fredag 3. desember 2010

Webscape - home design and literature

This week web reviewer Kate Russell shares a social networking tool that helps you learn more about what you really want from life and make decisions. Find out more at Hunch.com .

If what you want is to design a new home, Google has a free CAD download that will help you on the way - Sketchup .

Or why not give your fingers a break with the dragon family of Apple mobile apps that offer voice recognition for texting, email and even web searching.

With national novel writing month starting this week, The Amanda Project is a nice site for teenage girls who are interested in literary pursuits.

Finally a quick nod to popular blogging platform Wordpress , celebrating one million mobile bloggers this week with the release of their app for Nokia handsets.


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UK copyright laws to be reviewed

4 November 2010 Last updated at 17:37 GMT Newport State of Mind Spoof videos can fall foul of current copyright laws, campaigners say Britain's intellectual property laws are to be reviewed to "make them fit for the internet age," Prime Minister David Cameron has announced.

He said the law could be relaxed to allow greater use of copyright material without the owner's permission.

The announcement was welcomed by internet campaigners who say it will boost small business.

But any changes could be resisted by the music and film industries who have campaigned against copyright reform.

Speaking at an event in the East End of London, at which he announced a series of investments by IT giants including Facebook and Google, Mr Cameron said the founders of Google had told the government they could not have started their company in Britain.

'Fair use'

He said: "The service they provide depends on taking a snapshot of all the content on the internet at any one time and they feel our copyright system is not as friendly to this sort of innovation as it is in the United States.

"Over there, they have what are called 'fair-use' provisions, which some people believe gives companies more breathing space to create new products and services.

"So I can announce today that we are reviewing our IP laws, to see if we can make them fit for the internet age. I want to encourage the sort of creative innovation that exists in America."

The six month review will look at what the UK can learn from US rules on the use of copyright material without the rights holder's permission.

It will also look at removing some of the potential barriers that stand in the way of new internet-based business models, such as the cost of obtaining permission from rights holders and the cost and complexity of enforcing intellectual property rights in the UK and internationally.

It will also look at the interaction between intellectual property and competition law - and how to make it easier for small businesses to protect and exploit their intellectual property.

The review, which will report next April, will recommend changes to UK law, as well as long-term goals to be pursued by the British government on the international stage

In a separate development, the Intellectual Property Office will trial a "peer to patent" project, which will allow people to comment on patent applications and rate contributions to help improve the quality of granted patents.

'Basic user rights'

The announcement was welcomed by internet freedom campaigners, who said the government had to redress the balance after the controversial Digital Economy Bill, which gives copyright holders the power to block access to websites hosting illegal content.

"It is long overdue. Some of our copyright laws are frankly preposterous," Jim Killock, of the Open Rights Group, told BBC News.

"The Digital Economy Act left a massive hole of missing user rights like personal copying and parody.

"It's great to have the opportunity to make the case for modern copyright that works for citizens and artists rather than yesterday's global publishing monopolies."

The Digital Economy Bill was rushed into law in the dying days of the Labour government but has yet to be enacted.

Mr Killock said he hoped the government would introduce "basic user rights" so that people could make personal copies of music and videos, or transfer them from one format to another, without fear of prosecution.

He also called on ministers to relax the laws on parody - citing the case of a recent You Tube clip parodying rapper Jay-Z's Empire State of Mind.

Newport State Of Mind has been taken down by YouTube due to a copyright claim by EMI Music Publishing Ltd.

Mr Killock said relaxing copyright laws would also give companies more freedom to innovate.

But the Publishers Association, which represents some of the big names in book, audio and digital publishing in the UK, sounded a note of caution.

Chief executive Richard Mollet said intellectual property laws had to keep pace with rapidly changing technology but he added: "The immutable fact remains that the people who generate and invest in creativity deserve and need to be rewarded."

He added: "The Publishers Association will work very closely with the Intellectual Property Office during this six month review to ensure that rights holders' interests are not regarded as an obstacle to creating internet based business models, as some believe, but rather as the foundation of the UK's world-beating creative, cultural and educational publishing industries."


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torsdag 2. desember 2010

One likes networking: Queen on Facebook

7 November 2010 Last updated at 07:49 GMT Help

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The Technology newsbucket: Apple sues, Evernote .Not, Google wanted Jobs, and more

Smartphone patents Smartphone patent lawsuits and deals - updated

A quick burst of 7 links for you to chew over, as picked by the Technology team

Apple countersues Motorola over multi-touch iPhone patents >> AppleInsider
"As expected, Apple has responded to a patent suit from Motorola with its own legal action, accusing the company of violating six patents related to multi-touch features found in the iPhone."

