Jul 29

I think Yahoo and “its children” really believe this.

Cadogan will now run OpenX (which recently changed its name from OpenAds), which makes the leading open-source ad serving software, catering to about 30,000 Web publishers on 100,000 Web sites in more than 100 countries.

OpenX announced Wednesday that it has hired Tim Cadogan, Yahoo’s former global ad marketplaces senior vice president. The company also announced that it’s making the long move from London to Los Angeles to set up headquarters.

Interesting times.

commentary

OpenX is one of the industry’s most promising open-source start-ups, which perhaps makes it unsurprising that Scott continues to be able to hire such excellent talent. What I find most interesting in the news is Yahoo’s continued demonstration that it (or at least its employees) “gets” open source. Tim is quoted as saying, “With open-source software, there is a lot of potential for business disruption and to open up the market.”

All of which makes Microsoft’s shadow looming over Yahoo all the more intriguing. Microsoft can’t remove open source from Yahoo. Perhaps this will give the Microsofties a way to open up without losing face in the market. An acquisition will suddenly have Microsoft stepping all of those precious patents Microsoft has been alleging Linux and other open-source projects violate.

As D: All Things Digital’s Kara Swisher reports:

Cadogan, who was with Yahoo for five years, in its search unit and later as SVP for ad products, including playing an important role in the launch of its Panama ad search product. Previously, he was an early member of the GoTo.com team and went to Yahoo just before it acquired Overture.

I had breakfast recently with Scott Switzer, OpenX’s founder, and we talked through the move in headquarters. I had thought they were going to settle in New York to be close to the media, but it appears that OpenX has gone Hollywood instead.

Jul 29

Russian-language
Firefox users will see a new default search provider soon: Google rival Yandex.

“Over the past few months, we have listened to feedback, talked with our localizers, studied the trends of our Firefox Yandex builds, and reviewed the Yandex user experience. All this activity led us to the conclusion that our Russian users really wanted direct access to the Yandex search services in official Firefox RU builds,” Anderson said.

Details on the change can be seen in the Mozilla bug tracker, which specifically refers to “the new business arrangement between Mozilla and Yandex in Russia.”

Mozilla gets the vast majority of its revenue through a partnership under which Google shares revenue from search ads. In 2007, that was $66 million of Mozilla’s $75 million total revenue.

“As a result, we’re planning on setting Yandex as the default search provider for the Firefox 3.1 Russian locale builds,” he said. Version 3.1 is due in coming weeks, after a third beta version is released and tested.

Mozilla currently has Google set to be the default search engine in Russian Firefox, but it concluded that Yandex was the better choice, according to a blog post by Mozilla General Counsel Harvey Anderson on Friday.

Jul 29

Semantic search tool Powerset has put out a new
iPhone app this week. Those looking to search on the go can now use the service’s plain English searching capabilities to scour the entirety of Wikipedia and Freebase (coverage). The app comes after months of Powerset staff fumbling while trying to use their own product on the popular mobile device.

I expect the company to come out with its own native app that will save past searches and let you store local content depending on how popular this version becomes. I’ve embedded some screens below. Also embedded after the break is a demo video of it in action.

The new tool will pull up everything the desktop version does, although I found performance to be a tad slower–even over Wi-Fi. Outline, one of my favorite Powerset features that gives you quick links to each section in a Wikipedia article, has also made its way into the pocket version. While not as convenient as the desktop version which sits beside the actual Wikipedia article, it’s a great way to skip down to a lower section of an article, which is normally an activity that makes you look like a complete idiot while you continuously drag your finger up and down the screen of your phone. There’s also a much needed search function, something the iPhone’s version of
Safari is lacking from its desktop sibling.


Powerset iPhone Web App Demo from officialpowerset on Vimeo

Jul 29

Previous coverage:
Animoto adds personal music videos to Facebook

Video-creation service Animoto has lit my fire

Can Animoto make you the next Spielberg?

Previous coverage: CIA technology will map your face

BigStage is a 3D avatar service that puts together a rendered head based on three photographs it takes with your Webcam. It’ll figure out your bone structure, how much your nose sticks out, and how large your ears are.

What makes Overlay.TV interesting is that it’s going for both media creators and consumers. It’s got a Facebook app that lets you tag up your videos. It also works with over a dozen popular hosts like YouTube, MySpace.com, and Yahoo Video.

Michael Galpert, the co-founder of Aviary, a Web-based photo editor we’ve covered several times here on Webware (see link dump below) showed off the service’s latest layer tracking technology (video here).

