« July 2010 »
S M T W T F S
1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
You are not logged in. Log in
Entries by Topic
All topics  «
Blog Tools
Edit your Blog
Build a Blog
RSS Feed
View Profile
My Blog
Wednesday, 21 July 2010
In Case You Missed It: June 7 - June 13

The biggest problem with having Steve Jobs kick off the WWDC with the iPhone 4 announcement is that all the developer news that also happened gets buried in the press that follows. We would gladly trade three "Steve Jobs Couldn't Get Wi-Fi To Work" articles for just one great new app announcement or dongle sweetness article.

Well, we haven't forgotten that other news happens, so join the Mac|Life stafff, won't you, for all the other stuff that happened this week that isn't just about the iPhone.

Features:

- Free App Fridays: Writing - There's not a thing in the world quite like good quality free software. And if you're a writer, there are literally hundreds of choices. We've narrowed that down to three gotta haves for your Apple products for when you just have to get that idea out onto the screen.

- Facebook Games Showcase: Café World & Little Rock Pool - Of course, you're not going to get any writing done if you gets sucked into the gaming world on Facebook, but there are some pretty fun time killers nonetheless.


How-Tos:

- iPhone and iPad Tips of the Week - June 10, 2010 - This regular feature can help you learn a thing or two that you might not have stumbled on yourself. Want to check your iPhone data usage? Want to find an app quickly? Keep reading.

- How-To Watch the World Cup on Your Mac, iPhone and iPad - See, now, there are things that happen that don't involve Apple products, like the World Cup. But since our readers are Apple junkies, there must be some way to bring futbol and iProducts together. Well we've got the best of the best all ready for you to shout GOOOOOOOOAAAALLLLLLLL!!!!!!


Reviews:

- Guitar Apps for the iPad - The Six-String Thing - Maybe sports isn't really your thing. Or maybe just not soccer. No, maybe you're more a rocking out kinda guy. If that's the case, app developers are taking advantage of all that big screen goodness on the iPad to hook you up with plenty of six-string love.


- Star Walk - While a lot of apps make use of the iPad's greater screen size to cram more stuff in, an often overlooked wonderful addition is how much more beauty you can see. Star Walk takes the familiar iPhone app and brings the gorgeous night sky and interstellar space to the big screen. Nokia DKE 2 Data Cable Retail Packaging. And at $4.99? That's a steal, people.



ipad iphone robots

 

News:

Of course, of course, we're getting to it. Yes, the iPhone 4 was announced, with pre-orders beginning next week and shipping out the week after. Meanwhile, feast your eyes on the sexiness in our photo gallery...and here's the rates on what kind of data you'll be chewing through thanks to AT&T...plus, the list of where to buy your newest iPhone is growing as Radio Shack joins the list....Wal-Mart's getting in on this action too, though with Apple's tight price controls, it's not like they can offer quite the deep cuts they'd like to...or if you're across the pond (wondering why England could only TIE the US soccer team), here's when you can get your iPhone there...and if this leak is to be believed, Apple plans on shipping a whole bunch of the new handsets; how many? How does 3 million a month sound?...just don't drop it when you get your hands on the new iPhone, because iFixYouri claims the new model is going to break, and a lot.

Of course, the feature packed iOS 4 will be coming along shortly too, and for some people with beta versions of the software, iBooks is showing up already...maybe instead of worrying so much about rolling out iBooks, Cupertino can figure out their Wi-Fi issues, as these gurus are betting the keynote gaffe was related to iOS 4's drivers...maybe someone can look into the Gold Master release and see if there isn't something glitchy going on in there; perhaps someone in the jailbreak community.... since Apple doesn't seem to be able to keep the dev community from popping the locks on the iOS action, as one enterprising hacker's already jailbroken it.... of course, all that jailbreaking will need updates once iOS goes live with a RC on June 21, though we're sure they'll get around to it...and apparently Apple got around to nabbing the iOS name from Cisco, much like how they got the iPhone name and the iPad from Fujitsu.


