we want those days in July to be about.”

    “This is the new E3, new and improved.”

    And that, according to Taylor, means the small, more intimate meetings of this year’s E3. A toned-down affair that saw 3,000 to 4,000 attendees and whole lot less booth babes.

    The decision to move back to the LA Convention Center came after Santa Monica’s E3 this year was rife with complaints, mostly about the amount of walking people had to do to get to appointments. This year’s E3 did away with the convention center all together, hosting different publishers in suites at hotels spread out across Santa Monica. There was an exhibit hall, but it was not well attended, mostly because of its location and the fact that it wasn’t anywhere near the hotels.

    “We talked to many folks, participants on both the media and industry side of things, one of the overriding things they wanted was a more centralized facility,” Taylor said. “That’s one reason we moved back to the LA Convention Center… hotels are walking distance from the convention center, they’re closer to each other…”

    Taylor said that despite some people’s fears, this year’s smaller E3 managed to attract just as much media attention and he believes new E3s will continue to do so.

    In the press release sent out this morning the ESA said the event will “continue to focus on the business of the computer and video game industry, with an emphasis on press events and small meetings with media, development, and other key sectors. While there will be opportunities for game demonstrations, the 2008 E3 Media & Business Summit will not feature the large trade show environment of previous years.”

    Next year’s E3 exhibitors will include both ESA and non-ESA members and range the gamut from online and mobile to PC and console gaming. As with last year, attendance at all events, meetings and demonstrations will be invitation only. Media attendance will also remain by invitation only, with attending companies having a say in who gets invited.

    “The US is the world’s number one video game market and the E3 Media & Business Summit is its premier video game conference. The 2008 Summit will provide a professional and efficient environment for suite-based meetings with media, and other industry leaders,” said Michael D. Gallagher, CEO of the ESA, which represents US computer and video game publishers and owns the E3 Media & Business Summit. “We look forward to welcoming the media and top industry executives to a centralized, business focused and personalized experience. Our program of high-level meetings, networking and personal dialogue, and industry-shaping panel discussions will capture the explosive growth we have seen in 2007 and lay the foundation for the 2008 video game marketplace.”

    Taylor declined to say whether future E3s will be at the LA Convention Center or whether any sort of multi-year contract was signed.

    “We are pretty laser focused on making July a success right now,” he said.

    More details are expected to hit in the coming months, but for now color me… strangely undecided.


    Google Knol another step toward hosting the world’s information too

    Posted in News (December 14, 2007 at 11:14 pm)

    GOOG Stock: Amazon vs. Google in the storage warsWe could be seeing a major battle in the making between Amazon and Google (disclaimer: I own GOOG stock) down the road.

    Look at what Amazon’s been having a huge amount of success with lately: their S3 storage and server processes. They are building out datacenters and bulking up servers, quietly getting more and more companies and developers to use them as their server infrastructure. Their recent S3 competition had the winners taking a giant gold hammer to a server. The message: you don’t need servers to scale, you need us.

    Let’s not forget Amazon tried to take on Google with Alexa search and failed, then they tried OpenSearch and didn’t make a dent. The new battlefront is hosting.

    Meanwhile Google is offering mostly ad-supported products and services with clean UI where they provide the hosting. At first glimpse one might wonder why Google wants to be in the content business. If you’re in the content business you have to deal with spammers.

    Controlling how the world’s information is searched is largely impacted by having the data at your disposal. The more direct control Google has over the information, as they do by hosting, the easier they can combat spam and search what they feel is the best content. Google is extremely careful to clarify what I italicized there, by saying it is what each individual user deems the best content, but Google — and any search engine — already decides what is the best on some level in the way the results are returned.

    Ranking.

    This is becoming very tantalizing with news of their Google Knol project. In their own words, Google Knol:

    The key idea behind the knol project is to highlight authors. Books have authors’ names right on the cover, news articles have bylines, scientific articles always have authors — but somehow the web evolved without a strong standard to keep authors names highlighted. We believe that knowing who wrote what will significantly help users make better use of web content. At the heart, a knol is just a web page; we use the word “knol” as the name of the project and as an instance of an article interchangeably. It is well-organized, nicely presented, and has a distinct look and feel, but it is still just a web page. Google will provide easy-to-use tools for writing, editing, and so on, and it will provide free hosting of the content. Writers only need to write; we’ll do the rest.

