Long live the evil empire

So now Google is the evil empire that Silicon Valley loves to hate: SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 23 – For years, Silicon Valley hungered for a company mighty enough to best Microsoft. Now it has one such contender: the phenomenally successful Google. But instead of embracing Google as one of their own, many in Silicon Valley … Continue reading “Long live the evil empire”

So now Google is the evil empire that Silicon Valley loves to hate:

SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 23 – For years, Silicon Valley hungered for a company mighty enough to best Microsoft. Now it has one such contender: the phenomenally successful Google.

But instead of embracing Google as one of their own, many in Silicon Valley are skittish about its size and power. They fret that the very strengths that made Google a search-engine phenomenon are distancing it from the entrepreneurial culture that produced it – and even transforming it into a threat.

A year after the company went public, those inside Google are learning the hard way what it means to be the top dog inside a culture accustomed to pulling for the underdog. And they are facing a hometown crowd that generally rebels against anything that smacks of corporate behavior.

So once again, Bill Gates is Mr. Good Guy, like he was before the IBM PC, and Google can plan on rolling out a whole series of things that totally suck.

Grokster

Sure enough, the flower-power people are stompin’ mad over the Grokster deal, calling it “thought crime” and the end of the world: “Today the Supreme Court has unleashed a new era of legal uncertainty on America’s innovators,” said Fred von Lohmann, EFF’s senior intellectual property attorney. “The newly announced inducement theory of copyright liability will … Continue reading “Grokster”

Sure enough, the flower-power people are stompin’ mad over the Grokster deal, calling it “thought crime” and the end of the world:

“Today the Supreme Court has unleashed a new era of legal uncertainty on America’s innovators,” said Fred von Lohmann, EFF’s senior intellectual property attorney. “The newly announced inducement theory of copyright liability will fuel a new generation of entertainment industry lawsuits against technology companies. Perhaps more important, the threat of legal costs may lead technology companies to modify their products to please Hollywood instead of consumers.”

The thing is, the consumer isn’t locked in to some death battle with Hollywood; as long as Hollywood has reasonable protections, they’ll release lots of programming in MPEG format, and if they don’t they won’t. So we all benefit from the balance struck by the court in their unanimous Grokster decision. Here’s the way Cardozo law professor Susan Crawford put it:

Today’s Grokster opinion is a victory for content AND for technology. I was afraid that Sony would be undermined — and it wasn’t. The content guys were afraid that they wouldn’t be able to go after bad guys — and they’ve been given ammunition. What we’ve got is an opinion that is balanced and middle-of-the-road. It leaves Sony’s “substantial noninfringing use” standard alone (yes, the concurring Justices snipe back and forth about what that standard means, but that doesn’t matter), it doesn’t adopt any formless Aimster balancing test, and it says strongly that you can’t impute intent to technology. A good day for innovation. And a good day for Congressional staff, who won’t have to deal with some request for Induce legislation — we’re done.

And if you don’t think the whole purpose of Grokster was theft, I want some of what you’re smoking.

Here are a few relevant links:

* Wall St. Journal rountable
* Copyfight
* How Appealing
* SCOTUSblog, and here‘s their Grokster post.
* Ernest Miller’s blog, where you’ll find several posts:

I can’t stress enough that a unanimous Supreme Court issued a victory for the rule of law. The other parties in this case created systems that were made for the purpose of facilitating copyright infringment, the taking of music and movies. Taking from the people who put their sweat into making things we enjoy. The constitution protects this, It is in the constitution because they knew we needed this incentive to create something that we might all enjoy. This is a ruling that everyone who creates music, books are entitled to protection under the Constitution. When people create a product to help people take this content, they will be liable for it. All nine justices agree with this principle.

* Freedom to Tinker
The full text of the Supreme Court’s Grokster ruling (PDF, 55 pages).

No comment yet from Lessig, but Gillmor and Blankenhorn are miserable. Here’s Gillmor:

The Supreme Court has given the entertainment cartel and emerging broadband duopoly just what they wanted. You, and innovation, lost.

The high court said that Grokster and other file-sharing companies can be sued if their products are designed for copyright infringement and don’t have safeguards to protect copyrighted material.

And here’s Blankenhorn:

With this decision — a unanimous decision as opposed to the 6-3 Betamax ruling — I guarantee you the industry’s lawyers will try and turn this into open season on the Internet.

So it’s either the dawn of a new era of innovation, or the end of the world. Or maybe it’s just same-old, same-old.

