tech news from around the world

Sunday, June 25, 2006

Sennheiser styles your sound


Known for producing the world's best microphones, it's no surprise that Sennheiser would release these brilliant new amphibious headphones. Sweat-resistant and fully washable headphones ( also good for crying in the rain as you listen to Celine Dion ) the MX 75 Sport contains Powerful neodymium magnets for a balanced, detailed sound reproduction. The MX 75's come in an ergonomic Twist-to-fit design which ensures a secure and comfortable fit during sports, even for the weirdest shaped heads.

Taiwan international design competition


Gadget addicts will love the quirky fare dished up at the latest Taiwan International design competition. From shoes that double as floor mops to wristband dairies and umbrellas with art-print canopies, this year’s competition boasts an interesting range of useful and fun innovations. Our favorites is the digital picture frame, which uses laser hologram display technology to project your favorite pictures onto a frame.

Winamp in the Material World


It’s hard to believe that MP3s have been wildly popular for the better part of seven years now, long enough for us to find ourselves waxing nostalgic when we see this concept for an MP3 player that looks just like the first Winamp software interface.

via gizmodo

Wednesday, June 21, 2006

The great creative sale Pt2


If you are in singapore over the next week,then make sure to check out the sale at any one of the locations in the pic. Or if you gonna get someone to buy sumthin for you then go here for the special offers.

The great creative sale!


Well I found this little poster on the Creative’s Singapore website. Very interesting information. Besides the deals they have on Creative products it seems they may be releasing a brand new mp3 player.It claims that it will be tiny with a price to match. The event goes on from June 23-25,2006. I will keep you updated as to the release of the new gadget.

Laptop replacement anyone?


An article over at PC World got me thinking about laptop replacements and the possibility of using the Treo in place of a laptop/powerbook.

Ibog


I have precious little to say about Atech's iCarta iPod dock and Bath Tissue Holder.No joke;someone actually made a speaker system for the iPod with a toilet paper holder attached. The iCarta's sporting four speakers, a charging iPod dock, adjustable spacers for different iPod models, and a quick release fastening system for portability. My only question is: How many of these can they possibly sell?

Courtesy Johnny

Long Live Vinyl


Still have that album collection gathering dust in the attic somewhere? Are those 45s sitting in a shoebox under the bed? Now, all that vinyl that you couldn’t part with can indeed live forever. Turn your favorite 80’s tunes into MP3s with this revolutionary turntable from Ion Audio.Just connect the turntable via any USB port; importing all those 45s and LPs into your PC or Mac couldn’t be easier.Best thing?It can import 8-tracks and cassettes,too.Available atFredFlare.com

Tuesday, June 20, 2006

Sony Vaio UX Micro PC


The Sony VAIO UX Micro PC weighs around 1.2 pounds and sports a 4.5-inch wide SVGA screen which uses the company’s XBRITE technology to deliver brilliant color, crisp graphics and very fine details. The screen is also touch sensitive, usable with an integrated stylus and on-screen touch launcher for quick access to features and programs commonly used, such as games and Internet e-mail.

Driving Sony’s smallest PC is an Intel Core Solo Ultra Low Voltage processor and the Microsoft XP Professional operating system. This combination is joined by 512MB of 400MHz DDR2 SDRAM, an Intel Graphics Media Accelerator 950 with 128MB of dynamically allocated shared RAM/video memory and a 300GB 4200RPM ATA hard drive.

The Sony VAIO UX Micro PC comes standard with a port replicator which has connectivity options for i.Link IEEE-1394, USB 2.0 (x3), Ethernet, VGA and A/V; a VGA/LAN adapter; and soft carrying case, among other accessories. Optional accessories include a larger capacity battery, Bluetooth wireless mouse, Bluetooth GPS receiver, a multi-format DVD drive and a LocationFree Player Pak for streaming wireless TV and videos at home.

Sony’s VAIO UX Micro PC will be released this July for $1,799.99. More details can be found at the Sony Style Web site and Dynamism.com.

Why there are virtually no fat Japanese people


hehehhehe .. look at the size of the servings, makes me thinks we Indians are better off. lol .also note the digital price tags.

