Aug 22

The No Video on Flickr group amassed more than 4,000 members just a few hours after the new feature launched.

Shortly after Flickr added videos to its photo-sharing site, a number of users are up in arms.

And I suspect video is likely to dilute the great photography that’s available on Flickr much less than the vast oceans of mediocre snapshots on the site. The days of Flickr being a haven solely for refined, high-grade photography are long gone if indeed they ever existed. Also, who knows? Maybe the addition of video will help improve Flickr’s business so it can be overhauled with a better user interface.

“I love Flickr, and I think it should stay the same way it has always been,” the group description said. “We don’t need another YouTube! I have nothing against YouTube, I just don’t want to see all the $*#% that’s on there to wind up on here!”

(Via Thomas Hawk)

Flickr member Haeretik posted a petition, so far signed by hundreds of members, that states, “We all joined Flickr because of its dedication to photography and photographers, and we want Flickr to remain true to this dedication. It is our request that this feature and addition to Flickr be removed.”

Personally, I find the concerns overblown, though it might have been judicious of Flickr to add an opt-out option for those who don’t want video. A lot of people react unfavorably to change–think film buffs who don’t care for digital cameras, for one example.

Some discussion on the gripe group has been constructive. For those who don’t want videos to play, there is a Flickr configuration setting that lets users reverse the default behavior that the video will play automatically when its page is opened, and
Firefox users can add extensions that block Flash videos.

Members of the No Video on Flickr group have posted hundreds of images protesting the photo-sharing site's inclusion of video.

(Credit:
Flickr)

Aug 22

If you liked Ping.fm you’ve got to check out Pixelpipe. It’s a service that’s been designed for lazy (yet ambitious) folks who want to send photos, videos, and audio clips to multiple services with just one upload.

Also coming soon is an
iPhone app that will do this with photos taken on the device’s camera. Creator Brett Butterfield tells me one of the benefits here is that you only need to upload it to one place, removing the need to save various upload e-mail addresses or use Apple’s mail client that shrinks the photos down. It also preserves things like embedded geo-data, letting your shots get mapped to services that support it.

See where your media has gone with Pixelpipe.

In case you’re worried about those racy party pics ending up on the Flickr account to which mom and dad subscribe, you can disable certain services (or “pipes”) from getting the transfer. Starting Tuesday the service will be adding a tagging feature that lets you custom tailor your uploads to go to certain sets of services using small keywords instead of having to enter the settings menu each time you want to make changes.

Like Ping.fm and Hey!Spread all you have to do is plug in your credentials at each service and it does the work for you. There’s a simple Web uploader that lets you pick as many files as you want from a memory card or your hard drive and send them on their way. Repeat users can also pick one of the cross-platform software tools that runs on its own or integrates with existing software like iPhoto and
Firefox.

Related: Send your viral video to 20 different video hosts with HeySpread

That said, this is a killer tool for movie creators. If you’ve been paying for a tool like Hey!Spread simply to do the uploading, now you’ve got a free option. It certainly doesn’t have the analytical prowess to see what happens to your content once it gets there, but if you’re just worried about getting it out in the first place this is one of the easiest and most user-friendly solutions I’ve seen.

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

Openness/Invites

Pixelpipe is currently in private beta, although we’ve been given 1,000 invites to give out. To get yours just hit up this page. And as a word of advice for using any service where you’re giving multiple account authorizations to, it’s a good idea to make a strong password to keep someone from working their way in and mass publishing media to your various accounts.

While I’m a fan of making it easier to push the same piece of data to multiple services, ultimately Pixelpipe is a bandage on the wound that is data portability. Services like FriendFeed and SocialThing have risen up to help sort through the mess, and Pixelpipe is a result of what happens the data you upload to one service cannot be moved to another. Sure it’s handy and I think I’m going to be a regular user, but I can’t help but think this would be a whole lot easier if everything were a bit more open.

No matter what uploading tool you’re using it will keep track of your most recent uploads and give you a status of which services got your media including a link to the specific page where it resides (see the photo on the left for what it looks like).

Aug 21

Social-network builder Ning has deployed its support for developer applications for OpenSocial, something that it has been planning to do since Google kick-started the open-source project nearly a year ago. (It is now an independent organization.)

A Ning profile with the OpenSocial 'BuddyPoke' app added.

(Credit:
Ning)

As part of the launch, a directory of 30 applications will be available for Ning members to embed in their profiles, which they use for any of the hundreds of thousands of networks created with Ning. They’ll have variable “skins” to adopt the design of the profile around them and blend in, the company has said. Incorporation into the OpenSocial app directory on Ning will be selective, so it won’t be a developer free-for-all.

A few OpenSocial apps had gone live on Ning in beta over the past year, including one from social music service Last.fm (which is owned by CNET News publisher CBS Interactive).

