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For six years, the Internet Nexus served as my technology blog, but I've since started blogging at the SuperSite Blog instead. If you're looking for the blog, please head there. --Paul



Friday, February 18, 2005

TiVo Subscriptions Hit 3 Million Mark

Washington Post (free registration required):
Digital video recorder maker TiVo Inc. on Friday said it added 698,000 subscribers in its fiscal fourth quarter, bringing its total to over 3 million.

The Alviso, California-based company said it added 447,000 customers through satellite television provider DirecTV Group Inc., and 251,000 "TiVo-owned," or stand-alone, users in the period ended on Jan. 31.

The stand-alone users, who typically buy a TiVo DVR at a retail store and pay about $13 a month for the service, typically generate far more profits for the company than do the DirecTV users.
And another excellent subscription service gets some much-needed good news.
[ Posted at 6:21 PM | Permalink ]

 

Review: Portable Napster Won't Break Bank

Associated Press:
Napster is now offering consumers the option of renting as much music as they like and taking it on the road.

There's no hestitation with Napster To Go. Download a track — heck, you may as well transfer the whole album — and give it a listen while you look for more music.

Or build a playlist and load songs onto one of about a dozen supported digtal music players, including devices from Dell Inc., Creative Labs Inc. and Reigncom Ltd.'s iRiver. (Sadly, Apple Computer's popular iPod isn't among them.)

Napster is selling this [service] by saying it's cheaper to pay the [$14.95] monthly fee for unlimited downloads than to buy each track outright at iTunes, where you get about 15 songs a month for the same price — though you keep them forever.

Most other all-you-can-eat plans, including Yahoo Inc. (Nasdaq:YHOO - news)'s MusicMatch, won't let you move music directly to MP3 devices unless you've purchased individual tracks for an added fee.

Napster To Go's software, while slightly more difficult to navigate than iTunes, is easy to use.

If you get bored with your own music, Napster also lets you search the libraries and playlists of other members.

Born as a free file-sharing network that spawned a heavyweight legal bout with the recording industry, the one-time pioneer may have found a way to reclaim its place at the top.
I've been using Napster To Go for some time now, first with a Creative Portable Media Center and more recently with an iriver H10 device. It's pretty good. The best thing about Napster To Go, of course, is that you can just load up with music. I've spent a bit of time navigating through the 1980's Billboard Top 200 album lists, and I'll hit the 90's over the weekend. But it's fun downloading entire albums and huge batches of songs, trying them out, and then getting rid of what I don't want. So far, the 5 GB size of the iriver has proven to be just about right.

There's been a lot of silly debate about the pay-per and subscription models. A few points:

1. The two business models can co-exist. The people who like to pay for music can keep doing so. It's your money.

2. You don't "own" the music you "buy" at iTunes. One thing pay-per fans forget is that they're bound by the terms Apple sets, which let Apple change the rules at any time. They've already made one major change to their rules so far. Also, if you accidentally delete a song you "bought," you're dead. At Napster, you can re-download songs you've bought or subscribed to. Nice.

3. Subscription plans are proven money makers. We subscribe to all kinds of services, including cable TV, telephone and cell phone services, online video game services, ISPs, satellite radio, and so on. For a lot of content, people don't care if they get a physical "thing" and sometimes they just want to hear certain songs temporarily.

4. Tastes change. You may love that Oingo Boingo collection now, but it might also be embarrassing a few years later. I used to watch and love "Happy Days" on TV when I was a kid, for example, but now I find it painfully unfunny and unwatchable. There's a reason used CD sales are big business. You can't sell the iTunes songs you no longer want.

5. It's complex and time consuming to convert CD music to a digital format. One thing Mac users in particular, and techie people in general, have a problem remembering is that the technical skills they take for granted are not available to the general public. Let's say you buy a MP3 player, be it an iPod or an iriver or whatever. How do you fill it? Are you really telling me that normal people are going to take the time to rip all their CDs to MP3 format? Seriously? They're going to fix all the ID3 tag problems that exist because of the crap database at CDDB? They're going to download album art? Fine tune their collections and make playlists? You really do believe that? It's not going to happen. So buying or subscribing to music makes a lot more sense for these people (you know, 95 percent of the music-loving but technically adverse world). Filling a 4 GB iPod mini with the songs from iTunes you want would be hugely expensive. Filling a 5 GB, 20 GB, or 60 GB player with Napster To Go--and getting all the benefits of that services, including a constantly rotating selection of over 1 million songs--would not be expensive at all. And don't give that "I added up $14.95 a month for x number of years" crap either. I pay over $100 a month to my cable company for Internet access/phone/TV and I've never sat back and thought about all the money I wasted over the years. We're paying for a service that we want and think find to be valuable. That's how the world works, even if Apple doesn't want to offer such a thing (yet). That brings me to ....

6. Just because Apple doesn't do it, doesn't mean it's not right. Apple didn't pioneer MP3 players, jukebox applications, or online music stores, but that didn't stop them from eventually jumping on board. That means that Apple could one day have the premier music subscription service, people. And when that happens, I expect all you naysayers to hop right on the bandwagon with them again (witness all the "Mac" sites that just write incessantly about MP3-related stuff now as if they're suddenly music experts). That makes you hypocrites at the very least. People who worship Apple freak me out. Loving technology I get--I'm right there with you--but loving a company is messed up, sorry.
[ Posted at 9:29 AM | Permalink ]

 

Thursday, February 17, 2005

StarOffice 8 Beta: A few nice Windows-oriented changes

I haven't had much time to play around with StarOffice 8 beta yet, but I have noticed a few nice, small changes. The applications are now logically named (i.e. StarOffice Writer instead of "Text Document" and StarOffice Calc instead of "Spreadsheet") in the Start Menu, and there's a new splash screen, for example. But the nicest change I've seen so far is the Office 2003-style toolbars that Sun is now using. They make StarOffice look a lot more like Microsoft Office, and that will likely go a long way towards helping people migrate to this much cheaper solution. Here are a few shots:


(Click for larger version)
[ Posted at 3:12 PM | Permalink ]

 

StarOffice 8 Beta software now available

Sun:
Thank you for your interest in the StarOffice 8 Beta Program. StarOffice Office Suite is the world's leading office productivity suite on Linux and the Solaris OS, and the leading alternative office suite on Windows.