    This sounds like a promising, worthwhile project and history shows that not everything Google does is a runaway hit. A lot of what they do, most of what they do frankly, isn’t as successful as their search and Adwords.

    Writers could always write, long before Google and long after Google is gone. Do writers want to make Google the new Random House? It’s one thing for Google to organize the world’s information, but they are fast becoming the hosting company of the world’s information with only Amazon as their major competition on this front.

    I don’t know about you, but I’m starting to wonder if I want Google to be my hosting company. Giving any one entity too much control and power requires a huge amount of responsibility.

    Can we continue to trust Google to do the right thing?

    The growing Google content business
    Google has already been in the content hosting business since buying Blogger from Pyra Labs. The number of Google content-related projects include, and this list is incomplete, the following services:

    Blogger - create and store your own blog, hosted by Google
    Google Base - store items that rank better in search
    Google Code - download APIs and open source code
    Google Page Creator - create and share your own hosted web pages
    Jaiku - mobile microblogging service like Twitter
    Picasa - store and share pictures
    YouTube and Google Video - share and store videos created

    It’s way too early to speculate on what impact Google Knol will have, it’s in invite-only stage at this point, but if it can make the list above as a viable alternative to the heavily spammed Squidoo and what Techdirt labels too early to call Mahalo, I’m sure both those services won’t be pleased.

    As for being any competition to Wikipedia? Predictably, many are out there already talking and speculating too. Remember how Google offered at one time to host Wikipedia and was denied? Google would rather host Wikipedia than compete against it. But what do they do when they are denied? They find another path to take. Welcome to Google Knol.

    TiVo finally comes to Canada

    Posted in News ( at 2:18 am)

    After years of waiting, it looks like TiVo is finally coming to Canada. There is also an official TiVo mini-site about Canada.

    This has been a long time coming with reports going back over two years that this was “coming soon” following almost four years of hacking together some solutions for home-spun guide data.

    It looks like the offering isn’t HD, just the standard dual-tuner 80 hour box but after many years of waiting, at least it’s better than nothing. (thanks, Iain!)

    HD DVD & Blu-Ray Disc Players from $219 Shipped at Amazon

    Posted in News ( at 2:17 am)

    Toshibahda30_hddvdplayer
    Dealnews has a roundup of HD DVD & Blu-Ray Disc Players from $219 Shipped at Amazon
    . The Blu-Ray players come with 5 free movies (which go for $20-30 each) and the HD-DVD players come with 5 free plus 5 more free via mail-in rebate.

    For anyone looking to go upscale in their movie watching, these are some of the best prices ever seen for high-def DVDs. Unfortunately, that means you have to choose a side in the format wars. Personally, I’m still wishing to see a <$500 dual-format player come out. I know the Samsung BD-UP5000 is starting to get close to that, but the LG model is still about a grand. Hopefully by this time next year cheap dual players are abundant.

    I’ve had a Playstation 3 playing Blu-Ray movies on my 46″ 1080p LCD for about a year and I must say, movies do in fact look a lot better (especially anything in the background), but I must confess with most movies I forget about how good it looks after the first five minutes.

    TiVo brings back lifetime subscriptions, plus gifting

    Posted in News ( at 2:17 am)

    I’ve been meaning to post this for the past few weeks, but TiVo finally brought back the lifetime service option:

    through January 2nd, 2008 — current TiVo owners can upgrade their Series2 to a Series3 or HD with lifetime, or simply upgrade the service on their current S3 / HD — equipment aside, the service will set you back $399

    Tivogift
    They also added a way to give a lifetime service TiVo as a gift. The gift+lifetime option is great because one thing that has prevented me from giving anyone in my family a TiVo is that it means another $12-16 month payment for them. It makes for a very expensive gift, but it’s a much better way to just give someone TiVo and not have to worry about how much extra cost it will entail for them down the road. [thanks Jon!]

