Shake Up At Yahoo? This Week is A “Biggie”

February 23, 2009
Yahoo CEO, Carol Bartz, is expected to announce a major restructuring in the coming weeks

Yahoo CEO, Carol Bartz, is expected to announce a major restructuring in the coming weeks

Yahoo’s new CEO, Carol Bartz, is ready to announce yet another shake up this week.

Here’s a summary of what the Wall Street Journal has learned so far:

  1. Yahoo CEO believes in a top-down management approach and is expected to streamline the company’s ranks of vice presidents and senior vice presidents. There are currently 8 exec vice presidents and tons of VPs under them;
  2. Despite massive layoffs, Yahoo initiated searches for a number of high-level executives, including for a chief marketing officer;
  3. Hilary Schneider will head Yahoo North America. She’s currently in charge of Yahoo’s advertising, publishing and audience groups in the U.S.
  4. One person will lead Yahoo’s international operations including Europe and Asia (I bet on Senior VP Marco Boerries);
  5. Yahoo’s chief technology officer (CTO), Aristotle Balogh, will also be in charge of product strategy and management;
  6. Bartz is coming in Europe next month!

Facebook Unveils Comments Box Widget For Third Party Sites

February 20, 2009

Joining the social widgets race, Facebook unveiled a Comments Box add-on for third-party Web sites that channels comments back to a user’s Facebook page.

“With the Comments Box, Facebook users on your site can comment on your content, post those comments to their profiles, and share them with their friends on Facebook,” said Rau C. He on the company’s developers blog.

Facebooks comments box

Facebook's comments box

The box is designed to help site developers introduce social Web features to their online properties, He said.

The add-on makes use of Facebook Connect, a sign-on service that lets Facebook members log into other sites with their Facebook IDs and comment using the real names and Facebook profile photo.

Since Connect was launched in December, more than 6,000 developers have used it, with some of their sites experiencing a 40 percent to 50 percent increase in the number of posted comments, Facebook said.


Google Adds Global Warming Data To Google Earth

February 20, 2009

Battling global warming is a worldwide problem, so what better place to understand it than on a worldwide satellite map?

Project Vulcan climate data is added to the global mapping program

Project Vulcan climate data is added to the global mapping program

Google on Friday released a “plug-in” download for its Google Earth showing which states and counties generate the largest volume of greenhouse gases.

The plug-in relies on data from Project Vulcan, an effort to measure the impact of global warming led by Kevin Gurney, an assistant professor at Purdue University, according to a company blog post.

The overlay shows which U.S. states and counties have the highest and lowest emission rates per capita. It is also identifies the sources of those emissions: driving, home heating, etc.

“The results produced by Project Vulcan are publicly available, but they are not easy to analyze for a non-scientist, so during my 20% time at Google I have created dynamic maps of the Vulcan data,” said Site Reliability Engineer Simon Ilyushchenko.

Google engineers get to spend 20 percent of their time on projects of their own design.

Find the download here.


Century 21 Claims Online Ads Perform Better As It Pulls Most Offline Placements

February 20, 2009

Earlier this year, Century 21 Real Estate said it would cancel most of its offline advertising in favor of ads placed on the Web.

Century 21 cuts costs per lead generated by 60% in 2008

Century 21 cut costs per lead generated by 60% in 2008

The decision that came down to getting “the greatest return on our investment,” Senior Vice President Beverly Thorne told eMarketer, according to a Friday blog post.

Before shifting ads from television, radio and print publications, “we measured what came from them in terms of leads generated” each week, Thorne said.

“Our own empirical results showed us that our online investments were performing substantively better at generating leads,” she said. “We have a clear obligation to our franchisees to stimulate clear and tangible leads, not just positive preference.”

She declined to offer details on cost per lead, according to the post, but she said the company cut its costs by more than 60 percent last year while increasing the number of leads it received by 235 percent.


Intel Attempts To Slow Chipset Competition For Its Next-Gen Processors, Deja Vu!