Meanwhile, the iPad's been making some news, first because AT&T is often a bag of fail and managed to leave a gaping hole in their network that Goatse Security drove a truck right through...upon driving said truck, Goatse loaded up on sensitive email addresses attached to the SIMs of these iPads, but whose fault was it really? inquiring minds want to know...of course we know who in government got their hands on the tablet, as many of the emails grabbed were attached to Washington bigwigs...which means of course that now the FBI is going to get themselves interested in this...in more jolly iPad news, the on-again-off-again Hulu saga continues to get new wrinkles...and Hulu better get on the stick, because mobilely speaking, netbooks are looking less and less likely to be around much longer...and we can't tell if this is the coolest iPad action we've seen lately...or if these walking robot iPhones and iPads are. You tell us.




Alternative sites to check out on Quit Facebook Day


Posted by vitavilolu-phone at 6:12 PM EDT
Synopsys to buy Virage Logic for $315 million in move to expand software offerings

Technology News

Alternative sites to check out on Quit Facebook Day

Posted by vitavilolu-phone at 4:51 AM EDT
Tuesday, 20 July 2010
Hewlett-Packard spends $1.6M to lobby government in 1Q, one of highest spends in industry












Hewlett-Packard spends $1.6M on 1Q lobbying


WASHINGTON — Hewlett-Packard Co. spent $1.6 million to lobby the U.S. government in the first quarter on a smorgasbord of issues including federal spending on technology, enforcement of immigration laws and health care reform.


The amount was nearly double HP's $840,000 lobbying tab from the first quarter of 2009. HP spent $710,000 on lobbying in the fourth quarter of 2009.


Kristy Sternhell, formerly a counsel to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, was among the people who lobbied on behalf of HP, which is the world's biggest technology company by revenue.


HP said in its latest lobbying-disclosure form, filed with the House clerk's office, that it lobbied Congress and various government agencies. Moshi iVisor 15 For MBP. Those agencies included the Homeland Security and Labor departments, which HP lobbied on immigration-related issues, including legislation involving the creation of a computer network to verify that workers in the U.S. are legally able to work. Other agencies included the Health and Human Services department and the Federal Reserve System.


HP's $1.6 million tab ranked among the highest for technology companies in the latest period.


Other big-time Silicon Valley tech firms spent less. Google Inc. spent $1.4 million in the first quarter to lobby the federal government on issues including its decision to stop censoring search results in China, and Oracle Corp. spent $1.1 million, in part on regulatory issues concerning its recent acquisition of Sun Microsystems.


However, Microsoft Corp., consistently one of tech's biggest lobbying spenders, spent more than HP — $1.7 million on lobbying in the latest period.




Samsung to invest $3.6 billion to expand Texas chip-making facility, to hire 500 more workers

Posted by vitavilolu-phone at 3:21 PM EDT
US says nuclear sanctions are toughest ever; Iran’s leader dismisses them as ‘annoying flies’











Iran dismisses sanctions, but tried to avoid them



UNITED NATIONS — The U.S. and its allies scored a long-sought victory Wednesday by pushing through new U.N. sanctions over Iran's nuclear program, punishments Tehran dismissed as "annoying flies, like a used tissue."


The sanctions target Iran's powerful Revolutionary Guard, ballistic missiles and nuclear-related investments. Oil exports, the lifeblood of Iran's economy, are not affected because targeting them would have cost the U.S. essential support from Russia and China.


President Barack Obama said the sanctions are the toughest Iran has ever faced. They required several months of difficult negotiations by the five veto-wielding permanent U.N. Security Council members — the U.S., Russia, China, Britain and France — and non-member Germany. This is the fourth round of sanctions aimed at getting Iran into serious discussions on its nuclear ambitions.


"Actions do have consequences, and today the Iranian government will face some of those consequences," Obama said. He left the door open to diplomacy but said Iran "will find itself more isolated, less prosperous and less secure" unless it meets its obligations under the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty.


Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, on an official visit in Tajikistan, dismissed the new resolution.


"From right and from left, they adopt sanctions, but for us they are annoying flies, like a used tissue," he said.


Tehran insists its program is peaceful and aimed at producing nuclear energy. The U.S. and its allies say Iran is trying to produce nuclear weapons; they want Iran to suspend uranium enrichment and start negotiations aimed at ensuring that it uses nuclear technology only for peaceful purposes.


