marchonpentagon.org

Just another WordPress weblog

Off-topic Arsenal 3 Newcastle 0 (FA Cup)

20 Aug 2010

Diaby played better, and Senderos was good enough. Adebayor…? He played very well and is starting to earn my confidence, though I really would have liked to have seen him pass the ball to Eduardo on his second goal. Yes, he ended up putting it in, but Eduardo was clear to his right before Adebayor shimmied his way over to the right before taking the shot.

All in all, not a great display by the Gunners but a good enough response to their defeat at the Spurs’ hands. My one big dilemma is whether to cheer for Manchester United or Tottenham tomorrow. I’d like to see Tottenham get put back in its place, but I’m also aware that beating Tottenham will be easy compared to beating Manchester United should they meet up later in the competition. Decisions, decisions.

I would have liked to have seen Fabregas and Walcott score, as neither has been confident in front of goal. Walcott played reasonably well today but couldn’t get rid of the ball fast enough when he was anywhere near the goal. Very disappointing.

commentary

Bendtner didn’t play and that’s fine with me. His arrogance is starting to wear on me (and, apparently, on the other players). He’s a good player but needs to learn his place. This is what led to his bust-up with Adebayor. He’s still the junior man on the totem pole and needs to remember that. It was nice to see him warm up and then sit the bench. He needs that lesson in humility.

After Arsenal’s blistering defeat to Tottenham last week, I figured it would be a test of their mettle to see how they responded against Newcastle, which put up a good fight against Arsenal earlier in the season. Despite a slow start, Arsenal has clearly moved on.

(Credit:
BBC)

As for Eduardo…what can I say? He is turning out to be an exceptionally astute signing by Wenger. His first bending ball into the post set up Adebayor’s goal. The only surprising thing about his play today is that he didn’t score in his typical slow-motion/time-stops-while-he-slots-the-ball-home signature moves.

Live blog Nintendo’s E3 press conference

20 Aug 2010

Another cool feature is one that will record video of players’ performances. This should be fun for families, given that they will be able to play music in the privacy of their living rooms and then show off videos of their best performances.

But one nice element of this is that it features a system that will teach people how to play instruments, so, he said, players should be able to learn to play the drums in a matter of a few weeks.

Fils-Aime also said that the Wii has the fastest-selling set of game titles in console history. And that the success of its software titles is only growing.

Here at E3, the video game industry’s official Big Time Conference, there’s a lot of sitting around, filling seats while executives get ready to come out on stage and tell us what lies ahead for their companies.

Update 9:32 a.m.: Nintendo of America president Reggie Fils-Aime is on stage now talking about the success of the Wii. He says Nintendo expects that when video game research firm NPD releases its June sales numbers on Thursday that the Wii will move into first place as the best-selling next-generation console in North America, surpassing the
Xbox 360.

Fils-Aime said that Wii Sports Resort will be available next Spring.

Animal Crossing: City Folk will also feature some Sims-like abilities: Letting players create their own worlds in a sort of pervasive-type system. The game will feature live auctions where players can buy or sell items, and write letters to other players, attaching pictures, that can be sent to mobile devices or other computers.

This game is much like Wii Sports in that it is designed to allow anyone to play musical instruments with the Wii remote.

(Credit:
Daniel Terdiman/CNET News)

On the other hand, with the Wii doing as well as it has been, maybe Nintendo didn’t need that as much as, say, Sony does.

And this morning, it’s Nintendo’s turn to keep us in anticipation. And in a couple of hours it will be Sony.

Update 9:43 a.m.: Cammie Dunaway, Nintendo of America’s executive vice president of sales and marketing, just said that this fall, Grand Theft Auto: Chinatown Wars will debut exclusively on Nintendo DS. The game will be set in a modern day Liberty City, with a custom game engine and new character.

Stay tuned to this live blog for regular updates as the press conference evolves.

For now, there are hundreds, if not a thousand or more, sitting in the Kodak Theater in Hollywood for the Nintendo press conference. No one really knows what the
Wii maker is going to announce, but there are those who think that whatever it will be could become the talk of E3.

