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T-Mobile HotSpot customers can still use the Starb

20 Aug 2010

However, according to a T-Mobile news release, existing HotSpot customers will not be impacted by the switch for at least another five years. AT&T Wi-Fi operations have yet to begin, and even after the transition, customers can take advantage of a roaming agreement between T-Mobile USA and AT&T. HotSpot and HotSpot @Home customers who want to use the Starbucks Wi-Fi can do so without additional charge. That said, it’s still a blow to T-Mobile, as customers may attempt to crawl out of their existing HotSpot subscriptions.

Monday’s announcement that Starbucks will end its Wi-Fi partnership with T-Mobile had some HotSpot subscribers worried. After all, Starbucks locations are a significant source of T-Mobile HotSpots. One of the key attractions of T-Mobile’s HotSpot @Home service is the ubiquity of such HotSpots (HotSpot @Home is a service that lets T-Mobile subscribers make unlimited phone calls via Wi-Fi).

Nikon debuts D700, full frame for the midrange

20 Aug 2010

For the uninitiated, perspective-control lenses, sometimes referred to as tilt/shift lenses, allow you to photograph objects like buildings, where your angle relative to the subject causes unwanted artifacts, such as the top of a building looking very small relative to the middle. PC lenses don’t come cheap, though, as the prices of the PC-E Micro NIKKOR 45mm f/2.8D ED and PC-E Micro NIKKOR 85mm f/2.8D lenses exemplify; they will be $1,799.95 and $1,739.95, respectively, when they ship in August.

A brief comparison:
 
D300
D700
D3 Resolution
12.3 megapixels
12.1 megapixels
12.1 megapixels Sensor size
23.6×15.8mm (DX)
23.9×36mm (FX)
23.9×36mm (FX) ISO range
Native: ISO 200 to 3200
Expanded: ISO 100 (Lo-1) to ISO 6400 (Hi-1)
Native: ISO 200 to 6400
Expanded: ISO 100 (Lo-1) to 25,600 (Hi-2)
Native: ISO 200 to 6400
Expanded: ISO 100 (Lo-1) to 25,600 (Hi-2) Burst shooting
6fps (8fps with battery grip)
n/a raw/100 JPEG
5fps (8fps with battery grip)
17 raw/100 JPEG
9fps (11fps in DX crop mode)
17 14-bit raw/64 JPEG Viewfinder
100 percent coverage
0.94x magnification
95 percent coverage
0.72x magnification
100 percent coverage
0.70x magnification Price
$1,799.95
$2,999.95
$4,999.95

(Credit:
Nikon USA)

The D700 will also boast some of the durability characteristics of the D3, such as the magnesium alloy outside and dust and weather sealing. The 150,000-cycle shutter and dust prevention system come from the D300. Other features it inherits from both sides of the family include the 3-inch LCD, two live-view shooting modes, a 51-point AF system, and 3D Matrix metering technology.

The new Speedlight SB900, which will replace the SB800, offers a host of technology updates, including better coverage (17-200mm vs. 24-105mm for the SB800); automatic DX/FX format detection; three different light distribution patterns–center-weighted, even (corner-to-corner), and standard (like the SB800); a 360-degree rotating head; better performance on 4AA batteries (four-second recycle time with Alkaline batteries and 2.3 seconds with NiMH batteries); white-balance compensation for flash-mounted gels; user-updateable firmware; and an AF-assist beam that covers all 51 AF points compared to the 11 points covered by the SB800. Ergonomic changes include wireless controls on the body, not just in the menus, and a larger LCD.

(Credit:
Nikon USA)

Plus, their (relatively) lower prices put full-frame shooting in the hands of deep-pocketed amateur photographers. Until now, that’s a party at which Nikon never got to dance. But with Monday’s announcement of the full-frame D700, Nikon’s a wallflower no more.

For those who don’t need the indestructibility or built-in vertical grip of a traditional pro dSLR like the Nikon D3 or Canon EOS-1D Mark III–and that’s quite a chunk of the pro market–smaller, lighter, and cheaper full-frame models like the Canon EOS 5D are the real workhorses.

The following product is available:

On Sale Now: $2,269.00 - $2,794.99
View the latest prices for Nikon D700 (body only)

D700 back

On the downside, this thing is huge. So if the SB800 looks good enough for you and size matters, I suggest you run out and get one before it disappears from the market. The SB900 will also be a bit more expensive, at least initially; the street price of the SB800 is uless than $400 now, while the SB900 is slated to list for $499.95 when it ships in August.

