Logitech Unveils $300 Google TV Box (Video)

October 6, 2010

Logitech CEO unveils the Revue, the world's first Google TV set top box

At a press conference this morning Logitech CEO unveiled the world’s first Google TV set-top box.

The Revue is available today for “pre-order” online at Logitech.com, BestBuy.com, Amazon.com and, in 2 to the 3 weeks on retail shelves.

With this set-top box, the almost 30-year old company targets the 60 million HD TV households in the US.

“Google TV is the first platform that integrates the Web, broadcast TV and applications seamlessly,” said Logitech CEO Gerry Quindlen.

But at $300, the Logitech Revue is going to be a hard sell. So far, no manufacturers, including Apple, succeeded in selling a set-top box at this pricepoint.

So good luck with that!


Opinion: Amazon To Drop Kindle 3 Price At $99 By Holidays

July 29, 2010

The new Kindle will reach mass market status at the magical $99 price point

As Amazon plans to release a cheaper Kindle next month, the smaller, lighter, faster, brighter e-reader will actually reach “mass market” status when its price drops below $100, instead of $139 today (Wi-Fi only).

“That’s the magic price point for consumers,” confirms Netgear CEO Patrick Lo. “Our retail experience shows that consumers are more willing to buy 2 products at $99 than one at $199.”

So my advice to you is that, if you’re not in a hurry to jump in the e-reader bandwagon of course, to simply wait until mid-December, to buy the Kindle 3 at a $40 discount.

That will also give you the time to evaluate other options, such as smartphones and more complete Tablet PCs – like the Apple iPad – that will lets you read e-books, browse the Web, check e-mails and much more.

But at $99, there’s hardly any reason not to treat yourself with one for Christmas!


Apple iPad To Disrupt eReader, Netbook Markets

January 27, 2010

Apple's iPad is a nice PC tablet that outperforms current high-end eReaders at a lower price

Despite all the buzz prior to its unveiling earlier today during Steve Jobs’ keynote (you can watch it here), the iPad is anything but magical or revolutionary as Apple CEO wants us to believe.

Consider the iPad as a big iPod touch or an iPod touch XL or DX (in honour to the large sized Kindle).

Super thin, unbelievably light, reasonably priced

First, the good news. The iPad is really thin (half an inch), super light (1.5 lb) and has a 10-hours battery life and 1-month standby; a great achievement for a device that thin.

At CES, a couple weeks ago, Nvidia showed  a Tegra-powered tablet with 16-hours HD video playback time or  140 hours of audio playback, surpassing the iPad. Note that these numbers were for  tablet prototypes and might be better or worse on the final product.

Starting at $499, the iPad looks cheap compared to the similarly sized Amazon Kindle DX, which sells for $10 more: the iPad has a full colour screen, can browse the Web, read ebooks (with the iBooks app and the ePub format) and run applications (games, maps, social networking…).

All these things that the Kindle just can’t do. But to be fair, we’d have to compare the Amazon device with the 3G data-only connection (and Wi-Fi) iPad version, which then costs a whopping $630, without the optional data plan – but included with the Kindle.

The optional Bluetooth keyboard dock transforms the iPad into an "interesting" netbook

No Flash, camera, USB port and extended storage

Now the bad news.

As its smaller siblings, the iPad still doesn’t support Flash, which makes it a poor device to browse the Web, even compared to other ARM-based tablets – running Linux or Google Chrome OS for example – which offer support for Adobe’s Web video technology.

More surprising is the lack of an integrated camera. Not sure why this design choice, especially as the iPhone has one; making me think that the iPad is really just a souped-up iPod touch.

The lack of a USB port and an extended storage (e.g. an SD card slot) are two additional unpleasant surprises. However, Apple does sell a dongle to copy photos from a camera through a USB connector or an SD card slot.

The iPad is a killer eReader

All in all, the iPad is anything but magical or revolutionary. But I can see it be a cheap Mac (although it can’t run MacOS apps), an Apple version of a netbook, with its optional keyboard.

“Netbooks aren’t better at anything! They’re slow, they have low quality displays and run clunky old PC software. They’re not better than a laptop in anything. They’re just cheaper. They’re just cheap laptops,” Jobs joked.

Moreover, the iPad relatively lower price could very well disrupt the whole eReader market, that is currently inundated with over-priced devices like the Kindle or the $400 Sony Daily Edition. And I’m not sure the sleek Skiff e-reader stands a chance now.


Scribd Reaches Profitability, Hiring (video)

October 15, 2009
Scribd is storing 10 times more words than Wikipedia!

