Saturday, February 23, 2008

Apple Offers Refurbished iMacs Starting at $999! - There's a limited time on these special prices, so hurry up!

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In typical Apple fashion, the company's online store is offering refurbished Macs all of the sudden, as part of a Limited Time Special Price offer. iMac (current generation) prices range between $999 and $1,899 depending
on processor speed, hard drive capacity and RAM, so for those of you who haven't had the chance to get a decent system at an affordable price, now is the time to check out Apple store.

This of course has nothing to do with the cheapening of NAND flash memory this year, as neither of the refurbished iMacs sports a solid state drive. That doesn't mean that Macs can't get cheaper anyway.

So, here's a bunch of systems one might look into for a decent experience as well as price:

Refurbished iMac 20-inch 2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo (current generation): sports a 20-inch glossy widescreen display, 1GB memory, 250GB hard drive, 8x SuperDrive (DVD±RDL/DVD±RW/CD-RW), ATI Radeon HD 2400 XT with 128MB memory and of course a Built-in iSight Camera.

Its original price was $1,199.00 and it now goes for $999.00. Order now and you're likely to get it sooner than 5 business days. Shipping is free.

Refurbished iMac 20-inch 2.4GHz Intel Core 2 Duo (current generation): features the same widescreen 20-incher, 1 gig of RAM, 320GB hard drive, 8x SuperDrive (DVD±R DL/DVD±RW/CD-RW) just as the first system, with ATI Radeon HD 2600 PRO with 256MB memory and Built-in iSight Camera.

The system was originally priced at $1,499.00. Now, Apple is offering it for $1,249.00 and will ship it to your house within 24 hours. No shipping fees with this one either.

Refurbished iMac 24-inch 2.8GHz Intel Core 2 Extreme (current generation): this one has you scrolling with your eyes across 24 inches of glossy pixels, uses 2GB of RAM, can store 500GB of whatever, reads/writes discs with an 8x SuperDrive (DVD±R DL/DVD±RW/CD-RW), offers ATI Radeon HD 2600 PRO (256MB memory) video quality and stares at you via the ever-present Built-in iSight Camera.

Original price was $2,299.00; refurbished pice is $1,899.00. It ships within 24 hours also, no shipping fees.

Apple is also rumored to drop prices on its iPhone and iPod lineup by as much as 50 percent this year, due to weak demand and an oversupply on the market.

What's New in Microsoft Land: 18-22 February, 2008 - Open source and interoperability, doubled by games

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Investing in the future is one of Microsoft's goals throughout its entire existence. It teamed with schools and supplied with everything needed for a better learning experience for the students, and even talked with governments to get them to sign on different study programs, that would benefit both the Redmond-based company and the countries.

On Monday, Microsoft Corp. Chairman Bill Gates presented a software giveaway for college and high school students worldwide that will grant them access to all the latest developer and designer tools created by the company. The goal was to unlock the creative potential and set the young on their pathway to career success, and, why not, perhaps draft a few rookies right out of college. I anxiously await the day when a very good coder will have a press conference to declare himself eligible for Microsoft draft, but that's a dream I probably won't live to see happening.

The program is available to more than 35 million students, as I write this, and has a potential 1 billion worldwide. "We want to do everything we can to equip a new generation of technology leaders with the knowledge and tools they need to harness the magic of software to improve lives, solve problems and
catalyze economic growth," Gates said. "Microsoft DreamSpark provides professional-level tools that we hope will inspire students to explore the power of software and encourage them to forge the next wave of software-driven breakthroughs."

The software available through DreamSpark will get your blood to boil if you aren't a student: Visual Studio 2005 Professional Edition, Visual Studio 2008 Professional Edition, XNA Game Studio 2.0, Expression Studio, including Expression Web, Expression Blend, Expression Design and Expression Media, SQL Server 2005 Developer edition and Windows Server Standard Edition.

Windows Server 2008 made Microsoft's day on Tuesday, as a poll conducted by CDW Corporation clearly showed that it was waited for like rain in Sahara. Furthermore, it is anticipated to be such a big hit that it will actually shame Windows Vista in terms of adoption. Do remember that the Redmond-based company prided itself, late in 2007, that Vista had an install base in excess 100 million users.

