Archive for June, 2010

US Airways pilot big on Facebook

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

Pilot Chesley B. Sullenberger has a fan page on Facebook that's pulling in more than 100 new fans a minute.

To put things in perspective, Sullenberger may end up being the most popular pilot on Facebook. Amelia Earhart who was the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean, has less than 500 fans, while sound barrier-busting Chuck Yeager has close to 1,600.

Want some big exposure on Facebook? Just pull off a water landing in a fully loaded passenger jet.

So far users have created nearly a dozen fan pages for Sullenberger, the most active of which is pulling in more than 100 new fans a minute and totals more than 51,000 members at the time of this posting. While it’s nowhere near the millions attained by some celebrities and political figureheads like President-Elect Barack Obama, it’s only been a day since the historic landing.

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

For Chesley B. Sullenberger, who successfully landed US Airways Flight 1549 in the Hudson river Thursday, that happening appeared to have given him a cult-like following on the popular social network.

Latest quad-core chips creep into consumer desktop

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

“The bulk of our 45-nanometer output starts out in servers, moves to mobile, then moves to desktop,” he said. In other words, desktops have last dibs on 45nm parts. There were also rumors about motherboard compatibility problems for all three chips.

First up: AMD and its new power-sipping quad-core 9100e Phenom. HP is now offering its space-saving Slimline Pavilion desktop with the 9100e, which draws only 65 watts. Typically, quad-core processors draw 95 watts or higher. Intel’s popular Q6600, for example, has a thermal envelope rated at 105 watts.

Gateway offers a FX7026 tower system with a Q9300 processor for $1,099 at Best Buy.

Whatever the case, the processors are now offered on select consumer systems from HP and Gateway, among other PC vendors. The Q9550 (2.83GHz) and Q9450 (2.66GHz) integrate 12MB of cache (versus 8MB for older Intel quad-core chips) and attach to a 1,333MHz front-side bus. The Q9300 (2.5GHz) has 6MB of cache. All have a thermal envelope of 95W.

The HP Pavilion Ultimate d4999t series–with a Q9550 processor, 3GB of DDR2-800MHz dual-channel SDRAM memory, an Nvidia GeForce 8400 graphics card (256MB), and a 500GB 7200 SATA hard disk drive–is priced at $1,259.

HP Pavilion Slimline desktop s3430f uses a low-power AMD quad-core processor

(Credit:
Hewlett-Packard)

One reason for the long delay was stated explicitly by Intel CEO Paul Otellini at his company’s first-quarter 2008 earnings conference call earlier this month.

Quad-core processors boasting lower power and packing more transistors are arriving at mass-market retail.

These latest chips from Advanced Micro Devices and Intel are now populating consumer desktops from Hewlett-Packard and Gateway, among other prominent PC makers. What makes them different? Intel’s are made on a 45-nanometer process, and AMD’s run at a lower power.

The HP s3430f system also packs 4GB of PC2-6400 DDR2 SDRAM memory, a 500GB (7200 rpm) Serial ATA (SATA) hard disk drive, and an Nvidia GeForce 8500 GT graphics processor. The system is priced at $999 at Best Buy.

Next up, Intel’s Core 2 Quad Q9xxx series of 45nm quad-core processors. Although the Q9550, Q9450, and Q9300 CPUs were announced at the beginning of January, they were delayed, pushing back availability in the distribution channel until mid-March.

Live from D6 Jerry Yang and Susan Decker of Yahoo

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

Click here for full coverage of the D: All Things Digital conference.

The following is live coverage from D6 of Yahoo’s Jerry Yang and Susan Decker being interviewed Wednesday by Walt Mossberg:

Obscure Microsoft product behind halt of Windows r

Friday, June 18th, 2010

Perhaps its most notable customer is the NFL’s Dallas Cowboys, who use it to handle all of their merchandising activities, in conjunction with Microsoft’s Dynamics AX product.

A compatibility glitch with the latest versions of Windows has thrust the spotlight onto a little-known product from Microsoft’s Dynamics line for midsize businesses.

Microsoft acquired Dynamics RMS as part of its 2002 acquisition of Southern California-based Sales Management Systems, and it last updated the product in January 2007.

Just what is Dynamics RMS?

He didn’t offer a specific reason why the company didn’t catch the issue sooner. “It just happened this was the time and place when we did find the issue,” he said.

Griffiths said the Dynamics team discovered the issue as part of its testing and realized that the problem could lead to data loss.

