# Monday, December 08, 2008

image As those who have read my ramblings here know, I'm always looking for the perfect holiday mix.  This year, it's been easier thanks to two services I've been playing with: Zune Marketplace and Pandora. 

Tip#1: Find Great Holiday Music on Zune

Zune Marketplace serves up a broad range of musical suggestions, but if you click on the "more" option under Genres, you'll find the latest programming for the holidays.  Select, "Seasonal" and you'll find some great playlists - Christmas Classics and Holiday Cocktails are two of my favorite playlists.

Don't have Zune?  It's a great time to take advantage of the two weeks free offer or you can sample the catalog for ideas on Zune.net.

 

Tip #2: Serve up Pandora's Holiday Stations

A tip of the hat to the Pandora team for sharing some tips for creating Holiday stations on Pandora! Just start by entering the name of a holiday song you like. To create a station based on an artist who performs holiday music, enter their name, followed by the word 'holiday' (for example, 'Ray Charles Holiday').  

  •         Classical Christmas    Listen Now
  •         Rockin' Holidays         Listen Now
  •         Swingin' Christmas    Listen Now
  •         Jazz Holidays             Listen Now
  •         Country Christmas     Listen Now

Having spent the majority of this weekend boxing up our house for our move, I can attest that these work great on Pandora on Sonos as well. (Note: Pandora also now powers MSN Radio here.) 

And don't forget last year's Holiday Trivia Picture pack - great to put as a slideshow on your TV or Digital Picture frame during holiday parties. Happy holidays all!

posted on Monday, December 08, 2008 6:42:07 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Monday, November 24, 2008

download I just discovered these gems on Channel 10 - upload plug-ins for Facebook and YouTube coming to Windows Live Photo Gallery.  I've often wondered where the rest of the upload wizards are.  Now, can we just get one plug-in that handles upload to multiple services at the same time?

posted on Monday, November 24, 2008 7:13:18 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Friday, August 08, 2008

Ahh yes, Olympics frenzy is upon us.  The time when countries cheer on their athletes in games of sport and goodwill.  It's also a time when companies cheer on their contributions to the Olympic efforts and services available to keep tabs on the event which is lining up to be the largest streamed event in history.  Since we're Addicted to Digital Media around here, it wouldn't be the Olympics without a roundup of the ways you can keep tabs and this year it's much cooler - with thousands of hours of content available in HD streaming on the Web for Windows and Mac users, perhaps for just a few weeks we'll see some peace and harmony.  Unfortunately for my friends outside the US, these services are specific to the USA so apologies. 

So, here's the roundup:

1.  Olympics Tracker in the new MSN Toolbarimage

What: This isn't your old MSN Toolbar.  Generally I cringe at installing any toolbar app into my browser, but this new version is both functional and visually slick in part thanks to being built with Microsoft Silverlight.  You'll find an Olympics button that presents the latest medal count, photos, video and sport-specific news right from the comfort of your web browser. The button even glows when updates happen to notify you in a polite way.  Alternately, Live Search is optimizing search results to include latest stats, news, and medal counts.  Details available here.

How to get it: Visit www.newmsntoolbar.com and download the free toolbar.

 

2.  Live and HD On-demand Events on NBCOlympics.comimage

What: So you forgot to set your DVR to record that amazing football game, or want to watch live coverage but it's not being broadcast on the myriad of NBC/Universal TV stations?  Have no fear - NBC and Microsoft Silverlight are bringing over 1000 hours of live and on-demand Olympics coverage to your PC or Mac.  On-demand coverage will use a brand-new adaptive streaming technology capable of true HD-quality video over the Web - no stopping and buffering either, the technology automatically adjusts video quality to available bandwidth.  Live events are presented using the Emmy-award winning Windows Media technologies.  Be sure to check out the enhanced player - in the Control room you can stream up to four events - at the same time! 

How to get it: Visit www.nbcolympics.com/video and check out the new player.  Note: Silverlight is a required installation for the experience.

 

3.  Windows Media Center on Windows Vista Premium & Ultimate

image What: If you have a Windows Vista Premium or Ultimate PC, you can watch NBC Olympics On the Go in Windows Media Center, an Internet-delivered catch-up TV service from NBC Universal powered by Wavexpress’ TVTonic platform, no TV-tuner required. This free download-and-play service differentiates Windows Media Center as the platform with the highest-quality Internet-delivered Olympics experience in the USA. No word yet on whether this works via Extender - I will have to try it later.

With NBC Olympics On the Go in Windows Media Center, you will get:

  • NBC Sports’ complete on-air HDTV coverage of the Beijing Olympics on the NBC, USA and Universal networks – even when you don’t have a TV tuner for your Windows Vista Home Premium or Ultimate PC
  • 225 hrs of long-form Olympics video over 17 days
  • 24 sports, full opening ceremony, and a closing ceremony montage
  • Up to HD quality, with the vast majority of the video delivered in 840x480 progressive scan resolution at 1.5 Mbps bit rate, plus several events per day delivered in 1080i resolution

How to get it: Click here for details or here for the TVTonic app  Note: for 64-bit Windows users, hang tight- there's an update going through certification that should provide support before the games actually begin. 

There are a host of other ways to get the Olympic experience as well. Google has a summer games page and mobile page and I'm sure to have missed some others.  Tell us what you think- how will you be watching the Olympics?

posted on Friday, August 08, 2008 8:07:58 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Saturday, July 19, 2008

IMG_0001According to a study done by Vodaphone, less than 1 out of 4 people carry information on who to contact in case of emergency or serious accident. A movement over the past four years encouraging users to create an emergency contact entry in your phone under "ICE" has also been working its way around the world. But what happens when that information is locked in a password-protected phone or mobile device?

Is it time for mobile OS makers to offer an ICE contact feature that's accessible, even if you don't have the device's password? 

ICE Background
The ICE concept started in 2005 by British paramedic Bob Brotchie:

"I was reflecting on some difficult calls I've attended, where people were unable to speak to me through injury or illness and we were unable to find out who they were. I discovered that many people, obviously, carry mobile phones and we were using them to discover who they were. It occurred to me that if we had a uniform approach to searching inside a mobile phone for an emergency contact then that would make it easier for everyone." (BBC Radio 4 Today)

Sadly, it was only after the London Bombings that the concept really took off worldwide. ICE is a great idea and the ITU Standards Body has also gotten behind the concept, outlining a language-independent format for storing next of kin information and applications are available for both iPhone and Windows Mobile for ICE details. The problem is that it doesn't go far enough with today's phones.

"Sir, please wake up.  What is the password on your phone?!"
Not likely to be the first thing you want to hear after an accident.  Concerns surrounding privacy, theft, and overall security of personal information have created a social and organizational culture that places a premium on secure access to the device.  As cell phones increasingly become mobile information worker devices, corporate policies are "pushed" down to the phones, requiring a passcode to gain access to corporate email servers in order to protect the organization in case of device theft.  This is a great feature, as is "remote wipe" with Exchange servers where the remote device can be erased in case of theft, but the phones features as an emergency device haven't kept up with the times.  E911 requires that mobile phones be able to make emergency calls in the US.  But as far as I know, no requirements exist for making emergency contact, doctor, or allergy information accessible.

Is it time for ICE to become a Standard on Mobile phones?
The concept is simple - have a feature in the mobile OS that allows you to select an ICE contact and a standard way for emergency personnel to 

So the questions I'm putting out there are:

  • Does this feature actually exist on any smartphone platform?  and
  • Should it be standardized and mandated by the Government, similar to 911 calling on locked phones?

Pushing the Envelope - Phone of the Future
It's a slow Saturday so I'm going to riff here a bit. In the future, one could imagine that phones will start to implement features that work together to protect their owner in case of injury. In recent months, there have been stories that social messaging tools such as Twitter and Facebook broke news of the devastating earthquake in China, beating out traditional outlets.  Imagine if your phone could similarly report an incapacitating injury? For example, accelerometers like those in car airbag systems that can detect the massive G-forces associated with catastrophic car crashes could combine with location based services to notify emergency personnel.  Laptop hard drives have for years had accelerometers to lock the HDD heads in case of an accidental drop.  Of course, there would have to be sufficient safeguards against the occasional dropped phone (e.g. Phone telling the owner "I'm okay, are you?").   If the user doesn't respond in a given time, emergency personnel are notified with last known coordinates taken from the GPS. 

In major disaster events such as earthquakes or building collapses, emergency reports from multiple phones could combine to notify emergency personnel of major life-threatening events in near-realtime, pinpointing the location and potential severity. In additional to dialing 911, a "Panic Button" on the phone could notify 911 of your location and secondary information if you can provide about the type of emergency.  And 911 would have the ability to enable an audible "chirp" beacon on your phone, similar to what Firemen and emergency personnel wear today in case of building collapse or low visibility.

These are just a few ideas.  Just imagine what we can (and will do) as location based services move from being trivial people movers and notifiers to people savers.  Isn't it time we start in that direction with benefits?  Today you can get a discount on auto premiums if you have a car alarm.  How about a discount for an E911++ enabled phone on my life insurance? :)

posted on Saturday, July 19, 2008 11:17:33 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback
# Thursday, July 17, 2008

YouTube on TiVo

Courtesy of Dave Zatz, TiVo is indeed pushing out support for H.264 for TiVo Series3 and TiVo HD owners (requires hardware support, sorry Series 2 owners).  New service features include accessing YouTube, and CinemaNow will reportedly be available soon as well as the 2.4 update enables.

No official reports if this update will allow you to stream H.264 content from your home network though it would be a wise thing for TiVo to enable for enthusiasts.

In other news, Amazon.com is (re)launching their online store for movies and television called "Amazon Video on Demand" according to this NY Times article.  This is a smart branding move on their part - most consumers (and industry types) understand the concept of VOD, and "Unbox" requires more explanation.  Amazon's service will offer streaming and while it wasn't in the announcement, I'd expect this new update to work its way into the TiVo shortly where Amazon Unbox already exists.  It's been confirmed to be available via Sony Bravia Internet Video Link but at $300, I'm skeptical this will have mass-market appeal.

posted on Thursday, July 17, 2008 10:18:48 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Wednesday, July 16, 2008

imageLooks like Yahoo! Movies just posted the trailer for "Terminator Salvation", the prequel starring Christian Bale coming out next summer.  Finally, the Terminator franchise is going to do more than dance around the apocalyptic future, rather send Christian in to de-fibrillate it much like he's done with imageBatman.  Star Trek and Terminator prequels?  Summer 2009 can't get here fast enough.

