Microsoft has AT&T’s back, sues TiVo for patent infringement

Microsoft has AT&T's back, sues TiVo for patent infringementThe DVR patent fight just got a little crazier, with Microsoft greasing itself up and jumping into the arena — seemingly to preserve the honor of AT&T. You’ll remember (maybe) that TiVo and AT&T have been having something of a fight over a few different patents primarily related to time shifting. Now Microsoft is suing TiVo, saying that it has stepped on two patents used in AT&T’s U-Verse, which you’ll recall relies on Microsoft’s Mediaroom. Want to hear some of the legal verbiage in question? “A system that displays programmable information and a secure method for buying and delivering video programs.” It’s vague and all-encompassing, and that’s just how we like our patent kerfuffles.

Microsoft has AT&T’s back, sues TiVo for patent infringement originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Jan 2010 08:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Rock Band Network beta opening to Xbox 360 users, garage bands see ‘their chance’

Ever had the urge to crank out some nasty riffs in the kitchen, record them, and then watch as millions of Xbox 360 owners rush to download your jam(s)? Don’t lie. In a move that marks the next logical step of the Rock Band journey, Harmonix has confirmed that an open beta registration of the Rock Band Network will open up later today for Xbox 360 users, enabling amateur (or professional… or novice!) musicians to record, convert and upload tracks to a network where gamers can judge how awesome / not awesome any given song is. Reportedly, those seen as “good enough” will be made available for sale (you can price each tune from $1 to $3), though we’re hearing that the actual conversion process isn’t a lesson in simplicity. In fact, some outfits are offering their services to take recordings from .wav files to ones that the game can understand, but with rates of $500 per minute (of music), we’re guessing that only serious artists will apply. And if you’ve ever heard “that local band” willing to play shows for free, you’ll agree with us when we say that this barrier to entry is probably a good thing.

Rock Band Network beta opening to Xbox 360 users, garage bands see ‘their chance’ originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 Jan 2010 13:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iTunes 7.2 “Plus” Offers DRM-Free Music and Vista Compatibility

This article was written on May 30, 2007 by CyberNet.

iTunes Plus

Apple has finally stepped up to the plate by offering a small taste of the high-quality (256 kbps AAC encoding) DRM-free music that we had all been longing for. In order to reap these "iTunes Plus" benefits you’ll need to be using the new iTunes 7.2, and you’ll also have to pay an additional $0.30 per song (about $3.00 more per album).

The DRM-free song selection is currently limited to the EMI music catalog which includes artists like The Rolling Stones, Frank Sinatra, and Norah Jones. I would have liked to see a larger selection of music available, but this is a big move in the right direction. Apple had such an overwhelming response from music publishers regarding the DRM-free music that they are looking into ways of letting others offer their own high-quality DRM-free music.

iTunes 7.2 DRM-Free
Click to Enlarge

You’ll also notice that Apple finally added Windows Vista to their list of compatible operating systems, which is something I expected to see this time around after Microsoft issued an iPod update for Vista. I also thought it was kind of cool that they revamped their minimize/close buttons in the upper-right corner of iTunes to match the style in Vista.

Apple also announced the start of iTunes U for universities. It allows colleges to create their own iTunes site that hosts digital content created for classes:

Colleges and universities build their own iTunes U sites. Faculty post content they create for their classes. Students download what they need, and go. Learning isn’t just for the classroom anymore. It’s for anytime and anyplace you’ve got a Mac, a PC, or an iPod.

They already have several large universities on iTunes, including Duke, Stanford, and Berkeley. Apple did a great job of making it easy for students to access the content provided on iTunes U:

iTunes U
Click to Enlarge

With the iPhone just a few weeks away, I’m guessing that the next update we’ll see to iTunes will add features to manage the phone. Things like a contact manager will hopefully be included so that iPhone users don’t have to sit there and type all of their friends in on the phone itself.

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ESPN streaming coming to Xbox 360?