But there was no huge piece of news, and nothing, I think, that will be the talk of E3 all week.

Update 10:01 a.m.: Now, Miyamoto is talking about the various features of Wii Music, which will include over 50 instruments, such as the piano, violin, percussion, and so forth.

LOS ANGELES–And so we wait. Some more.

Update 9:22 a.m.: A video is running showing Animal Crossing: City Folk, a new version of Nintendo’s hit game that will run on the Wii and feature WiiSpeak, a speaker system allowing multiple players to communicate live while they play.

Update 9:47 a.m.: Fils-Aime is now talking about how Nintendo will be releasing a new sports game, Wii Sports Resort that is geared for the new Wii Motion Plus controller, which the company announced yesterday.

Legendary game designer Shigeru Miyamoto playing ‘Wii Music,’ a game that could be a huge hit for Nintendo.

(Credit:
Daniel Terdiman/CNET News)

At the famous Kodak Theater in Hollywood, Nintendo is getting ready for its E3 press conference. Among the images it is showing on the screen while everyone waits is this one, which demonstrates the widespread appeal of the Wii, including to senior citizens, not your normal gamers.

Nintendo of America president Reggie Fils-Aime shows off ‘Wii Sports Resort,’ which will be available next Spring.

Update 10:10 a.m.: Fils-Aime has wrapped up the press conference. The highlights were clearly Wii Music and Wii Sports Resort, both interesting and cool games that will likely sell many, many copies as well as drive sales of the Wii itself.

(Credit:
Daniel Terdiman/CNET News)

Update 9:55 a.m.: Now, legendary designer Shigeru Miyamoto is up on stage showing off the new Wii Music, which will come out this fall.

Explaining Israel’s high-tech success Another vie

19 Aug 2010

“This has been a way for people to contribute their technical talents. And whatever skills they pick up, they can then apply later in civilian life,” he said. “For our country, where we don’t have billions to spend, high tech has helped provide the differentiation between the armed forces of Israel and our neighbors.”

It’s a cute story, one that public relations reps love to play up. But it misses a lot of context.

“At the time,” Arens recalled, “there was considerable doubt about Israel’s engineering and scientific community.” He noted that there were questions at the time whether Israel would come up with the product that could compare with the U.S. and Soviet aircraft industries. “It took some time before the government’s ministers, the army generals, and the general public believed that that capability was here. But we did it.”

The nexus between the military and the country’s subsequent high-tech growth obviously consists of many strands. But when it comes to understanding the roots of Israel’s subsequent high-tech prowess, Arens said it is “impossible” to see Israeli high tech without also considering the special role played by the military.

On a recent visit to IAI, I had an opportunity to tour the plant. Unfortunately, security restrictions bar outsiders from bringing cameras onto the facility’s premises.

The list of tech advances developed in Israel runs the gamut from digital signal processing to antivirus technologies, encryption, and data security. More people likely are familiar with ICQ, the predecessor to AOL’s Instant Messenger, or M-Systems, which developed USB-flash drives as well as the design for Intel’s Pentium processor.

He should know. Through the decades, Arens played a close role helping to develop the Israeli army’s high-tech skills as both an academic and a politician closely identified with defense issues.

Reflecting on the growth in the country’s IT industry, Shamir agreed that the cross-fertilization between Israel’s high tech and defense industries had worked out beyond even the boldest expectations.

KIBBUTZ YIRON, Israel–”Znnnnnnnnng!”

“The idea was to build and design everything that we needed to defend ourselves,” said Yair Shamir, the chairman of Israel AerospaceIndustries, (IAI), which has since developed a range of UAVs. (Some that can travel as far as Iran.) The company also developed Israel’s first spy satellite; eight of them currently circle the globe.

“That was a starting point,” he said.

Another turning point came after the 1967 war, when France declared an arms embargo. France had been Israel’s major military supplier, and Israel was left cut off from its major aircraft provider.

Former Israel Defense Minister Moshe Arens

When I was a kibbutz volunteer in the early 1980s, Israel’s high-tech industry was negligible. A lot of history has taken place since then. High-tech services now comprise about half of the country’s total industrial exports. What’s more, the country boasts the highest number of publicly traded companies on the Nasdaq outside of the U.S. and Canada. Some, like Teva Pharmaceutical Industries, are in the health or scientific fields but the list is tech-heavy, featuring the likes of Check Point Software and Aladdin Knowledge Systems. Israel’s ratio of engineers to population is noteworthy: there are about 135 engineers per 10,000 employees. The comparable ratio in the U.S. is 80 per 10,000 employees.

IAI Chairman Yair Shamir

(Credit:
Israel's Knesset)

“When we began our activities–especially after Israel’s withdrawal from the Sinai–the emphasis was on our need to recover strategic depth,” said Shamir.

But when they seek explanations for Israel’s contemporary success in the technology field, chroniclers of the story often underplay the military’s part in helping to lay the groundwork for the nation’s high tech ecosystem. Instead, journalists more often focus on the network of personal connections that Israel entrepreneurs initially forge in the military. As if certain special individual qualities honed in the army prepared them for business success later on.

The mechanical whine overhead forced every picker in the apple orchard to crane their heads toward its source. I didn’t know it at the time, but we were watching Israel’s high-tech future play out a couple of thousand feet above us.

In the 1950s, RAFAEL, the Hebrew acronym for the Armament Development Authority, was part of the Israeli army. It built the country’s first computer, nicknamed “Itzik” in 1956. RAFAEL also sponsored degree study for employees, both in Israel and abroad at overseas universities. It subsequently helped create the army’s computer unit and developed the country’s first sea-to-sea radar guided rocket

The “mazlat,” as it was known in Hebrew, was a joint project between a government-run aeronautics branch and an Israeli electronics firm called Tadiran. This unmanned aerial vehicle later played a role in helping Israel neutralize Soviet antiaircraft and radar systems deployed by Syria in Lebanon’s Bekka Valley during the 1982 war between the two nations.

“I don’t think it is much different than any university alumnus when it comes to the same bond,” said Isaac Levanon, a former fighter pilot who is now CEO of 3DVU, a Tel Aviv-based provider of 3D photography navigation. “Obviously, the intensity of serving and sometime fighting together is more then the average sorority events. One knows his friends better through these greater challenges than (because of) a beer party or preparation for a test.”

(Credit:
Israel AerospaceIndustries)

That was 26 years ago.

A few examples:

To be sure, graduates of the army’s elite technology units do acquire valuable experience in optics and communications. And they do make valuable connections that can come in handy afterward in civilian life. But the “army brats-turned-entrepreneur” angle is more of a romantic cliche than a useful depiction of how it all went down.

Regional conflicts prodded the army to accelerate the expansion of its technological prowess. In 1961, for instance, Israel’s military mobilized a major engineering effort after learning about Egyptian attempts to build medium-range missiles. That scramble ultimately led to the creation of Israel’s Arrow ballistic missile interceptor.

(For more on more modern applications of the technology, here’s a recent 60 Minutes piece on the United States “Predator.” Although the Predator was developed by a joint U.S. Army-Navy program, there also is an Israeli connection. Following the 1982 Lebanon war, which demonstrated the UAV’s surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities, the U.S. began to purchase Israeli unmanned systems, such as the Pioneer, as the American military started to develop its own capabilities.)

The fact that companies in Israel are built by former soldiers isn’t remarkable. High school age Israelis get drafted at 18 and enter university or business after being discharged. By definition, then, you’re going to find a lot of ex-military in the Israeli business world.

The country poured millions of dollars into military development and launched its own aircraft industry. That again had a spillover effect as technologies and processes mastered in the defense labs would later trickle into the civilian sector.

A reconnaissance drone not much larger than your garden variety model airplane, a television camera strapped to its underside, was creeping through the sky to photograph military installations in Lebanon.