Scribd is storing 10 times more words than Wikipedia!

At Dow Jones’ VentureWire Tech Showcase event yesterday I met with Scribd co-founder Jared Friedman to talk about the San Francisco, Calif.-startup’s latest news: reaching profitability and hiring engineers.

“Scribd is the largest social publishing website where anyone can publish original writings and documents and share them with the world,” explains Friedman.

What is sometimes referred as the YouTube for documents has so far raised $13 million and stores more than 10 million documents which translates to more than 35 billion words – 10 times the size of Wikipedia! “We’re storing 1% of all public documents on the Web.”

How Scribd deals with piracy; sees Amazon, Google as main competitors

As for piracy- uploads of copyrighted documents – Scribd has developed technologies to help prevent copyright infringement.

“When infringing works are uploaded to Scribd they are matched against a huge library of reference database that we’ve assembled that has a huge list of works that are copyrighted. And if they found to be a match they are taken out immediately,” adds Friedman.

For Friedman, Google (with its Books initiative) and Amazon (with the Kindle) will ultimately be Scribd main competitors.

The 40-employees startup reached profitability in the second quarter this year, monetising through targeted ads – which displays on the side of every documents – and revenue share for every document sold on its service.

The other good news is that Scribd is actively hiring engineers!

Follows is my interview with Friedman.


Vudu Goes 100% Cloud, Adds Rotten Tomatoes (video)

October 13, 2009

At a press conference last night, Vudu unveiled its new “streamed” user interface (UI) “living in the cloud” with movie recommendation service Rotten Tomatoes.

Vudu downplays own set-top box

Last August, the HD streaming video service, which directly competes with Amazon HD, resurfaced as a 100% “cloud” service, with both the UI and the video content being streamed over the Internet. “We launched our streaming service on Aug 31st and this will be the third update of the service since then… versus having to update the firmware [of the set-top box or TV] every time you want to change a font or tweak the UI,” said Vudu executive vice president of strategy Ed Lichty.

The Santa Clara, Calif.-based startup is now licensing its technology to “high-volume” consumer electronics makers such as LG and Mitsubishi – which embed Vudu in their flat-screen TVs and Blu-Ray players – and has mostly given up trying selling its own set-top box for $150.

“When we launched originally (in 2007) the UI and everything was resident on the box… We still sell it [the box], we still support it, they’re very important customers for us, but the future for sure is in this embedded world,” explained Lichty to me.

Largest HD movie selection on the Web, “buy to own”

Vudu claims to provide “a-la carte” nearly all the latest DVD movies available (over 16,000 now) – while Netflix is focused on older content – and to be the only one streaming 1080p HD content (2,200 titles) with its HDX technology (which does require a minimum bandwidth of 4.5Mbps), when Amazon is still limited to 780p.

That’s in part due to Vudu’s proprietary compression technology and its use of content delivery networks (CDN).

At this point, only a handful of online HD movies are available for sale (buy to own), from Disney and some independent movie studios. “That’s a big area we’re pushing for in our studio relationships right now… if they [movie studios] want people to buy and own digital content, it really needs to be in HD.”

No Web channel support yet

However, Vudu’s new cloud service does not support Internet services yet – but the set-top box does – like YouTube, Pandora, Flickr or Picasa, but promised it will be added soon. “We understand there’s real demand for it and we do plan to expand to include these services at some point,” added Lichty.

No Hulu on TVs

Finally, Lichty confided that he doesn’t see the Hulu content coming to set-top boxes or other consumer electronics devices like TVs or Blu-Ray players anytime soon because it will compete head-to-head with the studio relationships with their cable partners.

Follows is my conversation with Lichty,

… as well as Lichty formal presentation of the new service at the Dolby theatre.

Finally, is a short video of Dolby marketing director John Griffin, giving a tour of the company’s “reference” theatre, which is a very quiet “box in a box,” ideal to showcase movie premieres:


Tech Price Watch: External 2TB Disk Drives For $180

October 6, 2009
An external 2TB disk drive from SimpleTech is only $10 more than the internal equivalent from Seagate

An external 2TB disk drive from SimpleTech is only $10 more than its internal equivalent from Seagate

Disk drive prices simply defy gravity… and probably economics too!

Looking at Fry’s Electronics daily ads in the San Jose Mercury News, I couldn’t help but being amazed at how quickly disk drives prices are plunging on a weekly, if not daily basis.

Today, the best value for an internal drive, is the 1.5TB 3.5″ Samsung drive at only $80. If you prefer an external drive, SimpleTech’s 2TB Duo Pro Drive Quad (Firewire, eSATA and USB) is hard to beat at only $180. And an external 2TB Seagate desktop drive will cost you $180.

