Aug 8

Intel’s new P series is also showing up at resellers. The P9500 has been posted on reseller Web sites for some time. The 2.53MHz chip has a thermal envelope (Thermal Design Power or TDP) of 25 watts, making it more energy efficient than current mainstream Intel mobile processors, which have a TDP of 35 watts.

(Credit:
Hewlett-Packard)

HP’s 6930p (photo) and Toshiba’s Qosmio G55, among other laptops, are expected to use new Intel mobile processors.

This part will become Intel’s fastest mainstream (non-Extreme) Core 2 Duo mobile chip. Pricing ranges between $570 and $615 at resellers. Intel list prices will be different.

Though the initial roll-out of the Intel “Montevina” Centrino 2 mobile platform was scaled back by Intel last month, processors are still slated for July 14.

The P9500 has 6MB of cache and a 1066MHz FSB.

The Intel Core 2 Duo Extreme X9100 “Extreme” mobile processor can be found at only a couple of resellers. It has a clock speed of 3.06GHZ and, because of its high clock speed, a high TDP of 44 watts.

The delayed silicon includes the “GM” chipset that includes Intel integrated graphics. This will be released in early August. WiMax silicon is also slated to come out later,Pearl Jewelry, though Intel is not saying when exactly.

New ultra-low-power processors will be released later this year, Intel said.

The 2.8GHz Core 2 Duo T9600 can be found at select resellers. This 45-nanometer processor has 6MB of cache memory and a 1066MHz front-side-bus (FSB),OMEGA Watches, beating the current crop of processors that have an 800MHz FSB. The front-side bus carries data between the processor and the chipset.

The 2.4GHz P8600 is also appearing as “backordered” at resellers.. The 2.26GHz P8400 is also listed at resellers.

Intel’s upcoming mobile processors are making a sneak preview at resellers.

But mainstream processors are expected to appear on schedule.

Last month,Gucci Watches, Intel said that only “processors and some of the chipsets” will be available initially. Technical and certification issues with Intel’s integrated graphics and Wi-Fi silicon, respectively, will delay other Montevina silicon.

The P series chips in general are expected to have lower TDPs than the T series.

Aug 29

Don’t get me wrong: offline access to Google Docs is a necessary addition to the app, and I am sure it will improve over time. Google’s Ken Norton was clear that document creation is coming to the offline version of Docs. But at the moment it’s really just a nice insurance policy if you work on a wonky connection, or if you want to edit–but not create–documents when you’re in an offline environment like an airplane.

Furthermore, offline edit reconciliation isn’t quite what I was told it would be. I fired up a shared Docs file, pulled the Ethernet plug on my machine, and started to make changes. Meanwhile, I asked Josh, still online, to edit the same block of text I was working on. When I plugged my machine back into the Net, Josh’s changes overwrote mine with no warning. The revision history kept a record of all edits, but unlike the real-time collaborative editing that occurs when all parties are online, Josh did not have a chance to see the changes I was making; his text just took precedence.

Cues that Google is working offline: one, the connection icon in the upper-right is grey, not green; and two, it tells you.

I finally got access to Google Docs offline, the launch of which I covered yesterday. I understand why Google is pitching it as a safety net for a flaky online connection, as opposed to an honest-to-goodness offline application. As we noted yesterday, you cannot yet create a new document when offline. And something we weren’t told: when working offline, you can’t insert a picture into a file nor review its revision history.

You cannot control the online/offline state of Google Docs, as you can in Google’s RSS reader. That’s not a major loss, since there’s no advantage to working offline. The offline site is no faster than the online site, for example.

Aug 24

Verizon will also be providing backup microwave facilities and a 24-hour emergency operations center during the convention.

In-building coverage has also been enhanced with signal boosters and repeaters in a number of hotels, parking garages, and other convention sites. The extra capacity is anticipated to accommodate the 15,000 members of the media, as well as others, expected to attend the event that begins August 25.

Verizon Wireless is beefing up its infrastructure in Denver to prepare for the influx of as many as 50,000 people expected to enter the city later this month for the Democratic National Convention.

The company said on Wednesday that it has added three permanent cell sites to downtown Denver and also plans to install a mobile “cell-on-wheels.” Upgrades at specific cell sites have doubled voice capacity in the city and increased data-handling capacity four-fold.