As if you needed another impetus to abandon cable and satellite TV, The New York Times is reporting behind closed door dealings are afoot between Microsoft and Walt Disney Company, with order of business being ESPN streaming via Xbox 360. According to the anonymous source, live streams of sporting events à la the now aptly-titled ESPN360 could come to the console on a per-subscriber fee, along with related interactive games. The thing with secret meetings, of course, is that they can never be confirmed and, should talks fall through, amount to nothing in the future — just keep that in mind before you get too excited and cancel Comcast a bit prematurely.

ESPN streaming coming to Xbox 360? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 18 Jan 2010 21:51:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ITG xpPhone gets a price, more pretty pictures

If you’re China-based and you think there might be an xpPhone in your future, we’ve got some news for you: according to an email from ITG, the device will cost from 3,000 – 4,500 Chinese RMB (or about $400 – $650), depending on options. Funny how the world works — put Windows XP on a laptop and it’s yawn city, then you go and put the same OS on a handset and the thing is a bona fide curiosity. We also have a few new shots of the thing, and now we’re we won’t be stingy with ’em. Take a look below to get your Ya-Ya’s out.

ITG xpPhone gets a price, more pretty pictures originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 18 Jan 2010 15:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Windows Mobile 7 megarumor: LG Apollo and HTC Obsession running flagship ‘720p’ specs, Zune Phone Experience

Alright, this is some wild, heavy stuff, but the folks at WMExperts have compiled what they believe to be true about Windows Mobile 7, including a whole bunch of previously undisclosed info and even a couple of flagship phones. We can’t vouch for the rumors, but there’s a ring of truth to plenty of it, and most of the rest of it we want to be true. First off, Microsoft is approaching the revision with two flavors: Windows Phone Seven Business Edition, and Windows Phone Seven Media Edition. The former is a stripped down OS that will allow OEM overlays like HTC’s Sense UI, and includes lower minimum specs — though a WVGA “minimum” is nothing to get angry about. Meanwhile, it sounds like the Media Edition is the quasi-“Zune Phone” we’ve been dreaming of, with a heavy emphasis on HD media playback and capture, along with social networking activities like Xbox Live, Facebook and Twitter. Other features include cloud-style services on the Business Edition side for live manipulation of stored data, a long with a location-aware platform dubbed “Orion.”

This all sounds great, but what’s really exciting is what Microsoft is dictating should be in some of these Media Edition phones. The first two to break cover are the LG Apollo and HTC Obsession. The Apollo is a 3G worldphone (EV-DO and HSDPA) that runs a 1.3GHz Qualcomm QSD8650 processor and a 3.8-inch AMOLED 1280 x 720 WXGA display. The phone also is purported to have a 10 megapixel camera capable of 720p video recording. Meanwhile, HTC’s HSDPA-limited Obsession runs a mere 1GHz Qualcomm QSD8250 proc, with a 3.7-inch AMOLED display, 5 megapixel camera and 720p video recording. The Apollo is due in August or September of this year, with the Obsession following in October. Now, some of these specs are admittedly suspect, like the WXGA resolution on the Apollo and that seemingly 10 megapixel sensor, but we want to believe.

As for what we know to be true? Well, we know we’ll see something at MWC next month, unless Robbie Bach is just joshing around, and we also know HTC has confirmed its involvement with Windows Mobile 7 — lending some credence to rumors of the Sense UI sticking around for a new-generation — and that LG has gone on (and quickly off) record as well saying it’ll have a WinMo 7 phone in September. It’s all a lot more vague than the pages of specs we’re staring at now, but it’s clear that something is brewing. Hit up the source link for the full nitty gritty.

Windows Mobile 7 megarumor: LG Apollo and HTC Obsession running flagship ‘720p’ specs, Zune Phone Experience originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 18 Jan 2010 15:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: Windows Mobile 7 Handsets Coming Late 2010, Will Support 6.x Apps

Another week, another treat from our mole: Windows Mobile 7, which we should see for the first time at Mobile World Congress next month, is intended for release before the holiday season of 2010—not 2011. And there’s more.