The new resolution bans Iran from pursuing "any activity related to ballistic missiles capable of delivering nuclear weapons," bars Iranian investment in activities such as uranium mining and prohibits Iran from buying several categories of heavy weapons including attack helicopters and missiles. Iran, however, already has most of what it would need to make a weapon.


Iran's top nuclear negotiator, Saeed Jalili, warned that "choosing the option of confrontation will bring Iran's resolute response," according to Iran's official news agency. He did not elaborate.


Iran's U.N. Ambassador Mohammad Khazaee accused the United States, Britain and their allies of abusing the Security Council to attack Iran.


"No amount of pressure and mischief will be able to break our nation's determination to pursue and defend its legal and inalienable rights," Khazaee said. "Iran is one of the most powerful and stable countries in the region and never bowed — and will never bow — to the hostile actions and pressures by these few powers and will continue to defend its rights."


U.S. Ambassador Susan Rice dismissed Khazaee's statement as "ridiculous … reprehensible, offensive, and inaccurate" and declared that "these sanctions are as tough as they are smart and precise."


The resolution was approved by a vote of 12-2 with Lebanon abstaining and Brazil and Turkey voting "no." Turkey and Brazil, both non-permanent council members, brokered a fuel-swap agreement with Iran that they offered as an alternative solution to concerns Tehran may be enriching uranium for nuclear weapons.


Lebanon's U.N. Ambassador Nawaf Salam said he abstained because the government failed to "reach a final position." A U.N. diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity because the government debate was private, said the Cabinet was split, 14-14, on whether to vote no or abstain.


The sanctions put Iran in the unusual position of bashing key allies China and Russia. Both countries voted for the resolution and either could have vetoed it. Ahmadinejad warned Russian leaders last month "to correct themselves, and not let the Iranian nation consider them among its enemies."


In Moscow, the Itar-Tass news agency reported that Ahmadinejad will not take part in the summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization in Uzbekistan beginning Thursday. The group was created in 2001 to address religious extremism and border security in Central Asia, and has grown into a bloc aimed at defying U.S. interests in the region.


Ahmadinejad is scheduled to tour the World Expo in Shanghai this week, but is not expected to hold talks with senior Chinese leaders.


Iran holds more leverage over China, which needs Iran's oil and gas to feed its growing energy appetite, than it does over Russia, which has long provided important technology to Iran including building the country's first nuclear reactor. The facility is expected to begin electricity production this summer.


The Security Council imposed limited sanctions in December 2006 and has been ratcheting them up in hopes of pressuring Iran to suspend enrichment and start negotiations on its nuclear program. Iran has repeatedly defied the demand and has stepped up its activities, enriching uranium to 20 percent and announcing plans to build new nuclear facilities.


The new resolution imposes sanctions on 40 Iranian companies and organizations — 15 linked to Iran's Revolutionary Guard, 22 involved in nuclear or ballistic missile activities and three linked to the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines. That more than doubles the 35 entities that had been subject to an asset freeze.


The sanctions add one individual to the previous list of 40 Iranians subject to an asset freeze — Javad Rahiqi, who heads the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran's Esfahan Nuclear Technology Center. All 41 individuals will also now be subject to a travel ban.


Rahiqi declined to comment when contacted by The Associated Press.


The resolution also calls on all countries to cooperate in cargo inspections — which must receive the consent of the ship's flag state — if there are "reasonable grounds" to believe the cargo could contribute to the Iranian nuclear program.


On the financial side, it calls on — but does not require — countries to block financial transactions, including insurance and reinsurance, and to ban the licensing of Iranian banks if they have information that provides "reasonable grounds" to believe these activities could contribute to Iranian nuclear activities.


U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Tuesday that new sanctions would pave the way for tougher additional measures by the U.S. Plantronics Voyager 520 Headset Retail Packaging. and its allies. France's U.N. Ambassador Gerard Araud said after Wednesday's vote that European Union foreign ministers will be meeting on Monday and France would like "a tough translation of the resolution," but it's up to the 27 countries to decide on additional sanctions.