Greatest inventor of the 20th century

Jack Kilby, inventor of the integrated circuit, has passed away. He invented the IC during the summer mass-vacation period at TI just weeks after joining the company and before he’d accrued enough time to take vacation. It happened like this: The innovation came in August 1958, when Kilby was working alone at a Texas Instruments … Continue reading “Greatest inventor of the 20th century”

Jack Kilby, inventor of the integrated circuit, has passed away. He invented the IC during the summer mass-vacation period at TI just weeks after joining the company and before he’d accrued enough time to take vacation. It happened like this:

The innovation came in August 1958, when Kilby was working alone at a Texas Instruments lab in Dallas. Most of the rest of company was on vacation, but Kilby lacked the seniority to take time off. Instead, he toiled on borrowed equipment and, by September, developed a working prototype.

Robert N. Noyce, co-founder of chip giant Intel Corp., is credited with developing the manufacturing process that made economical the wide-scale production of integrated circuits. Kilby and Noyce bickered for years over the other’s claim to have invented the integrated circuit. Ultimately, the two agreed to share credit. In 1995, Kilby was awarded the Robert N. Noyce Award, the Semiconductor Industry Association’s highest honor. When Kilby won the Nobel Prize, he invited Intel’s other founder, Gordon Moore, to the ceremony as a gesture to the contribution of Noyce, who died in 1990. Nobel Prizes are not awarded posthumously.

Including Noyce in the honor was classic Kilby, said those who knew him.

This Noyce fellow had some good ideas of his own, but Kilby invented the IC first, fair and square. The last project Kilby worked on was the solar cell, and we’re going to see a lot of those as well.

Kilby was a great man, and the world is a much better place for his having been in it.

Dvorak explains it all

Here’s his take on the process by which the Apple OS will go mainstream: 1. Apple releases OS X86 as a proprietary system for its boxes. It’s immediately pirated and goes into the wild. 2. Apple squawks about the piracy to draw attention to it, thus increasing the piracy, creating a virtual or shadow beta … Continue reading “Dvorak explains it all”

Here’s his take on the process by which the Apple OS will go mainstream:

1. Apple releases OS X86 as a proprietary system for its boxes. It’s immediately pirated and goes into the wild.

2. Apple squawks about the piracy to draw attention to it, thus increasing the piracy, creating a virtual or shadow beta test. The complaining is necessary to assure Microsoft that Apple does not intend to compete with Windows. This keeps Microsoft selling MS Office for the Mac.

3. There are driver issues that get resolved by the hobbyists, and OS X86 now remains in shadow beta, being tested in a process that is apparently outside of Apple’s control, but is in fact carefully monitored by the company.

4. Once the system stabilizes in the wild, Apple announces that it cannot do anything about the piracy situation and that it’s apparent that everyone wants this OS rather than Windows. It’s “the will of the public.” Apple then makes the stupendous announcement that it will sell a generic boxed OS, “for the rest of you!” One claim is that it is a solution to spyware.

5. Microsoft freaks out and stops development of Office for the Mac. But in the interim, while not selling OS X86 “for the rest of you,” Apple has been developing a complete Office suite, which it announces at the same time.

6. Spyware and viruses emerge on the Mac.

Sounds about right.

Dvorak: “I knew it all along”

John Dvorak says he’s been trying to tell us for years that the end was nigh for the IBM/Apple combination. The Intel platform has some interesting implications (as we said yesterday): I’ve never understood why the Mac nuts are in such denial over this platform shift. This change to Intel will not only save the … Continue reading “Dvorak: “I knew it all along””

John Dvorak says he’s been trying to tell us for years that the end was nigh for the IBM/Apple combination. The Intel platform has some interesting implications (as we said yesterday):

I’ve never understood why the Mac nuts are in such denial over this platform shift. This change to Intel will not only save the platform but potentially drive it into a position of dominance. What will be lost, of course, is the niche and mystique aspect of the Mac which many of its users seem to relish as part of some misguided superiority complex.

A more interesting scenario to me is examining the possibility that Windows users can switch to the Mac OS on their Intel machines. Is this going to be possible?

I have always believed that Apple could enter the PC arena with an Intel-based computer that could run OS-X or Windows and begin to take market share away from Dell and HP.

So why not? If Apple’s real value is their software, doesn’t it benefit them to run it on as many platforms as possible?

The PC industry is undergoing one of those paradigm-shift dealies where the PC is becoming a home entertainment device, and Apple is well-positioned (as they say) to take advantage as long as they understand their actual product.

In the battle over who broke the story first, the Wall St. Journal is taking credit.

High Definition TV Technologies

High-definition TV is probably confusing to most folks, so I’m going to lay out the basics in the interest of world peace and harmony and explain the technologies currently duking it out for your consumer dollar. First, lets understand that high-definition TV is digital, but not all digital TV is hi-def. DVDs, for example, are … Continue reading “High Definition TV Technologies”

High-definition TV is probably confusing to most folks, so I’m going to lay out the basics in the interest of world peace and harmony and explain the technologies currently duking it out for your consumer dollar.