February 20, 2009
Intel sued to prevent Nvidia to make chipsets for the Core i7 processors

Intel sued to prevent Nvidia to make chipsets for the Core i7 processors

I had a sudden flashback when I heard Intel suing Nvidia this week over the rights – or not – to build chipsets for its next generation processors dubbed “Nehalem”.

It was 8 years ago in September 2001, when Intel took Taiwanese-company VIA to court for making chipsets intended for the Pentium 4 processors without a proper license.

However, two years later, Intel eventually dropped its lawsuits against VIA, giving the Taiwanese company the opportunity to produce chipsets for the Pentium 4 with Intel’s blessings.

Now back to Intel’s pre-emptive lawsuit against Nvidia, which by the way did not release nor even built a Nehalem chipset yet.

Some fear that leaving Intel the monopole of building crappy graphics chipsets for the latest Core i7 chip and its successors is bad for competition, especially for the low-end PCs; which I totally disagree.

Large OEM customers like Apple or H-P already careless of Intel’s under-performing integrated graphic chips and are using ATI’s or Nvidia’s instead, as its the case today for the Core 2 Duo and Quad chips.

And as far as the low end goes, Atom-based PCs with a decent ATI or Nvidia graphics chipset is the norm this year!


Electronic Discovery: Separating The Wheat From The Chaff

February 20, 2009

Discovery burdens in civil litigation are growing exponentially. There are a variety of driving factors, including the sheer magnitude of electronically stored information (ESI) and relatively recent amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure that force assessment and handling of ESI early in litigation.

In the past, lawyers used to review documents for relevance, privilege and other determinations in response to production demands. However, dedicating armies of attorneys to analyze oceans of electronic data simply is not cost-effective for clients, especially in this economy.

Dedicating armies of attorneys to analyze oceans of documents is not cost effective, says Eric Sinrod

Dedicating armies of attorneys to analyze oceans of documents is not cost effective, says Eric Sinrod

So what are companies on the receiving end of broad production demands to do in seeking to meet their ediscovery obligations?

In this climate, it is not surprising that a number of providers have come out of the woodwork that offer to manage, search and cull ESI in response to discovery demands. These solutions themselves can be expensive and technically burdensome. Moreover, it can be difficult for companies to evaluate effectively the provider that is appropriate for a given case.

Clearwell Systems provides ediscovery software for early case assessment that is worthy of consideration for cases that are email-intensive in the discovery arena. Clearwell provides the ability to project potential attorney review costs, an early understanding of case facts and key players, and visual insight into chains of email discussions to allow for the pinpointing of important or otherwise missing custodians.

Importantly, Clearwell allows for easy removal of non-responsive information from email collections right up front based on simple inputted criteria, which can cut down on attorney review time in a massive way, to the substantial savings of the company. Indeed, Clearwell reports that review time can be reduced by up to 90%.

Defensible ediscovery truly requires a three-pronged approach. The client company must be involved and must be cooperative. The company must work with a law firm experienced and skilled in ediscovery matters to guide the process. And a technical solution should be put in place to facilitate, expedite and streamline the work of the attorneys. When it comes to email discovery, Clearwell provides a solution worthy of consideration.

This column was written by Eric Sinrod, an attorney at Duane Morris and a guest blogger at TechPulse 360. It was originally published at FindLaw.com.


Monetizing Social Networks Will Change Everything, Says Bill Coleman

February 20, 2009

Learning to monetize the social web will change commerce, as we know it.

Call it the pull economy, says Bill Coleman

Call it the "pull" economy, says Bill Coleman

But we might not figure out how for a decade or more.

This according to Bill Coleman, CEO of cloud-computing company Cassatt and founder of BEA Systems, which Oracle purchased last year.

Computing is becoming a utility, Coleman said this week at the Churchill Club. Computers and software will sit in the cloud, and organizations will pay for what they need like they do other commodities.

It may take 20 years to reach this point, Coleman said.