"This poll reflects the complexity of today's server environment, where preferences for operating systems are more heterogeneous than in the desktop market," revealed David Cottingham, director of product and partner management at CDW. "Many data centers operate more than one server operating system, and every organization needs to have a server strategy in place to capitalize on the benefits and new features in the server operating system."

According to the survey, 63 percent of the 772 IT professionals questioned are preparing together with their organizations to upgrade to Windows Server 2008, as soon as it hits the market. Of course, there are some worries related to the migration from the 2003 version to the newer one to be released, mostly based on RTM build bugs and application, and hardware compatibility issues. They will be surpassed, however, because by the looks of it, Windows Server 2008 is just too good to pass on.

"This is consistent with the increasing interest CDW sees from customers in our offerings of server virtualization solutions. There are a variety of options available, of course, and while built-in virtualization will not be in the initial Windows Server 2008 Release-to-Manufacture version when it launches on February 27, Microsoft is tapping into this market interest with their plan to integrate virtualization features into the server operating system later this year," Cottingham concluded.

This is Gears of War 1.. how will the sequel look like?

Xbox 360 fans must have gotten a stiffie on Wednesday when they were able to preview the portfolio for 2008. The big, big names included Gears of War 2 from Epic Games, Fable 2 from Lionhead Studios, Ninja Gaiden II from TECMO/ Team Ninja and Too Human from Silicon Knights.

"Gears of War 2" is the sequel to the 4.5 million-selling blockbuster that redefined the third-person tactical action game genre. "Gears of War 2" continues the story of Marcus Fenix and Delta Squad in an epic saga of survival, loss and retribution. Developed by Epic Games exclusively for Xbox 360, "Gears of War 2" launches this November.

In addition to the dynamic co-op mode unveiled onstage, Peter Molyneux also announced that Carbonated Games was bringing the "Fable 2" experience to Xbox LIVE Arcade. Before the game's launch, gamers will be able to get an early taste of the "Fable 2" experience and gain a head start on earning currency for use in "Fable 2" by playing "Fable 2"-themed pub games that will be downloadable via Xbox LIVE Arcade. The currency earned in these Xbox LIVE Arcade titles will enable players to purchase items in "Fable 2," when the game launches later this year.

Tomonobu Itagaki debuted several tantalizing new Xbox LIVE features of "Ninja Gaiden II," including the ability to capture and share videos of a player's glorious battles via the Ninja Cinema feature and upload them to Xbox LIVE. "Ninja Gaiden II" launches worldwide this June.

Microsoft also showcased the epic action game from renowned Canadian developer Silicon Knights, "Too Human," at a media event before the keynote address. In "Too Human," players are treated to a nonstop barrage of action powered by the seamless integration of melee and firearms combat, plus deep role-playing elements fueled by breathtaking visuals enabled by the power of Xbox 360.

All the above descriptions and new feats were made available by Microsoft's PressPass.

Bob Muglia

Thursday brought more serious news into attention, as Microsoft unveiled a new set of principles and actions designed to increase the openness of its products and drive greater interoperability and choice for developers, partners, customers and competitors.

The four principles mentioned are providing an open connection to the high-volume enterprise products, to promote data portability, to continue to enhance the company's support for industry standards and, last but not least, to create more opportunities to strengthen dialogue and engagement with customers and the industry, open source communities included.

Microsoft seems to really commit to these, as Bob Muglia, senior vice president, Server and Tools Division, said that "we'll allow open source developers to access these protocols for free for development and non-commercial distribution. For commercial distribution, Microsoft will license related patents on reasonable and non-discriminatory terms, at low royalty rates."

Friday is technical day once again, as Microsoft confirmed that a slew of third party apps are blocked or lose functionality on the machines that have Windows Vista SP1 installed. Mostly, it's the security software that acts weird after the upgrade, and the Redmond giant said that steps are being made to fix the problem. At the same time, the step to render these services unusable because of reliability issues was taken with the consent of the respective producers.

The security producing companies that found themselves blocked are Trend Micro, Zone Labs, BitDefender and Novell. Several workarounds from the some of the unfortunate manufacturers have already been released and are available for free download. Funny story about Novell, Microsoft links to a page that has absolutely no information relating to the blocking, but the security company let it slide, and was not available for comment.