Check out the trailers here:

posted on Wednesday, July 16, 2008 4:58:15 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Lots of reports of issues with battery life on the 3G in the Meme the past few days.  Adding insult to injury comes confirmation that most 3rd party adapters can't charge the power-hungry thing. I got bit by this yesterday for the first time when I plugged my iPhone 3G into my VAISTech SoundLinQ adapter in my Toyota Prius.  As soon as I did, I got a wacky message on the device that it would not charge.

Firmware problem?  Not likely. Reports are trickling in that the original iPhone charged via Firewire pin-out while the new 3G only supports USB 2.0, breaking compatibility with many devices including Apple's on pricey and discontinued HiFi sound system. This is most disappointing given I depend on my daily commute to charge my phone up on days when I'm using the iPhone instead of my BlackJack II.  A visit to the VAISTech forums and subsequent iLounge extensive review notes:

Another difference Apple snuck into the iPhone 3G is the latest change to its ever-shifting definition of Dock Connector accessory compatibility. 
This time, Apple has quietly discontinued support for certain types of charging accessories, namely ones that used the FireWire standard rather than USB. Unlike the video accessory change, developers should have known that this one was coming for a long while, so you’re less likely to be affected if you’ve made a recent purchase.
Because of this change, in addition to old accessories such as Belkin’s Auto Kit and Bose’s original SoundDock—identified by one of Apple’s hand-selected reviewers as no longer capable of charging the iPhone 3G—you’ll find that more recent accessories such as XtremeMac’s RoadShow have also stopped working in any way. They’ll bring up a passive screen that says “Charging is not supported by this accessory,” then a new nag screen that says “This accessory is not made to work with iPhone - Charging is not supported.” For RoadShow, which only did two things—AV-out and charging—this change kills any last vestige of utility the old accessory might have had, requiring the purchase of at least a new charger.

So I can't listen to my iPhone via the integrated system and charge it at the same time and doing so at the office isn't really an option since I'm in meetings most of the day. WOW.  Adding insult, the in-car adapter cost more than the iPhone 3G!  Talk about forcing an upgrade cycle. 

Apparently others are having issues with this as well:

At that cost, I might as well sell my SoundLinq on eBay and use my Zune all the time in the car.  At least then I can sync and charge from my garage and get the benefit of a ZunePass Subscription for years of music at a cost still cheaper than buying a new in-car adapter.

Update: VAIS Technology rapidly responded to my email inquiry noting they will be offering compatible cables for SL2i in about two weeks.  VAIS will also have an adapter available in about a month for SLi and SL2Vi owners. No word yet on pricing.  Thanks Eugene!

posted on Tuesday, July 15, 2008 10:23:53 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

image

A few weeks ago, I was asked if wanted an opportunity to review a new software app under embargo that is designed to solve one of the great remaining problems with any music library - fixing album art and metadata.  Over the years between WMP/Zune/iTunes conversions of my library, converting all of my tracks into 160kbps MP3, migrating between HDDs and just plain idiosyncracies with ID3 tags and where album art gets stored, my library has become a severe mess.  TuneUp promised to fix it and I have to say aside from a few minor nits, it does a commendable job and is now available for download in two versions: TuneUp and TuneUp Gold but more on that later.

Around the UI
TuneUp is a companion app to iTunes for Windows (Mac coming this Fall) - it rides shotgun, snapping to the right-hand side of iTunes and listens into your library via iTunes' scripting engine. The UI offers four options - Clean, Cover Art, Now Playing, and Concerts.  The first two options - Clean and Cover Art are the meat of the app.  The second two options- Now Playing and Concerts are similar to other solutions offer links to YouTube, Stubhub, Amazon, Google, and eBay searches for artist information and concert listings in your area (via Ticketmaster/Stubhub).  But what sets TuneUp apart is the cleaning feature. My library started off with about 40% accurate information (horrible!) and by running through TuneUp's algorithm, was able to successfully match the majority of my songs. 

image 

imageimageimageimage

Taking it for a Spin
After backing up my music library, I did a series of ad-hoc tests to determine the accuracy of the service. TuneUp representatives tell me it works by applying a heuristic evaluating ID3 tags, filename, and even samples the audio of the song to create a fingerprint of the content. From there, it's matched against Gracenote's massive library of songs.   Gracenote is now a subsidiary of Sony and they've been making great strides in accuracy since their grass-roots efforts as user-supported CDDB so many years ago.

TuneUp correctly found a large # of U2 songs in my library that had missing album art or inaccurate media information, mostly a mix-match of Genre information.  Results are listed in one of three categories - Matches, Likely Matches, and Processing.  All display by album and can drill down to You can then choose to save each track. 

Not Perfect, But Closing in on the Target
Most of my issues with TuneUp are easily solvable.  First the UI has layout issues with the progress bar often colliding with text.  Here is a good example:

image

Another issue is accuracy on Live Sets or rare tracks.  The library does a good enough job of identifying the songs, but normally matches them to studio recordings.  As of right now, I wouldn't recommend TuneUp for eclectic music libraries. 

Also, I've noticed the Genre naming is quite a bit different across the industry - U2 suddenly went from a mix of Pop and Rock to Adult Alternative.  I don't know if that's a bad thing though I'm not sure Bono would agree.  Sheryl Crow's "Good is Good" genre became, "Singer-Songwriter".  Huh?! I actually started using it as an indicator for when content had been cleaned in my library.

Then there's the pricing.  The app appears to be ad-supported, with an American Apparel banner ad at the bottom of the screen.

imagePricing and Advertisements
TuneUp is free to evaluate with over 500 song clean-ups and 50 album covers.  This is  a commendable # for testing and the price of $11.95 for an unlimited version is reasonable.  What I don't see noted here however is whether the Gold version removes the advertisements at the bottom.  I'd like to see more details about how TuneUp intends to use this space and exactly what information is shared with advertisers. Right now this appears to be limited to American Apparel - I don't see much of a fit between the ad and the content though, it would be less annoying if they did some frequency capping and targeted the ads to my interests.  I suspect this is to come in a later release.

Features I'd like to see
TuneUp isn't perfect- but it's pretty darn close.  Here are a few features I'd like to see included:

  • View ID3 Tags and Fix.  iTunes will offer, but I can only see all of TuneUps changes after they're applied.
  • Duplicate finder.  Yes, iTunes has a similar feature but is largely dependent on you as the user to go through and find
  • Lyrics finder. Gracenote offers the service, would be good to see here.
  • Offer to Remove Missing Songs from iTunes. WMP and Zune talk directly to the file system and know when files are removed.  iTunes tries to play and then gives you the dreaded "bang".  Nuke em all as an option.
  • Zune/WMP Media Bridge.  Ensure media info is correctly set in the places Zune & WMP look, and offer a sync option for playlists, playcount, and ratings.  (Check out MusicBridge as a good proxy)
  • Genre Mapper. Ability to rename a Gracenote genre (e.g. Adult Alternative) to Pop or whatever you wish.  It's a highly contentious and subjective topic.
  • Faster indexing and better notification. TuneUp normally works well with ~50 tracks loaded but I decided to try and break it load in over 1000 tracks at a time.  It actually held up remarkably well but the UI updates started getting slow and I wasn't sure if it died or not.  A countdown time or est. time remaining option would be a big help.

Summary
TuneUp solves a major problem of most music enthusiasts, though if you're fastidious about your ID3 tagging, have invested hours in genre matching and the like, you may find continuing to manually update to be right for you.  Also, if you wear a tin foil hat and are concerned about personally identifiable information such as track names, playcounts and personal ratings being uploaded to TuneUp, you may want to scrub through the privacy statement. TuneUp assures us this is used for improvements to the service and personalization features such as concert listings (e.g. they won't give you a suggested concert for a one-star rated artist you hate).  For the mainstream music lover, TuneUp is a worthy addition to your toolkit, even in this first release with one caveat- back up your library before you try.  It's not perfect, but it's major improvement over in-app solutions.  Be sure to tell us how your experiences are going in the comments below.

posted on Tuesday, July 15, 2008 8:26:03 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Monday, July 14, 2008

Here's a roundup of announcements today.  I was off playing with the family on Bainbridge Island otherwise I would have posted earlier.

  • Xbox 360 is getting a totally new Dashboard (Engadget) complete with Avatars. This is one of the many cool things being cooked up but haven't been announced/released yet.  The funny thing is a few months ago, having James Cameron on stage at the Advance conference talking about his upcoming movie project, "Avatar" caused a few heart palpitations in
  • Xbox Live gold members to get NetFlix on-demand, complete with shared viewing experience with your friends.  Now if only you could record your own RiffTrax ala MST3K.  There's an idea Lance!
  • Xbox Live Party System.  Friends stick with you- watch a movie together, share a slideshow, go from game to game etc.   Finally- make it a game night with your buddies!
  • Improvements to how Xbox 360 works overall.  Improvements include running games from HDD - no more whirring during games, 16:10 output via VGA or HDMI for those of us connected to 16:10 displays (vs. 16:9) and you'll be able to make Xbox 360 purchases over the Web.
  • Mark Whitten details it all in an email that went around our group like wildfire later today. 

More details and video at www.gamerscoreblog.com and www.majornelson.com.  There's even more goodness waiting in the wings which I can't talk about.  But for now, off to go play with new package that just arrived under embargo. More on that later ;)

posted on Monday, July 14, 2008 8:07:19 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Friday, July 11, 2008

Generated Image

 

Unfortunately it's in closed beta.  Ping me here for an invite.

Update:  Sorry all, this was a bad joke on my part but I think underscores ludicrous names that are popping up.  I used the Web 2.0 logo maker and ran a Mary Poppins reference through it, all Web 2.0 style.

posted on Friday, July 11, 2008 11:50:50 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback

imageI've been trying to use MobileMe for the better part of two days and had intermittent success with half-loaded apps, pinwheels to infinity, and missing apps.  Apparently there's now an explanation on www.mac.com (right).

Tough day for some friends in Cupertino today but I'm sure everything will be worked out by next week. I'm just hoping my tongue in cheek joke wasn't too close to the mark.

posted on Friday, July 11, 2008 5:54:21 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

imageGizmodo has detailed the official AT&T response to what is happening right now with what's being called, "The iPocalypse".  Basically it appears the hordes are trying to update iTunes and iPhone 1.x devices to the 2.0 firmware which requires re-authentication at the same time all AT&T stores are trying to do the same.   Friends in NYC reported 1.5-2hrs to activate in AT&T stores per person before they scrapped plans for in-store activation and are sending users home with promises you'll be able to activate at home.  But unfortunately, the dialog box at right is what all of we purchasers worldwide are being greeted with instead.

To add insult to injury, if you're upgrading an existing line to the new iPhone, your old SIM card is deactivated before you leave the store.  Normally this whole thing would just be a minor nuisance but now I'm without a functioning mobile phone with no idea when it will be back.  So I paid ~$300 plus giving AT&T a free day's worth of my monthly fees due to service outage.  If this keeps up, AT&T better credit my account for lack of available service. 