On top of the computing platform will sit the social network, a person’s dashboard to the world, he added.  Making money from these social networks will occur when people figure out how to let people invite companies into their conversations.

Call it the “pull” economy, Coleman said. And prepare for it to take decades to evolve.

But when it does, it will change everything, he said.


Dell Tries To Free The Netbook Trademark From Psion, For Itself?

February 20, 2009
Dell is fighting for the entire PC industry to make the term netbook trademark-free. But why?

Dell is fighting for the entire PC industry to make the netbook term trademark-free. But why?

The same company that tried to trademark “cloud computing“, filed a petition this week with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office to cancel the “netbook” trademark owned by Psion Teklogix!

Isn’t that funny?

Well, that mysterious Austin, Texas-based company is no other than Dell, the computer maker that is pushing hard its line of… yes, you guessed it… netbooks!

Dell claims that the term “netbook” has become generic and should be used by anyone without worrying about getting sued by the Canadian company.

The computer maker’s “real” intention are open to speculation though, as it could then apply for the netbook trademark after it has being declassified by the USPTO :-)


With 40% Of Global Wealth Gone, Do Not Expect A Quick End To The Downturn

February 19, 2009

This is a balance-sheet downturn, quips Stanford law professor Joseph Grundfest.

This is a balance sheet contraction, says Joseph Grundfest

This is a balance sheet contraction, says Joseph Grundfest

Bank assets are marked down, stocks crashed and home values have fallen.  In the past two years, 40 percent of the world’s wealth disappeared, Grundfest calculates.

“The problem is bigger than government,” he said Thursday at a Churchill Club gathering on the financial crisis. “We shouldn’t fool ourselves into believing (government spending) is going to lead to a vibrant economy in three years.”

If there was one message from the club’s panel discussion it was exactly that: don’t expect a quick turn around. Several panelists predicted the global decline that accelerated in December would last for years.

“This is a drastic resetting of everything,” said Patricia Sueltz, CEO of the startup LogLogic and a former Salesforce.com executive. “We’ve got to lower our expectations.”

There is a drastic resetting of everything, says Patricia Sueltz

There is a drastic resetting of everything, says Patricia Sueltz

While governments in the U.S. and elsewhere hope to spark consumer and business spending with stimulus packages, adjusting product prices will take the market place time.

It is not irrational that banks don’t want to lend into such as environment, says Grundfest. They respond, this “is not in our self interest,” he said.

Bill Coleman, CEO of Cassatt and founder of BEA Systems, predicted that it is possible the U.S. can avoid double-digit unemployment.

But he said the Dow Jones Industrial Average may not stabilize for another couple months at a price not lower than 6,000.


Breakthrough For Solar Cells Touted: Cheaper Materials For Cheaper Cells

February 19, 2009

Scientists at Berkeley and the Lawrence Berkeley National Labs identified nine materials that they claim can be used to construct cheaper solar cells than those made with crystalline silicon.

All nine materials are abundant enough to supply the world’s 17,000 TWh of electricity demand, according to excerpts of a study posted on the American Chemical Society Web site.

The study from Berkeley and the Lawrence Berkeley National Labs also looked at material abundance

The study from Berkeley and the Lawrence Berkeley National Labs also looked at material abundance

Solar cell production today is constrained by cost and availability. Widely used crystalline silicon is both in short supply and too expensive to make low-cost cells. Thin-film technologies now under development hold the potential to be more efficient – thus providing a lower cost per kilowatt hour of electricity – but may not be easily produced on a large scale.

To increase the use of photovoltaics, engineers need to focus not just on developing higher performing cells but on ones that deliver low costs, the scientists say.

Their study narrowed 23 promising semiconductor materials to 12 that were determined to be plentiful enough. It then weeded those 12 to nine gauged potentially inexpensive enough to best crystalline silicon.

The materials include iron pyrite, copper sulfide and copper oxide, according to an article by Semiconductor International.


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