It’s software that enables specialty retailers to handle cash register functions, process payments, and automate purchasing, inventory and other back-end processes, said Michael Griffiths, the group product manager for the retail part of the Dynamics business.

Microsoft said on Tuesday that it was delaying the availability of Windows XP Service Pack 3 and halting automatic updates to Vista Service Pack 1 because of problems with Microsoft Dynamics Retail Management System.

Dynamics RMS is used to manage about 38,000 different store locations, he said.

“The key issue is, there is a potential for data loss within the RMS solution itself, which is obviously something we wanted to make sure we address immediately,” Griffiths said.

Why Microsoft covets Yahoo

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

The commercial Internet is relatively young, rearing its head with Netscape in the mid-1990s. But consolidation is already taking place, driven by Google’s meteoric rise with search and advertising revenues. Instead of one throat for CIOs to choke, the Internet giants aspire to dominance in online ad serving and want to serve as the home base for billions of Web users on the planet.

In the most recent quarter Google has $5.19 billion in revenue from its ad and search business. Microsoft had less than $1 billion for its entire online business, and Yahoo less than $2 billion, including a $401 million gain from its Alibaba investment.

For starters, the big advertising networks have been scooped up. Google paid $3.1 billion for DoubleClick, and Microsoft picked up aQuantive for $6 billion in cash. Microsoft’s lust for Yahoo is in a similar vein. Google has 60 percent share of search market, and it keeps growing, and a Microhoo is the best offense from Microsoft’s point of view.

The future of the way people consume information, the way people socialize and connect is going to change a lot more in the next 10 years even than in the last 10. How you find information, how you consume it, how you share it and connect with your friends while you’re in the middle of that, how it gets paid for using advertising and other techniques, dramatic changes. We are absolutely committed to be the leading player in that endeavor.

Since 2005, Oracle made more than 40 acquisitions, totaling more than $20 billion. Microsoft, IBM, HP, Sun Microsystems, and Cisco Systems have each made dozens of acquisitions in the same time frame.

In this saga, it’s difficult to tell who is the white knight for whom. The two companies are concerned about the Google juggernaut. But Yahoo is considering getting in bed with Google, allowing its rival to sell ads on its service, as a way to avoid Microsoft’s embrace. On the other hand, Yahoo appears to welcome Microsoft’s embrace for the right price.

In the Internet era, the consolidators want to be the data center infrastructure providers to the giant Web colonizers–Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, AOL, eBay, Amazon, etc.

But the deal has to be based on more than just price. If they don’t get along and share the same vision, they will both suffer the consequences of a bad marriage, and Google wins anyway.

In his talk with Microsoft employees on May 1, Ballmer said:

Yahoo would add scale and expertise to Microsoft’s online initiatives, and some interesting ways to build a social layer into the Microhoo fabric of somewhere between 600 million and 800 million unique users (which will certainly get flagged by regulators if the deal happens). The alternative for Microsoft is to go it alone, but that strategy so far hasn’t yield the desired results. Hence, the consolidation route.

CEO Steve Ballmer understands that Microsoft’s dominance, gained primarily in the 20th century, is eroding. While Microsoft revenue continues to climb across its various business units, it trails in the online world. And, the online world of ads and subscription services is the future engine of growth and prosperity.

At the close of the 20th century and the beginning of the 21st century, the tech industry experienced a massive consolidation, culminating 40 years of market and technology development, from the mainframe to client/server computing and now the Internet.

We are not today the leading player. We are not irrelevant, but we are not the leading player. We’re committed to go do that.

Consolidation is a sign of the mature phase in an industry, in which the biggest players stake out more territory as a way to increase share of wallet from customers by fusing together more complete solutions. It’s the proverbial “one throat to choke” approach to enterprise computing.

Microsoft confirms Yahoo hire

Friday, June 4th, 2010

Microsoft confirmed Thursday that it has indeed hired Yahoo search executive Sean Suchter, following speculation this week that he would be joining the software maker after his departure from Yahoo was announced.

The poaching comes as CEO Steve Ballmer reiterated at Microsoft’s shareholder meeting Wednesday that it has no interest in buying all of Yahoo, though it remains open to a search partnership.

Microsoft would not comment on a report that another former Yahoo search executive, Qi Lu, is under consideration to head Microsoft’s online efforts.

“We are very pleased to confirm that Sean Suchter will be joining Microsoft as the GM of our Silicon Valley Search Technology Center, working on Live Search,” Microsoft search head Satya Nadella said in a statement. Suchter, who starts work December 22, will report to Harry Shum, corporate vice president of Search Product Development.