Expect the D700 to hit the stores at the end of July.

PC-E Micro NIKKOR 45mm f/2.8D ED

Speedlight SB900

Although there seems to be lots to like about the D700–I did get to play with one for a bit while Nikon briefed us on the camera–for those who want a second body to accompany a D3 things aren’t quite as rosy. Nikon lets you share picture control settings between cameras via a CF card, but some of the more prosaic features aren’t quite so transparent.

Nikon also took the opportunity to tweak some technologies and the interface. For instance, there’s new automatic Active D-Lighting, which adjusts exposure while shooting rather than post-shot. (Nikon does say you’ll take a performance hit with it.) The D700 will also have a built-in flash. An improved information display on the LCD now shows custom settings.

(Credit:
Nikon USA)

For instance, the D700’s viewfinder only offers 95 percent scene coverage. By itself, that’s a bit disappointing, but when you have to switch between bodies, having to make that mental adjustment constantly becomes a downright nuisance. Furthermore, the body design and control layout is pure D300, which means it’s completely different from the D3.

(Credit:
Nikon USA)

The D700 looks to be a bit of a cross between the full-frame (FX format) D3 and the DX-format D300. It has the same 12.1-megapixel Expeed CMOS sensor as the D3, with its concomitantly wide ISO sensitivity range.

(Credit:
Nikon USA)

The Nikon D700 looks to be a bit of a cross between the full-frame (FX format) D3 and the DX-format D300.

D700 top

Along with the D700, Nikon also announced a pair of perspective-control lenses and a replacement for the Speedlight SB800, the SB900.

iPod Touch alternatives

19 Aug 2010

Like its iPhone kin, Apple’s iPod Touch is the object of an overwhelming amount of fanboy technolust. Unfortunately, Apple’s high tech comes at a high price. If you’re looking for a touch-screen MP3 player that doesn’t suck, there are a handful of decent options available to you.

(Credit:
Donald Bell/CNET Networks)

Is the Touch out of reach? Try an alternative.

See CNET’s round-up of iPod Touch alternatives.

Powerset’s iPhone app solves bar bets, makes you s

17 Aug 2010

Semantic search tool Powerset has put out a new
iPhone app this week. Those looking to search on the go can now use the service’s plain English searching capabilities to scour the entirety of Wikipedia and Freebase (coverage). The app comes after months of Powerset staff fumbling while trying to use their own product on the popular mobile device.


Powerset iPhone Web App Demo from officialpowerset on Vimeo

I expect the company to come out with its own native app that will save past searches and let you store local content depending on how popular this version becomes. I’ve embedded some screens below. Also embedded after the break is a demo video of it in action.

The new tool will pull up everything the desktop version does, although I found performance to be a tad slower–even over Wi-Fi. Outline, one of my favorite Powerset features that gives you quick links to each section in a Wikipedia article, has also made its way into the pocket version. While not as convenient as the desktop version which sits beside the actual Wikipedia article, it’s a great way to skip down to a lower section of an article, which is normally an activity that makes you look like a complete idiot while you continuously drag your finger up and down the screen of your phone. There’s also a much needed search function, something the iPhone’s version of
Safari is lacking from its desktop sibling.

Clear’s Registered Traveler program– a final word

17 Aug 2010

It’s been an interesting several days since I posted “Is Clear a present danger for football fans?” and “Is Clear worth anything at all?” last week.

Although Clear customers today go through exactly the same airport security screening that non-Clear travelers do, Brill told me that he’s working toward the goal of providing a faster, more convenient screening procedure for his customers. For example, VIP is working with General Electric to develop those “shoe scanners” you may have seen here on CNET.

I’ll just leave it at that.

But let me come at these ideas from a different direction. It seems to me that:

There are many related issues that deserve further discussion, but I’ll just mention a few that I’d like other analysts to explore in more detail.

The Clear card

It wouldn’t surprise me if a private company such as VIP can move more quickly than TSA to deploy new technology. But I don’t think that’s a good thing.

Brill says that once these shoe scanners are approved for wider use by TSA, VIP will be able to use its membership revenue to install the scanners in the special Clear lanes at participating airports, where the company already provides assistants to help its customers get through the checkpoints faster.

I think these statements are essentially inarguable, but they effectively contradict the first two.

