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Archive for September, 2008

Removing CO2 From the Air Efficiently

September 30th, 2008
Canadian scientists have created a device that efficiently removes CO2 from the atmosphere. "The proposed air capture system differs from existing carbon capture and storage technology ... while CCS involves installing equipment at, say, a coal-fired power plant to capture CO2 produced during the coal-burning process, ... air capture machines will be able to literally remove the CO2 present in ambient air everywhere. [The team used] ... a custom-built tower to capture CO2 directly from the air while requiring less than 100 kilowatt-hours of electricity per tonne of carbon dioxide."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Roundup: Senate to vote on bailout, Dow bounces back, Hollywood sues RealNetworks

September 30th, 2008

Senate to vote Wednesday on revised bailout bill: The U.S. Senate will consider a new bailout bill with provisions that have been praised by House Republican leaders. The new provisions include tax breaks for businesses, alternative energy incentives, and a higher $250,000 cap for government insurance of bank deposits.

Easy go, easy come: Stocks bounced back on Tuesday after a disastrous Monday. The Dow rose 485 points on Tuesday, a day after it gave up 777.7 points. Investors are optimistic that a bailout deal will happen. And perhaps they overreacted on Monday.

Slide cuts deals with big media firms: Slide has arranged distribution deals with CBS, Time Warner’s Warner Brothers division, and Comcast’s E! channel, according to the Wall Street Journal. I guess we’re going to see sheep flying all over the place, as that’s one of the video/picture sharing company’s contributions to the modern world.

Hollywood sues Real Networks: Seattle-based Real Networks unveiled its RealDVD copying program at DEMOfall 08 earlier this month and sued the Hollywood studios. Now, of course, Hollywood is counter-suing for copyright infringement. But Real Networks has precedents on its side. Namely, Kaleidescape won the right to copy DVDs into its hard drive arrays for consumers to build their own DVD libraries. The Wall Street Journal has more.

Netflix launching its API tomorrow: The mail-order DVD rental company is opening up its user movie-rating platform to third parties who can build new applications around it.

Toxic Mac Pros? A French publication warns that your Mac laptop emits benzene that can be hazardous to your health.

Aha! So that’s what you’ve been watching: New YouTube Insight gives you analytics over span of time. It tells you which videos are hot, including the most popular segments of a video.

Pandora celebrates bill passed by Senate: A day after the House of Representatives acted, the Senate approved the Webcaster Settlement Act, the legislation that lays the groundwork for Web radio stations to negotiate reduced royalty rates for the songs they stream over the Web. Web radio firms like Pandora supported the bill.

A goofy Google time machine: Do a Google Search using the company’s oldest search engine index, just for kicks.

Are these start-ups best positioned to weather downturn? Techcrunch says this list will survive.

fatfoogoo hires ex pro-gamer Stevie Case: fatfoogoo, an Austrian game virtual business services company, has hired Stevana “Killcreek” Case to run business development in North America. She’ll help the firm license its engine for virtual goods and virtual economies to game publishers.

You can’t stop this guy: Marc Andreessen joins eBay’s board.

Charles Simonyi signs up for rocket ride: The famed ex-Microsoft technologist will head into space again aboard the private SpaceAdventures rocket — for the second time. It’s as good a use of $25 million as any.

Major whoops: Police seize $1.13 million in stolen games in U.K. Then thieves steal them again.

Ride the Shanghai express: AMD says that its new Shanghai server chips are ready to go.

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MI6 agent forgets to delete work records from camera before selling on eBay

September 30th, 2008

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We'd swear this had to be some sort of spoof on the impeccable James Bond, but sadly enough, the whole thing is true. A secondhand Nikon Coolpix camera which sold on eBay for a mere £17 ($30) turned out to be a real bargain once its new 28-year old owner completed his first image dump. Along with decidedly decent snaps from his US vacation, he also found a number of "top secret" images, diagrams and sketches that have since been confirmed as MI6 material. We're talking photos of rocket launchers, hand-drawn graphics of terrorist links and all sorts of other information not at all intended for civilian eyes. 'Course, the whole thing could just be the act of one talented Photoshopper, but we highly doubt the agency would be so fortunate.