You still can’t embed OpenSocial apps on Ning networks, just profiles–but that will change, CEO Gina Bianchini said to CNET News, when future versions of OpenSocial (the current one is 0.7) are developed. “In its first incarnation, it looks and feels a lot like what you’d be doing on a MySpace profile or on a Facebook profile in terms of adding apps,” she explained, “but what’s unique about us is that we have half a million social networks and they’ll want an app for their network as well.”

From the Future of Web Apps conference in London, Google engineer Kevin Marks praised the incorporation of Ning into OpenSocial, which he helped build. “The nice thing about Ning is that we’re going from about 100 social networks to about 500,000 social networks,” Marks said to CNET News.

The question still remains, though as to whether Ning would opt to support Facebook applications–still not compatible with OpenSocial–the way social network Friendster has.

“We’d love to support Facebook apps,” said Bianchini, who co-founded Ning with veteran entrepreneur Marc Andreessen. “Right now, Facebook hasn’t neccessarily set it up in a really clear, programmatic way…(Facebook) has talked about it, then came back from it, and it’s a little bit in limbo right now in terms of really what and how they would want other social networks to support Facebook apps.”

Aug 21

He called this next generation “spatial computing” and listed numerous attributes: many-core processors; parallel programming; seamlessly connected and fully productive; context-aware and model-based; personalized, humanistic, and adaptive; 3D and immersive; and utilizing speech, vision and gestures.

Mundie’s demos showed some progress in fulfilling Bill Gates’ dream of natural interfaces and seamless computing. The challenge for Microsoft will be turning lab demos into real products and services that can scale. With the Internet as the platform, and not Windows, Microsoft will have many more competitors, and partners, in its quest to realize the vision of spatial computing.

What comes next? Microsoft’s Craig Mundie says spatial computing.

(Credit:
Dan Farber/CNET Networks)

Then he showed how a smart handheld device could be used to navigate in a physical space. Pointing the device at a particular space would show local information, such as when buses were expected to arrive or what stores are having sales that would be of interest to the user based on their profile.

“For a few thousand dollars you could put in an assistant who can guide robotic interaction,” he said. “There is a wealth of opportunity for this, and it will allow people to develop applications and change the way the bulk of the population interacts with computers.”

See also: Mundie: The cloud needs killer apps

The 3D store environment was stitched together with Photosynth technology and interactive. Mundie could “walk” through the store and have a text or voice conversation with a store representative or someone, such as his wife, via his buddy list. In addition, he could watch videos and examine 3D models of the art objects, spinning them around to look at all the different parts of a sculpture.

The prototype system is a resource hog, consuming 40 percent of its eight-core processor system even when idle. Eventually, Mundie said, such a system could be used for rural medical clinics.

Mundie also said that software development hasn’t graduated to become a formal engineering discipline. “The resilience of systems is not up to the task,” he said. “We have to master the transition to a parallel programming environment, with highly distributed, concurrent systems. It’s nascent at this point but it’s required to achieve these capabilities.”

CAMBRIDGE, Mass.–Microsoft Chief Research and Strategy Officer Craig Mundie on Thursday offered a long-term view of where Microsoft and the world of computing are heading over the next few decades. Speaking at the MIT Emerging Technology Conference here, Mundie envisioned a 3D virtual world populated by virtual presences, using a combination of client and cloud services.

(Credit:
Microsoft)

Mundie gave a few examples from Microsoft Research to illustrate the concept of spatial computing. In a few months, the compay plans to test a new virtual reception assistant in some of its campus buildings. The assistant, which takes the form of an avatar, helps schedule shuttle reservations to get people to various locations across the 10-million-square-foot Redmond, Wash., campus.

“Our tools are not designed to address this level of system design,” Mundie explained. “We have to see a paradigm change in the way we write applications.”

In another demo, Mundie offered a glimpse into the future of the live Web. He played out a scenario in which he was in an store, took a picture of a magazine cover on Northwest Indian art with his smartphone, and then placed the phone on a Microsoft Surface technology table when he got to his hotel. The pictures in the phone showed up on the surface table and he dragged them around. The system analyzed the image to determine how to use the photo as a way to pursue next steps in a virtual Web world. The system found the a digital version of the magazine and Mundie proceeded to explore magazine pages. From the magazine image of an art object, he went virtually to the store where the art object was on display.

Microsoft's prototype reception assistant system.

The system includes array microphones and natural language processing by which the avatar listens to the subjects and then interacts with them in real time. The system has been programmed to differentiate people by their clothing. Someone in a suit, for instance, would more likely be a visitor and not a potential shuttle rider.