If that’s still too much, I’m sure you can still find SimpleTech’s 1TB external drive for under $90 or its internal cousin (from Hitachi) at $85!

For laptops, Hitachi is still the king of the hill with a 500GB notebook hard drive at just $80 (and just $10 more on Amazon). I also liked Seagate’s 1.5TB Expansion drive for $125, although it’s only $5 more at Amazon with free shipping.

Really no matter where you buy your drive, you’ll almost certain to get a bargain. Happy shopping!


Can Cloud Computing Scale At Amazon And Elsewhere?

August 4, 2009

At the heart of the cloud computing debate is the assumption that the cloud can scale to significant heights. But can it?

Some Amazon customers complain they cant get all the computers they want (and need)

Some Amazon customers complain they can't get all the computers they want (and need)

Some customers say services, such as Amazon’s Elastic Compute Cloud, or EC2, are already bumping up against capacity limits – even at this early stage.

The three-year-old Internet-based service from Amazon allows customers to rent computers in the Amazon cloud, or data center, to install and run their applications.

Need more computer power? Pay for the extra CPU time by the hour. But some customers say it isn’t as easy as that. That’s because Amazon can’t install new equipment fast enough. The consequence is customers say they have difficulty getting the full number of machines they want, when they want them.

The customers asked not to be named for fear of endangering their relationship with Amazon.

But one entrepreneur said he asked for 1,000 additional servers and got only 500. Another recently requested an expansion of his compute farm by an additional 1,000 servers and couldn’t get the extra power.

The explanation appears to be that Amazon is unable to handle the spike in traffic that would occur if the new facilities were required simultaneously. In fact, the company appears to be working on a scheduling application that would allow it to better plan for spikes in customer needs.

The application would let customers schedule their workloads.

So will the cloud ultimately deliver the ease of use and flexibility advocate say it should? Only if it is big enough to replicate the in-house computers companies rely on to run their businesses.

That would make it one awfully large cloud.


Q&A With Ian Freed, Amazon Kindle Chief On Color, Touchscreen, Web Browsing And More

May 8, 2009
Ian Freed is Amazons vice president in charge of the Kindle e-book reader

Ian Freed is Amazon's vice president in charge of the Kindle e-book reader

I had a conversation this morning with Ian Freed, Amazon’s VP and general manager for the Kindle e-book reader.

In the 20-minutes or so we had, we covered a lot of grounds, including why he doesn’t think touchscreen and color is ready for prime-time on the Kindle.

Here’s an edited excerpt of our conversation:

What does DX stand for?
It stands for deluxe because it includes a larger screen, more capacity, plus the ability to read documents in their original form (8.5 by 11) or A4 document.

Why did Amazon raise prices on certain e-books?
That’s actually not a correct assumption. We always had variable pricing with e-books since the day we introduced Kindle. So there’s always been a range. We have made a commitment for the New York Times best sellers to be $9.99. But if you look in the catalog, pricing is in different ranges for all kind of different books. And just like in physical bookstores, prices move around a little bit.

Any plans to add touchscreen capabilities to the Kindle?
We thought about touchscreen. Our goal though is to create the best reading experience as possible. But what we’ve seen so far is whenever there was a touchscreen implementation with electronic ink and electronic paper, it degraded the reading experience, because you’re introducing more reflections, more sets of glass between the electronic ink and the customer.

What about color?
When you think about it, most books are actually just fine in black and white. That said, there are a lot of applications like magazines that will look better in color. But if we introduce color that wasn’t “rich color”, I’m not such customers will like it. And so we far we haven’t seen the combination of the grey electronic ink, the electronic paper and rich color. We’ve seen color in labs but it’s just not that rich experience that you expect from color.

Will the Kindle ever be good enough to browse the Web?
When we introduced the Kindle in 2007, we wanted to include a Web browser primarily for being able to read text-focused web sites, like Wikipedia or search results. The nature of electronic paper is great for text-focused content. We’re not attempting with Kindle to build a browser that is great for all kind of websites. It’s great fortext-focused web sites.

Why buy Lexcycle?
We think we’re in the extremely early days in the evolution of digital books. The Lexcycle team were a set of great innovators, really passionate about e-books. And they built some great applications and we went them to join Amazon as part of the team. Our plan is to keep that business run separately – as we often do at Amazon – and that they will innovate in their own ways, separate and distinct from Kindle but with the support of Amazon.