Lessons from Evernote's flight from .NET « Tim Anderson's ITWriting
Evernote says that since giving up .Net for C++, it's got an app that starts five times faster, and uses half the memory. Tim Anderson looks at why it did: "WPF is not only based on .NET. It also uses DirectX and hardware acceleration under the covers, enabling rich multimedia effects. The layout language of WPF is XAML, giving freedom from scaling issues which cause hassles in the native API. So what are the lessons here? Is WPF no good?
"It is not so simple. WPF is brilliant in many ways, offering the productivity of .NET coding and a powerful layout framework. However it was a technology which Microsoft itself hardly used in its key products, Windows and Office – a warning sign."

Microsoft: Our strategy with Silverlight has shifted >> Mary Jo Foley
Basically, it's HTML5 in future for cross-platform products.

Enterprises: We'll run Windows XP even after retirement - Computerworld
Not a large survey (950 companies) so don't stake your house on its precision. Still: "Microsoft has been pushing XP customers of all stripes, including enterprises, to upgrade to Windows 7. While Dimensional didn't query IT professionals about what operating system they were leaving behind as they migrated to Windows 7, they're doing the latter in increasing numbers. More than a third, or 38%, of those polled said their companies have implemented a partial roll-out of Windows 7, up from 15% in January 2010, the last time Dimensional surveyed IT administrators and staffers.
"Six percent of the companies have fully deployed to Windows 7, a six-fold increase over the 1% who said the same back in January."

Larry And Sergey Wanted Steve Jobs To Be Google's First CEO >> Business Insider
Interesting detail. They didn't actually get as far as asking him, as he was already re-ensconced in Apple.

Exploring Earth's History with Wolfram|Alpha >> Wolfram|Alpha Blog
Likely to make creationists' brains melt.

LIVE BLOG: Microsoft Earnings Call >> Business Insider
Everywhere has done well apart from Online. Which still hasn't.

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Mobile chips battle for processing power


ARM Cortex-A15 The Cortex-A15, the latest mobile processor designed by ARM

Inside your smartphone, a battle is raging. As tiny chips with big ambitions fight for processing power, is there anything the phones of the future will not be able to do?

High-definition TV and ultra-complex gaming - all in 3D - is a big task for any computer.

Especially as it tries to calculate the way the shadows should behave, or the way the light should reflect off each of the two million pixels on screen, 50 times a second.

Such complex graphics on home computers have only become possible in the last few years, as chip technology has caught up with designers' aspirations.

But in the future, mobile phones will be able to handle this and much more - thanks to the prototype chips being designed by one of the most quietly successful and profitable companies in IT - ARM.

ARM does not manufacture chips but rather designs them for other people to make.

Around 95% of the world's smartphones have an ARM chip inside and, although the company does not discuss its customers, it is widely believed that there is even an ARM chip inside Apple's iPad.

ARM designs are so popular with mobile manufacturers because of their low power consumption.

Whereas a home computer can draw more electricity from the mains when it needs to do something complicated, mobile devices need to manage their power consumption carefully, lest they suck their tiny batteries dry.

Snapdragon silicon

ARM's director of marketing, Laurence Bryant, says it is something that ARM, with its Reduced Instruction Set Computing, has specialised in for 20 years.

"In the mobile world, the primary driver has always been about low power and this seems to be taking the biggest traction in the industry right now.

"Once you have got that low power you can create low-cost and small form factors. You can have smaller batteries and you can be innovative with your form factor and your industrial design.

"As the manufacturing process in which chips are made has changed, we have been able to pack more and more performance into the same piece of silicon."

So much performance, in fact, that you will now find ARM inside bigger more powerful devices - tablet computers, e-readers and even netbook-style devices.

Qualcomm prototype This Qualcomm prototype uses an ARM chip to run four HD videos at once

One of the best-known chips based on the architecture that ARM licenses to manufacturers is technology company Qualcomm's Snapdragon processor.

At Qualcomm's recent iQ showcase, prototype phones were sporting a new graphics processing unit, giving them graphical oomph to rival a desktop machine - running a 3D game, showing four HD videos at once and rendering real-time mapping applications with 3D graphics.

Intel is the world's biggest chip maker - open a PC and there is a very good chance that you will find, to coin its own marketing slogan, Intel inside.

