Aug 21

BEA’s Peter Laird just posted a great overview of Cloud Computing, SaaS, and Platform-as-a-Service PaaS for those who are still struggling to figure it out (and really who isn’t?)

As always, the definitions are vague, yet arguable but I think they do a good job in establishing what we are talking about.

Mapping the Cloud/SaaS/PaaS Universe

(Credit: Peter Laird, Kent Dickson)

Cloud Computing
Cloud computing refers to the virtualization of the data center, such that server machines are not thought of individually but as just a commodity in a greater collection of server machines. Cloud computing solutions in general strive to eliminate the need for an application deployer to be aware of the actual physical machines that are used to host the application. Some have called this idea “hardware as a service”.

SaaS
An application that is delivered through the SaaS model typically is done so:
-Over the internet
-Remotely by a third party, with little/no opportunity to bring that application in-house
-With a usage-based pricing model

PaaS
When a vendor offers a Platform as a Service, they are offering an integrated platform to build, test, and deploy custom applications.

The fullsize map is available here.

Aug 21

NEW YORK–When News Corp. mogul Rupert Murdoch plunked down $580 million to buy the social networking site MySpace in 2005, C.H. Low had a reaction not that uncommon among tech industry veterans.

“I said, ‘This is ridiculous! Are we in another bubble?’ ” said Low. “But I thought, ‘Murdoch is a smart man. Something else must be going on here.’ “

Three years later, Low is the CEO of the software startup Orbius, one of an estimated 50 to 100 companies selling software and on-demand tools to help everyone from automakers to traditional publishing companies add social networking and improved community functions on their Web sites.

For many of the companies here at O’Reilly’s Web 2.0 Expo, the approach to selling these community-building tools is downright old-fashioned: Site licenses, maintenance fees, and all sorts of enterprise software business models (of course, many with a software-as-a-services spin) that sound more like something out of the 1990s than the business plans of start-ups trying to get traction at the end of the Bush era.

But the conference taking on a decidedly business-focused tone shouldn’t be all that surprising. In fact, it’s a change remarkably similar (but on a smaller scale) to what happened in Web 1.0.

In the early days of the dot-com boom, many skeptics wondered loudly if the Web could offer any real business value. Sure, it was fun; the cool kids were able to brag about their cyber credentials, and it was a good way to sell things like books and CDs. But a place to do serious, global corporation kind of business? Unlikely. And all those advertising-based business models? Craziness.

Then a new generation of companies working on software to allow businesses to conduct transactions online and move their pricey corporate software to a more affordable Internet-based model. Only a few of them are still around, but they forced big corporate software names like IBM, Oracle and SAP to come up with viable Internet software that eventually helped drive the little guys out of business or into acquisitions (and a few of those companies running on ads managed to survive).

Today, Web 2.0 technology just may be passing from the “cool kid’ phase to the business-to-business phase. (A little ominously for the little software companies here, IBM announced Wednesday that it’s opening a center in Cambridge, Mass. to study social networking and create a set of social networking software tools it can sell to customers.)

Strolling away from the “Long Tail Pavilion” (named after Wired editor Chris Anderson’s oft-cited and occasionally ridiculed book), Low recalled his career as a serial entrepreneur. He was chief technology officer at VerticalNet, one of the biggest (and ultimately disappointing) names in the first dot-com boom. After that, he founded several small companies, and was taking time of when the MySpace acquisition gave him the bug to get back in the game.

“Web 2.0 needs to be a utility” Low said. “It can’t be just for fun.”

An enterprise software guy” fits right in
That’s exactly what Majid Abai, chief executive of Los Angeles startup Pringo, is counting on. Pringo sells community-building and management software that typically costs in the range of $20,000 to $50,000. He wasn’t all that surprised so many companies at the Web 2.0 Expo were focused on selling tools for community building rather because there’s a good sales pitch for it: It allows companies to improve communications with customers, distributors and employees. And the best way to do it, he believes, it to build those communities on top of packaged software.