I'm really surprised there's been no official response from Apple after hours since this issue arose.  Perhaps they're hoping the Apple PR halo effect will enact a cone of silence and this too will be forgotten/ignored.  A couple of sarcastic comments about enterprise scalability are sure to be made, Apple will tout unprecedented demand and the populist press will note only a few minor issues

Chris, you were right to stay home.  Meh.

Update: Authorization servers appear to be working now.  Updating now.

Update2: Andru Edwards and the crew at GearLive detail their snafus with activation.  Looks like my issues were small in comparison.

posted on Friday, July 11, 2008 10:37:46 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Thursday, July 10, 2008

image In what's sure to be the "Killer app" for iPhone's release, Apple's App store showcases a free download from Apple titled, "Remote".  The marketing speak says:

Be a mobile DJ. With Remote, you can control music on you Computer or Apple TV from your iPod touch or iPhone.

Play, pause, skip, shuffle. See your songs, playlists, and album art, on your iPod touch or iPhone as if you were in front of your computer.

Remote works with your Wi-Fi network, so you control playback from anywhere in and around your home.

 

Features

- Control the music on iTunes or Apple TV

- See the album artwork on your Remote

- Search the whole iTunes library

- Control your AirTunes speakers

 

Looks like there may be a function for multi-zone music playback with this feature- something I'll have to investigate.  More screens below:

imageimageimageimage

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Update: I've successfully tested the app with both an Apple TV and a massive iTunes library and report that the performance is snappy overall. When the Apple TV was powered off, a notification appeared on the iPhone which was also a nice touch.  Apps like this have existed for years for Windows Mobile-based devices, and most recently percolating to a solution for Windows Sideshow so that's now what's new- what's new is that this is the first time Apple has intimated the iPhone as a control device vs. consumption of media.

As for the Sonos comparison, it's readily apparent that Remote (and iTunes in general) is missing a critical feature IMO - synchronized audio playback.  Sonos' wireless mesh network delivers sync'd playback so flawlessly that I'm hard pressed to think of another CE-device in my stable that has worked so well.  This is a key feature for multi-room audio as we regularly fill the house and yard with music when cleaning, entertaining, celebrating the holidays.  I will say the iPhone fits in my pocket a sight better than the Sonos controller - a complete comparison to come in the future.

posted on Thursday, July 10, 2008 4:58:00 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [4] Trackback

Capture Lots of first takes coming out on the Apple App Store that just went live. Overall it appears cleanly laid out with sections for, "New", "What's Hot", "Staff Favorites", and two top ten lists, "Top Apps" and "Top Free Apps".  I'm pleased to see the latter, though you will need to log into your account to download as they count all free apps as "Purchases" as well.  The devil will be in the details on whether Apple releases a stat in the weeks to come that they've had over N purchases from the store when most will likely be free.

Here are my three takeaways:

Apps want to be shared
In order for the app store to take off, they're going to need users to visit, and often.  Apps aren't like music - music is innately more viral a medium than, "Hey I just got this cool weather app". So the "Tell a Friend" feature while basic today, I would expect to start expanding out.  Who knows, perhaps legions of Facebook developers are working on a "Apps on my iPhone" app for Facebook profiles today...

I still can't run any of these apps (yet)
Perhaps the 2.0 software release is imminent, but I can't seem to find it yet.  So I'm happily downloading the software but can't do anything with it. Sure to remedied soon, but goes against the traditional Apple grain of release it all at once.

Apple thinks my four-year old is old enough for an iPhone, shuns ESRB
The Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB) is a standardized rating system for determining the age-appropriateness of video games.  Virtually everyone in the industry is a member and supports ESRB but it appears Apple's app store is opting for a 4+, 9+, 12+, 17+ age rating system which also hints that Apple thinks your iPhone/iPod Touch is age-appropriate for a preschooler.  Suuuure.

posted on Thursday, July 10, 2008 4:46:29 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

Capture Courtesy of Lifehacker, iTunes 7.7 may not show up via "Check for Updates" yet, but it is available on the interwebs for those of us who aren't sleeping. 

Download here and read up on Lifehacker here.  One thing to note- the "Applications" option for the left-hand sidebar appears to be disabled by default.  To enable, go into Edit, Preferences. 

It also looks like the rumors of the iPhone remote control feature are true - stay tuned for more details.  I suspect Sonos could have a run for their money here if Apple decides to do multi-zone playback.

Update: iTunes non-ceremoniously crashed on me after five minutes of non-use in the background.  No explanation on why but it was syncing my Apple TV and iPhone in the background.

Update2: It looks like the Apple App store is up and running.  Once you've enabled Applications, select it and choose, "Get more Applications" at the bottom of the screen. I've included a screenshot here.  No iPhone software update yet though...

posted on Thursday, July 10, 2008 4:04:55 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Wednesday, July 09, 2008

Something about these logo/boxshots looks awfully familiar...

 

windows_me 

"Better Living in the Digital World" Hmm

posted on Wednesday, July 09, 2008 4:09:41 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Tuesday, July 08, 2008

As Media Center enthusiasts know, www.thegreenbutton.com is a fantastic resource for all things Media Center.  The good news is that the ads are gone.
I'm going to ping the team and get some details but this is fantastic news as we've always been super-supportive of the site and the contributions of the founders, moderators, developers, and community members over the years.  Perhaps it's time for me to re-up my account during vacation and pop into the site.

posted on Tuesday, July 08, 2008 5:03:19 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback

Drobo Those who know this site also know I'm a fan of the Data Robotics Drobo.  I've caught some heat from product managers for other comparable products because I just don't think they match the capabilities of this little device.  One area I've been disappointed about however is performance.  The Drobo docks massive amounts of storage in a small, rock-solid little unit but it's S L O W when doing large transfers.  That's why I'm keen on today's announcement of the new Drobo 2.0 with a faster processor, faster USB 2.0 and new Firewire 800 performance options.  I recently moved my home Media Center into a single desktop system with a Quad-core and it's been working without a hiccup using my Drobo as the primary storage for all media except for two things:  1) Hard Drive spinup lag when the drives haven't been used in a while, and 2) that pesky data transfer performance.  I have two  HDTV (OCUR) tuners connected via USB as well as sundry peripherals and haven't seen any perf issues fortunately, though I would

I'm eager to try out the new Drobo 2.0 and may pick one up - but if I have to transfer over all of my existing nearly 2GB of Drobo 1.0 content to the Drobo 2.0 via the original's sluggish USB, that may be a deal-breaker.  I'm hoping I can swap the drives out and the new 2.0 device will pick up where the 1.0 left off.  I have email into the folks at Data Robotics to learn more on that topic and a few other - will report back here.  Thomas Hawk also has an excellent review here.

posted on Tuesday, July 08, 2008 12:50:24 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Friday, May 23, 2008

Earlier this week at Microsoft’s Advance08 conference, Robbie Bach and Mark Kroese presented some examples of how the company is putting the fun in ad-funded experiences on three screens – TV, PC, and Mobile devices, with content examples including Gaming , Video, Music, and Mobile scenarios.  I wanted to provide a few additional thoughts about what was shown to the audience of advertisers but with a consumer perspective.  It’s our job to make sure there is a clear value for the consumer, often in the form of “free stuff” in exchange for a sponsorship message that’s lightweight (read, doesn’t piss off the consumer) while meeting the goals of the brand advertiser who is footing the bill.  Here are a few examples:

clip_image001 Gaming – Among the 12M+ Xbox 360 owners, nearly 10M have Xbox Live accounts, connecting to the community to participate in multiplayer games and community activities such as tournaments.  One of the most popular features on Xbox Live are the free downloads – for example, a recent Nissan/Forza 2 Motorsport promotion involved a free downloadable car pack for in-game play, and an online tournament where the winner won an actual Nissan car. 

The Result: Over 350,000 downloads of the free car pack, and over 6.7 million game sessions played during the tournament.

Video -  Movies are universally appealing, and Xbox Live Video Marketplace is no different.  McDonald’s recently completed their “Burgercon” promotion on Xbox Live by offering a free movie download to all Xbox Live users, in this case “Austin Powers”.

The Result: The movie became the most popular movie ever downloaded on Xbox Live.

clip_image002

Music  & Mobile – Like Movies, Music is also universally appealing and a largely social type of experience.  Zune Social is an online community where Zune owners can opt-in to share their music interests and listens with friends.  In the past four months, nearly 2 million Zune owners have chosen to participate the new Zune Social.  One concept we’re piloting this summer is the ability to connect with artists and music events as “friends” on the Social.  The goal is to take what’s been so successful on Xbox with gaming and video, and extend that value exchange to music enthusiasts on Zune Social.  The experience is a microsite on Zune Social, offering free music and video downloads, sponsored by brands such as Doritos in the example shown and connected to music downloads from the CMJ Music Festival. 

Rule #1 is, “Put music in their ears and a smile on their face,” so we’re going to be very careful in how sponsorship messages are presented.  In the example shown this week, it’s just a background wallpaper with attribution to Doritos – no in-song ads as some have speculated.  As a Zune Social member, I'd 4Y6H4970have to opt-in to download this Zune Card, and even then, it would be presented separate from my music library.  Brand sponsorship might be displayed in album art or wallpaper on the downloaded playlist that includes a small brand logo such as the image of the Zune 80 from the demo at the right.  We've had no discussions about putting ads into song tracks or the like- that would go against rule #1!  But like game and movies downloads, someone has to pay to offer the free and legitimate download. We’re finding just like at music concerts, there are plenty of brands interested in sponsorship opportunities, in this case offering free downloads in exchange for creating a positive connection with music lovers. 

As mentioned, this is a pilot launching this summer, will always be opt-in and the team will be actively soliciting your feedback.  Just like on Xbox, the goal is to put the “fun” in ad-funded downloads with Zune.  Trust is earned and there are plenty who will assume the worst- that's part of the fun (and the challenge) of my new job.

posted on Friday, May 23, 2008 7:39:50 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [5] Trackback
# Tuesday, May 20, 2008

A Microsoft VP once told me, "In the world of business, there are Pioneers and there are Settlers.  Microsoft needs both."  I've always gravitated toward the startup opportunities within Microsoft.  A few years ago, I was given the opportunity to help take a fledgling technology called, "WPF/E", name it, brand it, and launch it as "Silverlight", with my team.  The response has been phenomenal, with over 1M downloads/day and a developed balance of features for RIA-focused and Media-focused features. 