Yahoo Partners with CNN, ABC

It's been announced that ABC News and CNN.com will start providing video news feed to Yahoo's news site. Daily clips will be provided by CNN and on-demand video content will be delivered by ABC. Yahoo users will be able to access the content for free.

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Go 'Back up' to school now!

If you'd like to know more about backing up your computer, I suggest you take a look at backupschool.com. There's lots of good information on the site, presented in an easy to read manner. Backing up our files is something that no one necessarily enjoys, but it is extremely important. The site is still working on a few tutorials, but there is a wealth of info already available.

Firefox cheat list 101

Go here for the ultimate firefox cheat list.This page lists most of the basic functions Firefox has, and how to access them. Great for those who forgot how to access a certain menu, or for somebody who just switched to Firefox.

Be afraid very afraid

Is Microsoft afraid of the Google spreadsheet?

The world is excited about Google's new web-based spreadsheet, and the speculation about whether it poses a real threat to Microsoft has started. CNET asks the question, "Should Microsoft be worried?" Make no mistake, Microsoft is afraid of this product. It's a smart company and knows better than to discount Google as a competitor.

CNET quotes a lot of people who say Google is a consumer, not an enterprise company, and will only be useful to beginners; that it doesn't seem to fit Google's core search business; that other online vendors, such as Wikipedia and Salesforce already have online spreadsheets, etc. But Google's stock went up on the news, and Google has already demonstrated that crowds are wiser than experts. The wisdom of the stock market indicates this is important.

This reminds me of Microsoft's early days. Its products were mere "toys", people argued, it did not understand the enterprise, applications were very different than its core operating system business. Never forget what Microsoft taught the computer industry; it is much easier to move a product up in functionality than down.

Microsoft is now the company with overly complex products. Market research indicates that most people use only 20% of the functionality of Microsoft software. Microsoft has never offered simpler versions because it killed off all the competition (until now) and just didn't realize or didn't care that there was a need. Google is a master at simplicity. It can move up into the enterprise later.

Does it fit Google's search strategy? Not unless you define search broadly enough to say that people also want to search for their numbers, the way Google Desktop searches your computer. This is a new model. With Google, you do not have to categorize and file everything in the hopes that you will be able to find it later. Search is the first interface to Google's products.

Also, any time Google gets people to use a product, its customer base expands. Micosoft demonstrated that suites of programs with interoperability have a big advantage. That's what Google is doing--creating an online suite. Who knows what great advantages there will be to linking online products, pulling data automatically from other Google products as well as the internet? All someone needs to do to get on my Google calendar is send me a message with the date and time, and it magically appears. These kinds of features will increase.

CIO magazine has a good article on how applications fit Google's strategy, and why it has the technological prowess to do it.

Will people switch? Damn right. I will. Most people are not power users. Microsoft has left a huge opening for easy-to-use software. My wife's computer doesn't have Excel, and we don't want to spend the money to buy it. I can't send her the spreadsheet for our taxes. For the first time, I will be able to access spreadsheets from her computer.

When the reviews come out in the next couple days, they will most likely express disappointment. Reviewers continually forget that Google releases products before they're really ready for prime time, and collect feedback in order to improve them. It's a brilliant approach, avoiding the mistakes Microsoft makes by developing behind closed doors with the feedback of focus groups. Google uses extremely big focus groups.

It will not be an overnight success. Short term success is not the issue. Like Microsoft, Google is very patient. Be patient, and watch it grow.
More here on CNET

Thoughts courtesy Richard Brandt

Gates plans an exit - Whats next

Gates sets his exit. Ray Ozzie (a very smart guy) will be picking up Bill’s responsibilities. The next thing Microsoft should do is lay off 20% of their workforce and cut their product line by 25% (for starters). Could be a cse for major layoffs within 12-18 24 months. Upwards of 10-20%. MS needs to light a fire and get lean and they know it. The market knows it too and would love to see it happen

Yahoo battles YouTube

The lowdown on the new Yahoo Video product.The big change? Yahoo Video is targeting YouTube by allowing user-generated videos on the site. The biggest disappointment? The product is not being integrated(yet)into Flickr.

