Tuesday, December 9, 2008

blogging is old school

welcome to micro-blogging. it's on my facebook account. See you there.. 

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

forgetting is good! i feel better

from WSJ:: What happened is that countless days, nights, meetings, commutes and other unremarkable events went by, well, unremarked. They didn't make a lasting impression on the brain or they were overwritten by so many similar experiences that they are hard to retrieve. In short, they've been forgotten.

That's not necessarily a bad thing. Neuroscientists say forgetting is crucial to the efficient functioning of the mind, to learning, adapting and recalling more significant things.

"We focus so much on memory that forgetting has been maligned," says Gayatri Devi, a neuro-psychiatrist and memory expert in New York City. "But if you didn't forget, you'd recall all kinds of extraneous information from your life that would drown you in a sea of inefficiency."


That was what prompted Jill Price to contact the memory experts at the University of California at Irvine in 2000. As she wrote in a book published this summer, "The Woman Who Can't Forget," Ms. Price could recall in detail virtually every day since she was 14, but she was mentally exhausted and tormented by her memories. UC Irvine scientists are interviewing more than 200 people who say they have similar "autobiographical" memories, but so far have found only three more.

Memories of singular, significant events -- say, last week's historic election -- are generally easy to recall; people typically store them in long-term memory with many associations attached.

Memories of mundane, recurring events compete to be recalled, and scientists say the brain appears to be programmed to forget those that aren't important. Neuroimaging studies show that it's the brain's prefrontal cortex, the area of complex thought and executive planning, that sorts and retrieves such "like-kind" memories. Researchers at Stanford University's Memory Laboratory demonstrated last year that the more subjects forgot competing memories, the less work their cortexes had to do to recall a specific one. In short, forgetting frees up brain power for other tasks, says psychologist Anthony Wagner, the lab's director.

Your Questions Answered

Columnist Melinda Beck answers readers' questions about advocating for a patient in the hospital, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, and more. Read Health Mailbox.

A real-world example, he says, is having to learn a new computer password every few months: As your brain suppresses the memory of the old password, it gets easier to summon the new one.

In fact, forgetting is a very active process, albeit subconscious, neuroscientists say. The mind is constantly evaluating, editing and sorting information, all at lightning speed. "Your brain is only taking a small amount in, and it's already erasing vast amounts that won't be needed again," Dr. Devi says.

Much that happens during the day doesn't make an impression at all because our attention is focused elsewhere. Take your daily commute, says Dr. Wagner: "A heck of a lot of stuff is landing on our retinas as we're driving down the road. But if you were focusing on the presentation you have to give, you didn't perceive it and it didn't get stored."

He notes that people face such a constant cognitive barrage that they frequently fail to attend to information that isn't essential at the time. "I have two 4½-year-olds and I'm already thinking, where did those first four years go?" Dr. Wagner says.

Numerous studies have shown that when people are asked to focus on one thing, they can fail to notice others— phenomenon called "change blindness." In one famous test, when viewers are asked to count how many times a basketball changes hands in a video, roughly half don't notice that a gorilla walks through the scene.

Conversely, people who have remarkable memories for, say, sports statistics or who-wore-what to parties paid attention at the time and attached significance to it, while it doesn't register on other people's radar screens at all.

Are memories for events you didn't focus on stored in your brain nevertheless -- like unwatched bank-surveillance tapes? That's an area of much debate. Some experts believe hypnosis can trigger long-buried associations. But so-called recovered memories are also susceptible to distortion.

"Memory consists of billions of puzzle pieces, and many of them look the same," Dr. Devi says. "Each time you retrieve a memory, you're reconstructing a puzzle very quickly and breaking it down again. Some of the pieces get put back in different places."

What if you want to remember more about each passing day? One simple method is to keep a journal. Writing down a few thoughts and events every day not only makes a tangible record, it also requires you to reflect. "You're elaborating on why they were meaningful, and you're laying down an additional memory trace," says neuroscientist James McGaugh at UC Irvine. Taking photographs and labeling them reinforce memories too.