A number of months ago, I learned of a new opportunity that what right in my wheelhouse of consumer-focused digital media as a steward of user experiences in the Entertainment and Devices Division as Director of Product Planning for Ad-funded Experiences.  Looking back on the most personally rewarding times of my career so far, I've most enjoyed building teams that focus on the user experience, and deliver "free stuff" for consumers. One could argue my first attempt there was developing the original XP Digital Media Fun Pack and Powertoys, many of which included a small sponsorship message.  Following the acquisitions of aQuantive, ScreenTonic, and Massive Inc., it became clear to me where opportunity intersects with my personal interests.  Put another way, working on the Silverlight platform and seeing so many cool apps developed helped me to realize I missed having a hand in building consumer products myself.  It/s hard to leave the amazing leadership of Scott Guthrie, Soma and so many friends, but I'm not going far.

So what does the job involve?   It starts with working with many of the teams in Entertainment & Devices - Zune, Mobile, Xbox, and more to identify market opportunities where the consumer wins and brand advertisers get impressions.  This is a new area and we're going to step lightly and take feedback as we did with over 10M enthusiasts on Xbox Live who regularly download free add-ons for their games - Map packs, cars, tracks, and even feature-length movies sponsored by brand-name companies like McDonald's, Frito-Lay, Nissan, Ford, Nike, and many others.  The question is can we do the same thing for more media types and devices.  In a nutshell, that's my job - to put the fun in ad-funded entertainment experiences.

And I'm hiring. More on that later :)

posted on Tuesday, May 20, 2008 7:08:23 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [7] Trackback
# Thursday, March 06, 2008

Ryan Stewart and Long Zheng summed it up nicely.  This kind of banter and candor is why I work at Microsoft.  A CEO who will go, "Monkey Boy" just to please his customers.  Guy had some really nice things to say about the new Microsoft culture which was great to hear.  I'll post the keynote here when available.

posted on Thursday, March 06, 2008 8:50:42 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Friday, February 29, 2008

Sorry it's been so long since I've posted.  A lot going on as of late so here's a quick rundown on activities and topics I'm going to write about during flights:

  • Mix Update. The teams have been working incredibly heard in preparation for the MIX conference next week.  I've seen a sneak preview of some of the demos and think attendees won't be disappointed. 
  • Silverlight 2 coming. ScottGu (now a newly minted VP!) provides a glimpse into Silverlight 2 on his blog.  If you can't be at MIX this year, don't fret- the videos will be posted on the Web shortly after the events thanks to Jeff Sandquist and team.
  • HD-DVD is dead.  You can start buying Blu-Ray discs now or just go the digital route- my preferred method of delivery
  • Apple TV Take 2.  Will I cancel my NetFlix and Comcast subscriptions?  Thoughts over the weekend and I'll explain how you can score one for $99.
  • uStream as NannyCam.  Take an old IR-shot Sony DV camcorder, firewire and UStream my wife is addicted to her new Nannycam as a baby monitor.  I also hacked together a Vista Sidebar gadget for her which I may post. Now if only it was available in Silverlight...
  • Dell XPS m1330. - my new and best laptop ever, despite the crapware
  • New Silverlight site launches - Congrats to the team!
  • MyNetflix Plugin for Media Center - Another reason why I need to put a full PC in the living room?
  • Playing with CubeDesktop and loving it.  A must for any power user (thanks Chris)
posted on Friday, February 29, 2008 7:27:15 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Thursday, January 24, 2008

Having reported here my frustration with AT&T and Samsung's silence, it would appear Sammy just released the Windows Mobile 6 update for owners of the Samsung Blackjack mobile phone, months after the BlackJack II went on sale with WM6 pre-installed and nearly a year since its announce.  Note that you will need WinXP or lower OS to do the update.  What's interesting is that Samsung is not only making this available, but noting it is "highly recommended to be installed":

Where Do I Obtain Windows Mobile 6 For My SGH-i607 (BlackJack) And What Does The Update Do?
Samsung has released a software upgrade for the BlackJack, which is highly recommended to be installed. This update includes an upgrade to Windows Mobile 6.0 and numerous enhancements/corrections. The update may take up to 10 minutes to complete if the system is already set up.

Download and additional details: Windows Mobile 6 upgrade for Samsung BlackJack.

posted on Thursday, January 24, 2008 6:43:53 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Thursday, January 10, 2008

It's rare I get this excited about a productivity tool but this is one heck of a great solution. It's causing quite a buzz among a group of us. Check out the Lifehacker coverage here.

Click the button below to sign up for the beta.

 Xobni outlook add-in for your inbox

posted on Thursday, January 10, 2008 11:16:19 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Monday, January 07, 2008

By popular demand, Bill Gates' last day at the office video, courtesy of Channel 10.

Bonus points if you can name all the cameos and the song he's playing on Guitar Hero. ;)


Bill's Last Day: The CES Keynote video
/p>

posted on Monday, January 07, 2008 5:37:18 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Sunday, January 06, 2008

Silverlight_Final_CES I'm watching the CES 2008 keynote right now, streaming live on the web with Microsoft Silverlight at www.microsoft.com/ces.  I'm so happy they allowed the funny video with a long cast of celebs in the simulcast.  I have four streams going right now for test purposes. Kudos to the istreamplanet team for keeping up with the crushing stream load, I understand it kept rising and rising during the keynote.

Speaking of which, I'm happy that Bill just unveiled that NBC Universal has selected Silverlight exclusively for online delivery of the 29th Olympics in Beijing, PRC in partnership with MSN.  Lots of exciting stuff to come there.   I'll write more on that later.

 

More pictures below:

Silverlight_Snip_2CES_Silverlight_Microsoft

Capture

Update: If you're unfamiliar with this whole Silverlight thing, check out Andy Plessner's Beet.TV interview where we discussed Silverlight last year. For some reason that day, I opted for the Quicksilver T-shirt instead of my "Evil Monkey" shirt.  Perhaps it was partner love.

posted on Sunday, January 06, 2008 7:18:16 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Friday, January 04, 2008

Capture The new Microsoft at CES site is up, and it's powered by Silverlight. There are so many projects underway now it's hard to keep track of them all and this was a great one to see.   
What's more, you'll be able to watch the keynote live in-page with Silverlight or via WMP/default browser.  Take a look, spin the wheel in LV fashion and check out the latest news from Microsoft at CES.

Hope y'all enjoy the show - Sunday night @ 6:30pm

posted on Friday, January 04, 2008 7:28:45 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback

Todd Bishop of the Seattle P-I provides a glimpse into the Take-Home testing that many of us do on digital home technologies at Microsoft.  Scott and Hakkan are two of the guys I've had the pleasure of working with in the past - nice to see inside their homes. 

Which brings me to realize my setup has changed so much in the past few years since I was GPM for Media Center- it might be time for a video this weekend walking around our Digital Home 2.0 ;)

Microsoft employees try out new technology at home

posted on Friday, January 04, 2008 4:02:39 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Thursday, January 03, 2008

Jake's got some great guidance here for those of you going to this year's CES.  After 7 years of attendance, I'm sitting this one out and going to watch from afar.  A few more suggestions:

 

1.  Bring a 3 prong Multi-Outlet Adapter - you know, one of those little doo-dads that turns one 3-prong plug into three.  Now, when you get to McCarran airport and can't find an outlet during your flight delay, you can share with a spare.

2.  Hydrate Hydrate Hydrate - drink 2x as much water as you think you need.  Stop by the grocery store in Las Vegas and stock up or you'll pay $$$$ elsewhere. We used to get palettes of water at the local store and bring them into LVCC for the booth staff.

3.  Bring Mints for you and others - you're sure to encounter others who after last night's bender didn't rush home and brush their teeth.  A polite offering of a mint as you take one can often improve the persons outlook - with you and others.

4.  Bring Airborne - Placebo effect or actual benefit,it doesn't taste bad and can help ensure you're more in balance beyond vitamin B suggested by Jake.  I'm also a fan of melatonin if you're from a different time zone.

Hope that helps, as always be sure to share your CES war stories and tips here.

Update: Even more great suggestions from LiveDigitally's Jeremy Toeman here.

CES Survival Guide - 7 Tips For a Successful Consumer Electronic Show ~ Jake Ludington’s Digital Lifestyle

posted on Thursday, January 03, 2008 3:57:08 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback
# Monday, December 31, 2007

A few friends/family members have reported a rash of JS/snz.a virus messages when surfing this AM.  I'm not sure what is going on, but it looks like the issue just popped up and almost all of these users are running CA anti-virus software judging by the comments on Dynamoo's blog.  If I learn more, I'll post it here.

Update: The Register is commenting on the situation here.  Here's to hoping for a quick response from CA.

Dynamoo's Blog: Js/snz.a - likely false positive in eTrust / Vet Anti-Virus

posted on Monday, December 31, 2007 7:14:36 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Wednesday, December 19, 2007

The Gratitude CampaignA lot of you will be traveling over the holidays and may find yourself in a similar situation; I hope you'll take a moment to say thank you.  It isn't about politics, it's about people.

Kudos to the Seattle Seahawks, The Storm, Trailblazers and others for participating.

The Gratitude Campaign

posted on Wednesday, December 19, 2007 6:40:34 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Thursday, December 13, 2007

As a rabid Flickr user, this is a long overdue and very welcome addition.  Now, how about sharing the Flickr love on my TiVo or Media Center?  My pictures want to be set free to roam the house...

Flickr Adds Stats To Photo Pro Accounts

posted on Thursday, December 13, 2007 5:41:19 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Tuesday, December 11, 2007

This is a very cool example of data visualization possible with Silverlight, as developed by a Microsoft intern.  Gratuitous animation but put a smile on my face- something charts rarely do.  Nice work Richard!

Richard Z's JellyGraph

posted on Tuesday, December 11, 2007 7:57:47 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Friday, December 07, 2007

An interesting dialogue about consumer fair use rights happening right now.  I'm an advocate of protecting IP, but this bill (auspiciously named the PRO IP Act) goes way, way too far.

I may not agree with all of Jeremy's points (transmitting an MP3 intended for mass distribution is different from shoplifting a CD and should carry stiffer penalties IMO).  What concerns me about these kinds of bills is what happens to the Mom or Dad who puts copyrighted music under his home video, posts it and it goes viral?

This is an area where I encourage all of you to get familiar with the issues and make sure your congressional representatives have your views. Good places to start learning:

Jeremy Toeman’s LIVEdigitally » Blog Archive » A note to Nancy Pelosi regarding the PRO IP act

Michael Gartenberg - (un-) common sense on copyright

posted on Friday, December 07, 2007 10:35:48 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Wednesday, December 05, 2007

I normally don't link to movies, but this is Indiana Jones. My friend Craig has some new pictures of Harrison Ford in his best character ever.
I am so ready to go see this movie, despite Shia LeBoef.