2) These “trusted passengers” can be given a different kind of real-time security screening before entry into a secured facility such as an airport terminal without compromising the overall security of the facility.

Regardless of the technology involved, I believe all travelers should receive the same screening, and that’s TSA’s policy as of today. That policy takes away much of the potential benefit of the Clear program, and that’s unfortunate for Brill and VIP, but I think that’s the way it has to be.

But shortly after the first post, I got a call from Ellen Howe in the public-affairs office of the Transportation Security Administration. Apparently, government bureaucracies can be even more responsive than private companies. (I also know a smart, effective manager in the Corporate Communications division of the Department of Homeland Security, TSA’s parent agency. Assuming this isn’t purely a coincidence, I hope the rest of the Federal government follows DHS’s lead in hiring good people for these important positions.)

For example, VIP has a plan (already approved by TSA) to distribute a new Clear card, replacing the existing card pictured above, that will include the owner’s picture and other security features. The new card will be accepted at all TSA checkpoints, even in airports without Clear lanes, as a primary ID– no driver’s license required. I’m not sure this is such a good idea either, but it’s a relatively minor thing.

I asked Howe about this plan, and after consulting with TSA administrator Kip Hawley, she confirmed that when TSA approves the use of shoe scanners– whether the GE model, or comparable systems from other companies– it intends to use its own funds to deploy them in all of the checkpoint lanes in US airports, simply because the security and time-saving benefits of this technology will justify the expense.

If Clear travelers can go through a shoe scanner instead of other screening procedures, it’s possible some terrorists will actually prefer to take that route through the checkpoint– for example, if they’re not carrying explosives, which are what the shoe scanners are optimized to detect.

1) Advance registration in a security program such as Clear can create a higher degree of confidence in the trustworthiness of an individual.

Brill wanted me to point out that Clear lanes move as much as 30% faster than other lanes, which improves the overall efficiency of the whole checkpoint, thus benefiting non-Clear customers. TSA’s figures show that less than 1% of US air travelers on a given day are Clear customers, but Brill says that this figure can be much higher at airports with well-established Clear programs.

1) Advance screening cannot substitute for real-time screening.

(Credit:
Verified Identity Pass)

Many would-be terrorists would have no reason not to get a Clear card, giving them the choice between the ordinary Hijacking By Bomb lane or the special Clear-only Hijacking By Knife lane.

No, I don’t think that’s funny either.

Howe was correcting a factual error in my first post, but as I explained in the second entry, correcting the error only strengthened my original argument, which Howe agreed with.

Brill may still be correct that Clear will have these machines in its lanes before they are installed throughout the nation’s airports. (Brill said the ATSA compels TSA to support this deployment, but Howe quoted the law to me; it says the agency “may” do so.)

That was nothing unusual; I often get followup calls from the companies behind products and services I mention here.

These assertions are not obviously wrong; reasonable people believe them, the concept of “trusted passengers” is written into the Aviation and Transportation Security Act (ATSA), and VIP’s business model relies on them being true.

After that second post, Steven Brill, CEO of Verified Identity Pass, Inc. (VIP runs the Clear Registered Traveler program) contacted me to dispute my conclusions. Brill was very generous with his time in helping me to understand what Clear does and is trying to do.

Having discussed the issue at great length with the two involved organizations, I feel I’m in a better position to explain the problems I see with the Clear program. To me, there are two essential assumptions behind Brill’s vision for Clear:

2) Providing two different paths through a security checkpoint and allowing individuals to choose which path to take can create a potentially exploitable weakness.

Howe also says that TSA has provided “Black Diamond Self Select Lanes” (you know, like “black diamond” slopes for expert skiers) at 43 airports that provide similar benefits. So both sides have good arguments on this point, but convenience is a small thing by comparison with security.

Anyway, there are many other kinds of advanced security screening technology being evaluated by TSA. In the long run, airport security will be both faster and more effective.

DivX returns to Web video with the HD-licious Vree

17 Aug 2010

Update: Oops, looks like we helped take the site down. Removing links for the time being–will put them back up when the site returns.

Update 3: Everything is back to normal. Links are back.