[Via Digg, image courtesy of WWII Airplane Model]
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Update: AMD says Shanghai won’t be another Barcelona

September 30th, 2008

Advanced Micro Devices said its Shanghai processor is on track to ship in servers by the end of the year and sought to reassure customers that the problems that delayed its previous server chip, Barcelona, are a thing of the past.

AMD shipped the first quad-core Barcelona processors last September but halted sales soon after when a bug was found in the chip's cache memory. It didn't resume volume shipments for about six months, damaging AMD's reputation and costing it valuable market share to Intel.

Pat Patla, general manager of AMD's server and workstation group, said Tuesday that AMD has overhauled its testing process to avoid similar problems with Shanghai, another four-core processor that is being manufactured with a more advanced, 45-nanometer process.

"We realized with Shanghai that we'd have to turn out a product early that had the stability and the health to make [server vendors] get engaged," he told reporters in San Francisco. "We realized their experience with Barcelona wasn't ideal."

AMD appointed a veteran engineer, Raghuram Tupuri, to close gaps in AMD's testing and validation processes. And it worked more closely with server vendors early on to ensure that the first samples of Shanghai, delivered around the end of February, were of higher quality, Patla said.

In a sign of how confidence in AMD had eroded, Patla said some server makers were still "a little hesitant" about working with the first Shanghai samples, and AMD had to ship them complete systems in order for them to test them.

He said he's now confident that the first Shanghai chip, a "mainstream" processor running at 75 watts, will be available in servers in the fourth quarter. Two other models will ship in the first quarter next year: a low-power, 55-watt version for blade servers, and a high-power, 105-watt version for large, "number-crunching" machines.

Jim McGregor, a principal analyst with In-Stat, said AMD is still in "proving itself mode" with customers, but he noted that the move to Shanghai will be a smaller one than the leap AMD made to get from its dual-core processor design to Barcelona. "They've made the transition to Barcelona and the native quad-core design so they've done the heavy lifting," he said.

Shanghai will give a 35 percent performance boost over Barcelona on average -- meaning more for some applications and less for others -- and consume 35 percent less power, according to Patla. The improvements come partly from the move from a 65- to 45-nanometer manufacturing process and a larger 6M-byte Level 3 cache. In addition, the Shanghai cores will run at a higher clockspeed than those of Barcelona, but those details, along with pricing, won't be announced until the chip is closer to launch.

To go with Shanghai, AMD is building its second-ever server chipset -- it developed the first to go with its first Opteron processor about five years ago, but since then the chipsets have been made by Nvidia and Broadcom. Code-named Fiorano, the new chipset will be socket-compatible with the Barcelona chipsets, but will use a "virtualized I/O" and AMD's Hypertransport 3 technology for boosting data transfer speeds between components.

Patla said AMD wants to "take control" of its chipsets as it aims for specific market segments like virtualization, which Shanghai will be geared toward. Nvidia and Broadcom have said they will continue making AMD chipsets until the end of 2009; after that their future with AMD is unclear.

Fiorano will also work with the follow-on to Shanghai, a six-core processor code-named Istanbul, due in the second half of 2009. The following year, in mid-2010, AMD will release another six-core processor, Sao Paulo, and a 12-core processor, Magny-Cours, named after a motor racing track in France. These are all code names for chips that will become part of AMD's Opteron family.

Sao Palo and Magny-Cours will get another new chipset, code-named Maranello, which will move customers to a new socket design and a faster, DDR3 memory.

Intel, meanwhile, is not standing still. After being late to market with a 64-bit processor that would also run 32-bit applications well, the company recovered ground and in mid-September shipped its first six-core Xeon processor, the 7400 series, also known as Dunnington. Next year it plans to release an eight-core processor dubbed Nehalem, and in the past has talked about working on 80-core processors in its labs.

