[Analysis] Microsoft Windows 7 Is Essentially Vista; But Smaller, Faster

April 30, 2009
Roger Kay, President, Endpoint Technologies

Roger Kay, President at Endpoint Technologies is optimistic about Windows 7. I'm not!

A little less than 2-years after the launch of the much hated Windows Vista, Microsoft is getting ready to launch its successor.

Windows 7 is expected to be pre-installed in consumers PCs as early as the end of summer, just in time for the back-to-school season.

Under the hood, Windows 7 is essentially Vista, according to Endpoint Technologies analyst Roger Kay.

But for Kay, Windows 7 is better than Vista in important ways:

  1. Smaller footprint — The new OS takes up less disk space and runs with less main memory; part of the release surprise is the actual hardware specifications, which are similar to those for Windows XP, Vista’s less-resource-hungry predecessor.
  2. Faster — Everything is faster: boot time, application loading, overall performance.
  3. Quiescent — A lot of the old “chattiness” of Vista, particularly of user account control, is gone; the user interface stays out of your face and does what you tell it to do.
  4. More elegant — There are many fun and intuitive features that work well, stay in the background otherwise, and look good; the interface can be personalized more easily and to a greater degree.

Sounds like a MacOS me-too, right?

I’ll be testing the final release of Windows 7 soon on a Mac virtualized environment – just to fasten the comparison! – and will report back!


[Analysis] Palm Pre: Hype Precedes Reality, Time Is Running Out

April 30, 2009
Spray and Pray. Thats how I would describe Palms hunt for real reviewers. As Dells Andy Lark pointed out recently, its easy to identify the influencers. Just start Googling!

Spray and Pray. That's how I would describe Palm's hunt for "real reviewers". As Dell's Andy Lark pointed out recently, it's easy to identify the "influencers." Just start Googling!

Pressure is mounting on Palm as it gets closer to launching its new Pre smartphone, rumored to be just a couple weeks away, in mid-May.

For Collins Stewart analyst Ashok Kumar, Palm may be facing much more challenges than it can bear.

Pre faces multiple software and hardware issues

In a report this morning, Kumar writes about multiple hardware and software issues that forced Palm to dramatically reduced its production orders for the Pre; calling Wall Street’s expectation of Palm shipping 1+ million smart phones in 2H09, highly unrealistic.

Palms future depends on the Pres successful launch

Palm's future depends on the success of its Pre smartphone

Pre must sell at or below $199

For Kumar, if Sprint does not match or beat AT&T’s subsidized iPhone price of $199, which translates to a subsidy in excess of $200, the Pre is Dead On Arrival.

According to a virtual teardown done by analyst firm iSuppli, the material cost for the Pre is $170. iSupply expects Palm to charge Sprint $300 for the Pre, which in turn would subsidies the device to reach the iPhone level.

Running out of cash… again!

Kumar said that Palm’s cash burn was about $90 million last quarter, which should increase significantly with higher marketing cost associated with the launch of the Pre platform.

With only $220 million in the bank, time runs out in two quarters, Kumar notes.

But Palm might found a way to reduce its marketing “spend” by recruiting “Real Reviewers” of Palm phones including the Palm Pre. Every reviewer, will receive for free, a current model Palm phone and a data plan for six months. The only requirement is to regularly post about the Palm phone on blogs and social networks.

It’s smart for Palm to try to target “influencers” (journalists, bloggers, soccer Moms…). A strategy that was highly recommended at yesterday’s PRSA event on “PR Secret Strategies For Success” by PR pros from Dell, FICO and Sun. For the bloggers, it’s a double-edge sword: get an early access to the Pre, but risk selling your soul or at least the perception of it.

We already played with the Pre at CES, last January. The keyboard is nice – similar to the Palm Treo Pro – but the rest of the experience (features, applications) will need time to get use to it. We’ll stick with our iPhone, Blackberry and soon Google G1 for now!

Still, no takers, for Palm

Finally, Kumar does not believe that Palm is an attractive take out candidate.

“Their crown jewel is the operating system, but the smart phone industry is migrating away from closed to open platforms. As such PALM is on the wrong side of the fence,” writes the financial analyst.

While I agree that in this distress economy, Palm is an expensive and risky buy – which generally does not go well together – Palm’s WebOS is a much more “open” system than the highly successful iPhone.


Want Publicity? Start Your Own Blog, Media Site

April 29, 2009

As the old French adage goes, “One is never so well served as by one-self.”

And for PR pros that could also mean becoming… a publisher!

“Don’t underestimate the potential of self-publising and developing your own powerful blog or media site,” said Dell’s Vice President of Large Enterprise Marketing and Online, Andy Lark. 

Speaking today at PRSA’s event on “PR Secret Strategies For Success” Lark argued that the vacuum created by the collapse of publishing – Fortune Small Business magazine was just taken off the stand -and in particular in the high-tech sector, left Oracle magazine and Dell’s Power Solutions magazine as the 2 most distributed tech magazine in the world, ahead of IDG’s InfoWorld.