Aug 23

Here’s what Love had to say about the iPhone prospects:

In an interview in April’s China International Business (not yet online), Michael Love tells of developing the 6-year-old product and how it’s getting popular enough that many foreigners in China are buying PDAs or PDA phones just to use Pleco.

We’re not thrilled about Apple locking down distribution and charging developers a 30 percent commission to sell iPhone software, but we really like the platform and think it has enough potential to be worth the hefty fees.

I, for one, would not have bought my Windows Mobile-running HTC Touch if not for this program, and untold dozens of my Beijing friends and acquaintances are carrying around Treos for the same reason. (Love said he switches between a Treo 680 and an HTC Touch, himself.)

The iPod Touch is actually more exciting to us, in some respects, than the iPhone, since it doesn’t force you to change your cell phone carrier and can be found almost anywhere.

It’s next to impossible to buy a cell phone-less Palm or Windows Mobile handheld in many parts of the world nowadays, but the
iPod Touch is all over the place, so for those people who are willing to buy a handheld just to run Pleco, it would be a better option than they’ve had in quite a while.

The inventor of the increasingly ubiquitous Pleco Chinese-English dictionary software for Palm and Windows Mobile devices said the company is “very seriously considering developing” an
iPhone version.

Aug 23

The more users who signed up, the more the site seemed to be down, and it became nearly as commonplace to see the so-called “fail whale”–signifying that a desired operation wouldn’t go through–as it was to have the service work properly.

Which of these models are you going to follow?

Prodromou: I’m actively pursuing all of them, except for the advertising one. I’ve already started approaching people for doing white label hosting. I’m already talking to people about doing pilot enterprise deployment and we’re at a point where we’re going to be doing some multimedia file sharing later this month so I should be pushing it out. I hope to push it out for trial on Identica soon. So that will be a point at which we would start talking about premium services.

Evan Prodromou

One such service that seemed to come out of nowhere and get instant buy-in from influential digerati around the Web was Identica, an open-source microblogging alternative from Montreal resident Evan Prodromou, who in 2003 had co-founded Wikitravel, a wiki-based travel service that gained a widespread following and that has since expanded into printed guidebooks.

What’s your business model?

Prodromou: I have four possible revenue streams. The first is a premium services model. Some things cost us money, like file sharing, or heavy SMS use, so we have to limit that. But we may let people buy their way out of those limits. The second is enterprise deployment. A lot of companies are interested in microblogging but they’re concerned about putting their company data out on third-party Web services. But if they install Laconica inside their firewall, they can have more control of access to the data. The third business is the WordPress.com model, where we provide hosting for online communities using this open-source software, like if, say Boing Boing wanted to provide microblogging services for its community. And the fourth one, which is probably not as attractive to me right now is advertising. One other thing that I think could be very good, is helping companies or brands have a presence on the open microblogging network. So if Levi’s wanted a new campaign, we could help them set up micro.levis.com and they could have people subscribe to their messages.

Do you have investors?

Prodromou: I’m definitely seeking investment right now, I’ve got some very strong leads, I haven’t finalized anything yet. So my hope is that I’m going to have an announcement to make probably in less than a month.

For Prodromou, Identica began as a side project that leveraged his experience with open-source software and free software projects and quickly became a popular place for people looking for a stable microblogging service to go.

For countless users, this was extremely frustrating, as Twitter had become the live conversation medium of choice for many early-adopters. And into this vacuum jumped a series of other microblogging services, each trying to pick up where Twitter seemed to be leaving off and hoping that large numbers of users would migrate to these new choices.

Explain what Laconica is?

Prodromou: Identica is the name of the service and, it’s open source. I’m very interested in ways that service providers can give their users the same kind of autonomy as people have using open source software. So, one thing I did when I started Identica was made the software open source. It’s called Laconica. The software is available for download from Identica and it’s pretty easy to set up. It runs on PHP and MySQL, which you can get on pretty much on any hosting service. So my goal is to make it very easy to install and have lots of people installing their own systems and using it. I believe that if that becomes the case, as the network grows and gets stronger and it’s advantageous to everyone.

So will Indentica users be able to communicate with Twitter users?
Prodromou: That’s my goal. If we get enough people using these open standards and open systems, perhaps Twitter sees it as a business advantage to join this kind of open network. We’ve seen that before on the Internet. In the early 1990s, there were lot of silos around e-mail and if you had an AOL e-mail address and I had a CompuServe e-mail address, we couldn’t send e-mail to each other. But e-mail became so ubiquitous that even the companies with the biggest groups and users had to allow their users to send and receive Internet e-mail and I think that that’s going to happen with microblogging, too. But it means that we have to grow the rest of the system.