Israel's ambassador to the United States, Michael Oren, said the resolution "can serve as a viable platform" for nations to launch sanctions such as restrictions on Iran's ability to import gasoline. "They have a lot of oil, but not a lot of refined oil or the ability to export oil abroad," he said.


The U.N. resolution was approved despite an Iranian diplomatic offensive launched in April. Jalili visited Beijing that month in the wake of U.S. reports saying China had dropped its opposition to possible new U.N. measures against Iran.


Iran also approached several non-permanent Security Council members, including Bosnia, Brazil, Turkey and Uganda, in hopes of averting new sanctions. Inviting diplomats from all 15 members of the Security Council to a two-hour dinner in New York in May was seen as Iran's high-profile attempt to head off additional penalties.


China's U.N. Ambassador Li Baodong said after the vote that the sanctions were aimed at curbing nonproliferation and would not affect "the normal life of the Iranian people" nor deter normal trade activity, a view echoed by Russia's U.N. envoy Vitaly Churkin.


The five permanent council members and Germany, in a statement after the vote, reaffirmed their "determination and commitment to seek an early negotiated solution to the Iranian nuclear issue … which would restore international confidence in the peaceful nature of Iran's nuclear program." It welcomed and commended "all diplomatic efforts in this regard, especially those recently made by Brazil and Turkey."


Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said the new sanctions were "a mistake" implemented "just for spite." According to the state-run Agencia Brasil news agency, Silva said the resolution's supporters "threw out an historic opportunity to peacefully negotiate the Iranian nuclear program" — the fuel-swap agreement his country and Turkey had championed.


Under the proposal, Iran would swap some of its enriched uranium for fuel for a research reactor in Tehran. The U.S., Russia and France have said that — unlike the original plan drawn up eight months ago — the proposal would leave Iran with enough material to make a nuclear weapon.


The three countries sent a letter to the International Atomic Energy Agency seeking clarifications from Tehran, and several council ambassadors said they would still like to see the swap go ahead. Lebanon's Salam called it "a gateway for confidence building measures."


"We believe that the sanctions resolution is a painful failure of diplomatic efforts," Salam said. "We refuse to give up. We call on all states … to reinitiate and intensify diplomatic efforts."


The new sanctions should bring little direct political fallout for Ahmadinejad. The country has been deeply polarized since last June's disputed presidential election — which the opposition claims was rigged by vote fraud — and Ahmadinejad's backers are likely to use the sanctions as a rallying cry.


In Venezuela, President Hugo Chavez condemned the measures against Iran, his close ally.


"Why won't they sanction Israel? You realize the cynicism of the Yankee empire and its allies in the world," Chavez said in a televised speech Wednesday night. "Israel massacres, kills, doesn't comply with United Nations resolutions … and the United Nations acts as if nothing had happened."


Associated Press Writers George Jahn in Vienna, Matthew Lee in Quito, Ecuador, Peter James Spielmann at the United Nations, Beth Fouhy in New York City, Mark Lavie in Jerusalem and Olga Tutubalina in Dushanbe, Tajikistan contributed to this report.




Next »
Things for iPad Review

Posted by vitavilolu-phone at 1:51 AM EDT
Friday, 16 July 2010
Applelinks iPhone And iPad News Reader - Wednesday, June 9, 2010
• Apple iPad Targeted by Avaya Device?
• iOS 4 Jailbroken Within a Day of First Release
• Barnes & Noble Offers Free Coffee To Promote In-store E-reading
• New York Times Forces Apple to Pull Popular 'Pulse' iPad Newsreader
• Pulse Has A Pulse Once Again - Already Back In The App Store . SanDisk M2 4GB Memory Card Retail Packaging
• Did Apple Tell Times to Shove Its App-Takedown Letter?
• iPhone vs. Android
• Is the A4 CPU Really Exclusively Designed by Apple?
• IBM's Lotus Notes Brings Secure Email To The iPad
• The Tech Night Owl: The iPhone 4 Report: Chipping Away Problems.......Continue Reading