“Increasingly the “private label” publications is starting to dominate the media landscape with deeper reach and richer content,” added Lark.

For Lark, there’s no reason why even a small startup can not become a large publisher, with a site that agregates content and finally end up with a bigger circulation very quickly than any of the tradional media sites.

I agree this can be true for companies launching publications focused on their core market. Like Seagate’s blogs on digital storage or RSA’s security blog.

But I find hard to believe that these “private label” blogs will provide a fair and balance view of competitors, flaws, etc…

And there will always be a room for high-quality reporting, in “traditional” media, blog or whatever you want to call it.


Dell Worries About Bloggers, Not Mossberg

April 29, 2009

I have an advice to the many startups in the Valley, after you watch the video: don’t try this at home!

One of the many funny moments at today’s PRSA event titled “PR in a Down Economy: Secret Strategies For Success” was when Dell’s Vice President of Large Enterprise Marketing and Online, Andy Lark, talked about blogs versus the traditional media, and how bloggers keep him awake at night, and not the Wall Street Journal’s consumer technology journalist, Walt Mossberg.

“When I wake up in the morning at Dell, I’m not worried about what Walt Mossberg is going to write. I’m worried about what Ryan, and guys writing at Engadget and Gizmodo… They are more like to break a story than any journalist out there except Justin Scheck from the Wall Street Journal,” jokes Lark.

Scheck recently wrote an investigative piece on Dell’s plans to sell its first smart phone.

If you’re the size of Dell you might get away snobbing someone as influential as Mossberg. But if you’re not, there are many ways to “pitch” him – at conferences he attends for example – and you don’t necessarily need a PR firm for that!

[Update] In his Thursday column in the Wall Street Journal, Mossberg reviewed 2 Dell consumer products – the Adamo super-thin laptop and the Studio One all-in-one desktop – noting that “with these machines, Dell is making a strong bid to win back consumers’ hearts. It’s off to a decent start.” Sounds nice to me. Wonder if that’s why Lark was not worried about what Mossberg is writing!


In A Slow Merger Market, Companies Like ShotSpotter Make Discriminating Buyers

April 29, 2009

It is no secret that many venture-backed startups would give their first-born children to be acquired.

That’s because the alternative is bleak. VCs are handing out cash slower than they have in a decade, and many companies without suitors are forced to close their doors.

Unfortunately for many of these partner-hungry startups, the deal flow also is at a low. In the first quarter, only 68 venture-backed companies were sold, down 35 percent from 104 a year earlier.

People do approach us monthly, if not weekly interested in being acquired, says James Beldock

"People do approach us monthly, if not weekly" interested in being acquired, says James Beldock

That makes ShotSpotter’s deal announced Tuesday all the more worth looking at. ShotSpotter announced the acquisition of Planning Systems, a unit of QinetiQ North America, for an undisclosed amount.

“People do approach us monthly, if not weekly,” says James Beldock, CEO of ShotSpotter, referring to the stream of startups eager to sell themselves.

But instead of a deal simply to increase the company’s size, Beldock settled on a merger with hands-down strategic value.

ShotSpotter sells technology that enables police departments in cities around the country to pinpoint the location of gunshots. It uses sensors, as many as 20 per square mile, to continuously monitor troubled areas.

Planning Systems makes a similar technology for military and defense markets. And it has key sensor patents.

“It clearly is a buyer’s market,” says Beldock. And that buyer is more discriminating than ever.


Roku, Tivo, Microsoft On The Future Of TV

April 28, 2009

At SD Forum’s event on Digital Media, media expert Jimmy Schaeffler of the Carmel Group asked executives from Roku, Tivo and Microsoft their vision about the future of television.

t

Timothy Twerdahl, Vice President of Consumer Products at Roku

For Timothy Twerdahl, Vice President of Consumer Products at Roku it’s all about the cloud:

“Our vision is that the community is going to help us figure this out. So we have this open SDK and people are going to create channels they are interested in, local things they want to know and we’ll see what gets picked up… [The future of TV] is not DVR or streamed DV, but everything in the cloud, not necessarily at a head-end but really at the service provider that owns the content and is going to distribute it.”

f

Jim Denney, Vice President, Product Marketing at TiVo

For Jim Denney, Vice President, Product Marketing at TiVo it’s search:

“One of the critical points is being able to allow people to sort through all the content choice that they have, and do that quickly and simply. Getting people the content that they want is going to be a hot topic.”

Christine Heckart

Christine Heckart, General Manager Marketing at Microsoft TV

For Christine Heckart, General Manager Marketing at Microsoft TV it’s the experience:

“The future of television is an all on-demand experience that scale, and you get what you want, when and on the device where you want to have it, wherever you happen to be in the world.”


Roku To Open Up Netflix Player; At Least 10 More New Channels Coming

April 28, 2009

 

The Roku digital video player now plays Amazon and Netflix video content

The Roku digital video player now plays Amazon and Netflix video content

After months of hinting to it, Roku is finally ready to open up its digital video player to all developers, starting this summer.