New Bush Googlebomb? - Failure. George Bush

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A Google bomb (also referred to as a 'link bomb') is Internet slang for a certain kind of attempt to influence the ranking of a given page in results returned by the Google search engine,
often with humorous or political intentions. Because of the way Google's algorithm works, a page will be ranked higher if the sites that link to that page use consistent anchor text, according to Wikipedia.

If that didn’t clear the things up, here’s the shorter version: people tag a certain site with words not even remotely connected to the content. It will get a big boost because of the search ranking, but it will also clearly show the Internet community’s (or some of it) disapproval of the owner, message and so on. The first ever recorded was for the search term "more evil than Satan himself," bringing up the Microsoft homepage as the top result.

George W has been a target because of his, well, because of him. His former term was "miserable failure," but everything was fixed in the algorithm update that came late last December. There would be no political humor except for Georgie, who is a complete joke of a man according to his biggest dissenters, so now searching for "who is a failure" (there seems to be some common ground for the two) will bring up once again his page, as Danny Sullivan from Search Engine Land noticed.

He also point out that this can’t be a Googlebomb in its fullest because it lacks the people pushing to make this happen, drawing attention to the joke. No point in being funny for no audience whatsoever. The Google team that worked on the previous fix should take a closer look at this one because it might give them a lot of trouble, should the links with anchor text saying "failure" making the President’s page come up for any number of terms combined with "failure."

P.S.: The video is really funny, i just had to share it.

Couldn’t Log into His Gmail Address, Logged into Others’, Found Embassy Code

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An Internet Service Provider from Kuwait delivered one of the most frustrating experiences a user can have. Abdulaziz Al-Shalabi was unable to log into his Gmail account, but at the same time he was free to log into other 30 or so people’s accounts and browse through their inboxes.

He couldn’t help but think that at the very same
time another person was going through his personal messages and metaphorically taking a peak in his life. Google admitted this to be true, but it was pretty difficult to deny it when a major news site posted the story backed up by two dozen screenshots. Al-Shalabi wrote to CNET News.com to present his version. On Wednesday, the problem was fixed, though, and access to his Gmail account was restored.

In the meantime, he was able to find a lot of useful information about personal identification numbers, usernames, passwords and the "keycodes for some embassy gate." Imagine the headlines if he were a master criminal: "Embassy robbed, Google’s Fault" would have been one of the prettier ones. Oh, and the political implications…

The ISP was not named, but there have been several reports of events, like this coming from Sri Lanka as well, so it must be a pretty big one. That or it’s a common error (not very plausible), and another distinct possibility is the Gmail team goof up when coding. And leaving a backdoor accessible when certain conditions are met.

An ISP in that region is having a caching problem on its servers that is affecting Gmail users there, as well as eBay accounts, Google spokesman Jason Freidenfelds acknowledged. Google has contacted the ISP and is supplying a workaround for Gmail, he said. Freidenfelds said he did not know which ISP it was or how widespread the problem was, News.com reported.

YouTube Shops Itself - Sort of

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Google’s biggest problem, advertising wise, is that the very expensive YouTube, for which it paid $1.65 billion, does not pay off. Plain and simple, almost 70 percent of the people and companies that chose to advertise on the world’s biggest video sharing service said that they were not happy about the response they got and deemed it to be not worth it.

The Mountain View-based company couldn’t and wouldn’t have that, so it stepped up and said "Wait a minute, I can change things, I have that kind of power." And so it
did, it switched to overlay ads, also known as invideo ads. Being more user friendly than other formats and a lot less annoying than having the ads play before the actual start of the video, it caught on pretty big. The catch is that this option is available only for videos being created by partners, a very small percentage of the total number being available on YouTube.

However, the presence of these media companies and popular video creators being made partners debunks the general myth that YT is only about user-generated content. Jordan Hoffner, the head of Content Partnerships at the video company, uploaded a video of himself explaining that thousands of partners from all over the globe are already providing niche oriented videos and that every day that number increases.

Another video that is aimed at potential future partners is boasting with the huge opportunity provided by YouTube. "The YouTube community watches hundreds of millions of videos every day, more than any other TV network, cable network or social network combined. YouTube isn't just about media impressions, it's about the choices people make to be entertained, educated, inspired. It's about tiger vs bear. It's about sharing. Think of YouTube as the world's largest magazine rack. If it's of interest to somebody, it makes its way here."

I don’t know about you, but to me it looks like this is an aggressive attempt to get a bigger share of the advertising pie. Is it their last resort?