Tags: iPhone | iPhone News |




Tweet
Share With
Add to Buzz
RSS!
email







Akamai buys Velocitude, which delivers content to smartphones, for undisclosed sum


Posted by vitavilolu-phone at 4:21 AM EDT
Thursday, 15 July 2010
G8 and G20 must address online privacy

G8 and G20 must address online privacy



-It’s the least we can expect for our billion-dollar investment


It’s hard to imagine governments acting in citizens’ social media privacy best interests when they themselves often seem so inept in terms of integrating social media within their own respective environments. For every example of a government department success story using social media tools and principles, there always seems to be a counter-example that illustrates just how many elected leaders and civil servants still have their heads in the sand when it comes to Web 2.0 and beyond. Nokia BL 4B Battery. All-staff Twitter bans and continued sequestering of data that could help the public in hierarchical and disconnected silos, anyone?


Despite our leaders’ difficulties in making social media the new normal for government-citizen interaction, the need for our elected officials to help facilitate the transition to a Web 2.0-based economy has never been greater.


 


Facebook, for example, has garnered more than its fair share of headlines over the past couple of years for its propensity to play fast and loose with the rules of privacy and confidentiality. To its credit, the Privacy Commissioner’s Office has stepped in and forced Facebook to up the level of its privacy game – a process that has set a global precedent and positioned Canada as a leader in understanding and implementing real-world online privacy/confidentiality standards.


But this is only one example among a pretty desolate landscape. There are precious few other examples of governments – Canadian or foreign – taking truly bold steps to force market-dominant companies like Facebook and Google to play nice when it comes to citizens’ private data. For the billion-plus dollars we’re “investing” in the G8 and G20 summits, it would be nice if we at least got some answers on how member governments – especially our own – intend to not only meet the challenge, but get and stay ahead of the rapidly advancing curve.


If governments at all levels fail to exercise at least some influence over the evolution of privacy standards in the Web 2.0 and post-Web 2.0 era, it’ll be left to profit-seeking ventures to determine what’s fair and appropriate for the rest of us. Enterprise leaders and consumers alike are right to shudder at the prospect of Mark Zuckerberg holding the keys to the privacy kingdom. If anything comes out of these meetings, it’ll be consensus on how to keep tech giants honest – and citizens protected. 


Carmi Levy is an independent technology analyst and journalist based in London, Ontario. He comments extensively in a wide range of media, and works closely with clients to help them leverage technology and social media tools and processes to drive their business.




The iPad is making appearances all over the White House

Posted by vitavilolu-phone at 2:51 PM EDT
‘Generation Next’: Young up-and-comers being pegged, labeled before they even come of age












Kids labeled 'generation next' before they grow up


CHICAGO — They aren't even out of grade school. But already, people are trying to name the youngest up-and-coming generation, and figure out who they might be and how they might be different from their predecessors.


At a loss for something more original, many call them Generation Z, because they follow Generations X and Y.


They've also been referred to as Generation Net or "iGen," since they've never known a world without the Internet.


That's the one point most everyone can agree on — that they are the tech-savviest generation of all time, so much so that even toddlers can maneuver their way through YouTube and some first-graders are able to put together a PowerPoint presentation for class.


But beyond that, who are they, really?


Most people agree it's just too early to know for sure. But that hasn't stopped marketers from trying to figure out this young crowd of consumers. Or employers from attempting to prepare for them in the workplace.


Parents, too — many of them Gen Xers — are weighing in, saying they are raising a different brand of kid than baby boomers did.


"I would like to think that ideally, and this might be a bit naive, Gen Xers are a bit more freethinking and not necessarily as compelled to keep up with the Joneses," says Kris Sonnenberg, a teacher in Chicago and 38-year-old mother of three children, ages 8, 12 and 17.. Motorola BC50 Battery Bulk Packaging


Many parents also think the recession will play a role in shaping who their kids are, and perhaps make them less "entitled," a label that — fair or not — has been slapped frequently on Generation Y, also known as the "millennials."


"We're not afraid to say money's tight, so I feel like our kids are going to have that sense long-term," says Andrew Egbert, a 41-year-old dad who works in manufacturing in Greensboro, N.C. He has a son in fifth grade and a daughter who's a first-grader.