“I’m an enterprise software guy,” Abai said. “If this conference had been here last year, it would have been a completely different game” focused more on flashy companies targeting consumers.

In a conference room overlooking the show floor, LiveWorld CEO Peter Friedman was demonstrating new software that allows the managers of a Web site to quickly create a discussion group around a particularly topic, whether it’s a story on a news site or a
car. His company, which was founded in the 1990s and was nearly gutted in the dot-com bust, sells community-building software and management services that isn’t all that different than the discussion forums Friedman helped run at Apple in the 1980s.

Don’t tell the guys out there,” he said, motioning to the show floor below him, “but what we’re doing is basically enterprise software.” He added that technology and needs have changed, ‘but what we’re doing isn’t all that different from what we were doing years ago.”

Click here for full coverage of Web 2.0 Expo

Aug 21

There is one thing worse than being Joe Schmo. And that is being Joe Schmo on Facebook.

He still hasn’t quite got over his good fortune. It is as if Scarlett Johansson had walked over to him in a bar and slipped him her phone number and the address of a fine, cheap fitness trainer. So he was only too happy to reveal more about his technique.

Which all seems a little odd to me. But I am sure some of you will be able to enlighten what might have happened here.

“I set my alarm on my cell phone to remind me that registration was near,” he said. “I was watching the clock count down. When it reached 30 seconds until registration time, I hit the refresh button because sometimes pages will change before the automatic refresh.”

Joseph was so happy (but surely not vain) to have achieved the vanity status of facebook.com/joseph that he decided, in a series of e-mails, to reveal the secrets of his success.

You see, I had no idea about that. But I am sure that some of you did. And what an advantage this appliance of science gave to Joseph’s quest for immortality.

At this point I am seriously wondering how many other clever people out there were being as wise as Joseph. Perhaps not enough.

So Joseph Kitchens, co-owner of Kitchen’s Field Services in Hutto, Texas, decided he had to use his technological and deductive skills to become Facebook’s one and only Amazing Technicolor Joseph.

“I clicked it and it gave me a confirmation…and all this happened before the actual countdown ended,” said the newly crowned Facebook Joseph.

“So about 25 seconds before the clock finished counting for everyone else, I was already at the registration page,” he said.

“By the time clocks were getting close to zero, I am guessing Facebook overwrote the html file with the registration page for the vanity names. Anyone that hit refresh or simply typed in the registration page at the t-30 seconds and counting got that registration page,” he said.

(Credit: CC Mcdlttx/Flickr)

It all sounded terribly clever to me. But then it would, wouldn’t it?

One aggrieved customer seems to have been Joseph Smarr, the CTO of Plaxo. He Twittered around 3pm PST Friday, a full 6 hours before the countdown: “As i suspected, facebook.com/joseph was already taken before 9pm, but http://facebook.com/jsmarr is all mine :)”

However, because the world is what it is–a seething mass of envious, unhappy beings–he immediately received word from other peeved Josephs. Around 20 of them.

“I figured that I might get in a few seconds early but did not expect 30 seconds. I refreshed at the one minute mark as well as the 45 second mark and I was brought back to the countdown.”

The first task was for Joseph to synchronize his mind, his eyes, and his fingers with the Facebook countdown. It was all done with a precision far beyond that of most military forces.

“Some of them had ‘Joseph’ as an option but when they clicked on it, it gave them four new options,” he said.

He couldn’t stop himself musing further about the technical minutiae that may have brought him to his new self.

This is the famous Texan cafe in Hutto, Texas, soon, no doubt, to be renamed Facebook Joseph's Cafe.

And then he got really technical. “The link throughout the process never changed. Facebook had the html as a countdown clock that automatically refreshed as the clock hit zero,” he revealed.

So Joseph Kitchens became Facebook Joseph by, quite simply, beating the clock.

