Aug 24

Need a few sheets of graph paper? How about blank sheets of music? Dot paper? College-ruled? Before you run to the local office-supply store and pay for more than you need, head to the aptly named Printable Paper site. It’s home to hundreds of paper templates you can download and print free of charge.

The PDF-formatted templates are divided into 10 different categories, including graph, lined, music, legal, and ledger. Within each category you’ll find multiple selections. Music paper, for example, is available with anywhere from four to 16 staves in both portrait and landscape orientations. The only catch, if you can call it that, is that each template has a tiny “Printable Paper” logo stamped in the lower corner.

Find more deals, coupon codes, and bargains on CNET’s Shopper.com.

Obviously there is some cost involved here: your own consumables (paper and ink/toner). If you need a ream’s worth of specialty sheets, you’re obviously better off buying them. But if you just need a few sheets, this is an incredibly quick, convenient, and cheap way to go.

Aug 24

(Credit:
AT&T)

AT&T released yet another messaging phone Tuesday, and it looks a lot like AT&T’s answer to the T-Mobile Sidekick in a way. The Quickfire is equipped with a full QWERTY keyboard, and features 3G network support with access to AT&T Mobile Music. The Quickfire will be available in orange, lime, and silver in November for $99.99 after a two-year agreement and a mail-in rebate.

Aug 24

Edwards spoke at the Jefferies Clean Technology Conference here this week where he made pains to point out that the biofuel company does not produce ethanol.

“Chemical engineers of the world love catalytic processes…because you can control the yield and scale,” Edwards said. “It allows us to make a refinery from different (and the least expensive) feedstocks.”

The company is now in the process of raising a C round of funding to build the facility in Madison, Wis., which is scheduled to be open by the third quarter of this year, said Virent Energy CEO Lee Edwards.

Because building a full-scale 100 million-gallon-per-year plant costs about $200 million to build, Virent Energy plans to establish joint ventures to build its first refineries, he added.

NEW YORK–Virent Energy Systems later this year will open a demonstration plant that will convert sugar water into the chemical equivalent of gasoline.

“Virent is one of few companies that convert biomass directly into hydrocarbons. The molecules we make are exactly the same as the ones that you use to drive vehicles today. It just so happens that ours are made from sugar water,” he said.

Another advantage of biohydrocarbons is that they can be fed directly into existing fuel pipelines. Water used in the process can be treated and reused, Edwards said.

There is a lot of research and commercial work to make hydrocarbon biofuels, which have a higher energy density than ethanol. Synthetic biotech companies including Amyris and LS9 are genetically engineering microbes specifically for that purpose.

The company has raised $70 million to date–$30 million from venture capital and $40 million from government funds and large corporate partners. One investor is Cargill, which provides expertise on securing low-cost biomass feedstocks, and another is Honda, which is testing Virent Energy’s fuels in engines.

The pilot plant will be able to produce 10,000 gallons a year of liquid hydrocarbons–either gasoline, jet fuel, or diesel, he said. The feedstock can be sugar cane, sugar beets, or other plants.

Virent Energy claims that its fuels will be carbon-neutral over the entire lifecycle of production and use. Edwards said that there is some variation on the total carbon emissions from its process based on feedstocks and land use variables. Its tests show that the gasoline it produces will be 102 octane and have lower levels of air pollutants, he added.

The technology’s roots come from the University of Wisconsin where researchers developed catalysts for converting sugars in plants into hydrogen. Engineers later altered the process to make hydrocarbons. The company, founded in 2002, is now producing a liter a day of fuel at its Madison facility, said Edwards, who was president and CEO of BP Solar before joining the company.

A significant element to the technology is that the chemical reactions in the process produce heat. That means the manufacturing fuel will not require putting in a lot of energy, which keeps the production costs down, Edwards said.

(Credit:
Virent Energy Systems.)

He said in the long term he anticipates the company can compete without subsidies for domestically made biofuels. “At some point, biomass is a viable alternative with superior margins to crude oil.”

Virent Energy, by contrast, uses catalysts made of different metals including platinum, which is expensive but can be reused.

Aug 24

One of my favorite sites, GiftGirl, on Monday night introduced some small but important updates that make it an even more useful tool for unimaginative boyfriends and husbands.