Yahoo Video will continue to allow major video publishers direct API access to the site, as well as crawling the web for relevant videos as well. But now, regular Internet users will have an easy way to upload videos and create their own video blog channel on Yahoo Video.

The only limit on uploads is file size - each file cannot be larger than 100 MB - but there are no time, bandwidth or total storage limitations. Videos can be set to public or private, and viewers can search and sort videos by popularity, category (pre-defined by Yahoo) or tags (user created). Like YouTube, videos can be rated by viewers, commented on, embedded into other websites, etc.

The biggest benefit to using Yahoo over other competitors may be the potential for exposure. Popular user generated videos will be periodically featured in a number of places on the new Yahoo home page when it launches.

And unlike YouTube and other video sites, Yahoo is not going entirely with Flash. They’ve built the uploader tool from scratch, and the default player is Windows Media format. For Mac users and others unable to use this format, a Flash player will be used instead and automatically.

The product is slick and will certainly be popular - partially because this is Yahoo, and partially because they’ve created an incredibly robust and complete video search tool with home grown videos and stuff crawled from the web. But what I really want is to see video upload functionality included directly into Flickr, a totally different user base. People will upload videos on Yahoo Video to get distribution and fame. People will upload videos to Flickr for sharing mostly with friends and family, and to have a safe long term place to store them. I’m much more interested in the latter.



Courtesy - Mike Arrington

Yahoo Launches New Home Page

The new Yahoo home page, which was previously in private testing, is now available to anyone using IE or Firefox (up to version 1.5) at yahoo.com/preview. There are a number of cosmetic changes, including a wider page layout, a bigger search bar, and intelligent use of Ajax to make the page more interactive (mouse over “mail” in the right sidebar, for example). More on the Yahoo Search Blog.

Key changes include a “personal assistant”, which is a preview area to see recent emails, an online friends list from Yahoo IM and other information (traffic, weather, etc.). They’ve also launched Yahoo Pulse!, “a window to the attention stream of our estimated half-billion users”.

Richard MacManus has a podcast with Yahoo Chief Product Officer Ash Patel and Vice President of Front Doors Tapan Bha about the launch.

Office 2007 is a ballsy move - Anil


Anil Dash writes here on why office 2007 is a brave upgrade. My personal view however is that ar a first glance it did seem rather confusing , why you would make such a radical change to a key line of business is anybodys guess.

Apple factory conditions



Over the past week, a firestorm has brewed over a report in Britain's Mail on Sunday which claimed extremely harsh working conditions at iPod factories. The original story is not available online, but Arstechnica has posted a good summary of the article here.

In brief, two factories were visited by Mail on Sunday reporters. The first factory was found to be forcing its staff to work 15 hour days for $50 USD per month. The second facility benefited from being in closer proximity to Shanghai, and workdays were shortened to 12 hours/day and workers were paid almost $100 USD per month. Security guards were paid up to $150 USD per month, although much of that had to be paid back to the company for housing and food. In addition to long hours, work days were said to often be accompanied by military-style drills.

Today, Apple officially responded to the allegations with a statement (reported at Playlist/MacCentral):

India is getting too expensive- Why Apple walked away

OUTSOURCING IN INDIA is getting far too expensive, according to Businessweek.

The magazine was looking into why Apple packed in its India operation only a few months after it started, while the likes of IBM has been expanding its operations in the country.

A deep throat in Apple has revealed that the reason was entirely cost driven. India turned out to be a lot more expensive than the bean-counters had thought.

There is a skill shortage and the turnover among staff is too high. Apple felt it "can do [such work] more efficiently elsewhere," the deep throat gagged.

McKinsey Global Institute said that India's economy grew by 9.3 percent last year and its tech business generated some $17.3 billion in revenues and employed nearly 700,000 people. However global investors are leaving the country in droves over concerns that the country's wage bills are getting too high.

Entry-level pay at tech and outsourcing companies climbed by as much as 13 percent a year from 2000 to 2004, while salaries for midlevel managers jumped 30 percent a year during the same period.

With those sort of figures, those looking for cut-price programmers and call centres are starting to look further East, where the cost of such employees will remain low for a much longer time. It still does not explain why some of the bigger companies, like IBM and Microsoft are still spending a fortune in India.

Courtesy Nick Farell and BW