Microsoft Says No To WebKit For Internet Explorer; ActiveX Still Matters

March 19, 2009

Dean Hachamovitch, the general manager of the Internet Explorer team at Microsoft is not yet worried about the recent security breaches in IE8

Dean Hachamovitch, the general manager of the Internet Explorer team at Microsoft is not yet worried about the recent security breaches in IE8

After his keynote at the MIX09 conference, I chat with Dean Hachamovitch, the general manager of the Internet Explorer team at Microsoft about the future of Internet Explorer.

First off, Hachamovitch quickly brushed off the idea of adopting the WebKit engine – used in Apple Safari and Google Chrome – to replace the homegrown Trident engine.

The Microsoft executive also touched on the company’s Research Lab Gazelle engine “that is not a replacement for Internet Explorer’s engine but is actually using it.”

Second, despite pushing for smaller “add-ons” for its Accelerator, Web Slices or Visual Search suggestions, Microsoft is not abandoning ActiveX. “ActiveX is still going to be used for super rich applications,” confirms Hachamovitch.

On the latest security issue affecting IE8, Microsoft is still evaluating how the hackers breached the browser’s security and if the hackers made any “assumptions” for their brute force attacks. “I also want to remind you that all the browsers were taken down. It was not just IE8. But also Safari and Firefox,” adds Hachamovitch.


Blackberry Apps Store To Keep Applications In The Cloud

March 19, 2009

Research in Motion expects to unveil its App World store for Blackberry mobile applications this month, though it won’t offer a specific date.

“Very soon,” is all Senior Vice President Alan Brenner would say during an onstage interview at the 2009 Wireless Innovations conference in Silicon Valley.

Store will have quality and quantity, says Alan Brenner

Store will have quality and quantity, says Alan Brenner

What Brenner did say is that the smartphone maker expects to have both the quality and quantity of applications to attract users. He also said RIM will store applications in the cloud for users to download as often as they would like.

The use case goes like this. Suppose a user deletes an application. He or she can download it again for free. Or perhaps users have purchased more applications than they can store on their phone.

They can manage their applications in the cloud, deleting existing ones to make room for new ones and then reloading the old ones when they are through.

“We expect to have many high quality applications,” he said. “We expect to have the numbers, too.”


Cisco Buys Flip Video Camera Maker For $600 Million; But Why? Looks Like A Bailout

March 19, 2009
Flip is all about fun. And Cisco?

Flip is all about fun. And Cisco?

After weeks of rumours, Cisco Systems finally confirmed today that it bought Pure Digital Technologies, the maker of the popular Flip digital video camera; which sold more than two million devices since May 2007.

Flip, a new form of visual networking!

The acquisition amount is simply staggering for the popular maker of the sub $200 video cameras; around $590 million plus up to $15 million in retention bonuses.

Is Cisco’s trying to bailout Silicon Valley’s venture capital industry? The San Francisco, Calif.-based startup “only” raised around $68 million over the last 5-years from a number of firms, including Sequoia Capital and Benchmark Capital.

Will Flip, go the way Skype did for eBay?

But the biggest question is why a video camera maker, and why so much? Common Cisco folks, tell me I’m not the only one puzzling around this.

Recently, Cisco CEO recently said that in these tough economic times, “companies with cash are king, queen and the royal family,” and the San Jose, Calif.-company has over $29 billion in cash and short term investments. But, it doesn’t mean that you could waste it in over-paying for futile gadgets, John!

Pure Digital will be part of Cisco’s consumer business group, which includes Linksys home routers and set-top boxes from its acquisition of Scientific-Atlanta.


EBay Saw Big Growth In Mobile Last Year

March 19, 2009

“Our objective is to extend the eBay market place” to mobile users, says Max Mancini, senior director of platform and mobile at the company.

And apparently with some success.

Users bid on auctions from their phones and search for products, eBay says

Users bid on auctions from their phones and search for products, eBay says

According to Mancini, eBay saw a big jump in revenue last year at eBay Mobile. He declines to offer figures, but says he hopes to release metrics sometime this year.