Related:
Gift Girl helps men avoid blender blunders

Closet Couture gives you a virtual closet with real clothes

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

The service still costs $20 a year to subscribe to. That payment goes in part to the editorial curation of the items that change by season and online availability. Since we last checked out the site, it also added a special $200 custom consultation which gives you a one-on-one help session with GiftGirl co-founder Jean Vouté Pratt, although for that kind of money if you were thinking of something under $1,000 you might just want to put that towards the gift.

In addition to getting recommendations for gifts you can now manage wishlists and guests in the same place.

The site now also allows group gift giving, with a shared wishlist that you can collaborate on with others. You can invite friends or family members to view and add on to what you’ve got on the person’s wishlist to help coordinate who is getting what. Still missing, however, is a way to pool your funds together to buy it, although you can use third-party services like Homeslyce, which is technically a competitor but does not offer as focused a set of suggestions like GiftGirl does.

The first big change is that users are now able to make “unlimited” profiles, meaning they can set up virtual gift-giving profiles for multiple ladies at once. Aimed mostly at people who have a friend or family member in addition to their sweetheart, it could also conceivably be set up to help polygamists manage gift giving for multiple partners.

Aug 24

Hundreds of laptops used by the U.S. Department of State that were missing have been located, according to a report in the Congressional Quarterly.

Auditors found that the State Department had lost track of about $30 million worth of equipment, most of it laptops, the initial Congressional Quarterly report says.

News of the missing laptops first surfaced in late March in an anonymous post on the Dead Men Working blog written by foreign service officers.

Updated 11:10 a.m. PST Thursday May 8 with information that laptops were located

Given the sensitive and often secret nature of data the State Department workers deal with, officials had been bracing for repercussions like congressional hearings, according to CQ. That’s what happened when a Veterans Administration official had a laptop stolen in 2006, IRS laptops went missing in 2001, and a State Department laptop containing the names of foreign agents working for the U.S. government was stolen in 1999.

Aug 24

The fiber-to-the-home network called Fios has enabled Verizon to supercharge broadband speeds and compete against cable in the TV market.

Verizon has said it expects to pass 18 million homes with its Fios fiber- to-the-home service in 2010. Where are you guys in that deployment?
Wegleitner: I’d say we are slightly ahead of schedule for homes passed. But in general, I’d describe us as on schedule. We will have 12 million homes passed this year, which is the goal we had previously stated.

Are people really using the 50Mbps service?
Wegleitner: Under specific circumstances, transferring files at 50Mbps is better than 10Mbps. The key here, though, is concurrent use. In the old days, when you had one PC, there probably wasn’t much need for these kinds of speeds. But now there are multiple devices connected to broadband in the home. And that number is only going to grow. So it’s important to have the performance there.

In the lowest-density areas, it’s hard to justify new wireline deployment. And technically, DSL is available over copper. But it has limitations on long loops. Wireless solutions are attractive in these rural areas. We are looking at options in that area. But it’s worth noting that even many of the small towns in our footprint are still within miles of a city center. So it’s only about 30 percent that is out in low-density areas.

But is it acceptable to identify and slow down specific types of traffic like BitTorrent or other peer-to-peer applications?
Wegleitner: Well, it’s sort of a glass-half-full situation. Degrading traffic for one application enables another to work better. But we have to allow people who use the peer-to-peer applications for lawful and legitimate purposes to do so.

Would Verizon use LTE or WiMax to provide wireless broadband in those rural areas?
Wegleitner: Well, LTE is the horse we are riding right now. So that will likely move to the head of the line, in terms of the high-speed wireless-broadband data service we’ll offer. We are already offering direct broadcast satellite for video delivery where we aren’t offering Fios TV. So we could pair DBS with wireless data to also offer a triple-play offering in those rural areas.

The other thing is that we’ll need additional management for all these devices. We’ll have to be able to localize problems, identify them, and be able to fix them. And we’ll have to make sure we can do this at a reasonable cost.

The specification for that calls for 200Mbps to the home, with 400Mbps peak utilization. But we’ll probably see the next generation of technology allow us to deliver between 125Mbps and 175Mbps to the home. We are working with suppliers for that technology to go even faster. But 100Mbps is within range, and we could even go a little higher.