For a release to follow a debut by six months or more isn’t unprecedented for Microsoft, where long public beta testing periods have become the norm, if not the rule. And a late 2010 release is in line with older estimates, which have been recently derailed by claims that it would be pushed off until 2011. Even more interesting, though, is that the OS still seems to be in a state of flux. Here’s what we’ve heard:

• It’ll be shown at MWC, but don’t expect Microsoft to give a firm release date estimate—they’re not ready for that yet. LG slipped up and hinted at a September release for their first Windows Mobile 7 phones, but it sounds doubtful that anyone’s release dates are set in stone—and they’ll likely have to toe Microsoft’s line, since with WinMo 6.5, Microsoft’s been enforcing a hard, unified launch date for Windows Phones; something they never really did before.

• Contrary to Eldar Murtazin’s report that Windows Mobile 6.x apps won’t work on the OS, we hear that they will. Our info implies a promise of support though—not necessarily out-of-the-box, native compatibility—which could mean anything from an emulator (like webOS’s Classic app) to a set of streamlined porting tools for devs. Regardless, this isn’t really the kind of thing someone could deduce from playing with a device for a few minutes, which is what Eldar appears to have done.

• Speaking of apps, we should expect an SDK for the new OS to be available as early as June, giving devs a little lead time to have apps ready for the new OS. This implies that the platform will be markedly different than 6.x, which pretty much everyone has been assuming all along anyway.

• It doesn’t look quite like any of the renders or mockups we’ve seen floating around. There are some aesthetic similarities to some of the early renders, but they’re not pronounced enough to say that it looks like anything that’s already been “leaked.”

• The new input system, which we initially called “Natal-like,” is more of a complex gesture system than a whole new way of interacting with the phone. There is a motion sensing element, but it’s a close-quarters, proximity-sensing type thing, and only used for certain gestures: pinch zooming, rotation, twisting, etc. This was also described to us as resembling a tech demo, so it may not be a banner feature for the OS, but rather something that Microsoft is toying with behind the scenes.

• It’s being kept secret in a way that’s somewhat rare for Microsoft. It’s only being shown to people immediately concerned with the project within the company, and evidently to a small group of journalists as well. It’s Zune-HD-level secrecy, which is to say, pretty high.

That’s all we’ve got for now, and with Mobile World Congress creeping closer by the minute, it’d be safe to assume we’ll learn more before the big unveil. We’ll keep digging, but as always, if you know anything, let us know.

CyberNotes: How to Monitor Software Installations

This article was written on June 07, 2007 by CyberNet.

CyberNotes
Tutorial Thursday

One of the things that Windows is notorious for is not completely uninstalling an application when you go through the Add/Remove Programs. There just always seems to be some junk left behind that is impossible to get rid of, well, almost impossible.

ZSoft Uninstaller (Download Mirror) hopes to conquer all of your uninstallation woes by providing a more advanced method for keeping track of the applications you install. Normally when you install a program it creates an uninstall log that monitors where all of the files and registry values are stored. That way it can reference when a user wants to uninstall it later on.

Some things, such as registry values associated with your program settings, aren’t removed in case you decide to install the program again later on. That way you won’t have to reconfigure it all again. I don’t know about you, but when I want to uninstall a program I want everything it created to be removed.