But remember that forgetting can be very useful, says Dr. McGaugh: "If you used to go out with Bob and now you're married to Bill, you want to be able to say, 'I love you, Bill.' That's why forgetting is important."

Friday, October 31, 2008

share 3G over wi-fi

read about this today, very useful when traveling.. need a symbian or windows mobile phone for now...

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

windows 7


LOS ANGELES – Microsoft Corp. on Tuesday provided the most complete demonstration yet of its upcoming Windows 7 operating system and gave programmers an early test version of the software.

The Redmond, Wash., company also said it will make new versions of its Office suite of productivity applications that run inside Web browsers available for free over the Web, a move to counter efforts by Google Inc. and others to encroach on Microsoft's turf with free word processing, spreadsheet and other programs.

At a company technical conference here, Microsoft said Windows 7 will come with a number of improvements, including a feature called libraries that will give consumers a way to easily access in one location music, videos, photos and other documents that are located on many different storage devices, whether other PCs connected to a home network or removable USB drives.

Another feature called homegroup will make it easier for users with, say, a laptop to move their machine between office, home and other locations. The feature will automatically configure the laptop, for example, to work with a local printer so users don't have to manually adjust their printer settings.

Microsoft has said that it expects to ship Windows 7 for consumers by January 2010.

Microsoft's move to make Web-versions of its Office suite, including Word, Excel and PowerPoint, for free online represents a gamble that it can expand its audience for the software without cannibalizing one of the company's biggest cash cows.



Monday, October 27, 2008

MSFT get's into cloud computing

http://www.microsoft.com/azure/sdk.mspx

still have to play with this.. wondering if it's better than AWS.. and what uptime they promise. 99.95 that amazon promises is not cutting it.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

is google trying to kill firefox?

this may seem as a far fetched thought, but could be true. FireFox last week updated to 3.0.3 version and right after that its been taking way too much memory and crashing at times. As a result i have switched to Chrome. I am sure FireFox will come with a fix in 3.0.4 version but some users would have moved to Chrome already. Since Firefox is open source, and google does write a bunch of its code, this could be a subtle move to get some adoption.. Don't be Evil? not sure anymore.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

chrome - the review

there have been many reviews of chrome already, from WSJ to CNET etc. My key observations
1. the Most visited page is quite useful, although copied form Opera's latest releases - they have had this for a while.
2. it is fast with apps such as google maps etc. for other pages, the difference is not noticeable
3. i do use yahoo toolbar and this does not support it - yet.
4. where is the breakthrough google! at least cant see it for all the sites i have visited so far.. they should have created 2-3 demo sites that would be added to my fav's that would truly differentiate chrome from the pack.
5. do like that it's open source.
6. business model: by merging search in address bar, you are most likely to use default google engine (than type another Or change preferences). Got that.

i dont know why i'll not move back to firefox.. google, few more days, give me that compelling reason, otherwise i am loyal to firefox..:-)

=D

free wi-fi at the airports

read this today:

most paid wi-fi providers don't block images. to go to regular web sites: instead of going to www.freemobile411.com Go to www.freemobile411.com/?.jpg and the site loads! i.e. without paying for the service.

will try next time i am at one of these wi-fi zones.

-D

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

blog using google chrome

yep, its faster.. so far so good..

Google's browser

is out, get your's at google.com/chrome

reviews to come in a few days..

Friday, August 29, 2008

google's app strategy

Google on Thursday announced Android Market, an online center that will let people find, buy, download, and rate applications and other content for mobile phones equipped with the open-source operating system.

Attracting developer attention is a key part of the Google-led Android software effort, and those who produce applications will have an easy time getting them to the market, Eric Chu of Google's Android project said in a Thursday blog post.

"Similar to YouTube, content can debut in the marketplace after only three simple steps: register as a merchant, upload and describe your content and publish it," Chu said. "We chose the term 'market' rather than 'store' because we feel that developers should have an open and unobstructed environment to make their content available."