In the meantime, let us all hail the man who was once an ordinary Joe and became a somebody Joseph.

But here’s the really strange thing. Facebook offered him four vain options. Facebook.com/joseph was merely the fourth. Ahead of it was Joseph1, which seems, yet again, to reveal Facebook’s weak grasp of human purity.

Aug 21

Am I alone with the problem? It just seems to be too coincidental that both cards have been compromised in the past few weeks, especially since we don’t use the two cards with the same merchants. One is my business card and is primarily used at Marriott hotels. The other is a backup family credit card that we rarely use (but did recently use at Disneyland - Could Mickey be behind this?).

I just had one of the cards replaced and now will have to have the other replaced. It’s very, very aggravating.

Am I the only one currently getting hammered for using a Chase Visa card? In the past three weeks, two of my Chase Visa (Marriott Rewards) cards have been compromised, despite the fact that a) my wife and I still have the cards in our possession and b) we don’t use the cards on dodgy Internet sites (well, except for Arsenal.com :-).

commentary

Aug 21

Microsoft’s Brad Smith, singing a love song to open source.

“We live on both sides of the patent fence every day. We have more patent lawsuits than any company in our industry,” he said. “And yet we still believe in the benefits and value of a well-functioning patent system.”

“Two engineers in a room can solve a problem a lot better than 1,000 lawyers,” he told a packed ballroom of open-source enthusiasts and executives here, adding that the company wanted “conversation and dialogue.”

But despite his conciliatory tone, Smith is no shrinking violet when it comes to protecting his company’s intellectual property. Last year, he told Fortune magazine that free and open-source software violated 235 Microsoft patents. At the time, he told Fortune that the Linux kernel violates 42 Microsoft patents, while its user interface and other design elements infringe on a further 65. OpenOffice.org is accused of infringing 45, along with 83 more in other free and open-source programs, according to the interview in Fortune.

In February, Microsoft tried to smooth its relationship with the open-source world. Microsoft now shares communication protocols governing how its software products communicate. Microsoft also pledged not to sue open-source programmers for developing software that uses those interfaces. What’s more, the company has developed what it calls an Open Source Interoperability Initiative to improve how open-source software works with its own products.

“It would be a mistake for any one of us to say that the last word has been written on any of this,” Smith said.

Specifically, open-source software is now deeply entrenched in the computing industry and many of Microsoft’s customers use open-source software widely. Still, Microsoft came to town intent on sending a message. Earlier in the day, Sam Ramji, who is Microsoft’s “Director of Open Source & Linux strategy,” was all smiles and full of kumbaya as he participated in a panel with three other open-source executives.

Smith answered that it would be on a “project-by-project basis.”

James Bottomley, the CTO of Steeleye Technology, who was onstage with Smith questioned how Microsoft intended to square its desire to work with the open-source community, given the two sharply different business models.

SAN FRANCISCO–The advance billing had the audience assuming Daniel was about to enter the lions’ den. What they got was more along the lines of Mister Rogers talks tech.

Brad Smith, who is Microsoft’s top lawyer, went out of his way during an afternoon talk before a gathering of open-source die-hards to portray the software company as ready to turn a page in its relationship with the developer community.

(Credit:
Charles Cooper)

So what’s changed in the intervening 10 months? Well, a lot.

“We all do software,” he continued. “We are all part of the same industry–all part of the same industry that has many diverse parts to it.”

“We believe in the importance of building a bridge that makes it possible for different parts of the industry to work together,” Smith said. “We believe in a bridge that is scalable, that is workable, that is affordable…that’s a hard bridge to build. But I will say this–today more than ever that is a bridge we very much need to build.”

“I can’t give you an answer saying here’s a blank check–where do I sign,” he said. “We are moving. I recognize that contributing in a variety of ways is part of the equation.”

“Ultimately, people are not caricatures. They get up in the morning. They get smarter. The industry evolves,” he said. “And you want that. You don’t want people to have to live with the caricatures and stay with those caricatures.”

