Archive for May, 2007
May 30, 2007
Remember ‘Minority Report’? Tom Cruise movie, based on a Philip K. Dick short story, and one of the cool things was interfacing with a computer using gestures only. It was a vertical interface, and it was virtual. What we have here is a table-top (shades of old-style video games in pizza parlors!) interface, no keyboard, no mouse, dubbed ‘Surface’, and supposedly, opening the doors to ’surface computing.’ Surface will be demoed today at the Wall Street Journal’s D: All Things Digital conference.
“With Surface, we are creating more intuitive ways for people to interact with technology,” said Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer said. We see this as a multibillion dollar category, and we envision a time when surface computing technologies will be pervasive, from tabletops and counters to the hallway mirror. Surface is the first step in realizing that vision.”
In its current form, Surface is incorporated into a 30″ display mounted into a table. This allows user involvement to expand beyond just one person. Surface is capable of recognizing input from not just one finger, but multiple up to dozens of inputs simultaneously. Source: DailyTech
It’s cool that multiple users can interact with the screen at once. Though of course, at about $10K a pop, the price isn’t so cool. But initially the target is places like casinos, hotel lobbies, and restaurants. There is a demo available for viewing here.
Posted in Microsoft Surface, Minority Report, Tom Cruise | 1 Comment »
May 26, 2007
After reading this, I definitely had to write about this. While it’s true that MySpace is cooperating with states and giving them sex offender data, as well as taking down MySpace pages associated with such offenders, if they make a mistake … they need to admit it. In this case a woman was mistakenly labeled as a sex offender, had her page taken down, and MySpace has yet to respond to her … despite the fact that the security company they outsourced some of the work to has said she is innocent.
It took nearly a week for Jessica Davis to get an explanation about why MySpace had labeled her a sex offender and pulled her profile from the social networking Web site.
And when her name was finally cleared, it wasn’t because of anything MySpace did.
“They have a corporate and a moral responsibility to me as far as coming up and saying, ‘We messed up. This is going on. We’re doing what we can to fix it,’” said the 29-year-old, newly engaged University of Colorado senior, a woman who confessed to losing her driver’s license for careless driving a decade ago but insisted she’d never committed a crime to earn the status of sex offender. Source: ABC News
As I said, Sentinel CEO John Cardillo has come to her defense, but MySpace has yet to apologize, or even contact her directly short of “form emails.” The scariest thing is this sort of thing could happen to anyone, even to you and I, and I personally feel that MySpace should come out with a public apology … and be more careful in the future.
Posted in Apology, MySpace, Sex Offender | Leave a Comment »
May 24, 2007
It’s been rumored for a while that as part of the “recovery plan” Dell was instituting, to bring itself back to a leadership role in PCs, it would begin selling in retail channels. Well, if you’re gonna do that, how about picking the biggest retailer? Wal-Mart.
Computer maker Dell Inc. plans to start selling personal computers at 3,000 Wal-Mart stores in the United States and Canada as of June 10, launching a major drive to sell its PCs through retailers, a company spokesman said on Thursday. Source: Reuters
The desktop will be the E521, with and without a monitor. More models to come? Who knows, but this isn’t a gamer’s box so I’m still not tempted to go to Wal-Mart.
Seriously though, this disappoints me, as I am not a fan of Wal-Mart and their poor labor practices (both in the U.S. and abroad with their suppliers). This may affect whether or not I buy Dells in the future.
Posted in Dell, Desktop PCs, Retail, Wal-Mart | 1 Comment »
May 21, 2007
Last year I wrote about a possible link between cell phone radiation and infertility … well, all your worries could be gone, if you try out this new underwear that purports to protect against cell phone radiation.
The briefs are made with threads of silver which the company claims blocks cell phone rays and reception. The inventor, Andreas Sallmann, explains that when you put a cell phone inside your briefs, then dial your number from another phone, you probably won’t even get a signal. Source: Textually.org
Reading through the article, I found mention of other protective garb by other companies, such as Levi Strauss and anti-radiation lined pockets (but these were announced in 2002 and I haven’t seen anything about them … probably because if you put your phone in your pocket you couldn’t get any calls … kind of an oversight). Despite what Sallmann thinks, however, I usually use voice dialing and leave my phone in its holster, not in my underwear.
Posted in Cell Phone Radiation, Infertility, Isabodywear, Levi Strauss | Leave a Comment »
May 19, 2007

As Blizzard succinctly says on their own website, “Hell, it’s about time.” At the Blizzard World Wide Invitational event in Korea (where else), Blizzard has announced the long-awaited sequel to the mega-hit (and still addictively played by many!) Starcraft.
Featuring a unique single-player campaign that picks up where StarCraft: Brood War left off, StarCraft II will present a cast of new heroes and familiar faces in an edgy sci-fi story filled with adventure and intrigue. In addition, Blizzard will again offer unparalleled online play through Battle.net, the company’s world-renowned gaming service, with several enhancements and new features to make StarCraft II the ultimate competitive real-time strategy game. Source: Blizzard
You can see artwork here, screenshots here. I thought I felt a seismic tremor earlier today. Most likely all those attendees in Korea stomping their feet or fainting at the news. The release date has been announced, sorta. “As with all Blizzard games, we will take as much time as needed to ensure the game is as fun, balanced, and polished as possible.”
Now, Blizzard, about that next Diablo sequel …
Posted in Blizzard, Korea, Starcraft 2, Warcraft | Leave a Comment »
May 15, 2007
It’s no secret that Google, in its Gmail service, posts ads based on text it gleans from scanning your emails. At least, I hope you all knew this. Now, that’s one thing, Google, but stay away from scanning my behavior in City of Heroes, will ya?
Internet giant Google has drawn up plans to compile psychological profiles of millions of web users by covertly monitoring the way they play online games.
The plans are detailed in a patent filed by Google in Europe and the US last month. It says people playing online role playing games such as Second Life and World of Warcraft would be particularly good to target, because they interact with other players and make decisions that probably reflect their behaviour in real life.
The information could be used to make adverts that appear inside the game more “relevant to the user”, Google says. Source: Guardian Unlimited
Huh. Well, in City of Heroes, all they would get from me is that I really, really hate missions that can’t be soloed. I also really hate in-game ads, but that’s for another post.
Posted in Analysis, City of Heroes, Google, MMORPGs | Leave a Comment »
May 11, 2007
Since I upgraded my laptop to Windows Vista, I’ve been reinstalling all the software I usually use. I’ve been hesitating over the image editing software to install, as I own both Corel Paint Shop Pro Photo XI as well as Ulead PhotoImpact 12. Since Corel has purchased Ulead, they’re essentially both Corel products, but Paint Shop Pro Photo (let’s just call it PSP, shall we) XI isn’t as hard to install (PhotoImpact packages its components into a ton of separate installers), it also installs Protexis licensing software, which runs as a service and does not uninstall when PSP is uninstalled. That is a big pet peeve of mine; if you’re uninstalled uninstall everything!
On the other hand, you can disable the service (you also have to remove it from the registry or it will continue to show up in services.msc), delete the files manually and the product will still run … which makes me wonder why it’s even included. I do like the One-Step Photo adjustment feature (PhotoImpact has a similar feature but it’s not very easy to find in the menus). However, a bug really soured me on PSP this week.
I downloaded an JPG image from the Internet. Tried to open it, and received a “Not a valid JPEG-JFIF file” error. Huh. But PhotoImpact opened it fine. And so did Paint.NET (freeware).
I submitted a ticket to Tech Support. A few back and forths with Tech Support … and some investigation with PhotoImpact … and it turns out the file was really a BMP file, which had been saved and stored on the site with the wrong extension. So PSP couldn’t open it. And the explanation they gave me was “a lot of other programs will fail” in the same way.
Hmmm … maybe, but PhotoImpact, your “cousin” doesn’t. Neither does Paint.NET, as I said. It’s kinda like when a kid says “Everyone else does it” to which Mom says “If everyone jumped off a bridge, blah, blah.” To make a short story long, this kinda made up my mind. Here comes multiple PhotoImpact installers. Now if I could just get them to combine the installers all into one …
Posted in Bugs, Corel, Paint Shop Pro Photo XI, spyware | Leave a Comment »
May 10, 2007
I shuddered when I read this. Honestly. After being spoiled by past PVRs as well as my current Tivo, commercial skipping is a necessity nowadays. We almost never watch anything live, or at least delay it until the point where “ok, we can start watching now; it’s late enough so we can skip all the commercials”.
You may recall I wrote earlier about Philips and their ad-skipping technology. Well, Cox Communications has signed a deal with ESPN and ABC for a video-on-demand (VOD) service. Part of the deal, though, involved making sure people couldn’t skip ads … and while this only affects VOD for now … and it’s only a test … it’s quite possibly a sign of things to come.
The goal with the new program is to increase ad revenue, which broadcasters have been crying foul over since the dawn of PVRs like TiVo. ABC, ESPN and parent company Walt Disney Co. handed Cox the rules to abide by if Cox wanted to have access to hit programs. But Cox isn’t showing any concern, and in fact welcomes the restriction.
Reports say that Cox and Disney are still ironing out the details on what kind of ads will play, for how long and how often during a program. None of the above companies mentioned whether or not users will still be able to switch channels when a commercial pops up. Source: DailyTech
Yes, yes, same “feature” possibly as the Philips tech … no channel changing during ads. Although that’s still a rumor, right. Hang on to your old PVRs, people, the newer, better ones might just tick you off in the future, if this becomes de rigeur.
Posted in Ad-Skipping, Cox, PVR, Tivo, Video-on-Demand | 1 Comment »
May 8, 2007
It’s bad enough when I’m forced to use a really long password. It’s not like my standard, strong password isn’t long enough for most (10 characters) or strong enough for most (not a word, combination of letters and numbers). And I use Roboform for those rare cases when they ask for specific requirements which I will not remember no matter what. Sometimes I still have to enter a longer one. But what if I choose to enter a long password … and they ignore part of it?
Enter AOL’s latest gaffe. It appears that even though they allow you to enter a password with 16 characters … they only recognize the first 8.
It turns out that when someone signs up for an AOL.com account, the user appears to be allowed to enter up to a 16-character password. AOL’s system, however, doesn’t read past the first eight characters.
AOL spokesman Andrew Weinstein said the company was looking into the matter, but didn’t have any comment beyond that.
Bruce Schneier, chief technology officer BT Counterpane, called the set-up “sloppy and stupid.” Source: Washington Post
Nice example given at the Washington Post article, on how this could be really bad (basically, use something easy that takes up 8 characters and add strong stuff after that … symbols and numbers mixed). At any rate … 8 as a limit went out with the 8-character filename limit on DOS. This is pretty bad stuff (though expect it to be fixed soon, since this has now been publicized).
Posted in AOL, Password Truncation, security | Leave a Comment »
May 6, 2007
It’s a rumor floating around the Internet … and it sounds outrageous … however, in this age of globalization and outsourcing, it wouldn’t surprise me. Although I’ve seen it in more than a few places, the start of the rumor was a Robert Cringley column at PBS.org. It certers around an IBM project called LEAN that, as the name sorta implies, is meant to turn the corporation into a lean, mean profit-making machine that will … short-term … be really good for the stock.
LEAN is about offshoring and outsourcing at a rate never seen before at IBM. For two years Big Blue has been ramping up its operations in India and China with what I have been told is the ultimate goal of laying off at least one American worker for every overseas hire. The BIG PLAN is to continue until at least half of Global Services, or about 150,000 workers, have been cut from the U.S. division.
The point of this has nothing to do with the work itself and everything to do with the price of IBM shares. Remove at least 100,000 heads, eliminate the long-term drag of a defined-benefit pension plan, and the price of IBM shares will soar. Source: I, Cringely
Like I said, this is all a rumor, but I would be remiss if I didn’t post about it … While I am no economist, I have strong feelings about offshoring / outsourcing. While it’s great for the corporation in the short-term, it disenfranchises the American worker and leads to a squeeze on the once-healthy middle class. You only need look at the manufacturing sector to see how a whole sector of jobs has left the country … and if, as some theorize, global warming and peak oil lead to a time where importing of virtually all our manufactured goods is no longer viable, we may regret having dismantled our manufacturing infrastructure.
Further, Cringely makes some good points in the article about how IBM and other tech companies are complaining about the lack of technical workers in the U.S., and thus how the H1B program needs expansion. Here’s your solution, 150K technical workers about the hit the streets! Additionally, as Cringely says, and I have spoken about privately for years, it’s not that technical workers are unavailable but that cheap technical workers are unavailable. As always with corporations, it’s all about the profit (don’t get me wrong, I understand that is what they are supposed to do … make money) … especially since greater profit means greater bonuses for the CEO, right?
Posted in IBM, Jobs, Layoffs, Middle Class, Offshoring, Outsourcing, Profit | 5 Comments »