[Video] Apple vs. Gizmodo: Police Used Excessive Violence, says Ex-Sheriff

April 29, 2010

Gizmodo paid $5,000 for Apple's next -generation iPhone who was "forgotten" in a Silicon Valley bar!

The Apple vs. Gizmodo stand-off, also known as the “lost iPhone” saga is getting murkier by the hour.

On Friday, members of the Rapid Enforcement Allied Computer Team (REACT) Task Force raided Gizmodo’s editor Jason Chen and seized all kind of electronic equipments including several computers.

No need to resort to violence !

Surprisingly, the blogger was at the scene when the San Mateo county cops used a battering ram to break into his home.

“The blogger was there, they could have asked him for access… they didn’t have to break into the door, this wasn’t a drug bust. They didn’t need to use violence,” says analyst and former Sheriff, Rob Enderle.

REACT over-reacted ?

According to the task force’s website, REACT is a partnership of 17 local, state, and federal law-enforcement agencies headquartered in Santa Clara County. It was founded in 1997 to address new types of crime directly tied to California’s increasingly computer-oriented economy and widespread use of the Internet.

“This is an organisation that was primarly put in place to catch professional criminals. Catch from people who was stealing from one company and selling information to another one. High profile intellectual property cases like somebody breaking and stealing processors from Intel or sold something of very high value… This is not an organisation that was put in place to keep people from reporting on information,” adds Enderle.

Apple’s undue influence on REACT

“Apple certainly is the one who appears to have pushed REACT into taking this kind of response. And appears they are on their advisory board and they may have undue influence on the group. Also we may have a group that want to prove themselves in some high profile way and assure funding [especially in an election year!]… It looks really questionable.”

No charges are filed yet – against Gizmodo or the poor soul who found the phone and got the stipend – and the seized computers are supposedly left untouched until a judge figures out if REACT had the right to seize them.

Like they say, shoot first and then ask questions !


Analyst: H-P Buys Palm For Less Than $1 Billion, But Integration Is A Challenge

April 28, 2010

Todd Bradley is the man behind HP's decision to acquire Palm. Bradley heads HP PC's consumer division and is the former Palm CEO

What a deal!

H-P said it will pay $5.70 in cash per share for Palm, when only 2-weeks ago, on April 12, the same shares were worth over $6!

And despite the headlines, H-P is really forking less than $1 billion for Palm, as the smartphone maker has roughly $600 million in cash and short term investments, but $387 million in long term debt.

This really shows just how Palm executives felt confident in the viability of their company!

So why would H-P buy Palm, beyond just being a fire-sale? Here’s analyst Jack Gold top 5 reasons:

  1. The key management of HP’s Personal Systems Group is composed of nearly all the execs previously running Palm, including HP’s Todd Bradley. So the business and operations of Palm is well understood.
  2. HPs Windows Mobile phone business is dying a rapid death and HP would have had to totally revamp its product line in order to stay in the smartphone business. It could have designed new devices with Android or Windows Phone 7, either of which would have taken time and would be expensive. Palm brings HP a modern and competitive platform that is already designed, implemented, and in production. This saves HP many R&D dollars as well as dramatically accelerates time to market.
  3. HP can leverage its production capabilities to get large volumes of product into the market at low cost. Palm was not able to quickly reduce its costs and profitably compete in all areas of the market.
  4. HP gets a substantial IP and patent base it can use as a defensive threat against the competition (especially Apple, but potentially HTC and Google as well). This is not a trivial issue as many legal battles lie ahead in the smartphone and mobile/portable device marketplace. A strong IP portfolio that is defensible is important. Indeed, the IP may even eventually result in license revenues to HP form some of its competitors.
  5. WebOS could easily be re-positioned for tablets and other consumer devices to compete with Android, iPad, etc. This is a key growth area for HP. It has already shown a Windows based tablet. And since tablets are primarily front ends to the Internet, it allows HP to deploy many cloud-based services from which it can generate revenues, including those in an app store, streamed services, etc.

However, HP has made acquisitions in the past that did not really work out, and HP has not always been good at integrating acquired technologies in their business.