OK, so, let's take a look at the picture that's emerging of Gen Z, for what it's worth. They're young — roughly age 12 or younger.


Generational expert Neil Howe says determining who these youngsters are still is very much a work in progress.


"But there are hints from history," he says.


Howe, who coined the term "millennials," says 2008 may turn out to be one year with a big influence on this generation, due to both the recession and the election of the nation's first black president.


He is calling them the "homelanders" because they are growing up in a time of "greater public urgency and emergency, both at home and around the world."


For that reason, he speculates they could be a new version of the so-called Silent Generation, the group that grew up in the Depression era, who saw the country through World War II and who birthed the baby boomers.


That elder generation was pegged as hardworking and anything but entitled.


Janet Reid, who also has spent time looking at this latest generation, thinks that's a pretty fair appraisal.


"It won't be taken for granted that prosperity is guaranteed," says Reid, a managing partner at Global Novations, a firm that helps corporations develop and attract workers and understand generational differences.


Because they're so hooked into screens of all kinds at a such a young age, she sees Gen Z as more conscious of world events. "They're not just out playing hopscotch," she says.


She also thinks this generation will take characteristics already affiliated with Gen Y to a new level — be that multitasking or a comfort level with different races, ethnicities and cultures.


Seven-year-old Ryan Cook's parents have noticed many of these traits in him.


Asked what a recession is, he's able to tell you that it has to do with the economy and the fact that his parents can't always buy him the things he wants, like video games. "But I think that's fair," he says.


He can tell you that President Barack Obama is the nation's first black president, but — as one whose elementary classroom in suburban Chicago is much more diverse than his parents' — that doesn't seem to phase him much.


"Well, the president is the president," he says nonchalantly. "They don't really change much, except for different speeches."


Like a lot of kids his age, he gets frustrated when he has to sit through TV commercials. He uses his dad's laptop by himself with ease. And though he doesn't have a cell phone, he wants one (partly because his 12-year-old brother has one).


That fits with the notion that, recession or no recession, this generation has a big expectation when it comes to technological gadgets, whether that be cell phones, laptops or the latest version of the iPod or other music players.


And in many instances, their parents are getting them those gadgets, says Nicole Williams, a 39-year-old mom of three who's also a fifth-grade teacher in Seattle.


"They have quick fingers, good muscle strength in those fingers," Williams says, laughing as she refers to the many technological devices her students use in and outside class.


These devices are so coveted — and a sign of status — that theft can be a problem.


That's not surprising to Colin Gounden, a research specialist who thinks access to technology will play a big role in determining which Gen Zers thrive, and which don't.


"There is a segmentation of haves and have-nots that is very global. If you are in Mississippi or Bangalore, if you don't have Internet, your experience is quite parallel," says Gounden, global head of research for Integreon Inc., whose subsidiary Grail Research has compiled a report on Gen Z.


Among other things, he also thinks this generation is more likely to be debt-ridden, partly because getting a college degree will be as important for them as a high school diploma was for their grandparents and great-grandparents.


Gounden is among those who question whether this recession will really impact this generation the way some think it will.


Another skeptic is Jean Twenge, a psychology professor at San Diego State University who's written books and studies that examine entitlement and narcissism in young people.


Twenge cites a recent poll of young people from the 2010 Cassandra Report, compiled by a market research firm known as the Intelligence Group, which found that 81 percent of 7- to 13-year-olds expect they will have their "15 minutes of fame."


"Every arrow points in the direction of continued high expectations and optimism," Twenge says. "Things might be bad sometimes, but they think THEY will make it."


Online:


Grail Research Gen Z report: www.grailresearch.com/gen(underscore)z


Martha Irvine is an AP national writer. She can be reached at mirvine(at)ap.org




Next »
Is Apple Preparing to Ship 3 Million iPhone 4s a Month After Its Debut?

Posted by vitavilolu-phone at 1:21 AM EDT
Wednesday, 14 July 2010
Extra Time: World Cup coverage expands greatly on the Web and mobile phones














World Cup coverage expands on the Web, cell phones


NEW YORK — With games airing live on cell phones and computers, the World Cup will get more online coverage than any major sporting event yet. Watching highlights the next day on TV or YouTube will suddenly seem a downright ancient way to keep up with the action.