Craig's MovieBlog: More Indiana Jones Pictures

posted on Wednesday, December 05, 2007 6:50:30 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Tuesday, December 04, 2007

I've written here about Silverlight 1.0's capabilities to support rich media delivery with video and audio delivery and with ScottGu's update on Silverlight 2.0, I figured it's time for an update on all the goodness that is happening

When we think about Silverlight and media, we really think about content enablement - how to deliver video, audio, animation, and interactivity in a cost-effective way from creation to distribution to experience.  The teams are continuing to innovate on all three of these fronts:

 

Silverlight Content Creation with Expression

image Just a few months ago, we released Expression Encoder 1.0, a easy to use yet powerful tool for building interactive Silverlight media content including live events and on-demand video. Encoder solves a particularly frustrating problem of how to convert files such as QT or AVI into VC-1 for delivery in Silverlight.  Live streaming supports multiple camera angles, direct connect from Silverlight and Windows Media Player clients for PC, Mac, and Mobile, and easily supports broadcasting from Windows Media Services, a feature of Windows Server.  By providing a series of templates that can be easily modified with Expression Blend, you can host your videos on any web server (Windows, Linux, Mac whatever) with simplicity. In recent months, the Expression team released a Publishing plug-in to upload video up to HD quality  with Silverlight Streaming, a freely available service by Windows Live.  There's even a plug-in for Windows Live Writer that makes it easy to publish Silverlight video in your blog.  More on that later. 

If you're interested to get started with Expression Encoder, download the free trial  and check out the How-to videos here.  And pay attention to Mix for more to come ;)

 

Silverlight Content Distribution with Windows Server 2008

Today, content providers have a rapidly growing number of options for delivering media on the Web.  In particular, delivering on-demand video has never been easier. The majority of sites today choose to host video on web servers, where the average user watches under half a minute of video, but downloads nearly five minutes of content.  Video consumption is exploding online and of you ascribe to The Big Internet Slowdown Deloitte Consulting and Nemertes Consulting have predicted, we're in for a big slowdown by 2010.  "Users will experience a slow, subtle degradation, so it's back to the bad old days of dial-up," says Nemertes President Johna Till Johnson. "The cool stuff that you'll want to do will be such a pain in the rear that you won't do it."

Just as we're hearing about the importance of responsible energy use, content providers are increasingly being encouraged to do the same for Internet bandwidth.  By only delivering the data consumed by the user by using the streaming server features in Windows Media Services for Live and on-demand content and/or the upcoming IIS7 Media Pack, content providers can realize lower costs of delivery of a wide range of content types and be a more responsible, "Netizen".  One of the complaints we've heard about Windows Media Services in the past is the complexity of having to manage a separate service in a separate console for media, separate from the web server and application farm.  Windows Media Services 2008 addresses this with simplified admin, and unparalleled scalability.  In tests, WMS 2008 is twice as scalable as the release in Windows Server 2003 on the same hardware which means fewer servers, and higher performance.  Unlike some other solutions, Windows Media Services is a fully 64-bit enabled service, not a 32-bit solution running atop the platform.  There are a number of additional features here, which Harry Mower goes into on his blog here

But what if you want to  host your on-demand media content on your Web server or are supporting multiple file types from different vendors?  This is where the IIS7 Media Pack comes in.  This new add-on delivers intelligent bit-rate throttling for a wide range of file types - including Windows Media, QuickTime, Real, and even Flash video content.  What's more, it's configurable so that it can be used for application downloads as well.  By throttling content downloads, you ensure a more efficient and scalable delivery model.  Windows Server 2008 also supports clustering, enhanced cache/proxy support and much more that customers have come to expect in an industrial-strength content delivery platform.

HD video puts increasing strain on infrastructure, which is why we're working closely with big content delivery networks and startups alike who are looking for ways to address, and ensuring that Silverlight is a viable solution for them.  Download WS2008 and the IIS7 Media Pack Bit-rate Module today.

It's not just about stunning marketing sites and video on the Web - enterprise customers have recognized the proven reliability and scalability of Windows Media streaming and IIS for LOB applications, corporate communications, or e-learning solutions using a trusted solution broadly used for years- it's just getting better.  Experience matters as Forrester's recent RIA report notes- even in the enterprise.  It's our intent to seamlessly integrate Silverlight into existing installations and make it simple and scalable for others.

Windows Server 2008 will be released on February 27 2008, but you don't have to wait to start taking advantage of the platform already in use in some of the biggest sites on the web- you'll hear more about this come launch.

 

Free Content Distribution with Silverlight Streaming

If you aren't interested in setting up your own server, you can host on the MS network via Silverlight Streaming by Windows Live.  Currently available in test form, you can host up to 4GB of Silverlight applications on Microsoft's geo-distributed network. Primarily created as a simple way to host video-based applications for developers, Silverlight Streaming has been adopted by Solution Providers and even ISVs such as Roxio for simple video publishing.  To fully prove out the network, we've been hosting applications including the Halo3 Interactive Manual.  You can expect even more great things from the Silverlight Streaming team in the new year.

 

Content Playback in Silverlight

image Silverlight 1.0 today offers great media delivery options, addressing cross-platform support with Mac and Windows (Linux support coming), and cross-browser support for IE, Firefox, and Safari. Thanks to the efficiencies offered by the SMPTE-standardized VC-1 video format, Silverlight can deliver HD-quality without hardware acceleration as can be see here.  (It's important to note that two formats were selected for next-generation video experiences in Blu-Ray and HD-DVD - VC-1 and H.264. Today over 90% of all HD-DVD titles are presented in VC-1). No pre-requisite version of Windows Media Player or any other player is required with Silverlight, just a small browser plug-in.  What's more, with Silverlight, your HD content can play off of any web server or take advantage of the Windows Server efficiencies covered above.

There's a lot more happening by way of media support in Silverlight- more details to come in the following months. Scott detailed the developer-focused roadmap here. One thing I can saw we're working on across the stack is performance - at MIX last year, folks saw what .NET could do, with a 1000x improvement in performance over script-based solutions.  The teams are thinking about performance across the stack as seen with Windows Server, and you'll see with Silverlight 2.0

posted on Tuesday, December 04, 2007 9:16:58 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Saturday, November 17, 2007
 
Back when I first met with the Zune community team, I was a little skeptical of the plans for Zune Social.  Now I'm a  believer - I'm having too good of a time discovering music through the tastes of my friends on Xbox Live.  Yes, you too can regale yourself in the suckiness of my musical tastes.  That's okay, I have a thick flak jacket. The only wish I have is for the ability to share my playlists directly.
 
I'm in the process of building our road trip mix for next week's trip to Grandma and Grandpa's for Thanksgiving.  I'm searching for family friendly podcasts, music and more.  If you have suggestions, feel free to suggest your Top 5 or Top 10 list here, browse and make fun of my music here.
 
And in case you're wondering, yes Virginia, the team is playing a lot with Silverlight right now ;)
 
Update: I'm starting to get suggestions via Zune which is pretty darn cool.  Thanks everyone for the friend invites and suggestions.  Here are some additional ones that came in through email:
 

Learn to Fly--Foo Fighters

Things Have Changed--Dylan

This Is How a Heart Breaks--Rob Thomas

Runnin' Down a Dream--Petty

Someday Baby--Dylan

LA Woman--Doors

Locomotive Breath--Jethro Tull

Won't Get Fooled Again--The Who

You Can't Catch Me--Stones

Freebird--Skynard

China Grove--Doobie Bros.

Don't Fear the Reaper--Blue Oyster Cult

We're an American Band--Grand Funk Railroad

 
 
posted on Saturday, November 17, 2007 5:55:31 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Friday, November 09, 2007
posted on Friday, November 09, 2007 12:55:10 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Sunday, November 04, 2007

All has been quiet here as of late as I've been focused on other topics, namely raking an insane amount of leaves, and running the October gauntlet with two very active boys.  We now return to your regularly scheduled blogging. ;)

posted on Sunday, November 04, 2007 6:19:24 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Saturday, September 22, 2007

clip_image001As promised, the little elves have have been busy working on new surprises. The official Halo 3 Game Guide is now live, powered by Silverlight.  Get a sneak peek inside the game, the characters, and the story so far is this first of sure to be many game guides for upcoming Xbox 360 and Games for Windows titles. 

In addition to the game guide, we've placed new videos including "Enemy Weapon", "Believe" in HD and standard def for Mac and Windows users to enjoy in the Halo 3 Silverlight Movie Gallery.

But we heard you couldn't get enough Halo 3.  So we also posted, "The Making of Diorama", a story of the enduring survival of our species as told over a 3D snapshot of the epic battle and "Museum".  These were only shot in SD but we think you'll enjoy the higher quality originals.

Watch them all here, powered by the same Silverlight Streaming by Windows Live network you can use for your own clips.  Get your 4GB of free video space here.

posted on Saturday, September 22, 2007 6:56:50 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Sunday, September 16, 2007

On Friday, I had an opportunity to attend the Halo 3 Launch Appreciation Team party at an undisclosed location in the Redmond area.  This was the core marketing and  product management team responsible for releasing the product and it was a fun time.  Jerett, the Group manager for H3 had managed to secure eight final copies of the game for us to play and I took third in one of the rounds as a veritable noob on the final product.  All I can say is that the game still has surprises in it and the feel is so refined, so much more authentic when compared to Halo 2.  This was a good reminder that sometimes the most important meetings you have are outside the office.

By now a whole lot of you have seen the Halo 3 HD videos via Silverlight.  A question I sometimes get is why all the properties aren't done in Silverlight?  Answer is simple: we just shipped and a veritable army of vendors, creative agencies, and content providers A) are responsible for efforts such as the Halo launch and B) are being trained up on Silverlight as we speak, starting with top agencies of record.  Most of these campaigns were underway long before Silverlight was ready to ship.  Rest assured though, we'll have some more Silverlight goodies for fellow Halo 3 fans shortly. ;)

Speaking of goodies, one of my favorites is the new Halo 3 "Believe" experience.  This interactive diorama museum from the future was moving and has led to some very well produced fan commercials.  I'm pretty sure one of the prizes given away at the party was a soldier from the diorama (with a broken thumb) but it's significance was lost on me until I saw the site.