There’s no question that Verizon Communications hit a home run with its aggressive fiber strategy.

Mark Wegleitner, Verizon’s senior vice president of technology in charge of broadband and consumer services, has helped develop and drive Verizon’s fiber strategy. I sat down with him at the Nxtcomm trade show in Las Vegas last week to talk about a wide variety of topics, including the controversy over Comcast’s treatment of BitTorrent traffic, faster speeds for Fios, and what the company plans to do next when it reaches its 2010 goal of passing 18 million homes with fiber.

Verizon’s original Fios plan goes through 2010. What happens after that? Will Verizon continue to deploy fiber to more customers in its footprint, or will you focus more on DSL?
Wegleitner: I think there is more gas in the engine for fiber-to-the-home beyond 2010 that will help us get into the remainder of households in our footprint. Will we cover all the homes in our footprint? Probably not.

I remember that. A few years ago, you guys turned your existing phone booths in Manhattan into Verizon Wi-Fi hot spots. But when you rolled out EV-DO service, you shut down the Wi-Fi hot spots. Why?
Wegleitner: The economics just didn’t pan out. I think right now, the primary horse we are betting on will be 3G and 4G solutions for wireless.

Q: As you know, Comcast got caught slowing down peer-to-peer traffic on its network. As a network provider yourself, do you think it’s necessary to manage your customers’ traffic?
Wegleitner: I think we can come up with scenarios where network management would be necessary. While there might be plenty of bandwidth out there, you can’t really guarantee that you can get an error-free transmission of, say, a video file that will be guaranteed at a specific point in time. That is why you might need rational network management.

Right now, the primary horse we are betting on will be 3G and 4G solutions for wireless.

Verizon has begun selling a bundle that includes Verizon Wireless service and high-speed Internet and video, and no home phone line. How long before you think that the old landline telephones will be obsolete and will disappear altogether?
Wegleitner: In the broadband world, voice service is a small increment of traffic, in terms of bandwidth and cost. And in a converged world, we can give people who keep a voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) landline a rich set of features. So I don’t know that it won’t be a useful service for a large portion of the population. I don’t think the last chapter has been written on voice yet.

So what would you consider to be acceptable network management?
Wegleitner: It’s still a work in progress. But it’s important to ensure the capabilities of applications.

Below is an edited excerpt from that conversation. Feel free to share your thoughts after in the “TalkBack” section.

Some of your cell phone competitors, such as AT&T and T-Mobile, are using Wi-Fi in different ways to extend their broadband networks to public hot spots. T-Mobile is actually using it to augment its cellular voice service. Will Verizon use Wi-Fi?
Wegleitner: We might see Wi-Fi used in the home to provide multiple device interconnection. Right now, we are using the Multimedia over Coax Alliance (MoCA) cable standard to deliver connectivity using the existing cable infrastructure in the home. But we could use other kinds of connectivity in the home, such as Wi-Fi or power line.

And we’re still working cooperatively with P2P companies and the rest of the folks in the P4P group to employ the technology in a way that would maximize its impact.

Fios also has helped future-proof Verizon’s network. While its cable competitors buckle under the pressure of peer-to-peer traffic on their networks, Verizon has enough capacity in its network, thanks to its fiber upgrades, to weather the storm unscathed and work on its own timetable to find more efficient ways to handle peer-to-peer traffic.

Speaking of 4G, there’s been so much talk about moving to the next generation of wireless networks. What do you see as the biggest challenges in building and running the next-generation broadband wireless networks?
Wegleitner: One challenge will be the sheer number of new devices on the network. It’s a double-edged sword. There’s more capability for end users, but it also means that the network provider has to understand these capabilities. There’s not going to be a common denominator, so we will have to be able to identify and recognize the devices and their capabilities, and adapt to it.

Degrading traffic for one application enables another to work better. But we have to allow people who use the peer-to-peer applications for lawful and legitimate purposes to do so.

But as far as offering Wi-Fi in hot spots or covering whole communities with Wi-Fi, we’ve tried it. We provided Wi-Fi in Manhattan, but we no longer offer that service.