At another point in his keynote speech at the Open Source Business Conference on Tuesday, Smith said that Microsoft appreciated “the important role that open-source software plays in this industry” and complimented creators of open-source software for their passion. “That’s not what you always heard from us and I recognize that.”

Smith didn’t climb to the top of his profession at the world’s largest software company by accident, and his formidable skill was on display as he guided through an assortment of audience questions–some teasing, some flip, some downright hostile–and finished the session on a note of mutual recognition.

In a later Q&A onstage, Smith allowed that Microsoft was treading on delicate ground–especially on the topic of patents. He acknowledged the differences and sought to undercut any appearance of confrontation.

Aug 21

According to the ISP executive who asked for anonymity because he’s involved in negotiations with the music sector, the RIAA’s tactics in dealing with the ISPs have been too heavy handed.

Ernesto, founder of the blog TorrentFreak, which focuses on file sharing, was always skeptical of the RIAA’s announcement. He noted that some telecoms have voluntarily sent warning notices to subscribers accused of illegally downloading songs for years, while other companies refused. He says he sees nothing new.

“Yes, the RIAA, MPAA and other outfits do plan to send copyright infringement warnings to ISPs,” Ernesto wrote in March, “but they’ve been doing so for at least half a decade. Every other month these Hollywood lobbyists pitch their antipiracy efforts to the public…this doesn’t mean, however, that something is about to change.”

Last December, the music industry’s message to song writers, publishers, and musicians was that antipiracy help was on the way. Hopes soared after the major labels announced that they had convinced a group of telecoms to work with them.

“Every day that passes we realize how important Internet connectivity is to people’s lives,” Cohn said. “The RIAA looks so out of step with what most people think is a reasonable response to (copyright) infringing behavior. Even to the people that believe we’re locked into this 19th century view of copyright law, the RIAA looks hysterical.”

So, why did the RIAA announce the ISP-based program without any ISPs on board so many months ago?

And some ISPs say the DMCA is unclear about when they must terminate service of repeat offenders. AT&T executives say they won’t cut off someone’s Web access based solely on evidence supplied by the recording industry and will only do so after receiving a court order.

“We have been working slowly but surely, directly and through the offices of (New York Attorney General Andrew) Cuomo, with virtually every major ISP on common approaches,” said Jonathan Lamy, an RIAA spokesman in an e-mail. “During the past six months, a number of different ISPs have forwarded nearly half a million RIAA notices to P2P infringers. They had not done that before last winter. A number of individual ISPs now argue that notices alone are proving to have a sufficient deterrent impact.”

“(The RIAA) has tried various ways to turn ISPs and other intermediaries into their own Internet cops,” said Cindy Cohn, legal director for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, an advocacy group for Internet users. “What the ISPs appear to be saying is that this isn’t our job.”

Six months later, the music industry is still waiting to hear from the RIAA which ISPs have explicitly agreed to work with the association. When the RIAA first announced its new antipiracy project, it didn’t name partners. Behind the scenes, industry insiders assured the media that the group would disclose the names of partner ISPs “within weeks.” Six months later, however, not one ISP has publicly acknowledged working with the RIAA on a “graduated response.”

Filing lawsuits against individuals accused of illegal file sharing was, for the most part, a thing of the past, said the Recording Industry Association of America, the trade group representing the top music companies. The new strategy was to enlist Internet service providers, the gatekeepers of the Web, to issue a series of warnings meant to increase pressure on alleged pirates in what the RIAA called a “graduated response.” Under the plan, those subscribers who refused to heed warnings could eventually see their Web connection suspended.

“Every other month these Hollywood lobbyists pitch their antipiracy efforts to the public…this doesn’t mean, however, that something is about to change.” –Ernesto, TorrentFreak founder

In an interview with CNET last week, Paul McGuinness, manager of the rock band U2, says that ISPs have for a long time profited from selling broadband to file sharers and have little interest in taking action without seeing financial reward. But he sees some progress around the globe.