First, lets understand that high-definition TV is digital, but not all digital TV is hi-def. DVDs, for example, are digital, but they don’t qualify as hi-def because there’s no more detail in the DVD picture than in a good standard def, analog TV image. Digital TV programming can take any of several formats, defined by their image geometry and the frequency with which the picture is updated. The high end of the scale of these formats is hi-def, the low end is standard def, and the middle is called Enhanced Definition TV or EDTV. Nobody is currently broadcasting in the best format, an image geometry of 1920 pixels x 1080 lines, progressive scanned at 30 frames/sec. The popular formats are 1280 x 720p and 1920 x 1080 interlaced. “Interlaced” means that the video picture is formed out of pairs of images, one consisting of the odd-numbered lines and the other with the even-numbered one; this is a trick that fools the eye and uses only half as many bits as progressive scan. Digital TV at 480 lines progressive is EDTV, and 480 interlaced is standard def, SDTV, the format used by DVDs.

Size and Shape

Hi-Def TV monitors are generally larger and wider than Old-Timey TV (OTTV). The screen shape has a ratio of 16:9 (width:height) compared to 4:3 for OTTV. This is handy when you’re watching movies, but for normal TV programming it means you’re going to have black bars on the left and right sides of your picture. So if you’re used to watching a 27″ set, you would need to get at least a 34″ widescreen HDTV to see an image of the height you’re used to (17″) when you’re watching shows that aren’t tailored for the wide screen.

The main advantage of HDTV is its ability to fill large screens with crisp images that aren’t grainy or otherwise funky-looking, so if you don’t get at least a somewhat larger screen than the normal OTTV screen you’re kind of missing the point.

Geometry

When you’re looking for an HDTV monitor, bear in mind that very few of them are capable of displaying the largest formats directly, pixel-for-pixel; that is, they’re all capable of receiving 720p and 1080i, but they typically do some image processing to display the images on a screen that has somewhat different geometry. For example, most HDTV plasma panels have a native resolution of 1024 x 768, just like crappy computer monitors. But they have image processing capability that allows them to “scale” 1280 x 720 or 1920 x 1080 images onto their native geometry. Since the image changes 30 or 60 times a second, and there may not be a whole lot of difference between any two adjacent pixels, these panels produce fine images up to a certain size, depending on how demanding you are, and are better looking than regular TV in any event. But you’re still going to be better off with a display whose native geometry is perfectly matched to HDTV formats, or one that has flexible geometry like an old-fashioned picture tube, because you’ll avoid weird image processing defects that plague all but the most expensive of plasma sets. That being said, this WalMart wonder is a nice TV set, and nobody knows TV like WalMart shoppers.

The alternative display technologies are LCD (just like computer displays) and a couple of variations on LCD for projection TV, DLP and LCoS.

LCD

Like plasma, LCD is a direct-view, panel technology that produces screens four or five inches thick that you can hang on a wall like paintings. LCD can be had in HDTV geometries, but some of it uses computer geometries as plasma does, so you should read the fine print. As with all of this stuff, you can pay nearly as much or as little as you want for an LCD HDTV, as these two examples show: BenQ has a 37″ monitor with native resolution of 1920 x 1080 (just what you want) for $2000 at Crutchfield. And Sharp has some smaller 32″ sets for twice as much.

DLP

Digital Light Processing is a nice, fairly inexpensive projection technology that’s used in medium-sized rear-projection TVs (typically from 46″ to 60″). DLPs use a chipset from Texas Instruments with 1280 x 720p, so these sets do have to scale 1080i down, but it’s pretty straightforward exercise as each 4 lines of input produce 3 lines of output. DLP TV have a single gun, and get the three colors that TV pictures are made from by shooting it through a “color wheel” that spins at 10,000 RPM or so. It’s a clunky process, but the images are acceptable. This Toshiba is a good example of a DLP set.

LCoS

Liquid Crystal on Silicon is a brilliant concept that JVC developed for video editing systems and has recently adapted for home entertainment, and it’s my bet as the winning technology in this area as it’s both cheaper and brighter than either LCD or DLP. The trick behind LCoS is that the beam of light that shines through a liquid crystal in LCD or DLP bounces off the LCoS crystal, which gives the colored light more intensity. These sets also use three guns so you don’t have a clunky color wheel, and the geometry is HDTV-oriented and not a carry-over from computers. JVC makes the best LCoS sets, but you can also get them from Philips and others, and the prices are reasonable.

