Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Yet more rumors of a solar Prius

Posted on January 3rd, 2009 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

A solar-paneled Prius done by Solar Electric Vehicles.

(Credit: SEV)

Toyota is developing a solar-powered Prius, the Nikkei newspaper has reported yet again.

It was interesting when we heard about this in July.

But it seems to us that someone over at Toyota has now been fake-leaking/hinting news about a solar-powered Prius in one form or another for at least the last year.

This wonder-car-in-the-making has gone from being a Toyota Prius that uses solar roof panels from Kyocera to power its air conditioning unit, to “a vehicle that will be powered solely by solar energy” to quote one recent Associated Press article.

You may find it interesting that this rumor always comes floating by on the heels of bad news from Toyota.

In July, it accompanied news of a series of Toyota plant closings/reorganizations in the U.S.

This latest rumor seems to be timed to follow Toyota’s December news that it, too, has succumbed to the world auto industry slump, reporting its first annual operating loss in 70 years, and a series of consolidations and changes in its organizational structure.

Of course, there is already an available solar option for some Toyota owners in the U.S.

Solar Electrical Vehicles (SEV) has been offering an after-market Prius solar overhaul since June 2007. It includes a customized solar panel for a Prius roof that can improve the car’s efficiency by about 29 percent. SEV also offers kits for the Toyota Highlander, Rav4 EV, and Ford Escape Hybrid.

For those who just like reading about the idea of a solar car, Canadian engineer Marcelo da Luz and his team have been blogging about their attempt to set the world long-distance record for a solar-powered car with the Power of One (Xof1) vehicle.

‘Curse of silence’ smartphone flaw disclosed

Posted on January 3rd, 2009 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

A denial-of-service attack that limits the number of SMS messages that can be received by Nokia smartphones has been disclosed and demonstrated.

Dubbed the “curse of silence” by German security researcher Tobias Engel, the attack occurs when Nokia Series 60 phones are sent a malformed e-mail message via SMS (Short Message Service). Engel demonstrated the attack on Tuesday at the Chaos Communication Congress in Berlin, according to a blog post by security vendor F-Secure.

An advisory made public by Engel on Tuesday gave details of the attack. After receiving a message from a sender with an e-mail address of greater than 32 characters, Nokia S60 2.6, 2.8, 3.0, and 3.1 devices are not able to receive any more SMS or MMS messages. The S60 2.6 and 3.0 devices lock up after one message, while 2.8 and 3.1 devices seize up after 11 messages.

Affected users must perform a factory reset of the handset to remedy the issue. No firmware fix was available at the time of writing. A Nokia representative told CNET News sister site ZDNet UK on Friday the company was “aware of” the vulnerability, but believed it did not pose a significant risk.

“Nokia is not currently aware of any malicious incidents on the S60 platform related to this alleged issue and we do not believe that it represents a significant risk to customers’ devices,” said the representative. “Nokia believes that the vulnerability may be valid for some of the S60 on Symbian OS products. We are also working with the Symbian team to further investigate the vulnerability.”

Products running S60 3rd edition, feature pack 2, are unaffected, said the representative, who added that the issue can be prevented by network filtering.

“According to our knowledge, many operators are looking into and actually already implementing network filtering to prevent the issue,” said the representative.

F-Secure said on Tuesday that Sony Ericsson UIQ devices may also be vulnerable to this type of attack. On Wednesday the security vendor said the vulnerability will “most likely be used by jealous boyfriends,” but that support personnel “should know what to look for” in case of harassment of staff.

F-Secure added that, due to Engel’s reasonable disclosure, the company had managed to test the flaw and add protection to its Mobile Security product. Engel informed Nokia and several telecommunications operators about the issue in November.

Tom Espiner of ZDNet UK reported from London.

Yet more solar Prius rumors

Posted on January 2nd, 2009 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

A solar-paneled Prius done by Solar Electric Vehicles.

(Credit: SEV)

Toyota is developing a solar-powered Prius, the Nikkei newspaper has reported yet again.

It was interesting when we heard about this in July.

But it seems to us that someone over at Toyota has now been fake-leaking/hinting news about a solar-powered Prius in one form or another for at least the last year.

This wonder-car-in-the-making has gone from being a Toyota Prius that uses solar roof panels from Kyocera to power its air conditioning unit, to “a vehicle that will be powered solely by solar energy” to quote one recent Associated Press article.

You may find it interesting that this rumor always comes floating by on the heels of bad news from Toyota.