I've now had the pleasure to be involved in all three Halo launches - helping to produce the WMP skin and promotional DVD's for H1, the unveil of the H2 video in HD and 5.1 audio for the WM 9 Series Launch, and now HD and interactive efforts around Silverlight.  In my estimation, the journey has been the biggest reward.  I'm looking forward to launch day - Sept 25th.

posted on Sunday, September 16, 2007 11:54:36 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Thursday, September 13, 2007

The folks over on HowardForums are reporting that AT&T will finally release the Windows Mobile 6 update for Samsung Blackjack users on September 17th.  I hope this is true...  While a beta was unofficially released on the web a few months ago, the lack of any Internet Connection Sharing was a big issue for me.

posted on Thursday, September 13, 2007 8:14:18 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Thursday, September 06, 2007

Michael Scherotter has a great how to on creating screencasts with Silverlight here.  He provides a workflow for Camtasia end to end which is pretty cool.  We should do all our product demos like this.

posted on Thursday, September 06, 2007 9:36:55 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

Beet.tv has a good interview here with the creators the Entertainment Tonight application powered by Silverlight.

posted on Thursday, September 06, 2007 9:28:24 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Tuesday, September 04, 2007

ETsilverlight_540x317 Scott Hanselman says:

Wow, I didn't see this coming. (That's a lie, I totally saw it coming and have been saying it could, would and should happen for months) Silverlight 1.0 is officially released as of 9pm PST and surprise! It will formally support Linux (screenshots) as Moonlight via a partnership with Novell in the coming months.

 

Andy Plessner says:

Microsoft just released Silverlight 1.0, the cross-platform, cross-browser plug-in for streaming video, games and other multi-media content. The company has a number of content partners who will use Silverlight including Entertainment Tonight, HSN, World Wrestling Entertainment.

Entertainment Tonight launches today in Silverlight.  (As reported on Beet.TV Major League Baseball launched in an earlier version of Silverlight in late July.)

Like Flash, Silverlight is a thin plug-in download... Thanks to everyone at Microsoft for such warm hospitality for the purple channel.
(Of course Andy- our pleasure!)

Computerworld noted:

[Microsoft] said it will work with Novell Inc. on the Linux version of Silverlight, to be called Moonlight.

Microsoft will build the video codecs for the Moonlight project and supply Novell with software to test and ensure Silverlight runs well on 32-bit and 64-bit PCs running Suse Linux, Red Hat and Ubuntu.

Infoworld quoted the WWE's creative director as saying:

It's the advantages from a development side that Silverlight offers us," in terms of streaming video costs and displaying multiple video streams, he said.

"Flash certainly is a great tool, and we have some Flash product on our site, but I think overall as a company to partner with, Microsoft is going to be a great partner going forward," Angert said. WWE plans to use Silverlight for wrestling videos and broadband content. Current systems will be kept in place without much change, Angert said.

And the News.com NewsBlog noted:

Another key part of Microsoft's Silverlight strategy is to rely on its development tools. Its Visual Studio programming tools and Expression-branded designer products ease collaboration between developers and Web designers, Goldfarb said.

Version 1.1 of Silverlight, which Microsoft announced at its Mix 07 conference in May, will be available next year, probably in the summer, he said. That version will have support for the .Net programming model used in Microsoft's development languages, including scripting languages.

With the Silverlight 1.0 release, Microsoft also intends to release Expression Encoder, a tool meant to make it easy to encode video for display on the Web with Silverlight.

Not a bad start.

posted on Tuesday, September 04, 2007 10:40:04 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

Chalk it up to global warming.  Earlier tonight, Microsoft and Novell announced plans to bring Silverlight to our shared customers on Linux. In a solution called, "Moonlight", Novell will be creating a Silverlight implementation as a part of the Mono project.

Why is this significant?  It's a continuation of our commitment to listen to customers and bring Silverlight to the platforms that matter to them.  Scrape away the veneer and it's simple- because they asked us to. Nicely.  A lot of credit goes to Miguel de Icaza whom I had the opportunity to meet at MIX.  From there, the teams held a series of conversations throughout the summer. 

Also in the news, Entertainment Tonight is doubling down with Silverlight, as are about 35 other partners announcing support. 

I'd also be remiss to not mention that tomorrow AM, we're launching Expression Encoder.  If you're looking for an easy tool to publish video and audio content or even live events with Silverlight, Expression Encoder is your tool.  In the coming weeks, we'll also release a plug-in for publishing directly to Silverlight Streaming and an API that makes it easy to publish via other services.

Too much for one blog post.  Net-net, at MIX we said we'd deliver Silverlight 1.0 this Summer* and we did. Silverlight 1.1 is in tandem development and significant resources are going to this effort.  It's time to Light up the Web.

Congratulations to the teams who made this possible.  Truly the most "can do" effort in my time at MSFT.

(Note: Many web properties will launch tomorrow AM Pacific by design)

posted on Tuesday, September 04, 2007 9:21:12 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback
# Monday, September 03, 2007

This is to my recollection my first link to Fake Steve Jobs.  I enjoy him every once in a while, like a Far Side cartoon.  Tonight, I read his post, "A Boring Rant" about iTunes vs. NBC and he almost sounded lucid.  I think he's off the mark on Apple creating original video. They'll start where the risks are lower - music.

My prediction:  Apple will start a music label as the first step. They will have at least three major artists -

  1. An established, older but wildly successful artist that's experienced a slight downturn, to focus on the aging adult contemporaries with the budget to buy Mac products
  2. A hot country artist because we're reportedly a NASCAR nation*
  3. One more youthful artist, probably focused on the urban demographic.

Or they may go all-in with a big defection en-masse.  Apple will make a statement to the industry by making these tracks available at a slightly cheaper price than other tracks on the site.  The might start by offering non-DRM'd tracks for $.99 vs. the requisite $1.29 found now.  They'll generate modest profits and promote like hell to get on the radio airwaves.  They'll use television ad time traditionally used to drum up iPod awareness (like we needed any) to promote the songs and the new iPods on their way.

Or perhaps I'm off the mark and the numbers don't add up.  Either way, ubiquitous broadband is the real disruptive force happening here, and on that we agree.

*My son is an addict and preschool slave at the altar of Pixar's Cars.  John Lasseter and the Pixar team are phenomenal in my book, but if I have to hear, "It's all gas and goes for McQueen today!" one more time...

posted on Monday, September 03, 2007 9:52:17 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback
# Monday, August 27, 2007

Time magazine has an interesting article on why Facebook is the future of the Web.  I wonder if Lev Grossman was reading about how Scoble is completely off his rocker (again)?  Scoble has such affable charm though.  As Larry "Major Nelson" Hryb would say, "I like his energy". Scoble isn't afraid to be wrong in a very public venue (especially if it brings him more traffic).  Shrug.  But back to the Time article.  Facebook's ignition hinges on the simple "sociomathematics" dating back to the BBS era, updated for the Web:

                             Bozo + Bandwidth = Troll

It all reminds me of the movie "Gremlins".  If memory serves, there are two things you never do to a cuddly Mogwai (sp?).  1)Don't feed them after midnight and 2) Don't ever get them wet.  Facebook operates on the same principles - People are congenial and know the rules - feed your community with positive contributions and don't be a wet blanket.  The repercussions can be swift.  As Time notes:

Unlike the Internet, Facebook is structured around an opt-in philosophy; people have to consent to have contact with or even see others on the network. If you're annoying folks, you'll essentially cease to exist, as those you annoy drop you off the grid.

The quality of the connections is what matters. Even the features focus on positive aspects of relationship building - sharing TV and movie tastes, music, and more.  Want to know what people really think of you?  Try "applications" such as the Honesty Box.  Or if you're a real fan of the office, trade Schrute Bucks.  I love the Deep Thoughts by Jack Handey app. There's even a site for rating these fun little apps called AppRate.  These are all basically Widgets or Gadgets realized in a useful way.

The question is whether they can continue their phenomenal growth without succumbing to the fickle interests of a bite-sized society. Already some complain about the thirty-something's and beyond that are descending on Facebook.   Time makes a point that communities will self-select, regardless of age.  It will be interesting to see how Facebook evolves over the next year.

posted on Monday, August 27, 2007 8:21:26 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Saturday, August 25, 2007

I've discovered certain new games for Xbox 360 require that you do NOT have a "strict" or "moderate" setting in order to player match games.  Overall, you may see a performance increase in online network play if you follow the instructions found here.  They helped my situation quite a bit with a new Wireless Router.

posted on Saturday, August 25, 2007 5:10:52 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Friday, August 24, 2007

I just caught wind that the MSN Election Guide, powered by Microsoft Silverlight is now live.  You can browse through the latest news, up to date positions on the issues and even video clips with results powered by Windows Live Search.  My favorite feature is the ability to compare candidates positions interactively.  This is a tool I will definitely be using.  My only wish is for an RSS feed for each of the issues. 

Hot on the heels of Tafiti powered by Silverlight earlier this week, there are some very interesting things happening.   Congrats to the MSN and Windows Live teams!

posted on Friday, August 24, 2007 2:27:39 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Thursday, August 23, 2007

Some of you have noticed my summer hiatus.  I was going to lose some vacation at the end of the year and negotiated an extended leave of seven weeks (5 down, two to go).   We're off learning to live as a new, nuclear family with our newborn son, and just finished a marathon four weeks of family visiting.  I have tons of pictures to upload to Flickr and have also spent some time with Expression Web and Photoshop helping some fellow BBQ'ers create the Pacific Northwest Eggfest site.  Home improvement projects a plenty, and we just did our first major (10 hour) road trip with geek toys which I'll blog about later.

Thanks to all for your inquiry emails- I'll be posting a lot more often here once I've finished recharging!

posted on Thursday, August 23, 2007 6:08:13 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Sunday, July 08, 2007

Flowers A few of our friends at Jackson Fish Market just launched their first web app- a virtual florist service called, "They're Beautiful".  My wife and I both worked with founders of the company and were elated to receive virtual flowers from multiple friends this weekend from the service.  While I'd love to see a Silverlight version (we're still in beta), the Flash DHTML UI is very nicely done. Each flower was created from paper and was artfully scanned. There's also a tamagotchi-style feature where you can plant he flowers in your greenhouse and have to water them regularly. Thanks to everyone for the flowers and congratulations to Hillel, Jenny and the team at JFM and their sponsor Vosges Chocolatier

posted on Sunday, July 08, 2007 10:13:30 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Friday, July 06, 2007

This AM, the meme is buzzing about Skinkers and Silverlight.  Matteo Berlucci the CEO of Skinkers is one of the most impressive people I've met in a long time. Matteo gave an excellent presentation during my keynote at Streaming Media East and I'm encouraged to see the great coverage they are getting for LiveStation, which uses MSR P2P technology and Silverlight to enable stream-slinging.  No, they are not a competitor to Joost, and are more complementary than anything else in this emerging market.  Don Dodge has more over here.