CRT

OK, we’ve covered all the new technologies, but what about good, old-fashioned CRTs? It turns out they have a couple of natural advantages over the fixed-pixel-arrays that we’ve mentioned, flexibility and cost. CRTs form images by shooting an electron beam on a phosphor coating inside the tube, using electromagnets to direct the beam, which sweeps the screen from top left to bottom right 30 times a second, more or less (29.97, actually) . They can adjust resolution by altering the speed that the beam travels and by changing the number of times it turns on and off to form picture elements (pixels). It’s not really as flexible as all this at the high end, where a shadow mask is placed in between the beam source and the phosphor to sharpen the dots, but the general principle still applies. And CRTs are cheap to make because we’ve been making them for so long. The LCD companies are having to build brand-new and very expensive factories to produce the larger panels they need at a low cost, and somebody has to pay for them. Sharp is building their own, LG and Philips are collaborating, Sony and Samsung are collaborating, and the Chinese Army is building one with slave labor.

The down sides of CRT are size – they top out at 34″ – and the weight, about 200 pounds for a 34″. Old projection TVs also used CRT guns, but that’s a downer. Good sources for HDTV CRTs are Toshiba and Sony.

OK, that’s that for displays, there’s a lot to be said about HDTV recorders and programming, but that’s for another post.

Civility

A blogging conference in Nashville featured Dave Winer hosting a session on civility. This is not an April Fool. See Instapundit.com for details. Best quote was from Megan McArdle: “like Jimmy Swaggart preaching monogamy.” Winer’s the third blogger, and a brilliant guy and all, but still, this had to be somebody’s idea of a joke.

A blogging conference in Nashville featured Dave Winer hosting a session on civility. This is not an April Fool. See Instapundit.com for details.

Best quote was from Megan McArdle: “like Jimmy Swaggart preaching monogamy.”

Winer’s the third blogger, and a brilliant guy and all, but still, this had to be somebody’s idea of a joke.

A billion new bloggers

According to RCRNews.com: Chipmaker Intel Corp. announced its first WiMAX product, a move that could push the WiMAX industry similar to how Intel’s Centrino products advanced the Wi-Fi market. “As a standards-based, high-speed Internet access solution, WiMAX can provide the platform for the next generation of Internet expansion, connecting the next billion Internet users,” said … Continue reading “A billion new bloggers”

According to RCRNews.com:

Chipmaker Intel Corp. announced its first WiMAX product, a move that could push the WiMAX industry similar to how Intel’s Centrino products advanced the Wi-Fi market.

“As a standards-based, high-speed Internet access solution, WiMAX can provide the platform for the next generation of Internet expansion, connecting the next billion Internet users,” said Scott Richardson, general manager of Intel’s Broadband Wireless Division. “In addition to delivering the first flexible, highly integrated WiMAX system-on-chip, Intel has worked with a number of parties, including carriers and equipment manufacturers, to prepare the industry for the next wave of wireless technology.”

Maybe this will get my traffic up.

Don’t worry about peak oil

From time to time, our hippie friends worry that we’re on the brink of running out of oil and plunging into the Dark Ages. I don’t worry about this at all because technology will save our bacon as it has so many times in the past. Someday we’ll have the Hydrogen Economy, with clean-burning and … Continue reading “Don’t worry about peak oil”

From time to time, our hippie friends worry that we’re on the brink of running out of oil and plunging into the Dark Ages. I don’t worry about this at all because technology will save our bacon as it has so many times in the past. Someday we’ll have the Hydrogen Economy, with clean-burning and cheap fuel. But before we get there, we’ll manufacture more crude oil to replace the stuff we’re pumping now. We’ll do this with a process known as thermal de-polymerization or TDP:

TDP does the same thing the earth does when it turns organic matter into oil, but a lot faster, using standard refinery components and techniques. The technology is not quite competitive – barrel for barrel or ton for ton – with existing energy sources, but if all the secondary costs and benefits (transportation, waste disposal, pollution and disease control, compatibility with existing energy infrastructure, vulnerability to terrorism, etc.) were factored in, it would look more competitive than other energy alternatives

So don’t worry, be happy.

Darling of the business schools

Malcolm Gladwell is as surprised as anybody that he’s become a darling of the business schools: Q: Were you surprised at the reaction to the book by the marketing community? People can recite in amazing detail things they’ve taken away as prescriptions as to what they should be doing to reach consumers. Did that come … Continue reading “Darling of the business schools”

Malcolm Gladwell is as surprised as anybody that he’s become a darling of the business schools:

Q: Were you surprised at the reaction to the book by the marketing community? People can recite in amazing detail things they’ve taken away as prescriptions as to what they should be doing to reach consumers. Did that come at all as a surprise?
A: Total surprise! I remember when we had discussions about where we wanted the book to be in the bookstore, we weren’t even thinking [about] the business section. We were thinking psychology or science. I didn’t see that coming at all, and I’ve been so pleasantly surprised by it.

So’s the Dilbert guy.