While the potential for success is there, we will have to wait and see how well HP does at integrating Palm into their mainstream operations before calling this a win for HP.


[Video] SF AppShow: How PlayFirst Build iPad Game Sans Device

April 28, 2010

At the SF App Showcase last night, San Francisco-based game publisher PlayFirst showed its first native game ($4.99) for Apple’s iPad, Diner Dash: Grilling Green.

“We [PlayFirst] are considered a leader in making games for women. And the way we do that is we create really emotionally engaging games. What that means is that we’re out there just making simple match 3 puzzle games or these sort mind numbing time waster game,” explains Chris Williams, the director for mobile and console at PlayFirst.

Diner Dash has been downloaded over 500 million times (over 5-years) on PCs and Macs, and 5 million downloads for the iPhone/iPod touch version for which users spend on average 20-25 minutes per session.

iPad game required extensive custom design

For the iPad, the 100+ employee startup started from scratch and had to do a lot of extra work to customise the game for the new Apple device, like full multi-touch support, gestures and both orientation support.

“It’s a very different device… the larger screen, the assets need to be higher resolution, multi-touch… It was quite complex. It took a bunch of people, certainly more people that we have making our iPhone games. A solid 6-weeks to make this game,” adds Williams.

But unlike for other platforms, PlayFirst’s biggest challenge in developing the game for the iPad, was the lack of device!

“We spent 46 days working with cardboard cut-outs and the [iPad] simulator, hoping that it was going to play well on the device… That being said, Apple has a great simulator and we were able to replicate the experience. We were able to simulate the multi-touch and gestures and all those things. Now that we released it, we played it on the device and we’re very pleased with the result.”


[Video] SF App Show: Still No Android Mobile Apps Developers!

April 28, 2010

SF App Showcase organiser, Seth Socolow (left) and event moderator Ben Parr of Mashable.com

Larger and more organised than “meetups” but  more casual than larger run conferences, SF AppShow was started by boot-strapped mobile app publisher SF App Studio, to help fellow developers market their mobile apps.

SF AppShow is one those popular “micro-events” that are mushrooming in and around San Francisco, Calif. SF New Tech being another one.

“We needed a venue like this so app developer can come, show off their stuff to a lot of people in person, as well using social media and live video streaming to get this out to a much larger audience,” said Seth Socolow, the co-founder of SF App Studio and the event’s organiser.

Ben Parr of Mashable.com was hosting last night’s event where the following 6 new and upcoming mobile apps were showcased:

  1. TourRecorder by Geotrio, Inc.
  2. Expensify by Expensify
  3. Personal Assistant by Pageonce, Inc.
  4. Magic Window – Living Pictures by Jetson Creative, Inc.
  5. Diner Dash: Grilling Green by PlayFirst, Inc.
  6. And SF App Studio’s own LeanScale iPhone app

You can find the whole recorded show here.

Where are the Android app developers ?

So far, most of the apps showed at these events focus on the iPhone and more recently the iPad. But curiously, no Android apps yet!

“We actually haven’t seen any applications of native Android apps yet. It kind of surprised me. I would have expected by now we would. I think still there aren’t many people making any real money on Android but it’s going to come. It’s just taking a little while longer,” adds Socolow.


Analyst: iPhone OS 4.0 Needs Easier Phone Interface, Multitasking, Flash Support…

April 7, 2010

Apple plans to unveil new iPhone features tomorrow. A bit earlier than usual to steal some thunder away from Microsoft's Pink announcement

Analyst Rob Enderle wants amoung other things, multitasking, Flash in the iPhone OS 4.0

Apple will unveil the next version of the iPhone OS tomorrow.

A tat earlier than the previous 2 generations launched in past Julys, in order probably to steal some thunder from Microsoft, that is coming next Monday with yet another phone operating system – this one targets at the youngest crowd – code named “Pink.”

Instead of speculating on what the iPhone OS 4.0 will look like, we asked analyst Rob Enderle – the world’s most quoted tech analyst ! – to share his thoughts on the iPhone’s next new features.

The phone functions should be simpler and easier to use, a common complaint (and joke) is that the iPhone is wonderful at everything but being a phone.