 

Whoops gotta go- our son apparently wants to arrive a little early (c-section was scheduled for tomorrow and things are happening) so off to the Dr to check it out.

posted on Friday, July 06, 2007 8:50:35 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Wednesday, July 04, 2007

It seems everyone needs to post their thoughts on the iPhone.  I think I saw it in the license agreement actually.  So here are my thoughts, composed as haiku:

Activation pain;
Where is Exchange ActiveSync?
Best iPod ever.

 

Feel free to contribute your own.

posted on Wednesday, July 04, 2007 5:56:20 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Monday, June 18, 2007

ww100_winner_badge CNet's Webware site is billed as "Cool apps for everyone".  So when we heard that Silverlight was nominated for a "Webware 100 Award" in the publishing category we were elated.  Today, the 100 best Web 2.0 products were announced, chosen by you.

So on the heels of the Popfly PC World announcement, you can imagine my surprise when I learned about two hours ago (under embargo) that Silverlight is a Webware 100 winner.  My favorite quote:

We're already starting to see some pretty good-looking Silverlight Web applications crop up, although the platform is both young and lacks some of the expert developers that Flash has under its belt. Given time though, this could be the next big thing.

And we're only in Beta. Congratulations to the Silverlight (and Popfly) teams!

posted on Monday, June 18, 2007 8:10:55 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

Breaking news: Yahoo stock is up on news that chairman and CEO of Yahoo! Inc. Terry Semel is stepping down.  Semel joined Yahoo in 2001 after 24 years at Warner Bros.  Jerry Yang, co-founder and former executive at Yahoo will be returning to active duty to replace Semel .  Let the "return of Steve Jobs' impact on Apple" prodigal son comparisons begin.  Personally, this is one of the most encouraging moves I've seen.  I wonder what Furrygoat will have to say about this.

Update: It looks like it took Valleywag all of 2 nanoseconds after the announcement to post the obligatory "Jerry Yang is no Steve Jobs" story.

posted on Monday, June 18, 2007 8:10:55 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Friday, June 08, 2007

The meme is all gaga over an MIT project demonstrating the ability to power a 60W light bulb up to 6.5ft away from a wireless power coil using magnetic waves. Funny thing is this isn't news - the announcement was made last November. Two other companies, Powercast and eCoupled are doing similar things. If it proves out, this is a very cool development but the real question I haven't seen asked is: how efficient is it?  Does it take 90W of power to support a 60W bulb? Can it scale to support multiple devices like a wireless power strip?

Wireless charging of your cell phone may be just the break the iPhone and other multi-function devices will need to avoid the Russian Roulette game of managing your power consumption between music, video, email, and voice calls so you're not caught with a dead phone.  Will it replace all your cables in your home?  I'm highly skeptical.

posted on Friday, June 08, 2007 8:10:55 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Thursday, June 07, 2007

In 2006, CBS introduced a new series, "Jericho", about a small midwestern town banding together to survive after a series of coordinated nuclear attacks across the US.  Part "Red Dawn", part "The Day After" I'll admit I got hooked on the show.  CBS cancelled the show a few weeks back, prompting outrage among some viewers.  A bit of hilarity ensued when nuts of all sorts started to show up via mail at CBS, sent by fans of the show.  In a tip of the hat to the show's reference of WWII's General McAuliffe's one-word response to a German surrender ultimatum ("Nuts!"), online groups started to mobilize.  In all, a reported 20 TONS of nuts were delivered to CBS Entertainment in CA and NYC.  The result is of course, CBS has reversed its decision to cancel the show (which was slated against American Idol). It will return as a mid-season replacement with at least 7 episodes.

I first heard about this two weeks ago when I stumbled on NutsOnline's "Save Jericho" campaign.  This is a great example of a small business identifying an opportunity and connecting with a smart marketing and social networking component. 

And how did CBS make the announcement?  On the JerichoWiki @ CBS.com of course.  My favorite line:

"P.S. Please stop sending us nuts :)"

Speaking of the nuts, from what I've learned, CBS is donating them all to our troops overseas.  A smart move.

posted on Thursday, June 07, 2007 8:10:55 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback
# Monday, June 04, 2007

The site says, "On June 5th, Data Robotics will change the way you think about storage forever".  RAID-style expandable storage at any point?  It sounds too good to be true!  As one who just filled my 500GB RAID1 setup (largely with recorded MCE TV programs) this product sounds like an ideal solution- automatic backup, mix and match HDD sizes, makes and models, and it will work with my Mac or PC. If this works as advertised, I may be sitting in a pool of storage soon. 

posted on Monday, June 04, 2007 8:10:55 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Sunday, June 03, 2007

clip_image0022The question is simple: "What are the best Web apps?"  Silverlight hasn't shipped 1.0 yet but is already named a finalist in the publishing category.  Feel free to vote for your favorite here.

posted on Sunday, June 03, 2007 8:10:55 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Friday, May 18, 2007

Ok the blog is back up with some load-balancing features so I can talk about Popfly!  This is for the YouTube & MySpace generation- interested in mashups that bend to your will, combining mapping, Flickr, and bLaugh with unintended consequences.  Given all the new API's starting to show up, this has tremendous potential for the developer challenged.  Just connect the dots (literally) and create your own. It will even roll the code into a Windows Sidebar Gadget or enable you to embed easily into your own site. This is just an Alpha and LOT more is planned.  But I have to hand it to John, Dan and team this is an awesome use of Silverlight.  Watch the video and let the mashing begin.

posted on Friday, May 18, 2007 7:24:45 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Friday, May 11, 2007

This weekend, you can experience the Xbox Elite campaign in Silverlight on the Microsoft.com homepage.  Go check out the Xbxo 360 Elite in all its glory.  (Note: If you don't have the Silverlight Beta installed, you'll see a ribbon to see the site in Silverlight, note that Silverlight is in Beta).

This is only the beginning... Kudos to the Microsoft.com team on this pilot endeavor.  I'm off to NY tomorrow- spend Mother's Day with my mom (sorry honey) and then off to Streaming Media East.  It should be a fun time.

posted on Friday, May 11, 2007 8:39:15 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [4] Trackback
# Sunday, April 29, 2007

Last night, Scott Guthrie and a few of us on the Silverlight product team went to see Aerosmith in concert at the Mandalay Bay - something I've always wanted to do and it as worth every moment!

Tonight I finally met Dave Winer in person at a Blogger meetup.   Today was mostly partner meet & greets, keynote rehearsals (which look great) and a few other things. One of them was giving Jeff Sandquist a special edition Microsoft Silverlight skateboard- the same design seen in the intro video at http://www.microsoft.com/silverlight.  He love skateboarding as do I.  The difference is tha the can actually skateboard.

 

These are special giveaways for partners and customers.  I've had to carry a few around the Venetian and keep getting stopped by security guards wanting to look at it, attendees etc.  I have one extra and will probably send it spontaneously to the person who does the most impressive Silverlight-enabled app about 30 days from now.   Heck, you might see a few given away at MIX07 :)

Tomorrow blogging is going to be a bit sporadic as I have a pretty tight schedule but will try to post as soon as possible - lots to talk about, so much good but will be covered elsewhere.

If' you're at MIX and want to meet up and discuss Silverlight's media capabilities, feel free to text me at +1-425-442-5712 or leave vmail (sporadic notification) and we'll try and meet up Tuesday or Wednesday. 

posted on Sunday, April 29, 2007 10:12:56 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Interesting post over at Allen's Media Industry blog at Gartner.  Allen is Managing VP of Gartner and covering their media/digital media beat so it was a great pleasure to sit down w/ him.  Prior to our meeting, he had a chance to meet with our friends at Skinkers who have answered the question of "Will Silverlight work with P2P?" with a resounding yes, with their LiveStation product which was demo'ed in our booth and their own. (Note: Microsoft has an equity stake in Skinkers so take that into account. Gartner does not <g>).  LiveStation will broadcast live stations on the Web, presumably ad-supported, using Silverlight as the client and their own platform underneath with some "special P2P" goo from Microsoft.

To quote Allen:

The demo of LiveStation, which showed a good-quality picture from the BBC in the midst of a bandwidth-hogging tech show, has another thing going for it - its ability to leverage Microsoft's new Silverlight platform to create "content experiences" based on LiveStation's streams. Has interactive TV finally found its way to the consumer?

It's a good question, and I look forward to Skinker's public beta.  I've been playing with Joost as well, both are fine examples of what can be done.  It did occur to me that the Joost UI could be done in Silverlight, making it accessible everywhere the Silverlight client resides.  But for me, content is more important than the medium.  And my Slingbox is safely tethered to my TiVo for PVR supports for now. :)

posted on Tuesday, April 24, 2007 12:55:39 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback
# Saturday, April 21, 2007

I've received so many inquiries and kudos about the Silverlight name, logo, and brand video internally and externally that I thought I'd post the real story of how it came together.

  • Naming research was completed in Q3 2006.  We decided to hold it for a special event at a later date.  "WPF/E"- the codename of Silverlight was intentionally unappealing to keep mainstream consumers from installing it until we had good feedback from the developers/designers during the alpha (CTP) preview.
  • Brand work was done by my team working with an outstanding design firm I'll mention here once I have clearance to do so (by them).  We kicked this off in October, and went through many iterations before landing on the animated logo and final frame lockup.  If you don't like the frame, you can blame me Long :)  The orb is a plasmic energy being held into shape by an unseen force, where it spins and flows, almost organically.
  • The brand video was done by Phoenix Edit, a group of ex-Industrial Light & Magic wonks out of San Francisco.    The goal was to show many different Silverlight-enabled scenarios woven together – designer/developer collaboration, personalized e-commerce, devices, user-generated video, viral sharing, and the network effect on sales. We intentionally avoided excessive use of text or voiceover so the video will translate globally as we kick off events around the world. For the line, "Light up the Web" - you have me to blame.  It's more about illumination and blazing a trail vs. blazing anything else ;)
  • The music in the brand video is by my friend and prominent UK DJ Andy Hunter. The song is “Go” off his album, “Exodus”.  Andy consulted on the project and the remix, and has considerable street cred touring with DJ Tiesto. His songs have been used in The Matrix games, and multiple movie/television show. Andy is now on Nettwerk records working on his next release.
  • Customer and partner engagement was tightly synchronized.  During initial briefs, partners were shown a slide announcing the final name as "X-Plat Player Plug-in for Browsers" in Microsoft logotype, a self-deprecating way of noting that we knew the name had to be cool and were on the ball (ironically or sadly some thought that was the actual name!).  We'd show the logo without the name, and always used the name "WPF/E" in our discussions and external communications.
  • For the press announce, named companies didn't even know the final name until a matter of hours before the release hit. We intentionally didn't publish any brand elements internally and had about a dozen people total that had access.  The product management team got really tired of hearing me talk about secrecy and except for a few small nits that went unnoticed, they really did us proud.