Though the first Android phones are planned to arrive later this year, Chu said to expect the initial phone-based Android Market application to be a beta version that might only support distribution of free applications. An update later will handle different versions of applications, support for different profiles of Android phones, and analytics to help developers track adoption.

The move was expected. Google said in May at the Google I/O conference that it would provide a central repository of Android software.

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Siemens exits telecom

Sad day for the industry as Siemens exits telecoms sector after 160 years
14/08/2008 10:24:00 - by Martyn Warwick

It's been a long and glorious history. The German company Siemens was one of the very first companies ever to lay telephone cables and make telephony switches, but today it is exiting the industry after more than a century and a half.

The company was founded by Werner von Siemens on October 1, 1847, (the year that Sam Colt sold an early version of his epoch-making revolver to the US government, Denmark began its first railway service and Alexander Graham Bell was born) and the infant company's first product was a form of telegraph needle that, when activated, pointed out a sequence of letters transmitted from elsewhere. It was designed to compete with the highly successful and popular Morse code and telegraphy system but was not a great success except in Germany.

In 1848, Siemens built Europe's first long-distance telegraph line, a 500 kilometre link between Berlin and Frankfurt, and by 1853 (when the Crimean War was at its height, Vincent van Gogh was born and the keel of Brunel's massive paddle steamer, the Great Eastern was laid) Siemens was a multi-national conglomerate building a 6,000 kilometre-long telegraph system across Russia.

The first Siemen's telephone switch was designed and constructed in 1881 and the company designed the "Faraday", the first specialist vessel dedicated to the laying of submarine cable back in 1874.

But now it's all over. Siemens has agreed to sell a majority share of its cordless phone business (its sole remaining presence in telephony) to Arques Industries thus putting an end to its long history as a renowned and respected vendor of telecoms equipment.

The two organisations have agreed to transfer 80.2 per cent of Siemens Home and Office Communications Devices to Arques. Home and Office Communications, one of Siemens' last attempts to remain a major player in telecoms was set up as a stand-alone company only three years ago in 2005.

Earlier this week, Siemens divested 51 per cent of its enterprise communications unit (that, basically, sold call centre equipment) in a joint venture with the US-based Gores Group. And the company had already rid itself of its network equipment arm by entering a joint venture with Nokia of Finland as well as having, controversially and disastrously, sold its mobile phone business to Taiwan’s BenQ.

ruling on open source

Ruling Bolsters Open-Source Software
A Licensing Agreement
Is Declared Enforceable
Under Copyright Law
By ROBERT A. GUTH
August 14, 2008

A federal appeals court Wednesday overturned a lower court's decision in a copyright case that could strengthen the legal foundation of certain software such as Linux and online services such as Wikipedia.

The court ruled that conditions of an agreement called the Artistic License were enforceable under copyright law, supporting a basic tenet behind open-source software and other creations that the general public is allowed to freely modify and distribute.

The case centers around free software used in model trains that Robert Jacobsen, a model-train enthusiast, made available online. Mr. Jacobsen alleged that Matthew Katzer, and Mr. Katzer's company, used the software to develop commercial software products for model trains without following the terms of the software's license. Mr. Jacobsen alleged that Mr. Katzer had infringed copyright.

The U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California ruled that the license Mr. Jacobsen used was "intentionally broad" and therefore didn't create liability for copyright infringement. Instead, the court ruled, he might be able to claim breach of contract.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

on techcrunch today

Mobile Search Trends Show Economic Decline And Rise In Pizza
Calley Nye
10 comments »

v-enable

V-Enable, a voice-enabled mobile 411 system, conducted a study by taking a random sampling of 20,000 searches in major metropolitan areas from customers of several V-Enable partner carriers including Alltel and MetroPCS. The findings clearly represent interesting trends caused by the recession. For one thing, people are eating more pizza! The results for the top restaurant searches for the period between October 2007 and June 2008 are:

1. Pizza Hut
2. McDonald’s
3. Domino’s Pizza
4. Starbucks
5. Papa John’s Pizza
6. Little Caesars Pizza
7. Taco Bell
8. Burger King
9. Wendy’s
10. Denny’s

Sit-down restaurants like Olive Garden, Applebee’s and Red Lobster, have dropped off the list, while recession-proof comfort food like Pizza Hut and Domino’s shoot to the top of the list. 380% more searches for Pizza Hut have been conducted during the period, and searches for Domino’s Pizza have increased 980%. High gas prices are keeping people at home ordering in, and they are opting for cheaper alternatives. Financial analysts have explored this area extensively, and have deemed several of these restaurant chains “recession-proof stocks.”

There are several other search-related economic indicators from V-Enable. U-Haul, a company that was never on any top 50 list, jumped to #23 in general search, possibly because of a rise in foreclosures. Macy’s dropped from #17 to #49 in retail, a direct correlation to the fact that people just don’t have the discretionary income that they used to. Motel 6 has never showed up on a top 50 list, but they are now #37 in general search, quite possibly because travelers can’t afford the costly alternatives. Mobile search happens in real-time and is unaffected by SEO, making these statistics arguably more reflective of consumer sentiment than web search.

V-Enable is a mobile information system, where users can speak the name of a restaurant or residential listing and receive location and contact information. The company also has live operators working behind the scenes so that users can call and get human assistance, if necessary. V-Enable sent us similar retail statistics in December. The company is backed by $10.1 million over 3 rounds from Siemens Mobile Acceleration Corporation, Sorrento Ventures, SoftBank Capital and Palisades Ventures.

Monday, July 21, 2008




Checking for google ads

Friday, July 11, 2008

added blog it to facebook

this blog should show on facebook, at the same time it's published. lets find out!

also: iphone 3G is having activation problems.. AGAIN

Friday, July 4, 2008

Advice for auto industry

Auto manufacturers in US are increasingly working hard to get their vehicles more fuel efficient and closing truck / minivan plants (like GM and Chrysler announced few weeks ago)

i have been reading solutions proposed to the industry on WSJ , Business week etc: all mainly focusing on fuel efficiency for current class of vehicles. Here is a FREE tip for the auto industry: "wagons". People still have too much stuff and still need a vehicle to transport all the shopping that's being done.. if they cant ride their SUV's and cars can't fit stuff, the only fuel efficient answer (at least in the short term, now-5 years) is increase production of wagons. what would be a big hit: Prius Wagon! 45 mpg + lots of storage.

Another proof that i am right is: A look at inventory at Carmax shows, SUV's are not selling, but there is very limited supply of hybrids AND wagons.

-D

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

openwave (OPWV) sells mobile business for $32M

It is really amazing how the market is valuing certain assets. Even today, am sure, Openwave has the one of the largest deployments of their mobile browser in north america and probably in the top 3 worldwide, which would be more than a billion phones over time. It sure seems something was terribly wrong somewhere, granted the markets are not doing well (helio $39M), but $30M seems just too low.. Nuance spend more than $200M on voicesignal, from my perspective, this acquisition should have been a no brainer for someone that wants access to embeeded software in millions of handsets. Leaves me curious, if you know the answer: email me!

Thursday, June 26, 2008

iphone 3G: apple making some far fetched claims

Steve jobs is going after Blackberry quite seriously.. apple.com has a icon for iphone for the enterprise which follows with page (image below)..

Steve: unless there is a keyboard, iphone will NOT become an enterprise device.. just like tablet PC's were a very strong attempt from Bill Gates but did not get any broad enterprise acceptance. ADD A KEYBOAD: LISTEN TO YOUR CUSTOMERS.

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Google finance bug!


notice missing data on RIM's stock performance!

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

nokia buys symbian and makes it open source

Nokia to Buy Phone-Software Firm


Finland's Nokia Corp. is acquiring the rest of United Kingdom-based Symbian Ltd., a provider of software for advanced phones, in a move that will likely increase competition for Apple Inc.