The challenge for customers is finding software that can take full advantage of the multi-core capabilities. Virtualization is seen as one beneficiary, since virtual machines can be assigned to individual processor cores - hence AMD's push to position Shanghai and Fiorano as a good platform for virtualization.

AMD's server line-up is "still competitive with Intel, but do they have the edge they had before? No," McGregor said. "Intel is back with a vengeance and if anything AMD needs to be more competitive than it was. We need to see them become hungry again."

An important part of AMD's strategy is that it retains socket compatibility from one processor family to the next, he said, which is attractive to some customers.

AMD, which has been struggling financially, is expected to announce a plan soon to spin off its chip fabrication plants in order to lower its capital costs. Patla declined Tuesday to discuss that strategy, which AMD calls "asset smart." It expects to make an announcement by the end of the year, he said.

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True Next Gen Wii Coming in 2011 [Rumor]

September 30th, 2008
A true “next generation” Nintendo console, tentatively referred to as the Wii HD, will hit the market in 2011, according to the folks at What They Play. The site claimed that Nintendo is currently...

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StumbleUpon 2.0: Good-bye, software toolbar (Josh Lowensohn/CNET News)

September 30th, 2008

Josh Lowensohn / CNET News:
StumbleUpon 2.0: Good-bye, software toolbar  —  On Tuesday night StumbleUpon is changing the way users interact with the service, ditching the need for a software-based browser toolbar in place of a small frame that loads on top of the Web site you're on.  Users with the toolbar installed …

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Charles Simonyi to Become World’s First Repeat Space Tourist [Space Cadet]

September 30th, 2008
Not content with his first astronautic experience, Ex-Microsofter billionaire Charles Simonyi is now training for a second trip to the International Space Station in Spring 2009. Simonyi will be the...

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Marc Andreessen joins eBay’s board, will crush you [Hires]

September 30th, 2008
Marc Andreessen has been invited to join the board at eBay. The online auction company has been struggling of late, never mind CEO John Donahoe's assertion that what's bad for the American economy is...

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Predictify helps you understand other voters

September 30th, 2008

I am not a fan of the prediction market business. I know that many game and social theorists think they're valuable predictors of crowd behavior, but I've seen too many prediction start-ups turn into intellectual wastelands, with a few people controlling the "price" of opinions that are either pointless on the face of it, or bizarrely tilted in one direction or the other.

So I took Parker Barrie's recent pitch for a new feature on Predictify with a grain of salt. On Wednesday, the company is launching a prediction market for the U.S. presidential election, called the Election Showdown. Users will be able to enter their predictions for the election outcomes in 14 battleground states, and the most accurate users will, after the election results are in, divide a pot of $100,000.

Upon hearing this, my hackles rose. Users may predict one thing but vote another, I said, especially when money enters the process. To which Barrie had an answer that rescued the concept for me: "When you ask people to predict what will happen, you separate them from their personal biases and make them consider additional information."

The Election Showdown feature is not, I'm led to believe, so much about predicting the election results as it is about making people think about predicting the election results. "We provide a forum to research, discuss, and predict what you think will happen," Barrie said. And anyway, "We don't position Predictify as precisely accurate as to what will happen." There are polls for that, I guess.

Predict a state, win some money. But mostly, learn something.

(Credit: Predictify)

Over the past year, since I first covered the company, Predictify has in fact shifted its focus from providing precise predictions to creating a platform for community engagement. That works for me. I still don't like prediction markets. But I do like sites that encourage people to think in new ways.

Other political prediction markets (thanks, Peter Norvig): Intrade, Iowa Markets, Rasmussen Markets, Betfair, Newsfutures, Inkling.

See also: The Journal of Prediction Markets.