In July, it accompanied news of a series of Toyota plant closings/reorganizations in the U.S.

This latest rumor seems to be timed to follow Toyota’s December news that it, too, has succumbed to the world auto industry slump, reporting its first annual operating loss in 70 years, and a series of consolidations and changes in its organizational structure.

Of course, there is already an available solar option for some Toyota owners in the U.S.

Solar Electrical Vehicles (SEV) has been offering an after-market Prius solar overhaul since June 2007. It includes a customized solar panel for a Prius roof that can improve the car’s efficiency by about 29 percent. SEV also offers kits for the Toyota Highlander, Rav4 EV, and Ford Escape Hybrid.

For those who just like reading about the idea of a solar car, Canadian engineer Marcelo da Luz and his team have been blogging about their attempt to set the world long-distance record for a solar-powered car with the Power of One (Xof1) vehicle.

Unlocking the iPhone 3G - or maybe not

Posted on January 2nd, 2009 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Music sales for 2008 ride digital coattails

Posted on January 2nd, 2009 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Microsoft planning big layoffs for January?

Posted on January 1st, 2009 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Mark January 15 in your calendar: Rumors of layoffs at Microsoft peg that as the day the bad news will come.

The latest to report on the possibility of layoffs at the software giant is the blog Fudzilla, which puts the number of job cuts at 15,000, or nearly 17 percent of Microsoft’s worldwide operations. The January 15 date is a week before Microsoft’s second-quarter earnings report, scheduled for January 22.

(Credit: Microsoft)

Those numbers are up from earlier rumors, which suggested that 10 percent of the company’s employees would lose their jobs.

Fudzilla sees the biggest hit coming for the MSN unit, where Yusuf Mehdi recently took over as marketing chief while the company continued to look for an executive to run its overall online services group:

So far, we haven’t managed to confirm what departments or regions will be hit the worst, but we’re hearing that MSN might be carrying the brunt of the layoffs. We’re also hearing rumors about the possibility of somewhat larger staff cuts at Microsoft EMEA (Europe, Middle East and Africa).

It’s unlikely that Microsoft will be laying off a lot of people in departments and regions that are doing well, and considering the recent upturn in console sales, we have a feeling that at least most of the people working in the Xbox 360 departments will be pretty safe.

Wall Street veteran Henry Blodget says the target areas mentioned by Fudzilla make sense, but not the high volume of job cuts:

Unless Microsoft’s business has been absolutely crushed in the past two months, there is no reason for the company to suddenly cut this much cost. Microsoft’s margins are still fine, and much of its revenue is generated from multi-year contracts (and is therefore unlikely to see a massive intra-quarter hit).

In October, word leaked out of Microsoft that it would be closing its MSN Groups service on February 21, to be replaced with Windows Live Groups.

Blodget sees potential for a restructuring in Redmond that would fit into the long-running, on-again-off-again Microhoo saga:

The only way we could see Microsoft laying off this many people is if the company decided to eliminate business units. And if Microsoft did decide to restructure its business, it would likely sell rather than shut down divisions, including MSN (If Microsoft wants to get out of the consumer Internet business, which it should, the best way to do it is to spin its online operations into Yahoo in exchange for a big piece of the company.)

5 predictions for 2009

Posted on January 1st, 2009 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Facebook godfather groups spark mafia victims’ ire

Posted on January 1st, 2009 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

A computer revolution through a child’s eyes

Posted on December 31st, 2008 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

I have proof from an expert that the iPhone interface really is better. Who’s the expert? My 3-year-old son.

Over the years, I’ve seen countless newbies struggle to use the latest gadget, computer, or software. I like new technology, but it’s been work hauling myself up learning curves.

But I’m convinced that after years stuck with only modest tweaks to the WIMP interface–windows, icons, menus, pointing device–real change is upon us. That’s chiefly because the pointing devices now can be your own fingers.

Levi types random words on the iPhone’s notepad application.

(Credit: Stephen Shankland/CNET News)

Within moments of his first crack at an iPhone, my son, Levi, had figured out how to flip from one photo to another by flicking his finger across the screen. He understood with no coaching how to steer the simulated steel ball around the holes in the Labyrinth game by tilting the phone. He loves to type nonsense words on the notepad application using the virtual keyboard, deleting them once they’ve been read. In the three months since I got the iPhone 3G, Levi has learned to take photos, browse them, change the phone’s wallpaper, and, unfortunately, turn off Wi-Fi and switch on airplane mode.