Nokia said Tuesday it has launched a cash offer for the 52% of privately owned Symbian it doesn't already own. The deal is valued at roughly €264 million ($410 million). Nokia said investors holding some 91% of the relevant Symbian shares -- including Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications AB, Sweden's Telefon AB L.M. Ericsson, Panasonic Mobile Communications Co. and Siemens AG -- had irrevocably agreed to accept the offer. Nokia said it also expects Samsung Electronics Co. to accept.

In the face of stiff competition from cellphone-industry newcomers such as Apple and Google

Many of Nokia's rivals, who rely on Symbian software, have been concerned about the Finnish handset maker's influence in Symbian and the degree to which Symbian software is being developed to suit the needs of Nokia alone. But they appear to have put those concerns aside. "We service all of our customers equally," said Symbian Chief Executive Nigel Clifford.

The acquisition by Nokia is part of a broader move toward cooperation among several handset makers and cellphone-service providers under the auspices of a new group called the Symbian Foundation. Participants include the four other largest handset makers after Nokia: Motorola Inc., Samsung, Sony Ericsson and LG Electronics. Symbian's more than 1,000 developers will become Nokia employees and the non-profit foundation will be responsible for marketing and coordination for developers everywhere.

Symbian also will blend its several different flavors of cellphone software into one, to create one open-source software platform. That includes folding in user-interface software from UIQ Technology, a joint venture between Motorola and Sony Ericsson that was spun off from Symbian. UIQ's know-how includes touch-screen technology, which has been made fashionable by Apple's iPhone cellphone.

The efforts will enable "faster, better products," says Kai Öistämö, head of Nokia's devices unit.

Monday, June 23, 2008

google to launch free web site tool

Google to Offer a Tool
To Measure Web Hits

By EMILY STEEL
June 24, 2008

As soon as Tuesday, Google plans to unveil a new service that measures Internet use, according to advertising executives who have been briefed on it. The tool is intended to help advertisers identify the best places to buy online ads by telling them which Web sites their target audiences visit.

Google's approach, aimed at bolstering its ad-sales business, could pose a major threat to the Web measurement services that are available now, ad executives say. The two main players in the business -- comScore and Nielsen Online -- gather data on Internet use largely by tracking what panels of people do online or by conducting surveys, and their results can be inconsistent and incomplete. Google's new offering will be based mostly on data from Web servers, allowing for a deeper and broader view of Internet use. And unlike the services from comScore and Nielsen, Google's will be offered to marketers free, according to ad executives.

ComScore said it wouldn't comment before Google makes an official announcement. Nielsen Online also declined to comment.

Billions of marketing dollars a year trade hands based at least in part on Web-audience figures. Advertisers study the data -- which can estimate the total number of people that visit a Web site or the average amount of time those people spend on the site or both -- to try to determine which sites are popular among particular demographic groups or in certain topic areas, such as technology or health. Publishers also rely on the data to set ad rates.

Google's new tool could bring more efficiency to the process of buying online ads, ad executives say. Google already has one of the dominant systems for online ad-serving, which helps Web publishers manage their advertising sales and serve up ads each time a consumer opens one of their Web pages. The Web-audience data could be combined with the ad-serving system, so that advertisers would be able to find out whether they would reach the right audience before they committed to placing an ad. Existing ad-serving systems don't currently provide detailed Web-audience data about the sites where they place ads. By giving away the new tool, Google could presumably attract more ad business.

Separately, Google this week is expected to roll out a new tool aimed at showing how Web surfers respond to online ads. It will compare groups of people who are exposed to an ad with others who haven't seen it, taking into account such factors as search activity and site visitation.

The services are a logical next step for Google as it moves into other parts of the advertising business, including television and newspapers, where the company has begun selling ad space. Marketers are hungry for research that helps them compare the results of offline and online ads so that they can allocate their marketing budgets more intelligently. Google could be positioned to serve this one-stop-shopping role.