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Media server concept from Toshiba doubles as mega D&D die

September 30th, 2008

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Here's another mouth-watering concept on display at CEATEC today: Toshiba's Media Server -- not to be confused with some kind of nefarious explosive device from an early episode of Doctor Who. It uses NFC to download files from your cell phone, which in turn can be displayed on a TV via WirelessHD. But best of all, it's shiny and looks nothing like some of the mundane media servers we've seen in the past, which is reason enough for us to want one, or perhaps a pair to make 2d12. Here's hoping it gets past the concept stage.
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Pandora saved by Congress, can negotiate royalties through 2015

September 30th, 2008

Pandora has been given a reprieve by Congress. In August, the founder of the excellent music streaming and recommendation site Tim Westergren told the Washington Post that the company was approaching a "pull-the-plug kind of decision" over a pending increase in the royalty payments it would be required to pay SoundExchange, the music industry's royalty clearinghouse for radio stations. 

The bill authorizes Internet radio services to negotiate new royalty agreements retroactive to 2006 and through 2015. Jonathan Potter, Executive Director of the Digital Media Association said he was "very hopeful of reaching agreement soon, and thereby creating long-term stability that will re-energize the Internet radio business."

Today, Westergren told Gizmodo, "we're just hugely grateful to our listeners and everyone who moved so quickly to mobilize support. This last weekend was just extraordinary." The bill -- the Webcaster Settlement Act -- passed both houses of Congress and will now get sent to President Bush.

More news, commentary, and predictions from The Industry Standard:

 

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What Kind Of Filtering System Thinks W3C Is A Porn Site?

September 30th, 2008
We've all heard stories of various online filters that block perfectly legitimate sites as being "porn" or something else objectionable, but sometimes there are such extreme cases that it makes you wonder what people are thinking. Apparently, some ISPs are using a filtering system that believes the W3C site should be blocked as porn. W3C, of course, is the body that manages standards for the web. It was founded, and still run, by the creator of the World Wide Web, Tim Berners-Lee. Any filtering system that classifies the W3C as porn doesn't deserve to be in the filtering business. Hell, they barely deserve to be on the web at all.

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KDDI au concept phones explained and pictured

September 30th, 2008

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We got the low-down (well, at much of a low-down as one can get from thematic designers) on KDDI's latest au concept phones here at CEATEC, and the themes are -- are you sitting down? -- space and soup atomic elements. No, we didn't make that up. If you're still with us, hit the break for some pictures and explanations.

Continue reading KDDI au concept phones explained and pictured

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Briefly: Free Google WiFi in Mountain View is down

September 30th, 2008

Google's free WiFi network in its home city of Mountain View, CA is currently offline as of 8PM Pacific. The company is blaming "a fiber outage into/out of our data center" and Google is "working on restoring this as soon as possible."

You get what you pay for, I suppose.

 

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Starz deal adds more streamed movies to Netflix

September 30th, 2008

From "Spider-Man 3" to "No Country for Old Men," Netflix Inc. is making another 2,500 movies, TV shows and concerts available for instant viewing through a deal with Starz Entertainment LLC.

The world's largest online movie rental service and Starz, a subsidiary of conglomerate Liberty Media Corp., were planning to announce Wednesday that Starz titles were being added to the "Watch Instantly" feature of Netflix's Web site.

The new content will beef up the more than 12,000 movies and TV shows Netflix already makes instantly watchable over the Internet through its streaming service. While this is just a fraction of the 100,000 titles Netflix has available on DVDs, Netflix says it continues to grow both numbers and eventually hopes to close the gap between them.

In doing this, the company may be ensuring it remains relevant once people migrate from renting DVDs to watching movies over their high-speed Internet connections — just as they switched from watching VHS tapes to DVDs.

The addition of the Starz movies means Netflix viewers will have access to streaming movies from studios like Sony and Disney earlier than they would otherwise. Because movie distribution rights are tied up years in advance, "Spider-Man 3," for example, would not have been available for streaming for at least nine years, said Bill Myers, Starz's president and chief operating officer.

Ted Sarandos, chief content officer at Netflix, said the deal is unique because Starz "would have been an eventual competitor." In August, Starz pulled the plug on its Vongo movie-download service in favor of letting Verizon Communications Inc. and other companies market a similar service.

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