My proudest moment came when Levi issued his first tweet, borrowing my account: “Eesfrrgjlphdvlksxnjjktwsdvnjmmkbvvnn.” Though it was largely a matter of chance, of course, he could do it because he likes the cute bluebird icon of the Twitterific application, and touching it with his finger triggers entertaining interactions.

And I was intrigued when Levi tried unsuccessfully to use the phone’s accelerometer to play JellyCar, trying to spur the car by tipping the iPhone so the car would “roll” downhill faster. Note to JellyCar developers: your user interface needs work.

Levi’s first tweet

(Credit: CNET News)

As a parent, of course, it’s tempting to assume that Levi’s accomplishments are the result of his astounding intelligence. But of course much of the credit has to go to Apple and others who’ve advanced the state of the interface art.

“Human beings are a lot more programmed to manipulate things with our hands and fingers,” said Dan Saffer, a founder of Kicker Studio and author of Designing Gestural Interfaces. “I was at a party with a Microsoft Surface table. There was an infant playing with it, not even a year old, pushing photos around and squealing. It’s amazing how much it makes sophisticated computing power accessible to a hugely wide segment of the population.”

Keyboards and mice aren’t being replaced–they offer speed and precision for typing words, entering data, navigating documents, and issuing commands. But they are becoming just one of a host of mechanisms.

Touch screens, available on some Hewlett-Packard computers, are a big part of the revolution, letting people interact more directly rather than relying on a mouse, joystick, or other indirect pointing device. Multitouch sensors, which can detect multiple fingers simultaneously, add more sophistication, such as the ability to shrink a photo by making a pinching gesture on a trackpad. Newer Apple laptops offer more extensive use of multitouch, though at this stage only through the trackpad rather than a touch screen.

Levi took this picture of his feet with my iPhone while he was sitting in his car seat.

(Credit: Levi)

Computing devices also are getting ears and eyes. Speech recognition is available in rough form to power phone search on various phones with services from Yahoo, Google, Microsoft, and Vlingo. FluidTunes lets you control your iTunes library by waving your hands in front of a Mac’s video camera.

Intuitive, physical interfaces aren’t just for kids. I was stunned to see my technophobic mother-in-law gleefully bowling with a Wii last year. Sure, she couldn’t have installed Nintendo’s still-popular gaming device if we’d paid her, but using it was as easy as tossing a pebble in a pond.

“There are Wii bowling tournaments now for elders. It takes a sport they love, but there’s no weight of the ball anymore. They can play it in a wheelchair. It’s a huge hit at nursing homes,” Saffer said.

It’s not just that devices are easier to use when you can touch the interface, he said. It’s that it’s easier to learn by watching others use them.

“One interesting thing about touch screens is there’s this whole realm of observation you don’t have with standard computer setups, where the icons are smaller, and it’s hard to tell what people are doing by watching,” he said. “You can learn how to use an iPhone by watching people flip through it for a second. You can get it in a way you can’t with a standard phone, where you’re watching people push buttons to get through menus.”

Of course, immersion helps, too. Levi’s parents spend altogether too much time punching at keyboards and staring at screens, so he’s got plenty of examples to emulate his elders. As a camera buff, I’m delighted when Levi pretends to take pictures–he made a toy camera out of Lego once.

A view of Microsoft’s Surface device at the Sheraton Gateway Hotel shows a list of entertainment options for hotel guests.

(Credit: Stefanie Olsen/CNET News)

But I vacillate between pleasure that he’s learning how to use technology and fear that he’ll grow up ignorant of the non-electronic world. I’m prone to inordinate “screen time,” a term heavily freighted with negative baggage in our household, and Levi’s childhood will be far more digitally immersed than mine.

And perhaps worse, there’s the prospect of losing my status as resident guru. There are plenty of more technically proficient people in my orbit, but none of them live in my house, and Levi doesn’t ask any of them to read his typed nonsense words.

Most families come to some sort of reckoning when their son beats their dad in basketball. Ours will come when my wife asks Levi for technical support.

On the trail of Dell’s carbon footprint

Posted on December 31st, 2008 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

This was originally posted at ZDNet’s Between the Lines.

Dell has declared itself carbon-neutral, but good luck defining and auditing what that means exactly.

Assembling PCs at Dell’s Hortolandia, Brazil, facility.

(Credit: Dell)

The Wall Street Journal has an interesting story on Dell and its carbon-neutral efforts. In a nutshell: