Aug 1

Lieu’s bill would allow students to be suspended or expelled from school for bullying that occurs via electronic communication, including cell phones, computers, or pagers.

Experts say the biggest obstacle to combating cyberbullying is that children are unlikely to report it. Unlike real-life bullying, there is often no witness or physical scar to alert parents or teachers to a cyberbullying situation.

In November, Meier’s hometown of Dardenne Prairie, Mo., passed a law banning online harassment. Offenders can face up to 90 days in jail, a $500 fine, or both.

Assembly Bill 86, introduced by Assemblyman Ted Lieu of Torrance, passed the Senate on Monday by a 21-11 vote and now heads back to the Assembly for consideration of Senate amendments, according to an Associated Press report. If the Assembly approves the Senate amendments, the bill will be sent to Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger.

School bullies who use the Internet or text messaging to harass fellow students could be kicked out of school under a bill being considered by the California Legislature.

The issue came to national focus last year when a newspaper reported the details a cyberbullying incident in which a teenage girl committed suicide. Megan Meier, who had a history of depression, hanged herself in 2006 after a falling out with someone named “Josh” whom she thought was a 16-year-old boy on MySpace. As it turns out, “Josh” didn’t exist; the persona was allegedly created by a woman named Lori Drew, the mother of one of Meier’s former friends, to harass the girl.

Aug 1

“What I’m holding in my hand is what is possibly the world’s smallest PC motherboard,” Chandrasekher said. The Moorestown motherboard houses the processor, chipset (including graphics), and memory, along with silicon for 3G, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and GPS, he said. “This is the heart of the new machine.”

(Credit:
Intel Corp.)

Intel Moorestown platform

Click here for more stories on IDF Shanghai.

Intel showed what it considers the smallest PC motherboard in the world at the Intel Developers Forum (IDF) in Shanghai. The motherboard, or main PC circuit board, will go into the company’s next-generation “Moorestown” mobile Internet device (MID) platform due in the 2009-2010 time frame.

“Our engineers have been very hard at work on Moorestown,” Anand Chandrasekher, senior vice president and general manager of Intel’s Ultra Mobility Group, said during an IDF keynote speech Wednesday. “The platform design teams have been hard at work in figuring out what is the smallest form factor that they can actually fit a complete PC motherboard into so they can deliver a great mobile Internet experience.”

Intel's Anand Chandrasekher holding motherboard

(Credit:
Intel Corp.)

Moorestown will be Intel’s showcase system-on-a-chip, combining the CPU, graphics, and memory controller (and other silicon mentioned above) on a single die. It will likely be the main launching pad for Intel into the mobile phone market–what the chipmaker calls “MID phones.” Moorestown may also be a major market for Intel’s upcoming solid-state drives.

Aug 1

Here’s the backstory: A partial book proposal from Mezrich, who has come under scrutiny for allegedly exaggerating details in his nonfiction works, leaked to a gossip blog this spring.

Independent Harvard alumni publication 02138 reported on Friday that the film rights to Mezrich’s book had been acquired by Sony Pictures Entertainment and producer Scott Rubin, who have been confirmed as the backers of Sorkin’s screenplay.

In other news, readers of gossip blog Valleywag seem to agree that Mark Zuckerberg should be played onscreen by Arrested Development star Michael Cera.

Sources close to Zuckerberg’s Harvard days have indicated to CNET News that the scant detail available in the book proposal is of questionable veracity; one went so far as to say the content contained “some real bull****.” At the time, it wasn’t even clear that the book proposal was legitimate, since neither Mezrich nor his publisher, Doubleday, are willing to confirm it, but sources who spoke to 02138 seem to indicate that it’s a done deal.

With a working title of Face Off, the plot concerns Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg’s soured relationship with early Facebook executive Eduardo Saverin, who appears to have been in close contact with Mezrich for the book, while they were both undergraduates at Harvard. The proposal described Zuckerberg and Saverin getting caught up in Silicon Valley excess, partying like celebrities all over the world, until a showdown between them turned ugly.

If an anonymous source is correct, the confirmed screenplay-in-the-works about Facebook’s origins by West Wing creator Aaron Sorkin is tied to a forthcoming book about the social network by Bringing Down The House author Ben Mezrich.

02138 has occasionally faced off with Facebook: last year, the magazine published a scathing piece about Zuckerberg that exposed extensive personal details about the young founder’s life, leading to a brief legal spat.

Aug 1

UPDATE: China’s anti-piracy agency is now denying an investigation into an antitrust suit against Microsoft, the AP reports.

commentary

Apparently, China’s State Intellectual Property Office may be organizing a group of companies to sue Microsoft for using its market power to charge high prices in China, where the cost of Microsoft’s software can easily exceed the hardware costs for a new PC.

Let me make sure I understand this: China has long benefited from stealing Microsoft’s software. Now it’s considering suing because Microsoft charges too much for the software it pirates?

But isn’t this the land of piracy, where Microsoft’s software is basically free, whatever the list price may say? Microsoft has used piracy as a strategic weapon in China. It’s somewhat ironic to see China complaining about Microsoft’s pricing. Does the government have an alternative in mind?

“Our office has never conducted research on monopoly behavior aimed at any enterprises,” the [agency] said. “And at present we have no plan to conduct this work.”

As I was pining for the good ol’ days of predatory Microsoft, I read that the Jekyll side of Microsoft never really left. From All Things D:

In a status report filed with Federal antitrust regulators yesterday, Microsoft said it had done much to comply with its 2002 antitrust consent decree….

Right hand, meet left hand.

In the states, perhaps. But apparently not in Asia. Because not 24 hours later, China’s State Intellectual Property Office said it’s investigating the software giant for discriminatory pricing. And according to the Shanghai Securities News, it may sue Microsoft under a new antitrust law scheduled to go into effect Aug. 1.

Aug 1

Samsung and Verizon Wireless on Thursday announced the Samsung Glyde (aka the SCH-U940), a touch-screen cell phone based on the Samsung SGH-F700. All signs originally pointed to a May 9 release date, but Samsung and Verizon had an itchy trigger finger. But no matter what the reason, sooner is always better, particularly if it involves putting a high-profile device through its paces with a review.

On the upside, call quality was excellent and the 3G features performed reasonably well. We wouldn’t keep the photos from the 2-megapixel camera as keepsakes, but the Glyde’s multimedia capabilities measure up well against other Verizon 3G phones. For a full analysis, check out our Samsung Glyde review and be sure to take a look at our Samsung Glyde photo gallery.

(Credit:
Corinne Schulze/CNET Networks)

Offering a touch screen and a slider design that hides a full alphabetic keyboard, the Glyde is a powerful phone with a full set of features. Inside you’ll find Bluetooth, a full HTML browser, GPS, and 3G support. In many ways it rivals the iPhone and Verizon’s LG Voyager, but at the end of the day it can’t quite match those devices. We really wanted to like its touch interface but the Glyde’s small display didn’t do it or the Web browser justice. The resulting effect was not only crowded, but also clunky. Fortunately, the QWERTY keyboard fares better.

Presenting the Samsung Glyde…

Aug 1

For me, this isn’t the right question. Using his MySQL-derived customer classification system, the real question is, “Can proprietary software serve Category A (companies with more time than money) at all?” and “Can open source more efficiently serve Categories B and C too?”

In fact, my own experience suggests that B companies buy less and less proprietary software (E*Trade is an example). Ditto goes for B, and C companies are willing to pay, anyway, so where is the conflict with open-source business models?

Implicit in Rodrigues’ reasoning is, I think, a belief that if the software is proprietary, A, B, and C companies will all eventually just say, “Aw, shucks. I’ve got time/expertise/money, but what does it matter, I just have to pay anyway!” So the vendor cleans up on all three.

A “network” might not suit all companies equally well. For others, perhaps offering their software in a paid-for SaaS product would be the “proprietary hook” necessary to turn an onlooker into a customer. Or perhaps there’s a completely different angle on it: think Basecamp (an application written to exploit 37Signals’ Ruby).

I believe that keeping the core of one’s software proprietary makes poor business sense because it inhibits adoption and increases cost of sale. Rather, “proprietary” services surround the core (think RHN with Red Hat Enterprise Linux or Google AdWords around Google Search, which is proprietary but needn’t be) and provide the purchasing rationale or mechanism.

Why should they bother buying support when they can self-support?

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The point is that there’s a lot of money in giving away one’s core, then charging for the periphery. Providing the core free of charge and encumbrances helps foster adoption, which makes the peripheral add-ons all the more valuable.

Few begrudge Red Hat for closing off Red Hat Network. It’s a service, not the software. JBoss did roughly the same thing with JBoss Operations Network, to very good effect.

Having said all this, I do agree with Rodrigues that there needs to be some “proprietary” hook to give would-be buyers a reason to become actual buyers. Where I think we differ is in what we’d keep proprietary.

Open-source distribution gets a company to all three categories far more efficiently than proprietary software distribution does, so open source is better than proprietary software in that way. It reduces some development costs, too, even for companies that do the vast majority of development (because ancillary development-like language packs are generally picked up by the user community). And it significantly reduces sales costs because would-be buyers arrive at one’s door prequalified.

Savio Rodrigues of InfoWorld tries to parse what makes open-source buyers tick, and how to generate more of them. In so doing, he suggests that the real battleground is over those enterprises with both money and expertise to go it alone with open-source software (so-called “Category B” customers).

Or consider Acquia’s model: there’s a huge amount of code surrounding Drupal, not all of it good. Acquia boils the Drupal ocean down to a coherent distribution with a management network for keeping customers current on the add-on modules, similar to how
Firefox manages extensions.

Aug 1

The real estate in Thirdwave's $12,000 Skulltrail system is taken up mostly by fans and power supplies

(Credit:
Thirdwave Corp.)

The system (photo) in fact looks more like a stand-alone power supply box than a computer. Of course heat dissipation is paramount in enthusiast screamers.

The first dual G4 PowerPC systems from Apple were all heat sinks and fans. In this tradition, a rarefied Intel Skulltrail-based powerhouse from Thirdwave uses two top-line quad-core QX9775 processors and a bevy of Nvidia GPUs–and plenty of fans.

Intel’s Skulltrail technology is much more advanced of course but fans still occupy a large chunk of real estate.

Other specifications: Two Nvidia GeForce 9800 GX2 boards, each housing two graphics processing units (GPUs). Thirdwave lists two Scalable Link Interface (SLI) boards plus one more 9800 GX2.

System pricing is stratospheric. The “Prime Galleria XS” system from Japan-based Thirdwave is listed at $12,740. The Intel QX9775 processor alone costs $1,499, more than most PCs. And the system uses two of these overclocked to 3.6GHz.

The original Apple dual G4 systems (circa 2001) were a testimony to heat dissipation–and Rube Goldberg. So much heat that the system could quite literally raise the temperature in a small room. (Note: I can testify to this.) And so many fans–as many as nine in the original dual G4 system but less in later G5 versions–that Apple had to quickly release a system redesign to reduce noise (and heat) levels.

Skulltrail is a very high-end enthusiast platform based on Intel’s 5400 “Seaburg” workstation chipset. The design distinguishes itself with dual CPU sockets that power eight processing cores (two QX9775 chips). Skulltrail also supports the Scalable Link Interface (SLI). The system can be maxed out with two dual-GPU graphics cards from Nvidia (such as the GeForce 9800 GX2) or up to four AMD graphics cards using ATI CrossFireX technology.

The system also offers an unusual storage option: one 64GB solid state drive.

Aug 1

ScanLife saves you from having to remember and type in the URL for a web page.