So you founded Identica by yourself?

Prodromou: Yes. My background is in creating open content. I started a Web site a few years ago called Wikitravel, which is the Wikipedia of travel sites. I’ve also been involved with conversations about open network services and running free software on Web services. I wondered what I could do with this, and at the time, the most popular Web service with the digerati was Twitter. So I decided to try writing an open-source Twitter. I really did it in my spare time and invited about 150 people to check it out. But one morning Twitter was down and so the time was right to have the users start blogging about it, and TechCrunch and Mashable and ReadWriteWeb and CNET did, and we had a big explosion right at the time when Twitter was having a hard time. We’re about two months in right now and it’s looking like we’re just about feature complete compared to Twitter. We’ve got a really good group of 50 people on our developers mailing list and we’ve got an IRC channel that usually has about 50 or 100 people in it all the time.

Earlier this summer, just as Twitter started to really pick up steam, the microblogging service began to have major stability problems.

How do you differentiate yourselves from Twitter and the others?

Prodromou: Recent numbers show there are already around 110 microblogging services, and with others that have been announced, there are probably 200 different services right now. What we’ve seen with other kinds of social software is this kind of fragmentation and we are seeing that now with microblogging where you are on Twitter, and I am Jaiku, and we can’t be friends and we can’t send each other messages. That’s not the way the Internet is supposed to work. We are seeing these information silos happen around microblogging just like we’re seeing them in other social media and my goal is to see that not happen with microblogging because I think it’s a very valuable kind of communication.

Isn’t that where something like Friendfeed comes in, to aggregate all the different services into one place?

Prodromou: Friendfeed is a great way to listen to multiple places, but to me, that’s a stop-gap solution where we’ve got lots of silos, so you can listen to lots of silos. I want one microblogging place, where if I’m on one and you’re on another, we can still communicate and still be friends. That’s the long-term solution to the problem. It should be up to the services to talk to each other. That’s really the difference with Identica. I made the software open source, so you can take the software that runs Identica and install it on your own server. Maybe you’re involved with a Web community or you have a group of friends that like to talk or maybe you’re in business and you want people in your business talking to each other in the enterprise. You can install the software and tailor it just for your group. I built a protocol called OpenMicroBlogging, so if you take the software and install it on your server, people on your server can still subscribe to other people on Identica and vice versa, so we’re no longer having these little silos that are fractured and different from each other.

But as Twitter solidifies itself, why won’t people just say, Okay, Twitter is working, I’m just going to stick with that because most of my friends are there? How do you fit into that dynamic?

Prodromou: I’m a big openness advocate and I want to make sure that we follow the winning solutions. With social-networking sites, in around 2003 or 2004, Friendster was probably the only one worth caring about. But they had big scalability problems. That gave openings to alternatives like MySpace, Facebook, Bebo, and so on, all the ones that have become very big since then. Twitter’s gotten back on its feet, but there are other players now, and some Twitter users got accounts on Identica and others went to Plurk. A lot have gone back to Twitter, but as we saw with social networking, the growth wasn’t in those early adopters, the early, say 2 million, that are using Twitter. There are a billion people online, and there is a lot of room for growth in that billion people. You can’t just have a bunch of players fighting over the same small pie of early adopters. Eventually the market grows, and the MySpaces and Facebooks grow beyond the early adopter market, and I think that’s what’s going to happen with microblogging.

It seems you had the good fortune of launching Identica last summer right when Twitter was having major stability and scalability problems.

Prodromou: Yeah.

Now, Twitter has regained much of its footing, and it has a huge name recognition advantage over any of its competitors, but Prodromou thinks his model could eventually take the microblogging genre to its natural next evolutionary step.

(Credit:
Evan Prodromou/Indentica)

Q: What is Identica?

Prodromou: Identica is a microblogging service, a way for people to publish small messages about themselves. The messages are limited to 140 characters or less, so one to two sentences, maybe three sentences about what you’re doing, what you are interested in right now, and you can broadcast it to your social network. I launched Identica in July, and of course, microblogging has been around for probably about two to three years right now with some leading services like Twitter, Jaiku, and more recently Pownce and Plurk.