That’s the end of the conference sessions for the day. Stay tuned for the fireside chat about how start-ups can get noticed among all the noise from competitors.

Previous coverage:
Aviary’s creative suite is more than a pretty Flash app

Flash apps are taking over–Phoenix is the latest proof
Web-based multimedia suite Aviary invites beta testers

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif.–The Web has come a long way. The aesthetic of a site can oftentimes determine whether or not a wary user will dig deeper and explore your site. The four companies below offer some of the most beautiful products shown off Tuesday at the Under the Radar social media and entertainment conference, but are they really useful? For the most part, yes. Read more about them below.

Overlay.TV is a company that’s doing something very similar to VideoClix.TV (see coverage). It’ll link up the items, people, or subject matter that are found in videos to online stores so people can buy or get more information on what they’re watching. Some of the demos I’ve seen of competing products are incredibly engaging, albeit a far cry from the virgin, ad-free purity of what’s seen on most video sites.

The site is opening up with pictures in two months, and a version that integrates live videos about six months later. Strietzel thinks the future of the technology will be tie-ins with social networks to pull in faces from your buddy lists to make adjoining advertisements more targeted with rendered 3D heads of your friends. Creepy.

Animoto, one of my colleague Elinor Mills’ favorite slideshow tools and as CEO Brad Jefferson calls it “The end of the slideshow” (in the boring, stodgy sense, of course). Jefferson says he’s seen a large amount of users taking advantage of its premium services, which offer the capability to create full-length videos as opposed to the 30-second clips that free members get. In the future, the company is moving toward offering artists and companies a branded player and tools for users to create videos that involve products, songs, TV shows, and feature-length films.

Co-founder Jonathan Strietzel’s demo of the face maker reminded me a lot of Gizmoz, which does the same thing, except with Big Stage you can make live changes to your avatar in moving video clips and pictures and see the changes reflected right away.

Galpert only had six minutes to talk about the suite of Web-based graphics tools, but managed to throw in a mention about an upcoming vector-based editing tool akin to Adobe Illustrator. He also announced a 3D modeling tool that will take advantage of its sister-service that lets users create complex textures. Galpert didn’t reveal the names of the two forthcoming apps, but said that a less confusing name convention was on the way.

Jul 27

Using Data Execution Protection (DEP) within Windows XP SP3 and Windows Vista SP1, IE 8 will scan downloads and block any that it deems dangerous.

Perhaps the most anticipated addition is Internet Explorer’s new antimalware protection. Opera 9.5 and Firefox 3 both recently added antimalware protection.
Safari has so far not announced plans for similar protection. Using mostly its own antimalware technology, Microsoft will block emerging threats by masking the entire IE 8 browser screen with a warning to users. The addition of malware protection to the existing antiphishing protection will be re-branded as the Microsoft SmartScreen filter.

IE 8 Beta 2 will have a Cross Site Scripting (XSS) filter, preventing scripts within a link from executing on the browser.

IE 8 Beta 1 has already introduced several changes when handling ActiveX components. Components will be installed per user, which eliminates the need for everyone to have administrator privileges. In addition, you must acknowledge or opt-in for the component to run, eliminating drive-by downloads. Components will be per site and will only be available from site of origin. Finally, site developers can request killbits from Microsoft which can be sent via Windows Update to terminate risky or outdated components.

For developers, Microsoft is including improvements for better communication between the client browser and Web server. Cross Domain Requests (CDR) is a more secure way for the browser to pull data from other domains; and Cross Domain Messaging (XDM) is a more secure means for a browser to send a message across a domain. Microsoft says it is working with other browser vendors to standardize these.

On Wednesday, Microsoft announced new security features within the upcoming release of
Internet Explorer 8 Beta 2. The features are designed to combat the rising tide of drive-by downloads and malicious scripts contained within carefully crafted links embedded in e-mail and Web pages. Most of the new features require systems to be running
Windows Vista SP1 or Windows XP SP3.

(Credit:
Microsoft)

The public Beta 2 for Internet Explorer is expected sometime in August 2008.

Previously announced features include highlighting domain names from the rest of the URL (so you can visually see that you are on eBay.com, not some other site), and extended verification SSL.