Looking back on that history, former Defense Minister Moshe Arens said recently that projects like the unmanned aerial vehicle underscored the symbiotic relationship that he said nurtured Israel’s military and its high technology sector over the following decades.

For the many private sector technologists in Israel who later went on to fame and fortune, the development of the mazlat and other defense projects was a boon in that it fed demand for a talent pool that they could later tap. The Israeli political-military establishment was keen to build up a qualitative edge in weaponry to compensate for Israel’s tiny population and small size and to adequately equip itself in the face of conflict with its Arab neighbors.

Flying with Clear

17 Aug 2010

Despite my leftist obsession with privacy, I decided when I first looked at the Clear program that I thought it would be better if I voluntary signed up for the service since ultimately the government and TSA can find whatever they want about you anyway. I’m also fairly convinced that’s it better to have some alternate form of identity verification should something go wrong.

Regardless, for $100 the service is well worth it.

Head to the dedicated Clear line at security
Show boarding pass and ID to Clear representative
Verify fingerprint
Bypass the 45-minute line to security screen in less than 2 minutes

Today was my first experience using the Clear travel service. If you are not familiar (or haven’t flown lately), Clear is a service that utilizes fingerprints and/or iris scans to bypass the long lines of airport security.

My Clear experience:

There are multiple aspects of air traffic that remain baffling. Things that are supposed to help, such as United’s bizarre non-time-saving baggage drop (it’s at the way far left in SFO in case you, like me, find yourself searching for the mystery location), or the fact that I have to surrender my shoes, for example.

The one thing that I didn’t like was that the Clear representative put my bag, shoes, and jacket on the screening table for me as I went through the scanner. It doesn’t make a lot of sense to verify my identity only to take my belongings away from me. I think they were just trying to be helpful but my paranoia wins out.

Parity provides free online identity management

17 Aug 2010

Imagine finding the perfect gift via Google and then purchasing it in one click without typing in your password or credit card information. On Thursday, Parity, an information management company, announced a new Web service called CardPress that makes issuing online information cards a little easier.

Currently there are only two organizations offering or soon to offer CardPress cards. Boston Community Change, which rewards charitable donations to local schools, is only open to Boston-area residents. The Minuteman Library Network, a consortium of libraries in Massachusetts, also plans to offer the cards. The service would allow Minuteman Library members secure access to online resources. Both are available through an electronic wallet site called Azigo (currently in beta). In the coming days, Parity expects to add more associations.

Information cards are online equivalents of physical ID cards, such as a driver’s license. Online customers would have an electronic wallet with various information cards, bypassing the need to type in user names and passwords. A student accessing a university network, for example, would simply present his or her electronic student information card.

CardPress provides Web sites with a free (for low-volume usage) turn-key, hosted software-as-a-service (SaaS) solution. The information cards are designed for associations, organizations, and merchants, and can enable one-click log-ins, phishing protection, and single sign-on (SSO) across multiple partner sites, and can eliminate costs associated with restoring lost or forgotten passwords. “We consider the service a tremendous building block for the information card ecosystem,” a Parity representative told CNET News.

Unlike having a credit card number, which anyone on the Internet can use at anytime, the ID card model proposed by the ICF requires that all three players (user, provider, reliant party) be synced in real time before the transaction can proceed. A user would sync via encrypted connection with an ID provider (say a bank or credit card issuer), and also with a reliant party (a university network, a financial site, or an e-commerce site).

In June the Information Card Foundation (ICF) was created with the stated goal of increasing awareness of the use of electronic ID cards on the Internet, and encouraging interoperability in business around new standards. Member companies include Equifax, Google, Microsoft, Novell, Oracle, and PayPal, plus nine leaders in the technology community. Paul Trevithick, CEO of Parity, is the current chairman of the ICF.

Supreme Court denies Samsung appeal

17 Aug 2010

The Supreme Court has refused to consider appeals from Samsung Electronics in a case against Rambus, a memory design and patent licensing company, closing a saga that began in 2005 over alleged patent infringement.