Multi-tasking has been turned off and for a device like this that has been a problem. This should be turned on in a way that doesn’t adversely impact performance and the user interface should be updated so this capability doesn’t impact ease of use. This should likely come with some kind of a performance manager so that performance hogs can be identified by the user and Apple and addressed.

Stronger power management/better battery conditioning. One of the common complaints is dead batteries or batteries that have worn out prematurely this could be improved in the OS and should be.

Voice-to-text Google pioneered this in their phones, Apple has Voice Control but it isn’t as good, and given this has no real keyboard better voice to text is critical to saying up with Google.

A single in-box option for folks who want one place to look for email, this is a common complaint with the current product and should be addressed.

Improved phone Sync, SugarSync on the iPhone has been very successful. This likely should be a native feature in this next operating system.

Better support for native music streaming. Third party applications do this but you can’t do it from iTunes. Apple bought LaLa, this should be integrated in the OS this round.

Improved browsing experience. This is a moving target and Apple currently has one of the best experiences but Android is arguably better now with their leading phones. Personally I think they should bite the bullet and support Flash, since this is a “should” not “will” piece I’d include Flash on this list.


An Explosion In Smart Grid Investing Expected, IMBer Says

March 22, 2010

This year should see an explosion in smart-grid investing, particularly from venture capitalists interested in developing applications companies for this emerging market place.

Only a dozen or so successful start-ups address the smart-grid business, despite the more than $4 billion the Obama Administration has poured into smart-grid projects and the excitement the rumored Silver Springs IPO is likely to bring later this year.

The explosion could come as VCs begin to see the smart grid as a plaform ripe for application development, says IBM's Drew Clark

This could change. “You’re going to see venture capitalists attack this space,” says Drew Clark, director of strategy at BM’s venture capital group. “This year, you’ll see an explosion” of interest.

Clark says VCs are beginning to see the smart grid as a platform where applications can sprout, much as they sprout on Apple’s iPhone. This view is somewhat self-serving, since IBM hopes to be that platform supplier. (Cisco Systems also is making a platform play.)

Yet, Clark has reason to know. He talks to a lot of VCs as he tries to interest them and their start-ups to work with IBM and its products, such as the Maximo asset management software.

He says the trend will be driven by the realization that the energy-use data being generated by smart meters and stored in utility company computers has great value. In much the same way Google found a way to use search data to develop an advertising business, smart-grid companies will find ways to deliver products and services to consumer to help them save money and more effectively use power.

“People are thinking this is the ‘energy Web,’” he says. “I think it’s going to pick up speed.”

Clarks says one particularly promising opportunity is carbon accounting, or energy management, software. These are products analyzing energy-use data and pricing information to allow consumers and businesses to make better decisions about when to use energy.

Another compelling area involves smart micro grids. A university might develop such a micro grid to network its buildings, and monitor and manage their energy use. The micro grid also might be self-sufficient with solar and wind power and the ability to share energy among the buildings. Software to run the grid could represent a big opportunity.

It is clear the smart grid is at an early stage. The development of applications might signal stage two is on the way.


Cisco Takes Lesson From IPhone And Opens Its Smart Grid Software To Outside Apps Developers

March 17, 2010

Cisco Systems opened its EnergyWise software for corporate Smart Grids to third party programmers, hoping to spawn an iPhone-like frenzy of energy-management apps development.

The networking giant said EnergyWise software APIs, or application programming interfaces, are available to connect the software to assorted electronic devices and internal building systems, such as air conditioning.

Cisco released APIs for its EnergyWise software used to mamage power use by IP phones, computers and eventual building systems

The news came as Cisco introduced its EnergyWise Orchestrator technology for letting administrators remotely manage the power use of PCs and laptops. The technology lets administrators turn off machines not in use and provides information on operating power use.

The EnergyWise software is a key component of Cisco’s energy management strategy. It was unveiled in January 2009 as a tool for companies to manage power use by IP phones, video surveillance cameras, wireless access points, PCs and eventually building systems, such as heaters, air conditioning, elevators, lights and security systems.

