Latest Technology News

Sonic Solutions drops HD DVD authoring in favor of Blu-ray

11:30 am ET January 31, 2007 - Sonic Solutions this morning clarified its position regarding its apparent switch from HD DVD to Blu-ray, telling BetaNews that initial reports that the company abandoned HD DVD altogether were not quite accurate.

Sonic spokesperson Chris Taylor said that the decision is only specific to its professional authoring suite. Other divisions, such as its Roxio consumer arm and ATG licensing group would remain format neutral. Even within the professional division, HD DVD would still live on through its CineVision authoring application.

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In the great Web migration, are enough advertisers following along?

Now that more consumers are viewing video online -- as opposed to watching traditional TV -- why isn't advertising catching up faster? Experts believe there are still some creative strategies yet to be discovered.

The viewing public might be migrating in droves from TV, newspapers, and magazines to the Web, but where's the ad money to help the Web sites stay afloat? In pondering this question at this week's OnMedia NYC conference, executives of online services and ad agencies cited needs for finding the right employees, technologies, and business approaches to address a tangled mare's nest of related issues.

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Better living through pizza tracking

For those who doubt the change our daily lives have undergone thanks to increased connectivity, Domino's Pizza presents to you....Pizza Tracking.

While it premiered Pizza via SMS late last summer, and most national pizza delivery franchises already support online ordering, Domino's has taken their newest feature from the postal sector.

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Visual Studio 2008 hits the streets one month early

Once again Microsoft redefines the concept of "launch," releasing today the retail edition of a suite that was said to have "launched" last November, though whose "launch party" remains scheduled for late February.

It's one of the guests of honor at a formal launch party still slated for February 27 in Los Angeles. But with one guest bowing out early -- specifically, SQL Server 2008, whose RTM may come as much as six months later -- Microsoft decided today to balance things out by moving up its retail release of Visual Studio 2008 to today.

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IBM rolls out Linux-to-Unix server consolidation for SMBs

IBM is beefing up both its System p and Power-based Unix systems and its i Servers, once dubbed AS/400. Now, Linux-based binaries created for x86-based PC environments will be able to run unmodified on IBM Unix servers.

To help lure more SMBs away from Sun Microsystems and Hewlett-Packard, IBM this week rolled out a new virtualization capability for migrating PC-based Linux applications to its Unix systems, in addition to new entry-level "Express" Unix systems for SMBs.

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Analysis: Is Motorola better off without the handset business?

BetaNews examines why Nomura financial analyst Richard Windsor toyed with the idea of Motorola surrendering its handset business to focus on enterprise and government solutions.

Recently, Nomura analyst Richard Windsor discussed the possibility of Motorola Inc. leaving the handset business in favor of becoming what he calls "an enterprise and government company." He noted that rumors of a Chinese buyout of Motorola are increasing, but the company's problems would not be easily fixed by such a buyout. He closed by saying Motorola will most likely regain its unsure footing after this year.

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French police bid adieu to Microsoft software

The Gendarmerie Nationale is dumping Microsoft in the move towards open source software which first began in 2005.

At that time, the only applications transferred to open source were word processing applications. This was followed by the move to open source Internet browsers the following year.

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ICANN may end grace periods, killing off 'domain tasting'

A practice used by scammers to siphon off hits from users who misspell URLs in their browsers could be rendered impossible this year, as the organization responsible for the Internet's domain name system may end the program that makes the practice possible.

Just a few days ago, Google got some attention for announcing a policy that would effectively give it credit for killing off the practice of "domain name tasting," or "domain tasting," by exploitative DNS registrants. But as it turns out, one of the Internet's principal governing bodies, ICANN, had been preparing since last summer to come out against the practice anyway, and it did so yesterday.

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Reports: Sprint, Clearwire could be renewing WiMAX talks

News reports indicate that the two sides may be preparing to sit down at the bargaining table once more to combine their respective WiMAX networks.

Attempts at contacting either company by BetaNews had not been returned as of press time.

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New Nikon D60 camera offers Eye-Fi wireless connectivity

Eye-Fi, a company that makes SD cards with built-in wireless 802.11g/b/n connectivity, has announced that Nikon's new D60 Digital SLR camera will come out of the box with enhanced Eye-Fi capabilities.

Though this new company says the technology works seamlessly with any camera that accepts SD cards, the Nikon D60 is actually the first camera designed with Eye-Fi's wireless connectivity in mind.

The SD cards feature Static WEP 40/104/128, WPA-PSK, and WPA2-PSK security, and have a wireless range of over 90 feet outdoors and 45 feet indoors. Once a user has set up the connection, the camera can automatically send the photo data to many photo sharing, printing, blogging, and social networking sites, automatically resizing photos according to the criteria of their destination. Photos can also be wirelessly sent to the user's computer running the Eye-Fi manager software.

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Western Digital offers yet another pocket-sized HDD

Western Digital today introduced a new series of portable USB hard drives with capacities as high as 320 GB in a package comparable in size to a Nintendo DS Lite.

The My Passport USB drive series was redesigned to complement WD's line of My Book external drives, and have a footprint of 5.1" x 3.14" x .6" and weigh only 5 ounces. They range in capacity from 60-320 GB.

These 2.5-inch 5400 RPM hard drives are bus powered and promise the USB 2.0 transfer speed of 480 Mb/sec. Obviously, speed of transfer is not this device's strong point among a field of many competitors. However, the unit's small size, coupled with its large capacity narrow down the competition slightly.

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EBay to release browser-independent console next month

Now in beta test, EffectiveUI's new eBay Desktop is aimed at letting users shop, search and buy from their desktops instead of inside Web browsers, as well as to simplify user tasks and 'optimize rich media' along the way.

In an effort to give the eBay online auction site a richer and more adaptable front end, a software vendor named EffectiveUI is now beta testing a stand-alone eBay console. Its functionality will be provided by the AIR platform, Adobe's Flash-based UI production environment that expects to meet a heavy challenge this year from Microsoft's Silverlight.

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'Branded': Kids' Web sites sell virtual Pepsi, Disney avatar gear

At MTV's VLES site, kids in chat rooms are sipping on "virtual Pepsis." At Gaia Online, teens and 20-somethings are dressing up avatars in virtual Disney T-shirts. But is this strategy of "immersive branding" paying off for them?

NEW YORK CITY (BetaNews) - Virtual reality -- the keyphrase of the 1990s, adopted just after "information superhighway" started to deteriorate from the public vernacular -- is making a comeback as an advertising tool. This re-emerging category includes not just Second Life and other places for grown-ups, but online communities for the younger crowd, too.

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MySpace set to launch developer platform Tuesday

With rival Facebook's open API gaining traction, MySpace on Wednesday said that it would launch its own API on February 5.

The launch will also herald the promotion of the market-leading social network's business development chief Amit Kapur to the position of chief operating officer. Kapur will be tasked with heading up the program.

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Microsoft's tardiness for documentation extends DOJ oversight to 2009

Scathing words yesterday from the federal judge overseeing Microsoft's compliance with its antitrust decree, accompanied an order that effectively extends the DOJ's oversight period into the next US presidential administration.

Apparently agreeing with the European Commission's assessment that Microsoft has yet to provide adequate documentation for its communications protocols, US District Judge Kathleen Kollar-Kotelly issued an order yesterday extending the Dept. of Justice's oversight period for the company by two years, until November 12, 2009.

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