Aug 23

If, in fact, 80 percent of Microsoft’s Windows Server code is not patented, where does it get off pointing the finger at Linux? Or do all 235 of its unsubstantiated patent claims relate to the 20 percent of Windows that is actually patented? It’s possible, of course, but Microsoft’s patent emperor keeps getting more and more naked, and it’s not a pretty sight.

You’ve already seen it on Slashdot. ZDNet also has a great write-up. But for the real meat go to the source, Tom Kemp’s blog.

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…[o]f the 125 protocols posted on MSDN for Windows Server, 99 of the 125 protocols have no US patents associated with them, meaning 80 percent of the Windows server protocols do not have US patents associated with them.

About what? Well, just the contention that

Jason Perlow rightly asks if Samba got anything real from its patent deal with Microsoft. But perhaps we should stretch this further:

Aug 23

Finally, business travelers should be mindful of their Wi-Fi connections at airports; apparently some hackers are setting up fake ad hoc networks to gain access to information stored on laptops.

Intel announced a new supersmall processor and platform called Atom, designed for “netbooks” and mobile Internet platforms. The energy-efficient chips aren’t expected to hit the market for several weeks, but at least one site has posted some preliminary benchmarks. The chipmaker also introduced the official branding for the next iteration of its mobile platform, formerly codenamed Montevina: the highly creative Centrino 2.

We discovered two ways to ruin your brand-new MacBook Air: either coat it with gold and crystals (to the tune of $40,000) or take it apart. Meanwhile, Steve Wozniak doesn’t want to ruin his MacBook Air, he just wants to know what to do with it.

On Crave, Mike Yamamoto marvels at HP’s artist series laptops and wondered if a laptop could reduce air pollution. Matt Elliott spotted a larger Eee PC with a 9-inch screen. Meanwhile, CNET Labs’ Daniel Begun answered a question that I am asked pretty regularly: How do you find a quiet laptop?

Keep your eyes open, and have a great weekend!

(Credit:
ChipChick)

Other products announced this week: the rugged Dell Latitude XFR D630 and the snow-white MSI PR200 Crystal Collection. At the CeBIT Expo, Clevo unveiled two new gaming models and Asus announced the 17-inch G70. Products we reviewed this week include the latest edition of the MacBook Pro and the powerhouse 15-inch Alienware Area-51 m15x gamer.

There was plenty of laptop news in this week before our clocks spring forward, so let’s get right to it.

Aug 23

Sure, I’ll never love the look of the car like I love the e46. But the new M3 is, for better or worse, one of those cars you have to drive to truly appreciate.

At the track, it was time to take it to a whole other level. My manual coupe really let it rip when I got on the throttle, and the brakes bit down hard and fast before the turns. Even though I was only on stock Michelin Pilot Sport tires, the car stuck like glue through the apexes, and the car’s back end came around nicely as I gave it more gas out of the turns. Only a few times did I push it hard enough to get those tires to “sing,” but I never felt out of control. Admittedly, I did the whole track in third gear, but even so I never lacked for power or torque.

(Credit:
BMW NA)

On a recent press trip in Monterey, we had the opportunity to drive the M3 as it should be driven: On empty, windy roads. And later, even better: Madza Raceway Laguna Seca.

That said, the 2008 M3 is not a “track car” in the true sense of the word. But that’s not the point. The beauty of the e92 M3 is that it can be a sensible, dignified daily driver, and still tear it up on track days. And although I am coupe-biased, I think the re-introduction of the M3 sedan will even further the M3’s image of an all-around car that can serve many purposes and still be a thrill to drive.

The 2008 M3 is powered by an all-new, 4.0-liter V8 engine. This is a drastic departure from the inline six used on the previous generation of the 3 Series cars. The bigger motor catapults the output to 414 horsepower at 8300 rpm, with 295 pound-feet of torque. But the sound of the car remains refined. The engine sounds big, but still reminiscent of M3s past. Sure, there are bigger engines out there, but the M3 is powerful without being raucous. Acceleration is still plenty fast, and the engine revs so high, you could drive around town without changing gears — if you really wanted to.

The steering was about as tight as I’d ever felt on any BMW. Although faced with a slew of considerably sharp turns as we wound our way through the hillsides, I never had to take my hands off the three-and-nine position. And the nice thick M wheel was comfortable and pleasurable to grip.