Speaking today at the SD Forum event on Digital Media, Roku’s Vice President of Consumer Products, Timothy Twerdahl now expects at least 10 more channels to be available on the company’s set-top box by the end of the year.

“So far the software development kit was made available only to large content owners and distributors like Amazon, as well as large contractors,” confirmed Twerdahl.

As of today, only Netflix contents and Amazon video on-demand service are streamed through the Saratoga, Calif.-startup set-top box; which debuted 11 months ago as the Netflix Player and sold more than 100,000 according to Twerdahl.

Developers might have to “certify” their channels for Roku

One of the unresolved issue around opening up the set-top box is the certification of the various channels created for it. “We’re still working on that,” admitted Twerdahl when asked if Roku will adopt the Apple model of certifying each applications for the iPhone before it reaches the App Store. “It surely slows things down.”

Twerdahl also confirmed that it will be soon possible to view photos and stream music-only channels through the Roku box.

“The future of TV is that everything will be available on-demand from the cloud,” added Twerdahl.


Intel, Nvidia Capitalize On Better Graphics Chip Market

April 28, 2009

Yes, the PC and graphics chip market still stinks. But it didn’t stink as badly in the first quarter as it did in the fourth quarter.

And Intel and Nvidia made the most of it.

Graphics chip market rebounds (a bit)

Graphics chip market rebounds (a bit)

Overall, sales of graphics chips used in computers and other devices fell 21 percent to 74.9 million units, said Jon Peddie Research.

But Intel’s sales rose 7.5 percent from the fourth quarter and Nvidia climbed 4.8 percent as both companies gained market share.

Sales at AMD suffered, falling 8.5 percent.

Here is Jon Peddie’s forecast for the future:

“Things probably aren’t going to get back to the normal seasonality till Q3 this year, and we won’t hit the levels of 2008 until 2010…We are still predicting an upturn in the PC market in Q3 and Q4.”

The firm also says it expects new designs this year from Nvidia and AMD’s ATI. Seems like AMD will need them to be successful


Hulu Is A Rocket Ship As Online Video Viewing Spring Back To Life In March

April 28, 2009

It seems February’s nervousness is subsiding when it comes to viewing videos online.

Hulu becomes third most trafficed video site

Hulu becomes third most trafficed video site

After a 12 percent decline in video traffic during the month, video use rebounded in March, returning to more normal growth trends. Traffic rose 11 in March v. February, according to comScore.

Hulu, the television site started by Fox and NBC, led the way. For the first time, Hulu cracked the top three video sites, passing Yahoo and following just Google (read: You Tube) and Fox Interactive (read: MySpace).

Google accounted for 41 percent of videos viewed on line – by far the leader. Fox’s market share is 3 percent. But it may not remain in second place for long.

Hulu’s share is 2.6 percent and it is closing fast.

Watch out MySpace, your days may be numbered.


Analysis: General Electric 500GB Holographic Disc Is Too Costly For Consumer Success

April 28, 2009
Holographic discs could be the technology after Blu-ray

G.E.'s holographic discs could be the technology after Blu-ray

Yesterday General Electric said it successfully developed a digital storage technology that will allow standard-size discs to hold the equivalent of 100 DVDs or about 20 single-layer Blu-ray discs.

G.E.’s holographic discs could hold 500 gigabytes of data, when Blu-ray stores 25-gigabyte to 50-gigabyte, and a standard DVD holds 5 gigabytes.

When this next-generation disc comes in 2011 or 2012, G.E. expects it will cost less than 10 cents a gigabyte. When Blu-ray was introduced in late 2006, a 25-gigabyte disc cost nearly $1 a gigabyte, and is about half that now.

Furthermore, as a reader pointed out, the $2,700 player price tag will also have to come down to the $200-$300 level before the technology gets any mass-market traction.

But for storage expert Tom Coughlin, of Atascadero, Calif.-analyst firm Coughlin Associates, 500 gigabytes might just not be enough with ultra-HD and 3D coming to your home soon.

Tom Coughlin is an expert in digital storage and organiser of the Creative Storage conference

Tom Coughlin is an expert in digital storage and organiser of the Creative Storage conference

Follows, Coughlin’s take on G.E.’s technology:

I think G.E.’s holographics will be useful for high resolution video content. For instance the ultra-HD format being promoted by NHK in Japan would have 8k resolution requiring about 16 times the storage capacity of a Blu-ray. Combined with 3D this could require at least 500 GB and possibly more.

The argument for physical distribution is that for high resolution content it will remain cheaper and faster to buy a disc than download the content.

Too costly for consumers

However, regarding the price I think it must ultimately be less than 10 cents a GB to be popular. At 10 cents a disc a 500 GB disk would cost $50 and I don’t think consumers would pay that price. I think the price of a disc must be less than $10 in volume (without any cost for the content). Note that Blu-ray has had to quickly discount their prices to increase demand for the new format.

But a higher capacity physical format at the right price point could be very attractive for future high resolution content distribution.


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