When the soccer tournament begins Friday, footy fans can follow the action from an array of mobile and Web applications and share in triumph and heartbreak across social media.


Walt Disney Co. networks ESPN and ABC, which are broadcasting the games in the U.S., will stream 54 games live on the newly launched ESPN3.com, formerly ESPN360. The games are free to those in the U.S. who get their Internet from a service provider affiliated with ESPN, including AT&T, Verizon, Comcast and many others. The 10 games that will air live on ABC won't be available on ESPN3.com, but all 64 matches in the Cup will be available live on mobile devices to customers whose plans include TV on their phones.. Moshi Clearguard MB USA


Univision Communications has the Spanish-language broadcasting rights in the U.S., and it, too, will have games available on Univision.com and Univision Movil.


The digital coverage will be an especially important component for the World Cup because U.S. audiences will be watching many of the games - all being played in South Africa - during the day, possibly on their computers at work.


Comparing the digital experiences of the 2010 World Cup to the 2006 World Cup, Josh Kosner, senior vice president and general manager of ESPN Digital Media, said, "Things have changed utterly."


"This is going to be the biggest and most powerful demonstration of this, and it's just the start," Kosner said. "It's the play book, it's the blueprint for what's coming."


NBC's online coverage of the last Winter Olympics - also an international, daytime event - was extensive, drawing 45 million video streams. Traffic to NBCOlympics.com more than tripled from the 2006 Winter Games, with 45.7 million total visits compared to 13.3 million in 2006. That happened even though NBC held a lot of the footage for its prime-time broadcasts. ESPN expects worldwide online traffic for the World Cup to double or triple that of 2006.


The World Cup, a mixture of global and niche audiences - where some games mean much more to citizens of Honduras, for example - is particularly suited to the Internet. ESPN3.com, for example, will have the option to watch some games in either Portuguese, Arabic, German, Japanese or Korean.


The actual games are only part of the experience. Many media outlets have launched mobile applications, most of which feature live scores, news updates and some integration with Facebook or Twitter. Among them are apps from Fox Soccer Channel, The Associated Press, Goal.com, Mundial and many others.


ESPN has several, including an ESPN Radio app that gives live play-by-play audio. Turner Sports' SportsNow app promises direct linking to Facebook and Twitter to facilitate "trash-talk directly from the app."


Online interest in the World Cup has been building. The elaborate Nike World Cup commercial directed by Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu has been watched by more than 13 million on YouTube since debuting on May 17.


For the past year, Akamai Technologies Inc., which delivers about 20 percent of the world's Internet traffic, has been building its capability in anticipation of the World Cup. It expects traffic to be two or three times as heavy as what was measured during President Barack Obama's inauguration - thus far, the high point for traffic volume at about 1 terabit, or 1 trillion bits of data, per second. (Higher-quality video is also a major factor in boosting volume.)


"It could well be another watershed event in terms of people understanding what is now possible to do with video online," Akamai Chief Scientist Tom Leighton said. "This will draw a lot of people at once and that will cause people to be aware en masse that, hey, you can do some very cool things with video online that you can't even do with broadcast right now."


The World Cup is also shaping up to be a benchmark in the evolution of mobile TV, which is common in South Korea, growing in the rest of Asia, Africa and South America, but nascent in the U.S. and Europe. ESPN has partnered with AT&T, Sprint, Verizon, FLO TV and MobiTV to bring games to cell phones.


Any surge in bandwidth for live video could test those networks, which are already clogged. Just last week, AT&T announced that to ease congestion on its network, it would no longer offer unlimited Internet data plans for new smart-phone customers.


ESPN's Kosner acknowledged that those with live TV on their mobile phones are still a "relatively small audience," but predicted that the World Cup will be "a galvanizing event" for the capability.


Of course, technology is also being used for more quirky ends.


If you hurry, you can catch the final ticks to the World Cup Countdown app, which has simply been counting down to kickoff in South Africa since last year.