In addition, creating a rich virtual environment that reflects the real world and is available to billions of people requires a lot of programmers. “If we want a million people to know how to do this, we have to mask complexity,” Mundie said. His goal is to program computers to have the equivalent of human senses that can operate well together. “That’s how we get to natural interfaces,” he said.

(Credit:
Dan Farber/CNET Networks )

Mundie categorized this demo as an illustration of the power of the client and the cloud in spatial computing. “You have to have a to-and-fro between local and centralized data services,” he said.

Programming tools, which have been a strength of Microsoft, will play a crucial role in the emergence of spatial computing. To create a kind of parallel universe–a cyberspace version of the physical world–everyone has to contribute on a continuous basis, Mundie said. Sensors and users will be generating trillions of bits of data, which requires addressing concurrency and complexity in a more loosely coupled, distributed and asynchronous environment, he said.

Aug 20

Nokia BH-504 stereo Bluetooth headset

Along with the Nokia 5800 Xpress Music and its Comes with Music promotion, Nokia also announced a slew of stereo headsets to match its new music-focused products on Thursday. The Nokia BH-504 is the only Bluetooth headset of the bunch, with the ability to handle calls as well as listen to music wirelessly. Looking a lot like regular over-the-ear headphones, it’s fully foldable, with advanced digital signal processing that includes echo cancellation and noise reduction. It has the typical multifunction button as well as music player controls and a volume rocker. The BH-504 has a rated battery life of 9 hours talk time, 7.5 hours music time, and 3.75 days standby time.

The other three headsets are of the wired variety, and all three have call management features. The WH-202 has ear clips for long-wear comfort and has a 2.5mm connector for cell phones with that headset jack, though it doesn’t have music player controls. The WH-500 has a design similar to that of the BH-504, plus it has music keys such as play/pause and next/previous track and a 3.5 mm connector (as well as a 2.5mm adapter). Finally, the WH-800 earbuds come with adjustable ear hooks, a volume rocker, a carrying case, and a 3.5 mm connector plus a 2.5mm adapter.

(Credit:
Nokia)

Nokia WH-202, Nokia WH-500, Nokia WH-800

(Credit:
Nokia)

Aug 19

Many people already recognize video-streaming service Hulu.com as a great destination for watching TV shows (it has every single episode of Arrested Development, people!), but did you know it also offers movies? Over 100 of them, in fact, and some darn good titles, too. Here are my picks for the Five Best Movies to Watch on Hulu:

(Credit:
Hulu)

Find more deals, coupon codes, and bargains on CNET’s Shopper.com.

Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
Ice Age
Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World
Monty Python’s Meaning of Life
The Usual Suspects

I didn’t mention Sideways and The Big Lebowski because I think they’re overrated–but they’re there, too, along with plenty of other gems (and, truth be told, some serious dreck). You’ll have to sit through the occasional commercial–and stay tethered to your PC, of course–but that’s a small price to pay for watching free movies on demand. All hail Hulu!

Thanks to Craig for mentioning this deal!

Watch over 100 free movies at Hulu.com

Aug 16

Among the people I caught up with were these Brazilian techies who I wrote about two years ago when they won Microsoft’s Imagine Cup. They’ve taken their invention to use technology to guide the visually impaired and are starting a company to bring it to market, with $500,000 in funding from the Brazilian Government.

I’m also traveling to a senior center here in Miami, part of the city’s effort to close its own digital divide. I will have more to say about Miami and its projects, which include wiring the city’s parks, putting computers in senior centers as well as a program known as Rights of Passage that offers all sixth grade public school students the opportunity to earn a free computer for their family.

MIAMI–I’m not in Latin America yet, but I’ve certainly gotten greater exposure to the region in the last 24 hours than I had in the 33 years prior.

But first, I’m off to experience another important part of Latin American culture–Cuban food.

Since I arrived here last night, I have met with local leaders, a former government minister, top nongovernmental leaders, and students. I’ve had the opportunity to hear speeches from Microsoft officials, a Brazilian mayor, and an Argentinian senator. It’s all part of a Microsoft conference of Latin American politicians and non-governmental agency executives known as the Government Leaders Forum.

I’ve been meeting and listening more than writing today, but that should change Friday. I’m scheduled to cover two speeches by Bill Gates, one at the Government Leaders Forum and another at a meeting of the Inter-American Development Bank.

It was great to meet them in person to follow-up on their story and I look forward to posting more about their endeavors.

Aug 16

Around four years ago, I got a call from some of the original founders of a small network identity and authentication company that eventually evolved to become Identity Engines. In simple terms, the company built an enterprise-class Radius server that greatly enhanced the intersection between networking, identity, and security.

Our industry enjoys a lot of great folklore around smart investors, driven technologists, and garage-based start-ups that became Wall Street darlings. Great imagery and mythology, but it ignores the dark side of our industry’s Faustian compromise with VCs. Just ask Identity Engines.