Cohn, from EFF, sees it differently. To her, cutting off someone’s Internet connection for file sharing is like refusing to sell shoes to someone accused of jaywalking.

What the RIAA seems to be suggesting here is that it doesn’t need a threat of service termination for a graduated response to be effective. This, however, conflicts with what music executives say in private. They want a carrot and stick approach. They know they have to offer the public inexpensive and easy-to-use alternatives to illegal peer-to-peer sites. They also believe chronic abusers won’t stop without the threat of a serious punitive consequence.

“Perhaps broadband subscription sales are saturated in many territories and the ISPs are belatedly but realistically now turning to building revenue collection businesses with the content owners,” McGuinness said. “I just hope it’s not too late.”

Some RIAA critics have speculated that the December announcement was a smokescreen to cover the music industry’s retreat from the 5-year-old and highly controversial strategy of filing copyright lawsuits against individuals accused of copyright violations. The theory goes something like this: the RIAA needed a face-saving way to walk away from the litigation, which resulted in more than 30,000 people being sued, a fortune in legal fees, a huge public relations black eye, and didn’t do all that much to stop piracy.

(Credit:
Declan McCullagh)

So if Cuomo isn’t enough, why don’t the music labels appeal to Congress to legislate the ISPs into submission? That’s easy. The ISPs have much more influence in Washington than the music sector. There’s also little public sympathy for recording stars, who are often perceived to be rolling in money–even if this is a reality for a tiny fraction of working musicians.

To be sure, the RIAA continues to pitch its plan to ISPs, numerous sources have told CNET News. AT&T has launched tests of a graduated response–everything, that is, but service interruption. The telecom said it would never shut off a customer’s service without a court order. The recording companies may soon announce some kind of agreement with one of the ISP trade groups. But this won’t bind the group’s members and the RIAA will still need to strike deals with individual companies.

“We keeping hearing about how (Cuomo) is supposed to make this happen,” said the executive. “You don’t see much changing, do you?

That there are still no announced deals–and there’s no guarantee the RIAA can sign any of the major broadband companies–indicates that at best the big recording companies may have spoken too soon when they said broadband providers would help, says one ISP executive. Ironically, at a time when many figured the RIAA had finally hit upon a compelling way to go after music piracy, the association’s copyright protection efforts may be more toothless than ever.

The executive complained that the RIAA has tried to use Andrew Cuomo to push the ISPs into helping. But Cuomo doesn’t have the kind of political muscle to sway the major ISPs when they are acting well within the law, the executive said. There’s nothing in the Digital Millennium Copyright Act that requires ISPs to send their own warning letters to subscribers.

RIAA CEO Mitch Bainwol

Aug 21

Flexing its muscle at online retailers.

The gist is that Nvidia is conducting a test run of this pricing scheme, and if online retailers like NewEgg, Buy.com, and others don’t comply, they will face a series of penalties, and ultimately they will be cut-off from Nvidia-based 3D cards after a certain number of infractions. This strategy, called Manufacturer Advertised Pricing, is not exactly price-fixing, but it’s illegal in other countries, and, as H enthusiast reports, it’s only recently legal in the U.S.

(Credit:
Nvidia)

If you’ve gone video card shopping online lately, you may have noticed that you certain retailers are now asking you to click through to your shopping cart to see a price for Nvidia-based 3D graphics cards. As H Enthusiast reported earlier this week, that newly inconvenient shopping experience is part of a calculated effort by Nvidia to regulate the advertised pricing of its 3D cards.

Compliance thus far seems spotty. Some cards listed at NewEgg obfuscate the price, others with the same chip do not. The same with TigerDirect. Amazon, Buy.com, and ZipZoomFly all list prices as normal.