Its first task was to connect to IP phones and networking gear, such as access points. Now it is reaching PCs. Cisco hopes to extent its usefulness by encouraging third-party developers to expand its capabilities.

The company also on Wednesday rolled out the latest version of its 2960 Catalyst switch with a dramatic 60 percent reduction in power consumption. The edge, or branch-office, switch achieves higher performance while cutting power by using of new custom ASIC chips.


How To Import Mobile Phone Movies (3GP) Into iMovie ’09 For Free!

March 6, 2010

Quicktime Player 10 lets you convert a movie created with a mobile phone (3GPP format) to MPEG-4... For Free!

UPDATE: Just simply change the file extension from .3gp to .m4v and you’re done. Thanks Jason for the great tip!

Eureka!

This is something I’ve been trying to do for a long time, but just couldn’t found out how… until today!

And I thought, I’ll share it here as after all these years, I haven’t found anything on the Web to help me do this. Which by the way, I found out by pure luck.

The problem. All the latest mobile phones I had (from a Motorola Razr to the Google Nexus I’m trying out now) can record videos using the 3GPP format.

But, inexplicably so, Apple’s iMovie (I’m using the latest version 8.0.5) would not recognise nor import those mobile movies.

My solution. So to import a 3GPP movie into iMovie, I would first convert it, using the free Quicktime Player (i’m using version 10.0), to MPEG-4 (with the .M4V file extension). And then, import it into iMovie.

Here’s how I did it:

  1. Open the 3GPP movie in Quicktime Player: File -> Open File
  2. Share it with iTunes: Share -> iTunes
  3. Choose the Apple TV size (better quality but larger file size) and click Share
  4. Quicktime Player will add the .M4V extension to the original name of the file
  5. After the file appears in iTunes, you can import it using iMovie.

It’s not as straightforward as if it was possible to import a mobile phone video directly into iMovie, but it does the job. Moreover, it’s free!


Analyst: Nokia Leads Strong Smartphone Market To Triple In 2014

February 11, 2010

With the economy expected to continue improving, analyst firm Forward Concepts forecasts a compound annual growth rate of 24% for Smartphones to the 496 million unit level in 2014.

Follows some of the key findings of the Forward Concepts latest study.

  1. Smartphone shipments worldwide grew 18% in 2009 to 171 million units at a $67 billion level. The Smartphone semiconductor and display revenue reached $11.7 billion.
  2. Nokia continued to lead Smartphone shipments in 2009, with a market share of 36.4%, followed by RIM at 19.4%, Apple at 14.9% and HTC at 6.3%. Sharp follows with a 3.5% market share, then Samsung at 3.4%. 18 other Smartphone vendors constitute the remaining 20% share.
  3. Western Europe has overtaken Japan to be the leader in Smartphone consumption, with a 23% 2009 market share. However in 2010, North America is forecast to become the leading Smartphone market, driven by iPhone and Android phones,  with a 22% share, closely followed by Western Europe at 21.6%, and fast-growing China at 17%.
  4. Symbian continues to be the leading Smartphone operating system, with an estimated 43% unit market share in 2009, while RIM’s Blackberry OS (19%) and Apple’s OS X (15%) has supplanted Microsoft Windows Mobile (13%) for the #2 and #3 positions. Linux variants, including Android, reached 8%, followed by, Palm’s WebOS with 2%. In 2014, Forward Concepts analysts predict that Android will grow to the #2 position, followed by OS X in 2014.

Can MacWorld Survive Without Apple?

February 10, 2010

Where's everybody at MacWorld 2010?

After 25 years, could this be the last MacWorld show?

Well, from what I’ve seen so far, it’s hard to believe MacWorld could survive another year.

On Tuesday, there was hardly anyone. Mind you, this was day 0 (zero) of the show, with just a few sessions going on.

MacWorld 2010 is bigger than one company… not!

But today, when the event supposedly kicks off, just a few people showed up at the registration desks despite the free passes available for the expo floor. Hopefully more people with show up tomorrow when the expo floor actually opens!

Anyway, the absence of Apple is striking. Less buzz, lower attendance, few exhibitors. So why come? Maybe to say goodbye, one last time :-(


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