Verizon announced recently that it’s increasing the speed of its Fios service to 50Mbps on its high-end tier of service. How much faster can the speeds on Fios get?
Wegleitner: The original specification for the Passive Optical Network, or the FTTP network, we are using allows us to provide 100Mbps to the home. So that’s probably a reasonable ceiling, given the current technology. But we are also deploying GPON, which is an enhancement to the original fiber technology we’re using.

We conducted some tests with the P4P group and Yale University, and showed that customers have a better experience, and we use fewer resources, when we used the P2P technology. It’s really a win-win situation for us and the customer.

So when you talk about new voice services, are you talking about offering unified communications in the home?
Wegleitner: Yes, we can offer a unified communication experience in the home today with point solutions. And we have run way left for more sophisticated and converged services.

Verizon is working with several peer-to-peer companies to find ways to use the technology to distribute content more efficiently. How can the P2P protocol benefit service providers like Verizon?
Wegleitner: Peer-to-peer is a distribution enabler. But often when people talk about P2P, it gets lumped into a category with things that are bad, mainly because it takes up so much capacity on the network. But whether it’s a good thing or a bad thing, there is underlying technology for P2P that can be used to everyone’s advantage to get content like video, which everyone is asking for, distributed in the most efficient way.

When will we see these services?
Wegleitner: We can already provide the ability to forward calls. But the find-me and follow-me services haven’t caught on as rapidly as we thought. Sometimes the first time an application comes out of the shoot, it doesn’t catch. But then later, it does. I don’t think we’ve created enough selection or a compelling-enough template to drive mass-market adoption of some of these services yet. But that will come. I don’t think we’re talking more than a couple of years away.

Aug 24

MacBook Air: I've eaten thicker slices of pizza.

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

You can get the full hands-on experience by watching my First Look video of the MacBook Air at CNET TV.

These data can’t really convey the MacBook Air’s wow factor–thus the envelope trick. Yet even with that visual I wasn’t quite prepared for how very slender this laptop would be. When I picked it up, my mind took a few seconds to get past the incongruity of such a broad, bright 13.3-inch display in a package the weight and thickness of a Dr. Seuss hardcover.

The multitouch trackpad uses gestures similar to the iPhone.

That’s not to say users won’t have to compromise at all. Everyone around me seems to have a different take on the MacBook Air’s missing features. For example, I don’t care about the optical drive but bemoan the lack of Ethernet and cellular connections, while my video team is shocked that the laptop lacks FireWire and my business-minded friends can’t believe there’s no expansion slot. But in my mind the MacBook Air is hard to beat if you’re primarily looking for an eye-catching, extremely portable laptop that’s (relatively) competitively priced.

Once I put it down and started working, I was extremely pleased with the new multitouch trackpad, which incorporates a range of gesture controls that will be familiar to
iPhone users. It’s a smart move on Apple’s part; not only are the gestures easy to learn, but they’re difficult to forget, making it far more likely that users will stick with Apple products once they’ve become used to the interface. Writers and students will be pleased as well with the MacBook Air’s keyboard, which is full size and similar to that of the standard MacBook. (It actually feels the same as the keyboard found on regular MacBooks, but I couldn’t quite be sure without a direct side-by-side comparison.) In terms of interaction, the MacBook Air is probably the first 3-pound notebook that hasn’t asked users to make some kind of compromise.

Say what you will about Steve Jobs, but when he pulled Apple’s latest laptop out of a standard inter-office envelope I stood in awe–of both his showmanship and of the laptop’s remarkably slim design. Though the MacBook Air is not quite the thinnest laptop ever, it is among the thinnest we’ve seen (the Fujistu LifeBook Q2010 and Toshiba Portege R500 both measure 0.8 inch thick, but neither tapers to 0.16 inch like the Air).

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

Aug 24

Here I am this morning, sitting in front of the computer with my earphones on, laughing my ass off. My wife walks over and she sees me cutting up over a rooster bouncing around on screen. Of course, she’s not hearing Feldman’s sarcastic voice-over in a hilarious lampooning of a Shel Israel video interview on Fast Company.

Seriously.

It may not be Wolf Blitzer, but it’s one hundred times more entertaining. The best thing about Feldman? He’s got the cojones to upset the prissy assumptions of the TechMeme A-listers. Every now and then he leaves a verbal fart in the room and leers into the camera for effect.