StarOffice software is affordable, easy to use, and based on open standards. It offers word processing, spreadsheet, presentation, drawing, and database capabilities. Its familiar interface enables quick productivity and results for the business user, and elegant output for the consumer.

StarOffice 8 software increases usability and MS Office compatibility, adds productivity increasing wizards and tools and supports select Lotus and WordPerfect versions. It also introduces a new database engine and front-end tool, easier multilanguage installation and two new scripting languages for developers.
There are versions available for Windows, Linux, Solaris SPARC, and Solaris x86.
[ Posted at 2:41 PM | Permalink ]

 

Tuesday, February 15, 2005

StarOffice 8 Beta Set To Debut

TechWeb:
Sun Monday said that the newest edition of its alternative to Microsoft Office, StarOffice 8, will be available for downloading in a beta version on Thursday.

StarOffice, which shares a code base with the open-source OpenOffice application suite, will feature enhanced compatibility with Microsoft Office, including importation of password-protected documents and a database module much more like Microsoft's own Access.

The beta will be available for several weeks, and will be replaced by a final version of the for-fee StarOffice 8 by mid-2005, Sun said.

StarOffice 8 can be downloaded starting Thursday from the Sun Web site.
[ Posted at 8:40 AM | Permalink ]

 

Monday, February 14, 2005

Security Misconceptions

Rob Enderle:
Security starts with the user. If you aren't willing to ensure that only authorized users have access to sensitive systems, then you deserve what you get if your systems are penetrated. If you refuse to put locks on your door and someone steals your stuff, isn't that your fault?

The belief that open source is more secure is largely unfounded. Take Firefox -- a 1.0 product with two active support folks and a key designer who just left to work for Google. Yes, it works on a lot of sites just as Opera did when it was the hot browser; yes, it isn't (or wasn't) targeted by as many exploits; yes, it does seem faster (so did Opera). But if it used to be obscure, it certainly isn't today, and that means it will increasingly be targeted.

It is hard to figure out how many security vulnerabilities the product actually has. You can go to Security Focus and search on Mozilla as the vendor and then Firefox as the title and come up with 39. On Secunia, you'll see not only that the number of reported vulnerabilities is increasing, but also that 88 percent remain unpatched or only partially fixed. Internet Security Systems documents 62 security exposures, but I can't tell easily how many of those 62 have been corrected in the 1.0 product. At least some of the Mac folks are asking this question and concluding that the Apple browser is vastly more secure.

In the world I thought I lived in, if you ran around telling people to migrate to a 1.0 product over a 6+ product from a branded vendor, particularly when the 1.0 product only had two full-time support people, you'd be taken to a quiet padded cell. Firefox is getting a ton of press, and people will attack it. How will two people and a handful of volunteers be able to protect you? If you are in a company and are audited for this choice, the word "oops" doesn't protect you.

In the end it is your privacy, or your company's privacy, you are protecting. Stay focused on the bad guys, the people who want to steal your stuff, your identity and your piece of mind. Do your own research and think through the process. Don't think just of the exposures that exist today -- think ahead to the exposures you will need to address next week, next month and next year. You may make the same choices, but at least you'll be vastly better at defending those choices. Given the career implications, this approach will do a lot to cover your assets.
[ Posted at 10:34 AM | Permalink ]

 

The Zen of Fighting iPod

Newsweek:
Most customers of creative Technologies don't even know it. They're the millions who have the Sound Blaster circuit boards in their PCs that process the audio boomed through the speakers. The Singapore-based company has thrown its energies into digital music players, a field it entered well before Apple's introduction of the market leader, the iPod. Nonetheless, founder and CEO Sim Wong Hoo thinks his own products—the flash-based MuVo as well as the direct iPod competitor, the Zen Micro—can hold their own with Steve Jobs. We phoned the outspoken 49-year-old Sim, whose Zen playlist is heavy on Chinese and New Age music, at his Singapore headquarters.
A few interesting quotes from Hoo:
In the December quarter we had no problems selling [all of the MP3 players] that we could ship out.

Steve Jobs ... was not the first to come out with this MP3. We started way back in 1999. We paid a lot of school fees for our mistakes along the way, but [our] company has transformed from a sound-card company into a company where we do all kinds of external products.

[The iPod shuffle] turned out totally opposite [what we expected], something like our first-generation product—no display, no radio, very simple. I believe we had this kind of thing more than three years or four years ago. You can say it's cool; I say it's plain-Jane.

From all the initial feedback we have [on Portable Media Centers], this is a media type that people want to have ... whenever I tell them they can bring all their photos with them, their perception changes. It's the same thing when we saw the first MP3 player. It may take one or two years more, but we are patient, and in the meantime we're selling a respectable number.

I'm betting on the Microsoft camp. They want to win this whole MP3 war. With all the cash they have, with all the clout they have, they are going to win—if not the first time, if not the second time, the third time, and that's why we're working very closely with them.
[ Posted at 9:03 AM | Permalink ]

 



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