Samsung refused the offer but continued with its court motion to obtain them. The district court in July 2006 denied Samsung its attorney fees–in that sense ruling in favor of Rambus–but included in its ruling a lengthy opinion addressing allegations that Rambus was guilty of tampering with evidence.

Rambus first sued Samsung in 2005 for allegedly violating its patents of various dynamic random access memory, or DRAM, devices. Samsung immediately countersued in the Eastern District
Court of Virginia, claiming that the patents were invalid and unenforceable.

The court’s decision to stay out of the case leaves in place an April appeals court ruling (PDF) that a district court had no jurisdiction to grant an order that–while technically in favor of Rambus–included negative opinions about the company.

Unhappy with this turn of events, Rambus argued that the court lacked jurisdiction to even give the ruling, since its offer to pay Samsung the attorney fees rendered the case moot. In April of this year, the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit sided with Rambus, vacating the previous order and remanding the case back to the court with instructions to dismiss Samsung’s complaint. The Supreme Court’s decision not to hear Samsung’s appeal leaves the lower court’s decision in place.

In a similar case, a district court found Rambus guilty of spoliation of evidence. Rambus quickly settled that case and, in September 2005, moved to dimiss
its claims against Samsung. However, Samsung’s attorney fees were still in dispute, so Rambus offered to fully compensate for them.

Shopping for iFauxnes

17 Aug 2010

As the home of Apple, and the first country to get the original
iPhone, the United States has not been friendly territory for the imitators. But in countries that have yet to get the iPhone (or are just getting it), the fakes are more common.

Editors’ note: The iPhone launched in Slovakia on the Orange network on August 22.

Like a scourge of weeds, fake iPhones popped up en masse as soon as Apple announced its original handset. Most of the time these “iFauxnes” are easy to spot, but sometimes they’ll look so much like the real thing that you’ll need to turn them on to spot the fakery.

Nope, this iPhone is not the real thing.

Recently, CNET software engineer Vladimir Olexa spotted a few fake iPhones in a mobile store in Slovakia. He managed to snap a few pictures, which we’ve assembled in a fake iPhone slide show. As we said before, some are obvious but others come close to the real thing.

(Credit:
Vladimir Olexa/CNET Networks)

Antec offers poor man’s HTPC kits

16 Aug 2010

(Credit:
Antec)

(Credit:
Antec)

Home theater PCs are all the rage. OK, well maybe not all the rage, but there are people who have them and I’m sure there are people who want to have them. These kits from Antec are for the have-nots. Called Multimedia Stations, the adapters allow even technically inept people to add a little or a lot of HTPC functionality to a standard desktop (though they require a couple of open 5.25-inch drive bays or at least a free USB port for the most basic adapter).

(Credit:
Antec)

All of the modules include iMedian HD software that supports playback of nearly all media formats and supports full HD 1080p resolution and is compatible with Windows Media Center Edition,
Windows Vista, and XP.

(Credit:
Antec)

Pictured from top to bottom are the Multimedia Station Premier ($119.95), Elite ($99.95), Basic ($39.95), and E-Z ($29.95). The E-Z is a simple USB IR receiver that includes Antec’s standard remote with the advantage being that it’s portable, making it a good notebook accessory. The Basic kit slips into a 3.5-inch drive bay and again, is just a simple IR receiver with a standard remote. The Elite package adds a VFD display, volume control, and a deluxe remote and fits into a single 5.25-inch bay. Lastly, the Premier–which fits in two 5.25-inch drive bays–has an LCD, front media control panel with menu navigation, a volume control wheel, and media playback buttons.

Yahoo and Microsoft Is it on again

15 Aug 2010

Investors clamoring for change have pointed to the approximately 35 percent decline in Yahoo’s share price since Microsoft’s $33 per share offer to acquire all of Yahoo. Microsoft withdrew that offer in May after failing to get a “yes” from Yahoo. Shares of Yahoo are now within hailing distance of the $19 per share trading level they hovered at prior to Microsoft’s unsolicited bid in February.

After the Microsoft negotiations collapsed, Yahoo struck a search advertising outsourcing deal with Google. But that hasn’t impressed shareholders. Shares of Yahoo, which traded at $23.52 the day of the Google announcement, closed at $21.45 on Monday.