It turns out people do with their phones what they would have done with their computers: bid on auctions and search for products.

So what does eBay find interesting in terms of emerging mobile technologies? Bar code scanning, for one, that enables people to search with their phones for more information on a product or its price.

Second on the list are the local inventory services that let shoppers locate available product inventory at a nearby stores.

“That really is going to change the way people interact with shopping,” says Mancini.


[MIX09] Day 2 Internet Explorer 8 To Officially Launch; But Security Already Breached

March 19, 2009

ie8logoIt’s all about Internet Explorer 8 today at Mix09.

At a keynote (in a couple minutes), Dean Hachamovitch, the general manager of the Internet Explorer team at Microsoft, will formally unveil the browser; which can be downloaded here. You can learn more about IE8 features here.

Internet Explorer 8 security is already breached

A day earlier, a hacker attending the CanSecWest conference in Vancouver ran a successful exploit against IE8, defying Microsoft’s latest built in protection technologies- DEP (Data Execution Prevention) as well as ASLR (Address Space Layout Randomization).

The exploit was done during the PWN2OWN hacking contest held at CanSecWest and sponsored by security company TippingPoint; which started the Zero Day Initiative “rewarding security researchers for responsibly disclosing vulnerabilities.”

Security is one of Microsoft’s major talking point for the IE8 release. Oh, well… next time :-)


Adobe Brushes Off Microsoft Silverlight 3 Improvements

March 18, 2009

silverlight-vs-flashNot impressed. That’s how I’ll summarize Adobe’s response to Microsoft’s Silverlight 3 release today.

“We’ve been watching the announcements made from the MIX 09 conference and thus far we haven’t seen any real surprises. There doesn’t seem to be advancements on the capabilities that Adobe already provides Web developers,” confided to me an Adobe spokesperson.

With Silverlight, Microsoft duplicates Adobe (sounds familiar? Apple?)

“In fact, a large number of these product capabilities are duplicates, or near duplicates of features that we’ve already got in the market – in shipping software, while Microsoft is simply demoing these capabilities for upcoming releases.

Silverlight 3 “outside the browser” offline support is old news

“Given the success we’ve seen with AIR as well as how Adobe innovation appears to work its way into Microsoft products, it makes sense that Microsoft is also talking about offline support in Silverlight 3.

Originally, at MIX 2007 the focus for Silverlight offline support was on fully functional apps that were built using WPF – but those applications were Windows only.

At MIX 2009, they announced that in the future Silverlight applications can work offline, and the functionality seems to be that developers will be able to allow users to put a “bookmark” of an application on the desktop.”

Offline Silverlight is no match to Adobe AIR

“It appears Microsoft is attempting to claim the benefits of AIR without actually providing them, since AIR allows Web developers to build applications that are cross‐platform and have access to functionality that is available only outside of the browser, for example access to client‐side files or background processing of notifications.”


Microsoft Adds 3D, HD, GPU Support To Silverlight 3

March 18, 2009
Microsoft boosts graphics capabilities in Silverlight 3

Microsoft boosts graphics capabilities in Silverlight 3

In Silverlight 3 beta unveiled today at the Mix09 conference, Microsoft significantly improved its graphics capabilities and performance, bringing it on par with Adobe Flash.

The runtime gets hardware-based graphics acceleration, supports high-definition video playback in full-screen mode (720p and higher), 3-D, pixel shader effects, as well as new multimedia codecs like AAC audio and MPEG-4 based H.264; allowing for smoother and higher quality streaming videos.

And with new graphics APIs, developers can also develop and plug their own codecs.

Microsoft confirmed that there will be one more beta of Silverlight before it’s final release later this year.


Business Only Perception Of Blackberry Out Of Date

March 18, 2009

Most people think of a Blackberry as a business tool used most by executives and managers on the go.

Blackberry is gaining market share, says Alan Brenner

Blackberry is gaining market share, says Alan Brenner

But most people might be wrong. The perception is increasingly off the mark, says Alan Brenner, senior vice president at Blackberry builder Research in Motion.

“The enterprise focus of Blackberry is really maybe an out of date image,” Brenner said at the 2009 Wireless Innovations conference in Silicon Valley.