Nvidia’s reasons for implementing this strategy are unclear. H Enthusiast was not able to get anyone on the record, although the going theory seems to indicate that it’s a way to regulate non-US certified board partners from undercutting the Nvidia-approved US competition.

With only some vendors complying with Nvidia’s request, and only then partially, it seems that Nvidia’s plan is only an occasional annoyance. Whether Nvidia makes the plan permanent, cracks down on stray listings, and forces other retailers to go along all remain to be seen.

Aug 21

The Archos GPS In-Car Holder will work with all models of the 605 Wi-Fi and has an expected shipping date of sometime in May. Pricing starts at $129.99 or you can get a bundle package (30GB Archos 605 WiFi + GPS In-Car Holder) for $399.99.

(Credit:
Archos)

Archos GPS In-car Holder

The Archos 605 WiFi PVP already does a lot of things. It’s an MP3 player, a video player, a photo viewer, a PDF viewer, and a Web portal. Now, it can be your personal navigator. Today, Archos announced the GPS In-Car Holder, an add-on accessory that brings the features of a portable navigation system to the PVP. The GPS receiver is built into the
car mount, so you can simply slide your 605 WiFi into the cradle and connect it to your windshield and car stereo (via line-out) to get real-time tracking and voice-guided turn-by-turn directions. Maps of North America are provided by TeleAtlas (a European and a Chinese version will also be available) and will include a points of interest database as well as traffic and lane assistance.

Aug 21

With luck it will work, Ichihashi will be found, and the Hawker family can get some closure. Using technology like this is a very Japanese solution to a common problem, and one we might see here in shopping malls, courthouses, and city halls in the future, though the idea of life sized, virtual killers all over the place might be too much for the American public.

This isn’t the first time Japanese police have used cardboard cutouts instead of traditional wanted posters. Cutouts were used to try to track down three fugitive members of the Aum Shinri Kyo cult responsible for the 1995 sarin gas subway attacks in Tokyo, so far unsuccessfully.

Or you could cut through the sea of info by putting the identities right in the public’s face with life-size, talking, cardboard cutouts of the evasive culprits.

If you’re looking for someone wanted for murder, you could put up a wanted poster at a few post offices. You could set up Web sites with images of the felon or mail people the pictures. These days, however, we’re bombarded with information, and the bulletins could–and most likely would–get lost in the static.

Hawker’s parents reportedly don’t like the idea of the life-size cutouts, and think police are using them as a way to appease the grieving family since they’ve made no apparent progress in the case in months.

This is, though, the first time an audio playback solution has been utilized. By pressing a button on the cutout, a person can hear a recording of Ichihashi’s voice, hopefully prompting someone to remember speaking to him at some point. Two cutouts are located at a police station, with others set to go up elsewhere.

Bill Hawker, the father of slain 22-year-old teacher Lindsay Ann Hawker, displays a life-size cardboard cutout of the suspected killer, Tatsuya Ichihashi, during a press conference at the British embassy in Tokyo on Tuesday.

(Credit:
AFP Photo/Yoshikazu Tsuno)

Such a test case is currently underway in Japan as police try to track down Tatsuya Ichihashi, a man wanted in the 2007 murder of 22-year-old British English teacher Lindsay Hawker. Ichihashi barely slipped out of an arrest situation and has been at large ever since.

Aug 21

No doubt Google will try to enable offline access for all of its Web apps. This was pretty apparent when the company announced Google Gears last May. Google Gears is a browser plug-in that lets people run Web applications even when they are not connected to the Internet. The Blogoscoped screenshots appear to be the first public evidence of such testing.

Enabling offline access to its Web apps would further intensify the competition between Google and Microsoft, whose desktop application dominance is threatened by Web-based apps.

Looks like Google is hard at work on offline access to Google Docs. Google Blogoscoped has screenshots of what looks like the beginnings of such a service.

In response to questions, a Google representative said: “We’re working on enabling many of our applications to work with Google Gears, but we don’t have anything more specific to share at this time.”

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