Jul 23

Financial terms were not disclosed, but BuzzLogic’s motives were: It wants to apply the BlogRovr technology, which currently monitors about 200,000 blogs, to the services it offers clients in its Conversational Targeting ad program. This BuzzLogic service identifies the most influential bloggers talking about a certain topic to help advertisers figure out where to put their name out. After the acquisition, Activeweave CEO Marc Meyer and Chief Technology Officer Jean Sini will stay on board.

That chunk of code is BlogRovr, which produces content from pre-selected “favorite blogs” as Web sites are displayed; if the user loads eBay, for example, a BlogRovr tray within the window might display what tech blogs have been writing about the auction giant recently.

BuzzLogic, which tracks discussion of clients’ companies across blogs and social-media sites and then pinpoints the most influential commenters, has announced plans to acquire software start-up Activeweave for the technology behind a browser plug-in it developed.

“Activeweave lets (Web users) see the tracks of the people around them, and lets them knowingly lay tracks for others,” tech veteran Esther Dyson, an Activeweave investor, explained in a statement from the two companies. “The online world around each user suddenly becomes more relevant and more personal. This acquisition helps BuzzLogic make this dimension available to advertisers.”

Jul 21

It’s not surprising that residents of the nation’s most populous state would be disproportionately represented among iPhone 3G early adopters, especially given Apple’s roots in the Bay Area. But California residents were almost unanimous in their negative experiences with the reception of the iPhone 3G, even in the South Bay area near Apple’s headquarters in Cupertino, Calif.

Chicago and New York City were two other hot spots of iPhone 3G frustration. Again, big cities are more likely to contain early adopters, but the high ratio of problem iPhone 3G experiences to trouble-free iPhone 3G experiences was noticeable in those cities.

After advising owners to restore their iPhone 3Gs or turn off the 3G capabilities, Apple and AT&T store employees would in many cases replace the units if customers persisted with their complaints. AT&T customer service representatives tended to point the finger at the iPhone 3G, while Apple representatives tended to blame the reception problems on AT&T’s network, as might be expected.

At his local Apple store, Kowalyshyn encountered one of Apple’s “Geniuses” who was sympathetic to his plight, explaining that iPhone 3Gs in use by the store employees were suffering from the same issues and that a replacement unit would likely be just as flawed as his current phone. The employee told him to “sit tight,” and that while he wasn’t aware of any official fix in the pipeline he was confident that Apple corporate was aware of the issue, given the volume of complaints about the iPhone 3G’s reception recorded at that store.

(Credit:
Apple)

(Credit:
Josh Lowensohn/CNET)

Owners reported, for the most part, sympathetic if frustrating treatment from representatives at their local Apple and AT&T stores. Many of those who took the time to share extended accounts of their experience said that Apple and AT&T appeared to be aware of widespread issues with the handsets, especially in the week since coverage of the complaints of iPhone 3G owners has expanded.

“I’d estimate that I see 3G icon on the phone less than 1/3 of the time
in so-called 3G areas that I frequent in Bay Area and Austin (Texas),” wrote Marty Faltesek, a resident of Santa Clara, Calif., which borders Cupertino. Only 13 percent of responses from the West Coast were from iPhone 3G owners satisfied with the reception of their unit, the lowest of any region.

Cory Emmelle of San Diego was told by an AT&T representative that the towers in his area were producing strong signals, and therefore it must be a phone issue. Later on, an Apple representative said that AT&T’s network was the problem and advised switching off the 3G capabilities for the time being. Neither company said it was aware of any known issues with the phone.

In the absence of any hard information about what was happening to the iPhone 3G earlier in the week (much more has come out since then), the idea was to try to get a sense of whether the problems were located in a certain region, or whether there was any other kind of pattern. If a disproportionate number of problems were happening in a certain area, for example, that could indicate nothing more than network weirdness.

(Credit:
Caroline McCarthy/CNET News)

As the week closes, it seems iPhone 3G users are closer to a solution to their reception problems. One amazing thing about the responses was how many respondents still loved their iPhone 3Gs, warts and all. After all, the touch-screen interface and navigation features that have made the iPhone a hit weren’t affected by this problem.

But CNET News readers across the country report that many Apple and AT&T customer service representatives are indeed aware of their problems. The iPhone 3G is having trouble connecting and staying connected to 3G networks even in areas that appear to be located within a strong pocket of AT&T’s network, as well as on carrier networks around the world. Business Week’s sources said that the problems are affecting “2 percent to 3 percent” of iPhone 3G traffic, but there’s no official word on just how widespread a problem this is.