I’m not smart enough to predict how this is going to turn out. Still, it’s quite amazing to watch the opinion-making mandarins freak out on cue when someone has the temerity to put forward a counter-argument to the conventional wisdom. (As I write, they’re burning Nick Carr at the stake for his take on Billy Bragg’s Saturday op-ed piece in The New York Times.

Wolf Blitzer, eat your heart out.

Twisted in a brilliant, kiss my tuchas kind of way.

Loren Feldman of 1938 Media is twisted.

Here comes my Sunday morning rant. This industry has always been a lot of fun to write about. But when it comes to conversations over future directions in technology, these days good humor is in short supply. I’m sure money has something to do with it. A lot of people who have big bets obviously have a vested interest in how things are going to turn out. But there’s also a lot of passion even if you don’t have any personal skin in the game. So it is that Twitter may be the most revolutionary advance in digital communications or the biggest waste of time since the hula hoop. FriendFeed may mark a major breakthrough in “conversational platforms” or “more hyped yawn.”

(Credit:
Loren Feldman)

Feldman, who heads a Web video production company in New York, probably upsets a lot of people with his posts, but I think he’s one of the freshest voices in digital media. It’s a lot of inside baseball about the tech business but newbies to his shtick should leave any tender sensibilities at the door. This dude is raw…big time. (Check out Feldman’s “People who should be Jewish” video riff. Steve Jobs will hate it, but it’s inspired.)

Wonder how they’d react to Feldman growling about how big business is being “duped by this user-generated crap and how Andrew Keen was right about everything.” That’s not a popular point of view. Then again, he doesn’t a damn what they think. And that’s why he’s got me hooked.

Aug 24

(Credit:
Redlasso.com)

She added later that RedLasso executives told her they were on good terms with broadcasters. The executives’ assertions, however, are untrue, the networks said in their letter to RedLasso. In the letter, the entertainment companies wrote that such statements “falsely convey an affiliation…when there is none.”

Disclosure: CBS has agreed to acquire CNET Networks, publisher of News.com. The deal is expected to close in the third quarter.

Three of the largest broadcast TV networks have sent a cease-and-desist letter to RedLasso , a little-known but rapidly growing video syndication site.

Gannes wrote: “Now might be a pretty good time to get permission.”

At a time when the networks are giving their content away for free, one has to wonder why RedLasso would even get into this business. Anyone can go to Hulu and grab embed code for many NBC Universal shows without violating the law.

Fox News Network, NBC Universal, and CBS sent a letter on Monday, accusing the company of “building a business based on the unauthorized syndication of” the content owners’ news, sports, and entertainment shows.

Executives from King of Prussia, Pa.-based RedLasso were unavailable for comment.

I was in Los Angeles for the Digital Hollywood conference earlier this month and there was plenty of discussion about the influx of Silicon Valley entrepreneurs moving in to make deals with the studios. The big entertainment companies were more open to cutting deals than ever, insiders told me.

RedLasso records TV shows and then indexes clips so users can find, pull, and embed them on other Web sites. Reporter Liz Gannes over at Newteevee.com saw this one coming. Two weeks ago, Gannes noted that RedLasso had grown from 2 million unique users in November to 24 million in April.

They also said that partnerships awaited those that could help the entertainment industry solve problems of advertising, marketing, and syndication on the Internet.

Aug 24

My two key takeaways:

-You will be forced to do integration, regardless if it fits into the analyst dream world of immaculate SOA conception
-If Thomson has already achieved an SOA environment and are so focused on governance, than its clearly more important than most people realize

Koenig’s Top Ten:
1. SOA requires governance. The only way to control the complexity of an IT infrastructure built out of services is with a governance process based on “a well defined set of interface guidelines and policies,” Koenig said.
2. Govern to the policies that matter.
3. People don’t communicate.
4. Make governance easy and do it early.
5. Reusability does not come cheap.
6. Interfaces are more important than implementation.
7. Integration is more common than “greenfield.”
8. Identify the owner for each service.
9. Be pragmatic.
10. It’s all about governance.

Wondering how to do good SOA? Check out these 10 lessons learned as presented by Ian Koenig, Thomson Financial’s senior vice president and chief architect.

Full article: 10 lessons learned on SOA excellence

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