Some ad executives say they are concerned that Google could use the data it compiles about their campaigns to make a business pitch to a competitor. They imagine a scenario in which the biggest online advertiser in a category is running its campaign through Google's ad-serving systems. Not only would Google be helping that marketer deliver ads to particular Web sites; it would also be capturing data about which Web sites and types of ads work best. Advertising executives fear that Google could then resell that same intelligence to competitors. (Any data that marketers put into Google's ad systems will remain confidential, a Google spokesman says.)

For all the cutting-edge technology on the Web, the systems used to measure Internet use are mostly based on traditional models. Both comScore and Nielsen rely on panels of people who agree to let the companies track their online movements, from the Web sites they visit to the purchases they make. ComScore and Nielsen then take these data and extrapolate from them to make statements about the broader population of Internet users. In some cases, Nielsen benchmarks its findings against a Web site's computer-server logs.

..........more at WSJ

George Carlin dies at 71

he was my favorite stand up comedian/artist. Very witty and intellectual. this is certainly a sad day. He will be missed.


http://blog.wired.com/underwire/2008/06/comedian-george.html

Saturday, June 21, 2008

send to car


both yahoo and google are adding features to their map products to link to car navigation systems. makes a lot of sense.

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

LTE looking like the 4G standard

worth noting..

[from wsj]

Moving Away From WiMax,
Nortel Shifts Focus to LTE

By SARA SILVER and DONNA KARDOS
June 11, 2008 2:06 p.m.

Nortel Networks Corp. said Wednesday it is reducing its investment in developing the ultrafast wireless Internet technology called WiMax to focus its research dollars on a competing technology preferred by major U.S. and European carriers known as LTE.

The decision, announced at the Toronto-based company's annual analyst meeting, comes as Nortel is coming under pressure to focus on fewer new technologies that can make up for the erosion in its core business supplying telecom carriers. The telecom-equipment maker, which posted losses in the last two quarters, has pared costs while it waits for sales of its most promising innovations to pick up.

Nortel shares were trading up 9.6%, or 78 cents, at $8.89 in New York Stock Exchange trading Wednesday.

Nortel's decision also signals how much of the telecommunications industry is gravitating toward LTE—or Long Term Evolution—as the primary fourth-generation wireless broadband technology. The biggest U.S. carriers, AT&T Inc. and Verizon Wireless, are pursuing LTE, as is Vodafone Group PLC, the European telecom giant which owns Verizon Wireless in a joint venture with Verizon Communications Inc.

Nortel's switch comes two months after some of the world's largest network-equipment makers agreed to a licensing framework they hope will accelerate adoption and deployment of LTE.

Over the past several years many equipment makers including Nokia Siemens Networks, Samsung Electronics Co. and Motorola Inc., invested in development of WiMax products, believing it would let carriers offer mobile broadband services sooner. But some carriers are announcing they will begin to upgrade their so-called third-generation, or 3G, networks to LTE within two years. That evolution has come particularly quickly in the U.S., where 3G devices are only now becoming popular. Fourth-generation technology allows for faster Web browsing and downloads over mobile phones and other wireless devices.

Most of the interest in WiMax is coming from carriers in emerging markets that are expanding wireless coverage to many areas for the first time.

In the U.S., WiMax is being pursued by Sprint Nextel Corp., the No. 3 carrier which is struggling to stem subscriber losses, through a $12 billion venture with Clearwire Corp., a startup also backed by cable-TV companies such as Comcast Corp. and Time Warner Cable Inc., Internet giant Google Inc. and chip maker Intel Corp.

Further reducing Nortel's interest in WiMax, the company wasn't among the suppliers chosen for the Sprint venture, and the thin margins offered in emerging market contracts forced the company to step away from its investment. Nortel said Wednesday it had established a joint agreement with Alvarion Ltd. to provide WiMax-compatible equipment to its customers.

.... more on WSJ

Monday, June 9, 2008

ATT site down at iphone 3G launch

well! go to apple.com for iPhone 3G info.. att is down


Saturday, May 24, 2008

microosft cashback not working..

Apparently Microsoft's cashback is hugely popular or not well executed.. site's not working!