Oh, and about that heaviness thing; BMW lightened the new chassis up quite a bit to compensate for the weight increase. An aluminum hood and suspension, as well as a carbon-fiber roof, shave some weight off, although the “unladen” weight of the coupe is still 3704 pounds, with the sedan weighing in a tad heavier at 3726 pounds. By comparison, the e46 M3 coupe is 3415 pounds. So just imagine the kind of horsepower boost the 2008 M3 could get if it were 300 pounds lighter. But if you’re the kind of person who’s bothered by that kind of heft, you’re probably better off buying an old M3 and ripping all the seats out.

As a fan of the predecessor to this current M3, the e46, I was skeptical about driving what some called a heavy, underpowered
car that didn’t quite live up to its ancestors’ legacy. A few die-hard enthusiasts, amid cracking tired Bangle jokes that are oh-so-five-years-ago, called it the MPIG, bemoaning the addition of more sensors and high-tech gadgets that added weight and deterred DIYers. And I almost bought into it.

2008 M3 coupe

On the road portion of our drive, my driving partner and I were amazed at how soft the ride was while driving over uneven pavement. This was due to an optional Electronic Dampening Control (EDC) feature on our car which has three suspension settings: comfort, normal, and sport. But even in “comfort” mode, softness didn’t equate to mushiness. The car still felt dynamic and responsive, even while going over potholes and railroad tracks.

Aug 23

Why is this man smiling? Because everyone loves cheap and tiny laptops.

(Credit:
Dell)

You didn’t expect Dell to sit idly by while Asus, Intel, and Hewlett-Packard went flitting about town with their trendy low-cost, low-power minilaptops, did you? Paris Hilton isn’t the only celebrity to tote a Chihuahua, after all. According to Taiwanese manufacturer Compal Electronics, Dell will soon enter the minilaptop fray. The company is lining up 200,000 to 300,000 units per month for Dell, according to Compal, which it says could start shipping as early as June.

Product details aren’t known at this point, but a summer release might mean Dell’s minilaptop will pack an Intel Atom processor, which is expected to start appearing in products this summer. (Our biggest complaint with the otherwise excellent HP Mini-Note is its poky Via C7-M processor.) Engadget reports that Dell’s minilaptop will feature an 8.9-inch screen and will go for less than $499.

Dell CEO and namesake Michael Dell lent credence to Compal’s statement yesterday when he said, in response to HP’s 2133 Mini-Note PC, “We will introduce a similar laptop.” Don’t hold him to a June release, however. “Stay tuned,” he said. “We will have some interesting products coming in that space over the next two quarters.”

Aug 23

Adobe on Tuesday said it will launch an update to its flagship
Creative Suite software bundle on September 23.

Just ahead of the CS3 launch last March, Adobe made available a public beta test version of Photoshop CS3. For CS4, the company in May posted “preview versions” of its Dreamweaver Web design software, Fireworks image editing application, and Soundbooth audio editing tools.

As for Photoshop CS4, Adobe has said publicly that it will make available a 64-bit version of the photo-editing software, but only for Windows and not for
Mac OS X.

In Photoshop CS3, which debuted last year, Adobe added rudimentary 3D editing and manipulation tools.

The company has offered few details of the planned CS4 release. The current iteration of the suite, CS3, is offered in several configurations that include various combinations of the company’s core applications, such as Photoshop, Illustrator, Flash, Acrobat and InDesign.

CS3 is currently offered in four configurations: Master Collection, which includes virtually the entire Adobe design software lineup; Design Premium, which includes Photoshop and other tools for designers working in print, Web and mobile applications; Web Premium, targeted at Web site designers; and Production Premium, geared toward people designing film, Web and mobile content.

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

Aug 23

I spent my lunch today in Buenos Aires with Red Hat’s general manager of South America, which I’ll report on tomorrow. Meanwhile, on the other side of the planet, Red Hat announced a cool deal with Munich Airport, thrice-named “Airport of the Year” in Europe.

While this may not sound like a lot of servers and desktops, it’s important to remember their purpose: keep air and ground traffic running efficiently and productively. In other words, it’s true mission-critical deployment, however small.

Why? Because Unix couldn’t deliver the performance that Munich Airport needed, so the organization went with Red Hat Enterprise Linux to “provide both the savings and performance benefits desired.” Thirty servers and 40 desktops later, Munich Airport is running smoothly and at lower cost than before.

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