The Drinksin Footy Pubs 2010 app lets U.K. fans know the nearest pubs carrying the games. LiveSoccerTV.com, similarly, offers "soccer friendly" bars in the U.S.


Technology truly meets soccer enthusiasm in South Korea, where a World Cup iPhone app from KT Corp. includes a "glow stick mode" that lights up the screen with fluorescent colors when the phone is shaken - perfect for exuberant waving in South Africa or anywhere near a screen playing the games.


That still leaves one, essential question: Where's Becks?


Fear not. David Beckham, the dashing British wingman, has signed on with Yahoo Inc. as its "global football ambassador." Along with its extensive Cup coverage (which includes a toolbar just for updates and scores), Yahoo will offer a Beckham channel to share the midfielder's thoughts on the Cup.


Associated Press Writer Sangwon Yoon in Seoul, South Korea, contributed to this report.




Next »
5 tips and 3 sites that take care of your digital legacy when you die

Posted by vitavilolu-phone at 11:51 AM EDT
Monday, 12 July 2010
TiVo Releases Desktop Software 2.8.1, Adds Support for iPad Export

TiVo has released version 2.8.1 of their Desktop Software. Nokia Cell Phones. In addition to just a few new settings, the software adds export support for iPad, iPhone, and iPod Touch. This update affects both Basic and Plus versions of the TiVo Desktop Software, but only the Plus version gets the added export options.

The Basic version of TiVo Desktop is free and only adds a few settings and one main feature: the ability to view folders on your computer from the DVR.

TiVo Desktop Plus, which costs $24.95, also gained the folder view ability, and has many new features including the ability to export to multiple devices like: iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, DROID, Palm Pre and several Blackberry models.

You can find out more about these TiVo updates, and download the updates for yourself by visiting the TiVo Blog.

via Engadget



Twitter to start using own link shortener, t.co, to shrink Web addresses starting this summer


Posted by vitavilolu-phone at 7:41 PM EDT
5 tips and 3 sites that take care of your digital legacy when you die

5 tips and 3 sites that take care of your digital legacy when you die



If I’m having this much problems managing my multiple digital presences now, try to imagine what could happen if for example I suddenly croaked.



Nestor Arellano



It’s a morbid thought, but have you ever wondered what happens to your LinkedIn account, your Facebook page, Twitter, Flickr or whatever account when you die?

In my article Get ‘porn buddy’ to clean up your digital debris when you die and its accompanying video, social media expert Adele McAlear, explains that the tangle of digital detritus we leave behind can have far reaching consequences on the lives of our loved ones, friends and even businesses we’re affiliated with.



“You’re Facebook page lives on long after you’re dead and unless arrangements are made other social sites won’t close your account either,†she said.


Conversely, if you haven’t left your account passwords to anyone it would be extremely difficult to open up those accounts.


Imagine if you had a Website that is earning money through ad placements, manuscript or book sales, online donations. Sony Ericsson CLA 60 Car Charger Retail Packaging. Rather than help your family through financial difficulties those funds could be barred from them. Worst if someone else got hold of the password or hacked the system, they could siphon off the money.


What if you were blogging or talking to online communities to promote a company through a social site? If you die and no one in the organization has the password to the site, the company won’t be able to moderate discussion or filter out damaging posts.


Here’s where you need your porn buddy. You’ve got accounts to not so family friendly sites which if ever dug up could bring some embarrassing moments to your loved ones of business colleagues. 


Here are a few things to consider when preparing for your digital demise:


1)     Determine what it is you want to pass on or get rid of


2)     Designate a key person who will be left with account passwords and instructions. This could be a digital executor working under your lawyer, a friend working with your family or a buddy known only to you.


3)     Consider money in and money out issues. These are sites that are earning you money or sites that you owe money.


4)     Explain to your family your wishes. What may be important for you might be hard to understand for them.


5)     Understand the death policies of your social media provider and make arrangements with them early on.


Here are some sites that can help you managed your affairs. They have free and paid services:


Legacy Locker


Slightly Morbid


Entrustet




Walmart Offering Up iPhone 4 On Launch Day

Posted by vitavilolu-phone at 6:11 AM EDT

Newer | Latest | Older