Reception problems with the
iPhone 3G are occurring in towns and cities across the U.S., based on readers’ responses this week to CNET News’ request for more information about their balky phones.

More information has trickled out this week about the iPhone 3G’s reception problems, which are now believed to be the result of a problem with the Infineon chipset inside the unit. Business Week reported Thursday that Apple and Infineon are working on a software fix for the problem, which Apple has yet to officially acknowledge.

When Goodman arrived at the Apple store for his appointment on Tuesday, he was told that Apple had “changed its policy” since his last visit and was withholding iPhone 3G replacements until a software fix arrived. After complaining to a manager, Goodman was able to get a replacement unit, but the reception issues persisted. On Thursday, he was told by an AT&T customer service representative that its cell towers are having trouble recognizing the iPhone 3G on the network, and that a fix was forthcoming.

The Northeast in general, on the other hand, recorded the highest percentage of satisfied iPhone 3G users based on the overall responses from that region. We received a total of 61 responses from residents of that region and 23 percent said they were satisfied with the reception of their iPhone 3G. Residents of the Southeast also seemed more satisfied with their reception than the average user.

Some Geniuses at Apple stores, like this one in New York, were aware of problems with the iPhone 3G, while others pointed the finger at AT&T.

Andrew Kowalyshyn of Denver, Colo., took his iPhone 3G to the AT&T store where he purchased it after experiencing the reception issues, in hopes of returning it. The AT&T customer service representative advised switching out the SIM card as a possible fix, and said she was aware of issues with the iPhone 3G. After the SIM card replacement didn’t solve the problem, AT&T advised him to visit an Apple store.

That wasn’t the case: 257 iPhone 3G owners, or 82 percent of all respondents, reported a variety of reception problems, from inconsistent data connections to 3G networks in their area to multiple dropped calls. The problems were reported in 32 states, but seemed to get slightly worse as they traveled west: 37 percent of those experiencing problems lived on the West Coast, mostly in either the San Francisco Bay Area or the Los Angeles area.

A few words of warning before we get into the results: this was not a scientific survey. Apple is believed to have sold about 400,000 iPhone 3Gs in the U.S. as of the first week it was on sale, and has certainly added to that total since. We received input from 334 people over the last four days, both in comments on our site and in e-mail, 312 of whom were iPhone 3G owners and the rest of whom were AT&T customers with other phones.

With a September iPod event likely on the horizon, Apple will have its hands full over the next month getting the iPhone 3G back on track while preparing for the most important part of the year for the company: the holiday shopping season.

The iPhone 3G is having trouble maintaining a connection to fast 3G networks–the reason many bought the thing in the first place.

Gordon Goodman, a resident of suburban Chicago, was asked last week to come into his local Apple store to get a replacement unit after a prior service appointment at the store indicated that a new unit would be the best solution to his persistent reception problems. His first attempt to get the SIM card readjusted at an AT&T store–which did clear up the problem for some early reporters of reception problems–failed to solve his issues.

Reports of reception problems with the iPhone 3G poured in this week after CNET News ran a story on the issues Monday.

Apple’s reputation for quality software, however, might have suffered. While the reception issues have received a lot of attention–given the fact that many bought the iPhone 3G to use it on 3G networks–reports are cropping up about several bugs in the iPhone 2.0 software that affect the performance of third-party applications, the iPhone’s camera, or that result in the newly coined “white Apple logo screen of death.”

Jul 15

That’s because companies are voluntarily tracking their pollution or they anticipate regulations will be put in place in the next few years.

But Carbonetworks CEO Michael Meehan said that demand for his company’s software is already high, noting that billions of dollars worth of carbon is being traded every year.

“The U.S. market dwarfs anything in the world. So even if it takes a long time, it’s worth waiting for,” Meehan said.

A company could, for example, achieve reduction goals by making data centers operations more efficient or purchasing carbon offsets.

Separately, another carbon-trading start-up, CarbonFlow, is expected to announce initial funding on Monday.

(Credit:
Carbonetworks)

There are already regulations in Europe to restrict emissions of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas. But for the most part, most corporations around the world aren’t mandated to reduce emissions.

Carbonetworks’ applications provide companies with a way to account for their carbon emissions as they would other assets and liabilities.

Software company Carbonetworks on Monday is expected to announce it has secured $5 million in series A financing, led by clean-tech venture firm NGEN Partners.

Even without a federal mandate to reduce greenhouse gases in the U.S., existing state climate laws represent half of the country’s gross domestic product, he added. “We still believe things will happen much sooner than five years.”