Neither Microsoft nor Yahoo had immediate comment.

Meanwhile, the future of Yahoo’s CEO and co-founder, Jerry Yang, as well as a number of the company’s other directors, remains undecided. Yahoo has been stunned by a run of high-profile resignations in the last couple of weeks. And while reports surfaced about the degree of Yang’s involvement in the pending re-organization of Yahoo, the CEO has been busy making the rounds on Capitol Hill to discuss the Google agreement, as well as talking about the big G to Yahoo teams from Sunnyvale to New York about the announcement. These moves come as the company’s annual shareholders meeting on August 1 draws near.

Microsoft has signaled that it is willing to sweeten its previous offer for a partial buyout of Yahoo’s search business, according to one major investor who has been in contact with both parties.

But the source noted that several of Yahoo’s nine board members, including its chairman, Roy Bostock, have since indicated a willingness to hold further discussions with Microsoft on a possible deal to sell the search operations.

And you thought a deal between Microsoft and Yahoo was over and done with?

Should Microsoft increase its buyout bid for just Yahoo’s search assets, and if the company’s investors find it appealing enough–even if Yahoo’s board does not–investor activist Carl Icahn may consider keeping with his initial game plan of running a dissident slate to win control of the board.

Yahoo's Yang: On the hot seat

Update 10:33 a.m. PDT Tuesday: Adds details of Jerry Yang’s activities over the past week

Meanwhile, rumors of an impending Yahoo reorganization–a big one that could come as early as this week–continue to swirl.

After the termination of discussions with Microsoft less than two weeks ago, Yahoo’s board said in a statement that a sale leaving the company without an independent search business “would not be in the best interests of Yahoo stockholders.”

Not so fast.

(Credit:
Dan Farber/CNET News.com)

(Credit:
Dan Farber/CNET News.com)

Steve Ballmer: It ain't over ’til it's over?

“When Microsoft made its offer to acquire Yahoo’s search business, Yahoo rejected the offer outright. There was no negotiating beyond the ($9 billion offer) Microsoft was offering,” the source said.

The source questioned whether unrest about the stock price would force a change at the top as well. “A lot of Yahoo directors are fed up with the process of what’s been happening,” the source said.

But according to an institutional investor advisory services source, Icahn would still likely stand a better chance just running a partial slate of dissident directors for minority representation on the board–even if Microsoft makes a public statement of a sweetened offer to buy only Yahoo’s search business.

“If Microsoft would make a public statement, it would make a difference to a certain extent,” said the institutional investor advisory services source. “But, unless it was official like a tender offer, or unless shareholders could see the details and specific terms of the partial offer, it’s hard for shareholders to know how it will benefit them.”

This source noted that a mere press release saying the offer has been increased to a certain level will have even less effect, or meaning to shareholders: “I don’t think Microsoft publicly announcing even the terms of a sweetened bid would be enough for Carl Icahn to run a full slate, or motivate shareholders to replace the whole board.”

Pearl Jewelry Google tool lets advertisers scrutin

08 Aug 2010

,Pearl Jewelry

Google announced a tool called Ad Planner on Tuesday that lets advertisers find Web sites whose visitors match various demographic attributes.

The tool, which was expected,silver jewelry, also can show in detail how many people visit a particular Web site. The tool competes with offerings from companies including ComScore and Nielsen Online.

The site is a more specific tool than the publicly available Google Trends tool, unveiled last week, that shows relative Web site traffic for various Web sites.

Google Ad Planner lets advertisers scrutinize Web site characteristics.

“Enter demographics and sites associated with your target audience, and the tool will return information about sites (both on and off the Google content network) that your audience is likely to visit,OMEGA Watches,” the company said on its AdWords blog.

Right now, Google’s tool is available by invitation only, however.

Data can be exported into a spreadsheet for further analysis or for import into Google’s DoubleClick MediaVisor tool for managing ad campaigns, Google said.

(Credit:
Google)