In spite of their industry background, VCs care about one thing: ROI. Unfortunately, this means that they end up playing a game of chicken with people’s lives. We all know the rules of the game when we get into it, but that doesn’t mean that these rules are right.

I am not an investor in ID Engines nor do I know everything that happened with negotiations over the last few weeks. What I do know well, however, is the high integrity and professionalism of the team and the market opportunity squandered. I just don’t get it.

From my first meeting with two or three people, ID Engines raised a few rounds of financing, hired some really smart folks, and developed a product. The company also was able to ride the momentum of an IEEE protocol named 802.1x for authentication. Geeky? Yes, but 802.1x is slowly gaining a lot of momentum in wired and wireless networks.

As recently as a few months ago, I thought ID Engines was as close to a sure thing as there is in our quirky little industry. The company had talent, customers, and a growing market. What else do you need? Money. IE Engines needed another round to get to the next level. Unfortunately, this is where my “sure thing” fell apart.

From what I gather, ID Engines got caught in a VC vortex filled with greed, ignorance, and a fair amount of bait and switch tactics. The VCs either didn’t get it or didn’t want to get it. Regardless, a very promising company and talented management team is now essentially defunct, the customers were shoved aside by investors, and all that’s left is four years’ worth of sweat equity-based intellectual property for sale.

Aug 16

It arrives and disappears as suddenly as a drunken gatecrasher.
At times I confess I lose my patience, take out the battery and start my MacBook up again. Without fail, the Swirly Rainbow Circle Thingy will be gone.

The Swirly Rainbow Circle Thingy never, ever tells me what’s going on. Or how long it will be chasing its tail around my desktop.

But something is now coming between us.

(Credit: CC Cessna206)

My MacBook and I are at a difficult stage in our relationship.

We’ve traveled the world together. We’ve written heinous insults together. And we have refused to countenance entreaties from sites of ill-repute together.

It’s that little Swirly Rainbow Circle Thingy. You know, the one that tells you, well, what is it supposed to tell you exactly?

You know the kind of thing: “Your trash is fuller than Meg Ryan’s lips and the Big Lebowski’s belly. Empty it, you moron.”

This little Swirly Rainbow Circle Thingy might have been a bug. Or the introduction to some errant and very nasty computer game.

Or even: “This MacBook is wasted on a bonehead like you. Get yourself a PC and like it.”

I even wondered if it was about to burst open and turn into a dancing leopard or wriggling worm.

In other words, it’s like a plumber perched beneath your sink, his upper bottom portions waving to the sky and his voice telling you: “Hmm. Aha. Uh-huh. Aha. Hmm.”

I would therefore ask the core of superlative minds at Apple to please find me another plumber.

The first time I saw it, I had no idea what was going on. It whirled away on my desktop just like a dog that is trying to communicate with you and, in its frustration, begins to chase its tail in circles as if this will somehow make things more obvious.

Well, except for the dialogue part.

Or perhaps: “I can tell you’ve got no idea about tech, so just do what I say. Go to the cache and click on the third choice down.”

I would like something that talks to me, that gives me at least a clue about what is going on.

The most I have ever comprehended about this anomic apparition is that it is somehow meant to signify: “Hold on there, mate. I’m not entirely sure what’s going on. The ole’ system’s playing up a bit here and I’m trying to get it sorted out.”

Aug 16

NEW YORK CITY–You’ve heard about the controversy over Comcast throttling back BitTorrent traffic on its network. But did you know that before the news exploded in the media, Comcast’s chief technology officer was actually advising and working with BitTorrent?

“Tony is a really great guy,” he said. “He understands the issues and we’re continuing to have a dialog. And I’m hopeful we can work together in the future… If there is anyway to help (Comcast provide faster speed service to its customers), we would like to be part of solution.”

For more on my conversation with Walker, look for a Newsmaker Q&A on CNET News.com early next week.

During our conversation, Walker criticized Comcast’s network management tactics as “wrong,” but he said his company is still talking to Werner and his people about possibly partnering.

That’s what BitTorrent’s CEO Doug Walker told me Friday when we sat down for a one-on-one interview at the Distributed Computing Industry Association’s P2P Market Conference here.

“The funny thing about a company the size of Comcast is that they can work with us in the background asking us what kinds of things we can do together to more efficiently deliver high-bandwidth content,” he said. “And on the other hand, the folks on the network side are throttling back our traffic. Someone catches them doing it, and a spotlight is cast on them. And the public opinion for the company goes down. The funny thing is we were actually already helping them find a solution to the problem that they were trying to solve by throttling BitTorrent traffic.”

According to Walker, Tony Werner, Comcast’s CTO, was acting as an advisor to BitTorrent before the hoopla over traffic shaping even came to light.

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