But there is not a single smartphone in the world that has the same credentials. So why not? After all, Intel do have a low-power chip, the Atom, which is widely used in netbooks.

Heavily-armed market

Ian Fogg of Forrester Research explains that Intel have had limited success pushing the Atom into smaller devices.

"Part of the problem is, they are coming from the PC market and they are having to design something that is super efficient.

"There are already established players in mobile and having completely different technology means a company does not just have to change the processor, but they have to change other parts of their product that tie in to the processor.

"It is quite a big decision for a company to switch away from ARM technology to something very different."

The chip Intel is hoping to break into the smartphone market with is a version of the Atom - codenamed Moorestown and laden with amazing claims about power efficiency and performance.

Atom-powered mobile phone The world's only demo of a mobile powered by Intel's Moorestown chip

But so far, there has only been one smartphone demo with the Moorestown chipset inside and soon after its unveiling at consumer technology tradeshow CES in January, its development was halted.

Speaking at the show, Intel's chief executive Paul Otellini did not seem convinced that smartphones were the future at all.

"I think a lot of the growth is going to be mobile, in all form factors. It is way too early to decide which form factor is going to win - the laptop, the netbook, the smartphone. For the foreseeable future they are all going to thrive."

Intel argues that since we will expect a full PC experience from tomorrow's mobile devices, it makes sense to have the same make of chips in both, to ensure full compatibility.

That is why it says its Moorestown smartphones, now scheduled for 2011, are the sensible choice of architecture.

But with Nokia launching its latest ARM-powered devices this week, and Samsung announcing its first dual core ARM processor for smartphones and tablets, Intel may well find it difficult to force its way into an already heavily armed market.


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onsdag 1. desember 2010

The Technology newsbucket: browsers v HTML5, WP7 sales, Nokia v Apple and more


Good moooooorning Toronto! Photo by gtall1 on Flickr. Some rights reserved

A quick burst of 16 links for you to chew over, as picked by the Technology team

Where the iPad comes into its own >> Memex 1.1
John Naughton discovers a great new app, Soundnote: "At first sight it looks like any other notetaking App. But it has one magical ingredient: it can record audio and sync the recording to the typed notes. In other words, it does much of what my Livescribe pen does, but with none of the associated gadgetry — and cost. The Livescribe pen retails at around £120, and then there's the cost of the special notebooks (you can print your own special paper, but life's too short for that) on top."

HTML5 Conformance Test Results >> W3 Org
Pits Safari 5, Opera 11, Firefox 4b6, Google Chrome 7 and Internet Explorer 9 (preview 6) against the current HTML5 (not CSS3) testbed. See if you can guess what order they ranked before you click.

Windows Phone 7 "selling well" so far >> ZDNet UK
Jack Schofield looks at WP7's progress (though nobody can work out whether there's been a supply constraint or a mad dash to buy), and asserts: "It seems likely that the number of WP7 apps will overtake the number of iPhone apps, though most of the WP7 apps may be in-house programs that are invisible to consumers."
Filed away to revisit in the future, though it contains its own getout clause.

'Evilgrade' Gets an Upgrade >> Krebs on Security
Apps that are updated on Windows but don't use a cryptographic key can have updates spoofed. "Among the software products that Amato says EvilGrade can compromise are iTunes, Java, Skype, Winamp — even security applications like Superantispyware, Sunbelt and Panda Antirootkit (a longer list of vulnerable apps is available in the documentation)."
iTunes considered harmful.

Nokia Gets Support of ITC Staff in Apple Smartphone Trial - Bloomberg
Apple wants to get Nokia's phones ruled in breach of international rules, which would mean imports to the US would be blocked. (Would anyone notice?) Nokia, separately, wants to do the same to Apple.

Porn maker sues 7,098 alleged film pirates | Media Maverick - CNET News
"F--- 'em all," [Axel] Braun told Xbiz. "People don't realize that when you pirate a movie it hurts all of the people who work very hard to get it produced - from the cast to the production assistants to the makeup artists...So we are going after every one of them who pirates our content."
You mean they're not doing it for the enjoyment in those films? But they always sound so happy.

Google is lost in location-based battle with Facebook, will it check in? >> Scobleizer
Robert Scoble: "In the past, to find a business, we'd go to Google and type something like 'Palo Alto Sushi.'
"We're heading toward a world where you'll use location-based services to do the same thing. That is a HUGE disruptive threat to Google.
"Here's why.
"In Google's world they controlled everything and were able to decide which ads get displayed next to searches for businesses.
"The world has now shifted to where people like my wife stay signed into Facebook 18 hours a day. Now she can see which businesses her friends are using."