There are about 25 million active Blackberry users, he during an onstage interview. Fifty percent are enterprise user and 50 percent are consumers.

“We are increasingly doing both” consumer and business markets, he said, adding that this focus is visible in the devices the company has recently released.

As to the pace of business, smartphones remain one bright spot in today’s dark market place. In this environment, Blackberry is gaining share, he said.


Microsoft Silverlight Now Runs “Outside The Browser”; Just Like Adobe AIR

March 18, 2009

silverlight-oob1With Silverlight’s “outside the browser” capability, Microsoft’s Rich Internet Application (RIA) strategy looks more and more like Adobe’s, if not identical!

RIAs can now run directly on a Windows or a Mac desktop without requiring any additional software to install (like .NET or Windows Presentation Foundation), as long as you already have the Silverlight 3 runtime on your machine.

At Mix09, Microsoft showed a demo of Seattle-based KEXP radio that developed an impressive RIA application that runs on the desktop, with both online and offline capabilities.

To me, Microsoft and Adobe are now on par for RIAs running on desktops.

KEXP radio has developed an amazing Silverlight RIA running on the desktop

KEXP radio has developed an amazing Silverlight RIA running on the desktop


Analyst: Solid State Drives Will Never Match Hard Disks In Price And Capacity

March 18, 2009

Analyst Jim Handy does not expect prices for SSDs to match HDDs

Last week, Brian Beard, a Samsung executive, went out and predicted that solid state drives (SSD) will soon be as cheap if not even cheaper than hard disk drives.

For now, it looks like a far out shot as currently a 256GB SSD – the highest capacity commercially available – costs around $489 for the Super Talent SSD, versus less than $80 for the equivalent disk drive. That’s 6 times less!

For Jim Handy, Objective Analysis’ analyst covering the Flash industry, the price parity between SSDs and HDDs sounds indeed like a pipe dream.

“Samsung does make both HDDs and SSDs, so these comments should be balanced, but I suspect the HDD side is regretting Brian Beard’s comments right now [Beard is in the SSD group],” said Handy.

However, Beard has a point. If the 60 per cent annual megabyte price decline of NAND continues – versus 40 to 45 per cent for HDDs – it’s just a matter of a few years before the dollar-per-gigabyte price parity is reached.

The problem is that the 60 per cent per year price reduction is not sustainable by cost reductions alone, according to SanDisk’s CEO, Eli Harari.

So what to believe? Here’s what Jim Handy had to say on the issue raised by Beard.

Price parity will never happen as long as HDD prices keep pace with SSD’s

If you ask when an SSD will cost the same as an HDD, well, that has always been the case, as long as the SSD is significantly smaller than an HDD.  If you want to know when an SSD will match the price AND the capacity of an HDD, that is unlikely to occur for at least for another decade, if ever.  HDD price per gigabyte drops at a rate that is between 40 to 50 per cent per year. So it’s keeping pace with SSDs and it’s projected to continue to do that over the long term.

NAND Flash is selling below cost, but it’s bouncing back

Something that many people don’t seem to realize is that manufacturing cost really does limit the speed at which prices can fall.  When the market moves from profitability to losses (during the transition from an undersupply to an oversupply) prices drop very quickly to absorb all the margins.

During this time a 60 per cent price drop is possible – even normal.  Once prices have reached manufacturing costs the fall will slow to match the speed at which costs decline.  For NAND that rate is 40 per cent per year.  We are actually in a market today where NAND has sold below cost, but it’s bouncing back up to cost.

Micron might file an anti-dumping suit against Asian rivals

It is very likely that Micron, in a year or two, will file an anti-dumping complaint against other NAND makers for the period during which NAND was selling for below $2.00/GB, since most manufacturers’ cost is about $2.00 today. The treat of such lawsuits forces NAND (or DRAM) makers to keep their prices above costs.

NAND Flash pricing is very predictable

NAND pricing is actually pretty predictable to anyone who has lived through a number of down cycles in commodity memory markets and has come to understand the very predictable path this pricing follows.


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 29 other followers