    Terry Pratchett Diagnosed With Early Onset Alzheimer’s [News]

    Posted in News ( at 2:16 am)

    pratchett.jpgTerry Pratchett, who many of you will know from the famous Discworld series of books and rpg, has recently announced that he’s been diagnosed with “a very rare form” of early onset Alzheimer’s. In a post on his site labeled “An Embuggerance,” Pratchett revealed his condition to the world before, in true Pratchett fashion, breaking the ranks of solemnity as only he can.

    PS I would just like to draw attention to everyone reading the above that this should be interpreted as ‘I am not dead’. I will, of course, be dead at some future point, as will everybody else. For me, this maybe further off than you think - it’s too soon to tell. I know it’s a very human thing to say “Is there anything I can do”, but in this case I would only entertain offers from very high-end experts in brain chemistry.

    He plans on writing a few more books and doesn’t want everyone getting all mopey.

    AN EMBUGGERANCE [via cnn][photo]


    Morgan Stanley sounds U.S recession alarm

    Posted in News ( at 2:15 am)

    The roller coaster markets continue on Wall Street. The definition of a recession according to mcwdn.org:

    A time of less business activity, usually lasting at least three quarters of the year or nine months.

    And according to Morgan Stanley, a full recession alert is here for the US economy:

    Morgan Stanley is the first major Wall Street bank to warn that it is may now be too late to stop a recession, though most have shifted to an ultra-cautious stance in recent weeks.

    The bank doesn’t think Asia and Europe will help this time around. Yesterday, the market tanked on news that only 25 basis points (.25%) were dropped in the interest rate instead of a hoped for 50 basis points (.50%), but today is rebounding a little bit on news that Federal Reserve plans to inject billions of dollars into the system.

    What is worrisome to a layman in finances like me is how they’ve done this several times and it’s been little more than a temporary bandage. The market will come back a little bit and then plummet huge amounts. Then they do something, and there is a minor correction and things fall apart again. Being the holiday time of year, the best time for retail stores historically, shouldn’t the market be reflecting these times?

    Or is the subprime loan mess putting coal in a lot of these businesses’ stockings? Whatever the case, the roller coaster ride continues. Investors seem at best uneasy about the current financial climate. The U.S dollar has rebounded a little bit and now is back to being worth (slightly) more than the Canadian dollar.

    Mitchell Report fingers those playing juiced in baseball, 10 Mariners included

    Posted in News ( at 2:15 am)

    The sports radio dials are juiced. Even non-sports radio is hopping with talk about steroids in baseball.

    Holding Jose Canseco's book

    While waiting for the 6,000 mile checkup on our car today, I learned of Senator Mitchell’s report to Major League Baseball detailing the list of athletes linked positively to steroids and human growth hormones (HGH). I’ve been fascinated and disturbed in an accident scene way since reading Jose Canseco’s book Juiced. I wasted no time downloading the PDF from ESPN and searched through for our local Seattle Mariners and on other names.

    The biggest surprise to me was the rocket, Roger Clemens (Update 3:20pm PST: Roger has hired attorney Rusty Hardin and vehemently denies the information in the report), but there were a few other names that raised my eyebrows, particularly other pitchers like Andy Petitte. When Ryan Franklin in Seattle was suspended for steroids, I realized it wasn’t only for homerun hitters, but why would solid pitchers like Clemens need the juice? Really, it was that important for him to stay in the game longer? It couldn’t be about the money with him … or could it?

    10 Seattle Mariners juicing
    A search for ‘mariners’ revealed 15 results including the following former or current (Update 4:17pm PST: a check of the Mariners active roster doesn’t show any current Mariners players in the 10 below so struck the “or current” part) Seattle Mariners players:

    1. David Segui
    2. Josias Manzanillo
    3. Glenallen Hill
    4. Ron Villone (pitcher)
    5. Ryan Franklin (pitcher)
    6. Todd Williams (pitcher)
    7. Fernando Vina
    8. David Bell
    9. Jose Guillen
    10. Ismael Valdez (pitcher)

    Wow, 40% pitchers?