That’s where ZSoft Uninstaller comes into play. It will scan your hard drive and registry both before and after installing a program. Then it will compare the differences so that there are no worries about everything not getting removed. All it takes from you is a few clicks…

  1. Download and install ZSoft Uninstaller (Download Mirror).
  2. Click the Analyze button in the toolbar. Press Next when you see the popup on the screen.
    Uninstaller
  3. Click the Before Installation button to begin the hard drive analysis. Depending on the speed of your hard drive and how many files are on it, this could take several minutes.
    Uninstaller
  4. Begin the installation of your application, in our case we are installing Google Earth.
    Uninstaller
  5. After the installation completes, press the After Installation button on the ZSoft Uninstaller. This will reanalyze your hard drive and Windows Registry looking for changes. When it completes it will ask for the name of the application.
    Uninstaller
  6. Now the comparison between the before and after will take place, and then the window will close. If you want to see the differences just switch to the Analyzed Programs tab, right-click on the program, and choose Show Recorded Info.
    Uninstaller
  7. Similarly, you can go to the Analyzed Programs tab and click the Uninstall button to truly remove the application from your computer.
    Uninstaller

One thing that you want to make sure when using this program is that you promptly perform the before and after scans without doing anything “extra” in between. If you create a file in between the two scans, ZSoft Uninstaller will think that the application created it during the setup routine, and if you try to remove the program later on, that file would also be removed.

Thanks to Radu for the tip!

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Big Cash Piles in the Tech Industry

This article was written on May 09, 2008 by CyberNet.

cash pile.pngCan you imagine having 20 billion dollars plus in cash, just lying around? Microsoft for many years has been one company in the tech industry that always had at least that on hand. In fact, four years ago they had a whopping $64 billion dollars sitting around. The San Francisco Chronicle recently posted a really interesting article about Microsoft’s cash balance of $26.3 billion dollars, and how that gives them the title of biggest cash pile in the tech industry. They may have some company soon though, because another tech company is creeping up on them. Any guesses of who this might be?

If you guessed Apple, you guessed correctly. Apple’s cash balance has been mounting and recently they hit the $19.4 billion dollar amount. To help put into perspective the growth Apple has seen, it was just four years ago that they had about $5.5 billion dollars in cash at their disposal. A good chunk of that money that they now have is due to the success of the iPod and of course then the iPhone. That got us thinking about where Apple would be if they hadn’t developed and had so much success with the iPod.

You’ve probably heard the “Halo Effect” mentioned in regards to iPods over the last several years. It is used to describe the notion that people who buy iPods may eventually buy a Mac computer and so the sales of Macs are dependent on the success of the iPod. The sales results we’ve seen from Apple tend to show that there is at least some type of Halo Effect going on, and at least some of the millions of iPod owners choose to buy a Mac because of their satisfaction with the music player.

I guess what we’re getting at is that Apple is awfully lucky that the iPod was successful for them because if it turned out to be a flop, there’s absolutely no way that they would be creeping up on Microsoft in the amount of cash they have available. This puts Apple in a really great position because now they’ve got the money to fund and consider acquisitions to help boost their business even further. While they’ve got the money to spend, some have speculated that Apple won’t be doing much with it soon. Andy Hargreaves who covers Apple at Pacific Crest Securities in Portland says, “I don’t really expect them to do anything with it in the near term. I think that Steve Jobs’ experience with this company and the cycles that it’s been through has taught him to be very, very conservative, and save for the rainy day.”

For now there is no rainy day in site, and the piles of cash continue to mount in the tech industry…

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IE security flaw exploited in recent Google attacks

This next item’s for any rogue states out there that might be planning a comprehensive wave of cyber-attacks: It looks like Microsoft has admitted that indeed it was a security flaw in Internet Explorer that hackers based in China exploited in the recent attacks on Google. As is often the case, the flaw is neatly summed up in the title of the advisory: “Vulnerability in Internet Explorer could allow remote code execution.” According to news agency AFP, the incident (which targeted Chinese human rights activists) shows “a level of sophistication above that of typical, isolated cyber criminal efforts.” (Which is, evidently, how we like to think of our own cyber criminal efforts.) Microsoft has yet to release a formal software update. In the meantime, if you think your machine could be at risk, hit the source link for all the details. Or just switch to Firefox.

IE security flaw exploited in recent Google attacks originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 15 Jan 2010 14:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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