The short clip I uploaded earlier today came from my digital camera and was converted from AVI to DivX with no noticeable loss in quality. The one caveat there is that, to see it, users have to install the DivX Web player in their browser, the same thing you have to do with Flash and YouTube. DivX’s player, however, has a few tricks up its sleeve. For one, you can pop out any video to its original quality, which on some widescreen videos looks just great. It’s also got a much more complex options menu for every clip that lets you do fast forward and rewind, and even save the clip if you have a premium version of the player–the same kind of things you get with Apple’s QuickTime.

Update 2: Vreel is getting more servers and should be officially “re-launching” soon. We’ll keep you posted.

Unfortunately, the one thing missing is a way to embed the clip on other sites, so if you want to see how it looks beyond the screenshot below, you’ll have to go here

Like its predecessor, one of the service’s strong suits is that it uses DivX, a codec that’s not as popular as Adobe’s Flash for Web video, but beat it to market for delivering high-resolution videos and is largely the format of choice for videos found on sites like The Pirate Bay. Since then, Flash has caught up technologically, but high-resolution videos have not quite reached the mainstream, only popping up on sites like Dailymotion, Vimeo, and in a gallery on Hulu. The user-uploaded videos already filling up Vreel’s servers are beautiful (albeit mostly illegal).

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

When I put together a small comparison test of video services earlier this year, an overwhelming number of people got on me about not including Stage6, a side project of the people behind the popular DivX codec to showcase what their technology was capable of. Shortly thereafter, Stage6 shut its doors in a rather dramatic fashion–giving users mere days to find somewhere else to host their high-resolution videos.

That was in February though, and since then a group of half a dozen developers has put together their own solution, called Vreel. Originally planned to launch back in March, it opened up its doors this morning.

High-quality videos on Vreel shine. You can even view them in close to native resolution with a pop-out player.

The service is allowing users to upload gargantuan video files by most standards. The current cap is 1GB, which is what many free Web storage services offer as their entire limit. I’m told users will be able to upload even larger sizes in the future. The best thing is that there’s no time limit, so as long as your video is under the size cap, it can be as long as you want. Considering the news about YouTube extending its video length, this is a necessary move.

Mike Magee to leave The Inquirer

17 Aug 2010

Good luck to Mike in whatever comes next down the road, which will likely involve a pint and a smoke along the way. He’s our combination of Hunter Thompson and Bob Woodward.

Both The Inquirer and The Register, Magee’s original publication, carved out a space for themselves on the Web against the entrenched trade industry players way back before blogging was the Next Big Thing. They are required reading for hardware executives and reporters, both for the stories they generate and the biting wit they bring to a very buttoned-down industry.

Mike Magee, who founded two of the cheekiest-yet-influential technology news sites ever to grace the Internet, plans to leave The Inquirer in February.

If you’re not in the chip industry, or if you’ve never written about it, you might not know Magee. But Intel and AMD executives, all the way to the top, are all too familiar with his work covering their industries over the past decade in classic British tabloid style. Magee confirmed his plans to leave via e-mail, saying he wanted “to try something a little different.”

Underexposed blog Links of the day

16 Aug 2010

Apple crippled DTrace: Sun DTrace cocreator Adam Leventhal — Dampened delight that Apple ported Sun Microsystems’ DTrace from Solaris to
Mac OS X. It’s blocking DTrace from probing processes which exempt themselves. "This is antithetical to the notion of systemic tracing, antithetical to the goals of DTrace, and antithetical to the spirit of open source."
A gripe about Adobe Lightroom documentation — I’ve introduced a few folks to Lightroom, and I agree the state of documentation and tutorials is chaotic, in part because Adobe revved the software so often. Better than no updates, though. I also sympathize with the paralysis of hierarchy, DNG, etc.
John Nack: Community-powered Lightroom help goes live — Don’t like Lightroom documentation? Fix it yourself with this quasi-open-source documentation effort.
Free noise reduction plug-in for the GIMP | Photodoto — John Watson likes this free noise-reduction filter for the GIMP.
Harold Davis lurves his Nikon D300 — "This is the first digital single lens reflex that I’ve used that approaches what a dSLR should be, and maybe even the Platonic ideal of a dSLR." Likes 14-bit raw, low noise.
Nikon D3 Review Diary — Nice shots comparing D3 performance at various ISO settings.
David Pogue’s SLR turned away at the door — Pogue can’t get his Nikon D80 into a motocross event. A harbinger of trouble. This goes hand in hand with all the issues about who owns broadcast rights–including text-messaging an update to your pal–of NBA games.
Adobe - Feature Request/Bug Report Form — Lightroom’s feature request form.
Getty Images up for sale, could fetch $1.5 billion - The New York Times — Getty on the block? Hello private equity.
Pentax K20D Sample Images | Photography Bay — More rumors of Pentax K20D and K200D
Photoshop Insider ? What I’d Love to See in Lightroom 2.0 — A Photoshop guru’s Lightroom wish list. Wedding album export templates, networking, tethered shooting are among his desired pro features.
A developer of Windows on cruft in the Registry — This is my single biggest beef about Microsoft Windows. Pathetic that insider advice is "don’t try out new software." One reason I use virtual machines is to try out new software. What a sorry state of affairs.
GPS Tracklog: Garmin Colorado 300 in stock — A new line of outdoor-oriented GPS units from Garmin. Not cheap.
FormatMessageW Error in Lightroom Export Plug-ins — Some good sleuthing on why Jeffrey Friedl’s Lightroom Flickr Export plug-in can break on Windows. I have this problem often. Looks to be a timeout-related problem.
Bibble 4.9 Pro raw conversion software review — A review of Bibble’s latest software. "If you’re neither working with RAWs or processing lots of images, Bibble may not be (right), but for if you’re looking for lots of speed and some of the sharpest results around, there’s nothing better at this price."
Corel PhotoImpact X3 Announced — An upgrade to a consumer-level photo-editing package.