New IE 0-Day used in Targeted Attacks >> Symantec Connect
"Since the specific exploit page only worked when someone was using Internet Explorer 6 and 7, the script only transferred the visitor to the page hosting the exploit when this condition was met. In other cases the users didn't see anything but a blank website." There's a moral in here, if only we could disentangle it...

10 Reasons Python Rocks for Research >> Hoyt Koepke
Makes a lot of good points, though quite a few of them aren't exclusive to Python by any means; it's more the fact that you have all of them together in the package. (OK, tuples are clever once you find the right use for them.) But quite a few of these could be applied to, say, PHP.

Open data from the inside: Lichfield Council's Stuart Harrison >> Online Journalism Blog
"I think the main thing I've learnt is that APIs are great, but they're not always necessary. My early work was on APIs that link directly into databases, but, as I've moved forward, I've found that this isn't always necessary. While an API is nice to have, it's sometimes much better to just get the data out there in a raw format."

What do you have to believe for an Android dominated future? >> Asymco
Horace Dedlu asks calmly what it would take for Android to become dominant, what the constraints are, how the future looks. Consistently rational, and points out that those cheering Android have forgotten that Windows Phone is more likely to take share from there than from Nokia, Apple or RIM. "Looking at the world through modular/inter-dependent lenses lets you see that mobile platform dynamics will not evolve as they did in the PC era. At least not for the foreseeable future."

How much is that data plan going to cost you if you use internet TV? - The Globe and Mail
The unanswered question about Google TV (and similar TV-over-web plans, Apple): are they going to pay for all that streamed data? Because there's no sign in Canada (where this article applies) or the UK of "unlimited" data plans even on fixed broadband.

Recorded crime data at local authority level >> data.gov.uk
Come on, someone has to be able to do something dramatic with this innocent-looking CSV.

Apple confirms move to 90-second iTunes samples >> CNET News
Because it reckons you'll buy more tracks than with the present 30-second ones. Well, it gives you three times the chance of getting an earworm.

Amazing Facts About Facebook And Breakups >> Mathias Mikkelsen
Pre-Christmas is a minefield and spring is the worst. All human life is on Facebook, it seems.

iPhoto '11 updated to squash "extremely rare" library bug >> DownloadSquad
"Extremely rare". Suuuuure. The bug that deletes libraries whole. Mmm-hmm. The onle blamed on third-party plugins. Nobody uses those.

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Coders decry Silverlight change

2 November 2010 Last updated at 11:04 GMT Windows 7, Reuters Silverlight will be used to get apps working on Windows 7 phones Developers say Microsoft has "betrayed" them by changing strategy on the Silverlight web technology.

When first announced Silverlight was portrayed as a rival to Flash and key to getting Microsoft software running on many different devices.

Now Microsoft is slowing Silverlight development and turning its attention to web standards such as HTML5.

Silverlight will remain as a way to get apps running on Windows phone 7.

The strategy shift emerged as a result of an interview that Bob Muglia, Microsoft's head of servers and tools division, gave at the company's Professional Developers Conference.

In that interview, he said Silverlight was still "core" to Microsoft but the company was looking to other technologies such as HTML to get its software running on devices people use to get at online sites and services.

Mr Muglia clarified his comments in a blog post saying that exploding use of e-readers, tablets and different sorts of smartphones now made it "practically impossible" to get something like Silverlight running on all those devices.

Like Adobe's Flash, Silverlight acted as a wrapper that, once installed on a machine, allowed that device to run code written for it. Many sites used it as a way to present rich video and multimedia to visitors.

Silverlight also made it easier for developers to hook into the many back office systems Microsoft produces to help enrich the services that could be put online.

Mr Muglia said the shift on strategy was not a "negative statement" but a recognition that the industry had changed.

The furore kicked off by Mr Muglia's comments also led Microsoft boss Steve Ballmer to underscore the software giant's commitment to Silverlight technology in a statement of his own.

Despite this, many of the comments on Mr Muglia's blogpost took the software giant to task for the change.

Developers described themselves as "betrayed", "disappointed" and "demoralised" by the decision.

Others said they felt they had wasted the time they had invested in learning to use Silverlight and others said they would now consider changing to rival technologies.

Many pushed for more clarification on the future of Silverlight and when the next version of the software will be available.

Microsoft has only said it would talk about a release date for Silverlight 5 "in the coming months".


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