For NGEN, the investment in a software company represents something of a departure. The clean tech venture fund is focused primarily on energy generation and energy efficiency.

The company’s software could be described as a carbon accounting package. It allows corporations to do an inventory of their greenhouse gas emissions and provides them with an application to manage a program to cut down on those emissions.

CarbonFlow’s software is aimed at project developers looking for a way to record and manage carbon emission reduction projects by following regulated market guidelines, according to the company’s Web site.

Meehan said the equity investment will be used to expand the company’s sales staff and operations.

Jul 15

Schwartz also went out of his way to play up similar cultural backgrounds of the 11,000 engineers working at Sun. Former MySQL CEO Marten Mickos, who preceded Schwartz on stage, was similarly upbeat about the development progress registered since the completion of the merger.

During a break, I ran into a Sun employee who told me the question really wasn’t whether Sun would change MySQL but just the reverse.
“It’s MySQL thats changing Sun’s culture,” said the employee, who didn’t want to speak for attribution. “In the past, we had all these silly fights by being proprietary. But that’s history.”

Sun Microsystems CEO Jonathan Schwartz

(Credit:
Dan Farber/CNET News.com) “So…enough of this free software stuff,” Sun CEO Jonathan Schwartz joked during his appearance at the MySQL Conference & Expo. After getting the expected round of laughter, he quickly sought to reassure the developers attending the standing-room only gathering that Sun would continue to abide by open-source traditions.

“They seemed to have already embraced the open-source mindset for quite some time,” said Eric Reeves, a developer from Houston, Texas. “I think everybody is hoping that there will not be a big change. Unless they take too violent a turn, there’s too much community behind (MySQL). Sun would only be shooting itself in the foot.”

When Sun Microsystems paid $1 billion to buy MySQL, perhaps the biggest question facing the merger was the apparent culture clash. For years Sun had been a closed-source software company and the deal raised concerns within some quarters of the open-source community about how things might play out. But on Tuesday Sun sought to dispel any questions with a choreographed love-fest at the first big gathering of MySQL developers since the deal closed in January.

In particular, he noted that many more big corporations are showing interest in trying MySQL. At the same time Mickos reported that the community had reported 386 bug fixes so far this year, compared to 997 for all of 2007. In the past, there were questions about MySQL’s performance in maintaining its code base.

Developers, at least so far, aren’t terribly concerned about Sun’s involvement.

“You want to know our secret plot? It’s to serve (the open-source) community,” he said. “Each one of those folks represents an opportunity for Sun.

Jul 15

“Ultimately the goal is to move all our properties,” Srivastava said.

“Realistically, companies won’t be deploying applications for a year or more but there is a lot to learn,” Muglia said. “There are new things they need to learn, to understand.”

In an interview, corporate VP Amitabh Srivastava tried to set me straight.

“Windows Azure is at an early stage,” he said, “It is real, but it is at an early stage.”

In particular, only software written in managed code, essentially .Net, can currently run. Internally, the company has other types of native code running, with plans to offer that to outside customers sometime next year.

Services also must be built on a set of pre-designed templates, he said, though Microsoft plans to add more templates and ideally, allow services that don’t follow any sort of template. Also, for now, Azure services will be running in a single Microsoft data center (the Quincy, Wash. facility). Sometime next year, Microsoft will expand that to other U.S. data centers and eventually move overseas, though that brings with it its own set of geopolitical issues that Srivastava said that the company would just as soon wait to tackle.

The version of Azure that Microsoft is rolling out now is a community technology preview that lacks a number of features that Microsoft is working to quickly add, he said.

In honor of announcing Windows Azure, which had been code-named Red Dog, corporate VP Amitabh Srivastava sported these red sneakers with his suit Monday.

LOS ANGELES–With only a couple of examples shown Monday of programs running on Windows Azure, I started to wonder just how far along things are with the cloud OS.

Srivastava also explained another question that was in my head. What was up with his bright red sneakers? I suspected, correctly, that it had to do with the fact that Azure was code-named “Red Dog.”

(Credit:
Ina Fried/CNET News)

In addition to the BlueHoo application shown on stage, Windows Azure was used to build Microsoft’s Live Mesh and is also being used to build the next generation of Live Meeting.

Microsoft also expects it will take some time for businesses to move major applications to Azure. For now, the company would be happy if developers just start learning about Azure and playing around with its software developer kit, senior VP Bob Muglia said in an interview.

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