Amazon launched a large screen version of its Kindle, targeting primarly at newspapers and textbooks readers

Amazon launched a large screen version of its e-book reader - the Kindle DX - targeted primarly at readers of newspapers and textbooks

Any plans to open up the Kindle format?
The Kindle format was designed to work seamlessly with Kindle devices and other devices, but to do things customers we think will really like. So for example, with our feature WhisperSync, I can open up a book on my Kindle and start reading it, and later on, open up the same book on my iPhone and it will sync automatically at the same place that I was on, on my Kindle. Same thing for the annotation feature: you can annotate on your Kindle and see the annotations on your Kindle for iPhone application. So our perspective is if you’re focusing on making things really simple for customers, you may need to do things with the format that are specific to those devices and those applications.

Will the Kindle format remain proprietary then?
I think it’s an open question (sic!). We plan to keep innovating on behalf of customers and that innovation may take various form in the future. So it’s hard to speculate about what we might do there. But we have a wide open platform- the digital text platform - for content providers that are free to publish directly in the Kindle format themselves. In that way it is a very open platform.

Why add support for PDF in the Kindle DX?
The main reason is that we heard from many customers that the amount of reading that you do that is outside of books, periodicals and blogs is generally in the form of personal or professional documents that are typically on 8.5″x11″ sheet of paper; and a lot of it is in PDF format. So instead of carrying hundreds of pages of those documents, we wanted you to move it easily to your Kindle and be able to read them. But it’s the combination of having a large screen and the need to maintain the structure of the document – with no re-flows – that really let us to support PDFs.

Will the Kindle really be the savior for newspapers?
It think people have been concerned about newspapers for a number of reasons. Our goal is to provide a great reading experience for customers, in some cases that with newspapers, magazines, highly formatted books and professional documents (PDF). Newspapers have been available on Kindle since we launched on November 2007 and customers love it. Kindle newspaper subscriptions are among the best sellers on Kindle.

This week, the CEO of the Dallas Morning News said Amazon takes a 70 percent commission on newspaper subscriptions through the Kindle. That seems really high, isn’t it?
I don’t want to speculate on what somebody said, and I’ll leave it at that.

When Kindle be available outside the U.S.?
We’re absolutely looking forward serving our international customers with Kindle devices. But just like with the original Kindle, that took us 3 1/2 years before we introduced it, we are focus to create a great experience before launching the Kindle internationally; there’s just a lot of things to work on before that happens.


The $359 Kindle 2 Costs Amazon $186 To Build

April 22, 2009

Nice markup, ehh?

According to a product tear down by iSuppli, Amazon’s new Kindle 2 has a 48 percent gross profit on its material and manufacturing costs.

The Kindles E Ink display module costs $60, or 42% of the total

The Kindle's E Ink display module costs $60, or 42% of the total

The popular ebook is constructed from parts costing $176.83, and its manufacturing and battery add another $8.66, bringing the total to $185.49.

Not included are costs for intellectual property, licensing fees – and, of course, sales efforts, marketing, shipping, etc.

The markup still is attractive given the normally slim margin retails operate with.

About $60 of the material costs go to E Ink for the display module at the heart of the product. The display uses an electrophoretic bistable technology that allows it to show an image even when it’s not drawing power, said Andrew Rassweiler, principal analyst at iSuppli.

The next most expensive component is the wireless broadband module from Novatel Wireless at $39.50. Qualcomm supplies a baseband processor priced at $13.18.


Apple iTunes Store Is Now DRM-free; But Pricier Than Amazon

April 7, 2009
Starting from today, all music sold on iTunes is DRM-free. But its also more expensive than Amazon!

Starting from today, all music sold on iTunes is DRM-free. But its also more expensive than Amazon!

Well, well, well. Is this the beginning of the end of Apple’s iTunes dominance of the digital music business?

The record labels will certainly hope so!

Starting from today, all music on the iTunes Store is DRM-free.

Consumers will pay more for Apple’s DRM-free songs

Apple’s proprietary “FairPlay” protection is maybe gone, but here’s come “variable pricing.”

Songs now range from 69 cents to $1.29, instead of the 99 cents fixed price.

But looking at iTunes “Top Songs” list today, songs were either sold at $1.29 or 99 cents; none were at 69 cents.

However at Amazon’s MP3 Downloads store, the same Hits were sold at 99 cents. And the downloading process – using Amazon’s MP3 Downloader is almost as easy as with iTunes: click on the music, the downloading starts and then the song gets added to my iTunes collection.

If pricing stays the same, no doubt I’ll be buying my music on Amazon.

Bye bye DRM, bye bye iTunes.


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