(Credit:
ScanLife)

The software only works with EZcodes, which you can create your own for free after a quick registration. You can even create an EZcode for a specific Web page, for example, to send users directly to an iTunes page to preview and purchase a specific song or to watch a particular video on YouTube.

Facebook’s EZcode.

(Credit:
ScanLife)

I tried ScanLife on my new iPhone 3G to launch a few Web sites, and it worked very well most of the time, even when the code is not on the center of the photo. A few times when the photo was blurry or underexposed, I had to take it again.

ScanLife is available for other smartphones, too. You can get it by texting the word “SCAN” to 43588 to receive the download instructions or go to www.getscanlife.com on your
mobile browser. ScanLife supports hundreds of other camera cell phones running major mobile operating systems including BREW, Java, Symbian, Palm, Blackberry, and Windows Mobile.

Scanbuy announced on Wednesday their free Scanlife barcode reader for
iPhone called ScanLife. The software allows for scanning an EZcode using the iPhone’s camera then instantaneously executing an individual action that the code is associated to, such as launching a Web site without you having to remember its URL and typing it on the phone’s browser.

This seems a fun and convenient way to access and process information from your phones, especially when the implementation of EZCodes becomes popular.

There’s a catch, though: your memory will atrophy, and soon enough you won’t be able to do anything without your phone. This has already happened to me.

Aug 1

Oversupply of Silicon Worse Than Expected - Greentech Media
Expect lower solar-photovoltaic costs: good for buyers, bad for suppliers. Also note that thin-film cells are forecast to represent 25 percent of production in 2010.
New Report Reveals Huge Variation Between Cities’ Carbon Footprints - Wired Science
Cool mashup of Brookings Institute data measuring different cities’ carbon footprints.

Google Maps and city carbon footprint mashup.

(Credit:
Wired)

Toyota building $192M green-car battery plant - Associated Press
The great
car battery race is on in earnest: plant will make nickel metal hydride batteries now used in the Prius. Also rumored is a Toyota lithium ion battery plant.
T. Boone Pickens’ green scheme - Fortune
The legendary wildcatter (I’ve always wanted to say that) has a grand plan to use wind power to decrease U.S. dependence on oil.
White House: Humans "Very Likely" Causing Warming - The Wall Street Jounal
Higher temperatures mean more energy generation is needed to cool homes and run industry, the White House concludes.
Mounting Costs Slow the Push for Clean Coal - The New York Times
Reality check on the huge hurdles facing so-called clean coal, which involves pollution from coal power plants being pumped underground.
Sopogy Scores $9M Funding from Omidyar, Hawaiian Investors - Earth2Tech
The Hawaiian company uses small reflective troughs to generate heat and make electricity.

Aug 1

As part of his efforts to advocate for the passage of the so-called “stimulus” bill, President Obama met with a number of chief executives from the technology sector and other industries on Wednesday to discuss the economy.

Obama called it a “sober” meeting but said the economic package moving its way through Congress will create more jobs and lay a foundation for long-term growth.

“At the heart of this debate over the economy is the question (of) whether America will be the preferred destination for businesses to operate, entrepreneurs to start ventures, investors to make their financial bets, and high-skilled workers to continue their careers,” Motorola’s Brown said in a statement. “President Obama understands that our economic policy must be geared toward strengthening U.S. competitiveness for the long term.”

“It will invest in broadband and emerging technologies, like the ones imagined and introduced to the world by people like… so many of the CEOs here today,” he said, “because that’s how America will retain and regain its competitive edge in the 21st century.”

The House of Representatives approved the $819 billion economic package on Wednesday, with no Republicans voting for the bill.

The CEOs at Wednesday’s meeting came out in support of the legislation.

Tech company leaders present at the meeting included IBM’s Sam Palmisano, Google’s Eric Schmidt, Applied Materials’ Mike Splinter, Motorola’s Greg Brown, and Micron’s Steve Appleton.

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