Sunday, May 11, 2008

msft-yahoo

looks like i was right, the merger did not happen.. msft may come back, they are expected to.. but i think it'll be a mistake.. most mega mergers have failed to come together due to cultural, integration issues..

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

CRAVE IT

http://crave.cnet.com/8301-1_105-9931014-1.html

JAVA version also available now. (www.freemobile411.com)

Sunday, April 27, 2008

voice search now on sprint

Last week we launched our first Java product. It's available on Sprint handsets to start with. Its key differentiators are: Voice Enabled Search, only offering with People Search that connects to to an live operator if needed.

Our Java platform is quite unique as it is built on our own proprietary multimodal browser that uses a form of X+V authoring (we call it veXML). This gives us the unique ability to update the application at any point in time just by altering the XML on our servers.

While others (Microsoft Live Search OR Google Maps) require new application downloads, our product will evolve without requiring new application downloads.

Find it at www.freemobile411.com

Saturday, April 12, 2008

freemobile411.com

We launched our first direct to consumer product : Freemobile411.com OR fm411.mobi

some related press..

CNet
http://www.webware.com/8301-1_109-9911425-2.html

TechCrunch (Feature in #1 business technology blog and target)
http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/04/11/v-enalbe-adds-real-humans-for-new-411-pitch/

AltSearchEngine (Top 10 blog) referred by sister blog ReadWriteWeb
http://altsearchengines.com/2008/04/11/v-enable-launches-freemobile411™

Mobile Content Today
http://www.mediabistro.com/mobilecontenttoday/gps_maps_and_directions/venable_celebrates_free_mobile_411_82248.asp

TMCnet:
http://mobile-voip.tmcnet.com/topics/consumer-voip/articles/25078-v-enable-marks-1st-annual-411-day-with.htm

Wirelessdevnet
http://www.wirelessdevnet.com/news/2008/apr/11/news1.html

Washington Post
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/04/11/AR2008041102360.html

Original Moconews
http://www.moconews.net/entry/419-mobile-content-bits-moms-luv-txt-freemobile411-launches-nikes-iphone-ap/

Venture Beat
http://72.32.125.226/2008/04/11/v-enable-s-mobile-voice-search-goes-old-school-with-live-operators/

Venture Beat syndication in the Industry Standard
http://www.thestandard.com/news/2008/04/11/v-enable-s-mobile-voice-search-goes-old-school-live-operators

Local Mobile Search (Opus Research)
http://localmobilesearch.net/?p=573

Media Bistro
http://www.mediabistro.com/mobilecontenttoday/gps_maps_and_directions/venable_celebrates_free_mobile_411_82248.asp

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

CTIA

This CTIA had announcements related to products VE (V-ENABLE) has launched and demoed a while back. Good to see the market is appreciating what we do. Key highlights were
- Voice search getting endorsement from major search company (Yahoo)
- 411 integration with data products continues.

We announced a broader product: A local search service that can be used on a mobile phone Or web. Search interface includes Voice, A live Operator (411) Or by typeded input. Our local search offering is the broadest in the market and caters to all types of consumer usage behavior.

Shortly we will be announcing a subset of our carrier product for consumers, stay tuned.

All in all, CTIA has left us quite busy as it has helped accelrate the need for technologies we have build over the last few years.

regards,
D

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

CTIA

There is a lot of news these days, with the economy, spending on ad dollars, breakup of MOTO, Yahoo + MSFT etc etc.

Will we hear some major announcements at CTIA? I am not sure.. The theme though will be around openness from both the carriers and handset OS makers (like Android, Apple)..

V-ENABLE will be making some "open" announcements of its own that have been keeping us very busy lately. Over the last seven years we have constantly transformed our company, the latest series of transformations that had started in 2006 will show their face at the show.

I'll post another blog at or after the show. One thing is for sure, we are looking forward for a very exciting CTIA.