    Selig responds
    On my way back to the office MLB Commissioner Bud Selig was giving a press conference and detailing the three things he announced MLB would be doing right away in response to the Mitchell Report:

    1. eliminate the 24 hour notice given to clubs prior to testing/screening.
    2. mete out appropriate punishment for each of the players named in the report on a case by case basis
    3. work with the player’s union to try and come to agreements on many of the other 20 recommendations made in the Mitchell report.

    How will this impact future Hall of Famers?
    If they are going to continue to keep Pete Rose out of the Hall of Fame (HOF) for gambling, then I don’t think any of these players named should be in the HOF either. It will be interesting to see if that happens.

    I continue to be disgusted by this whole issue. A sport I love is being ruined by performance enhancing drugs. This shouldn’t be an issue that is in dispute by the player’s union. They should want the game kept clean. If they do anything differently, I may have to become an MLS fan instead.

    One in three US charities embrace blogging, beating business, study suggests

    Posted in News ( at 2:13 am)

    A survey of 76 of the United States’ largest charities suggests that over one-third of them have embraced blogging as a way of informing and engaging with current and potential donors, and three in four use at least one form of social networking tool.

    The University of Massachusetts study also found that nearly half of the charities surveyed thought that social media was a very important part of their fundraising strategy.

    The university’s previous research into the blogging habits of Fortune 500 and Inc. 500 companies found that only 8% and 19% respectively were engaged in any official form of blogging — though it should be borne in mind that the dates of this research weren’t published in the article.

    The university’s report noted that, “this research proves conclusively that charitable organizations are outpacing the business world in their use of social media.”

    Charities surveyed said that their blogs were most often written by in-house PR or communications staff, and that their success was measured by basic statistics such as site hits or comments left, rather than money raised.

    Around half said that their blogs were available via RSS feed. This either means that the other half are using proprietary content management software without a feed option, that they’ve deliberately or inadvertently removed feed functionality, or they’re just not aware that their blog is available as a feed.

    The report, “Blogging for the Hearts of Donors: Largest U.S. Charities Use Social Media.”, surveyed charities including the Salvation Army, American Red Cross, Catholic Charities USA, Habitat for Humanity International and Easter Seals, and the full results of the survey are expected to be published next year.

    (Via Computer World)

    SpinVox voted “best new service” at World Communication Awards

    Posted in News ( at 2:13 am)

    SpinVox, the Voice-to-Screen messaging service that I looked at back in February, has won the “best new service” award at the World Communication Awards held last night in London.

    The service can be used to post voice messages to blogs, including LiveJournal, Vox, TypePad, Blogger, Windows MSN Live Spaces and Moblog.co.uk, and with WordPress and Movable Type with the aid of an email Plugin. The service currently supports four languages: English, Spanish, French and German.

    The judges described SpinVox Blog as “truly innovative and capturing the Zeitgeist”. SpinVox fought off strong competition to win the global award sponsored by Microsoft, including entries from Orange Business Services, 3 and Colt Telecom.

    SpinVox CEO and co-founder, Christina Domecq, said: “This ‘Best New Service Award’ is a terrific honour. It is recognition of our drive to innovate and lead the market in bridging the gap between wireless and the Internet. We’re anticipating customer and market needs with simple, but smart services that make communicating and sharing experiences easier and more enjoyable. SpinVox Blog essentially allows people to blog instantly, anywhere, without losing the immediacy and emotion that brings the content to life.”

    EFF defends anonymous blogger

    Posted in News ( at 2:13 am)

    FreeRepublic.com reports that the Electronic Frontier Foundation has asked the New Jersey Supreme Court to preserve the free speech rights of “daTruthSquad,” an anonymous blogger who is facing a lawsuit from the township of Manalapan.

    The EFF asked the court to block Manalapan’s move to uncover the identity of “daTruthSquad.” Google’s Blogspot has been subpoenaed to turn over details about the blogger.

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