Yahoo to unseal opposition court papers in shareho

15 Aug 2010

Yahoo investors who are hoping to get a glimpse into the company’s legal brief filed Monday to oppose holding a trial to remove its controversial employee severance plan will have to wait for an hour or so, according to a source familiar with the filing.

Update 10:30 a.m. PDT: Yahoo plans to unseal its court filing Monday.

Yahoo’s brief seeks to oppose a motion made in a shareholder lawsuit, which asks the court to hold a trial to invalidate the company’s employees severance plans and to hold the trial before Yahoo’s annual shareholders’ meeting August 1.

Yahoo had unsuccessfully sought to keep the shareholder amended complaint under seal. The recently unsealed documents created a firestorm of controversy for the Internet search pioneer. The amended complaint contained e-mails and information from outside compensation consultants Yahoo had hired, who raised questions regarding the breadth of the severance packages that would be awarded to all full-time employees in the event of a change of control of Yahoo should employees depart the company or their duties or responsibilities change.

While the motion to oppose setting a trial date was temporarily filed under seal, Yahoo’s motion to dismiss the shareholder amended lawsuit–also filed Monday–was not, according to the Delaware Chancery Court, where both filings were submitted.

Yahoo’s employee severance plan has been called a defacto “poison pill” by the plaintiffs, who allege it was put in place to make Microsoft’s earlier unsolicited buyout efforts more expensive, a claim Yahoo has previously rejected. The Internet company characterized the plan as an employee retention effort.

A whopping $35 million for RockYou’s social-networ

13 Aug 2010

Disclosure: CBS, one of RockYou’s past clients, has agreed to acquire CNET Networks, publisher of News.com. The deal is expected to close in the third quarter.

That rumor of a $400 million valuation might not be too far off base: social-media application powerhouse RockYou announced Monday that it has raised $35 million in Series C venture capital.

It’s the kind of money that may raise a few eyebrows, considering many believe the social-application space doesn’t offer a proven business model yet. RockYou is responsible for a number of popular applications–SuperWall, Vampires, Likeness, X Me–on Facebook and several OpenSocial-compatible platforms (MySpace, Hi5, Friendster, Bebo, and Orkut), as well as an ad network. The company has already done marketing campaigns for clients like Paramount, New Line Cinema, Sony, Microsoft, and CBS, and claims to have 87.5 million monthly unique visitors with 2.7 billion page views.

Along with Slide, RockYou is one of the biggest companies in the social-network application development space. And with the $35 million, RockYou plans to work on “additional tools and services” to further improve its advertising platform for brands and marketing campaigns that want to jump on the social-application craze.

“DCM believes that RockYou will be the catalyst of this new global ecosystem that delivers next-generation advertisements through its innovative advertising network and social applications,” DCM co-founder and general partner David Chao said in a release. “With the current momentum, RockYou is positioned to become a top-10 Internet property in the world in the near future.”

The round was led by venture firm DCM, with contributions from several private investors. Previous RockYou investors include Lightspeed Venture Partners, Partech International, and Sequoia Capital.