Friday, February 29, 2008

Microsoft lowering prices of Vista

There is an article on today's papers about MSFT lowering retail prices of Vista, authors comment that it would have little effect on MSFT's Vista revenue because a very small % buy Vista of the self. What I did not read in any article this morning, and is of significance is: I think one of the reasons for lowering retail prices is a strategy MSFT is taking for consumers with APPLE laptops/desktops to install vista at ~$130.. If it were to MSFT, they would give away free Vista to anyone with an APPLE computer.. Also important is MSFT realizing that increasing % of US households are buying APPLE computers which could be a long term threat to their OS regimen.

-D

Saturday, February 16, 2008

Blue ray won

Toshiba is expected to pull out of HD-DVD as of next week (WSJ).. Blue ray was becoming almost exclusive..

I own a PS3, investment is safe.

Expert "Toshiba Corp. is highly likely to pull out of the HD DVD business early this week, people familiar with the situation said, marking the end of an intense battle over next-generation formats against Blu-ray technology"

Since Time Warner Inc.'s Warner Bros. decided last month to support Blu-ray exclusively, sales of Blu-ray players and movies have started to gain momentum, putting pressure on Toshiba to consider its options.



---

D

Sunday, February 3, 2008

Microsoft's Yahoo acquision

Good or bad for MSFT?

Smart move by Steve Ballmer. Ever since Bill has (or was few months into leaving), MSFT has become increasingly acquisitive, compared to the earlier mentality of : We will build it and in time (no matter how long it takes) take the no1./no2 position. Clearly that strategy was working before Google came into the scene. Now though, MSFT has to move faster than it's used to, and it tried to be competitive to Google and Yahoo!, but failed. Ray Ossie turned MSN into Live, but it still is in infancy compared to where Google and Yahoo! are.

Will it pass the government's scrutiny?

This is going to be a pretty tough one, as noted in the response letter by Google, some areas : such as email and IM, Yahoo and MSFT will take a far larger lead compared to a number two player (AOL/GOOG). I personally think it would be pretty hard for MSFT to acquire Yahoo! as is. Yahoo! will have to be broken into 2-3 units, such as search & search marketing, Media (music , video , portal etc) and communications (email, IM etc). MSFT would be allowed to acquire the search and search marketing unit, although the other two would likely get bought by some big investment bank OR a News corp etc


Is the MSFT/Yahoo merger good for the consumer?

I dont think the consumers benefit or care as much. Competition is always good and 3-4 players aren't so many. The real benefit could come to advertisers, who end up paying a boatload of money to GOOGLE to be on the top 5 ads should next to the search results.

the game just started, time to focus on Superbowl!

-D

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Apple's Macworld

I was eagerly waiting for this morning's speech by Steve Jobs. The news/blogs before the show were hoping to set lower expectations from this years Macworld than the last years. And they were right. Apple is quite an innovator but it was clear that they were busy making current iPhone successful last year than coming up with a new improved iPhone that guys like me would buy into ( must have 3G and Exchange email support) I will have to continue to wait.

As for the new Air laptop, If Walt (WSJ) was not impressed, it'll be hard to get me to buy into it :-)

The laptop looks cool and am sure has a lot of innovations, knowing Apple's reputation with hardware I would have to assume it is better than the Sony Viao TZ that so far claimed to be the thin and light standard here in US. Sony suffers from Vista and Apple would not have that problem.

Stock has tanked more than 10% today.

On the good news, iPhone gets 1 of every 1000 web views and is already 20% of the smartphone market. That's a big deal.

As for V-Enable, we will play with the SDK and widgets and get something out to all of you that makes iPhone even more valuable.

Monday, January 7, 2008

yahoo relauncehes yahoo mobile

as per techcrunch, yahoo is relaunching its mobile app and mobile page today. Looks like the relaunched app will allow developers to write their own widgets for the app. That sounds like a novel concept (similar to Qualcomm/BREW's UI One). I have played with yahoo go in the past on my windows phone and found is quite cumbersome. Looking forward to this new update..


here is the article:

http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/01/06/yahoo-opens-up-its-mobile-platform-to-third-parties/


-D