Some day I'll post the evolution timeline of the logo if others are interested.

posted on Saturday, April 21, 2007 8:43:15 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback

Every year, the publishers of Videography, DV, Digital Cinematography, and Television Broadcast magazines get together at NAB and announce the "Best of Show" award winners in multiple categories.

The Best of Show Awards are given in recognition of outstanding achievement in the advancement of the art and science of video technology, include the Videography Vidy Awards, the longest running NAB awards program, the Television Broadcast Top Innovation Awards, the DV Black Diamond Awards, and the Digital Cinematography Premiere Awards.

"To receive an award, a technology is evaluated by our panel of editors and industry experts," says NewBay Media Video Group Vice President/Group Publishing Director Doug Krainman. "The winning technologies reflect innovation and engineering excellence.

I'm elated to note that Microsoft Silverlight was the recipient of a coveted DV Black Diamond Award, in such esteemed company as Apple Final Cut Studio 2.  Congrats to the entire team!

posted on Saturday, April 21, 2007 8:08:53 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

Dan is one of the top movers/shakers in the online media space.  A veteran of Web 1.0, EVP of StreamingMedia.com and and Chairman of the Streaming Media conferences,  he recently started a blog and people are taking notice.  I first met Dan back at Streaming Media West 2001, in-between Steve Ballmer heckling me on-stage for using my wedding video in an end to end demo :). 

Dan gets our strategy with Silverlight for the media space.  Customers want a solution with the quality/reliability of Windows Media, standards-support of VC-1, and the interactivity only available from another provider today:

While the higher cost of creating and delivering in Flash over Windows Media has not stopped too many in the past, it has stopped some content creators from wanting to spend two to three times more just to use the Flash streaming format... If Silverlight truly does allow content owners to create, encode and deliver content faster and cheaper while providing the same if not better user experience than Flash streaming, then Microsoft is going to have the advantage in the long run.

Almost every broadcaster I speak to is looking with whetted appetite to the moment they can deliver HD video on the Web in a reliable and effective manner.  While everyone talks about the rapidly dropping price of bandwidth on the Web, we seem to neglect the actual cost of retraining designers to be developers (or vice versa), the production costs associated with creation of more complex, experience-centric websites, and the plain fact that more bits flowing through the "tubes" of the internet = more congestion, particularly at HD rates.  This is why we're investing so heavily in Silverlight for media, and adding new features such as SSL (https://), the same technology used to protect your credit card information, will now be used for over-the wire encryption of progressive streams from Windows Server code name "Longhorn" to Silverlight.  A certain broadcaster said they needed it and were concerned about proprietary protocols of other solutions that were recently reverse engineered.

Dan Rayburn - Subscribed.

posted on Saturday, April 21, 2007 7:56:52 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Thursday, April 19, 2007

Silverlight Hot on the heels of our annoucements at NAB and the overwhelming response, I'm happy to announce the Silverlight team is growing again.  If you want to be a part of the next wave of media experiences and help to build the business to create, deliver, and experience RIAs, new job opportunities exist for the following job roles:

  • Sr. Product Management - Enterprise & Solutions Engagement
  • Sr. Product Management - Server & Services Engagement
  • Silverlight Business Development & Deployment

All jobs are located in Redmond, WA.  Qualified candidates should have minimum of 5 years in the industry, MBA preferable with experience in the enterprise streaming and/or content delivery space.  Excellent customer/partner references are a must.  Skiing and/or 'boarding experience is a plus.

If you're interested, feel free to contact me at LinkedIn or send me email at sean@seanalexander.com with "INQUIRY:" in the title and your resume/VC. Or come find me on LinkedIn if you prefer.

The positions are located in Redmond, WA and will require some travel, about 4 days a month. It's important to note these are senior positions, with large impact on the business working directly with partners, customers, and product team to  ensure we're meeting the needs of our customers in the years to come.  Mac+Windows enthusiasts appreciated. ;)

posted on Thursday, April 19, 2007 12:17:03 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Finally coming up for air now after 10 hours of press briefings for nearly three days, I can finally talk more here about Silverlight:

 

Top 10 Questions About Silverlight and Media

  1. What media formats do you support?
    A: WMV7,8, 9/SMPTE VC-1, WMA, MP3
  2. What is SMPTE VC-1?
    A: WMV9 - now an open standard recognzied by the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers (SMPTE) and shipping in all Blu-Ray and HD-DVD drives.
  3. Will Silverlight work with my current Windows Media?
    A: Yes, it most definitely will work with your existing Windows Media
  4. What do I have to do to add Silverlight to my site? For Mac and Windows playback?
    A: Once the beta ships in two weeks, all you'll have to do is drop a little .js and XML into your page and away you go. 
  5. Can additional formats be added for playback?
    A: No, part of the appeal of Silverlight is the small package size- 1MB, includes everything it needs for video and audio, animation, graphics and AJAX-based programmability to boot!
  6. What companies are supporting Silverlight?
    A: Major League Baseball, Brightcove, NetFlix, Frog Design, AvenueA/Razorfish, Akamai, and many others are among the names announced. 
  7. How easy the install really going to be?
    A: How does 3 clicks sound for XP users?  Vista users have one more click by default due to the user account feature.  Web pages can be wired up to do in-line install and auto-refresh after you're done.
  8. Can you really do 720p HD video?  What 3D video card do I need?
    A: Definitely.  About a 3ghz P4 class processor will work, regardless of video card. We've done some really neat processor optimizations. All the demos shown in the booth at NAB were run off a mid-range laptop.
  9. Why does resizing/scaling of apps "snap" differently in Safari/FireFox/IE?
    A: It all depends upon the way the browser renders.  I won't make any qualitative comment as your mileage may vary.
  10. Will Silverlight work with my existing web server?  What about live streaming?
    A: For on-demand, yes! Run it on Darwin, Apache, whatever you're running.  Of course, you'll get a few added benefits with Windows Media streaming- reduced bandwidth costs, faster seeking, etc.
  11. Where can I learn more?
    A: Right now you can learn more at www.microsoft.com/silverlight.  The community site will go live at www.silverlight.net.  The Beta "Cruise" starts on April 30th.  
posted on Wednesday, April 18, 2007 5:28:37 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback
# Sunday, April 15, 2007

You can see the video here.  (Note, I won't be offering Silverlight-based videos here until beta ;))

Note: Silverlight doesn't use video acceleration (such as Aero-enabled PCs) for Silverlight.  That's one of the ways we keep everythng consistent between applications.   Also resize rendering is dependent upon the browser's capabilities and refresh rate. 

posted on Sunday, April 15, 2007 10:56:08 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Sunday, March 18, 2007

Last week, IP delivered television got a little closer to reality or a lot closer to irrational Web 2.0 exuberance when Amazon and TiVo flipped the switch enabling Amazon customers to send movies ordered from Amazon.com directly to your TiVo Series 2 or Series 3 boxes.  My wife and I took this for a spin last week, renting a few movies, including one with the $15 credit you get as a TiVo customer.  There's a few things I like about the service, and a lot I don't. 

 

What I like

  • Convenience of ordering a movie from home or work
  • Integration with Amazon.com is easy enough
  • Ability to send to any TiVo in my home, or supported devices
  • Selection is respectable
  • TiVo Integration is simple- 'Amazon Unbox" shows up as a new Folder in Now Playing

 

What I don't like

  • Lack of a subscription program. 
  • No "Season Pass" purchase for TV programs
  • No easy way to search/filter movies by MPAA rating
  • On TiVo, no progress meter or estimated time until your movie is ready to start playing
  • No HD downloads
  • No 10' movie browser on Tivo.  All movies must be browsed & ordered with a PC
  • Encoding is fuzzy
  • No option to get the movie sent on DVD/HD-DVD as well

 

While this is definitely a step in the direction of convenience, if Amazon is serious about this business model, I hope they're working on a subscription program and/or considering a deal with NetFlix or Blockbuster directly (NetFlix acqusition anyone?).  I'm not likely to buy a $14.99 movie when $3.00 more a month gets me a subscription pass and HD movies on Blockbuster.

posted on Sunday, March 18, 2007 9:47:54 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback
# Saturday, March 10, 2007

A few of you have been asking where I've been and why I've been so quiet about digital media. Has blogging become passe? Am I spending too much time reading Scoble? (no) or Pirillo (no)?   I am Twittering though - delivering bite size bloggables. Perhaps I joined Michael Gartenberg in returning to the "private sector"?  No again. I've been working heavily on exciting things we're going to unveil at MIX07.  If you're involved in digital media delivery on the web, you're going to want to see what we unveil at the show.

For the past six years, I've been involved in different aspects of digital media, dating back to Windows Media Player 7 and beyond.  With every release, a debate roiled internally - are we an experience or a platform?  More effort over time was put into creating an experience with Windows Media Player (as our customers were asking for), but the developer platform never saw much in the way of major leaps forward.  OCX updates were modest, load times were unacceptable to customers on web pages, and it was too complicated to create compelling and differentiated experiences.

Not for long.  We've been listening.  Taking notes.  Asking questions. Understanding what's needed to go beyond what's available today for delivering media-enriched experiences on the Web.  And MIX is where you're going to here more about that.  I have emails reporting that the media experience in www.vista.si from Microsoft Slovenia  beyond delivering a full Vista desktop emulator in "WPF/E" runs faster than some web-enabled experiences.

So at MIX, we're going to step it up with sessions dedicated to those focused on rich digital media delivery on the Web. You'll learn how to use new tools coming such as Expression Media Encoder, and how to use new features with Windows Server "Longhorn". Our team will be there- engaging in the conversation across a broad range of topics. 

Yesterday, I a podcast for the Mix website where I'll talk some more.  I'm going to be doing a lot of talking soon.  I'm also doing the first-day keynote at Streaming Media East. (Note to Dan Rayburn, I look about 10 years old in the picture on the site)

I'm also Twittering now.  The RSS feed is here.  Feel free to add me to your list if you dare.

posted on Saturday, March 10, 2007 9:15:33 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Tuesday, March 06, 2007

I've been pretty heads down meeting with partners the past week so time to gome up for air.  Scott Guthrie, the General Manager for "WPF/E" among other things had an opportunity to do a guest spot on Red vs. Blue- the runaway hit machinima series choreographed in Halo 2.  The Channel 9 team even did a fun WPF/E-based player for it as well.

Check it out here.

posted on Tuesday, March 06, 2007 6:58:22 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Sunday, February 18, 2007

Still catching up on blogworthy items. As is customary with the release of any new OS, a lot of attention is being given to the new, native features of Windows Vista, the compatibility of devices as well as existing applications.  But what about new applications?  Vista doesn't rest on the laurels of traditional, flat, 2D applications. Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) is a feature of Windows Vista that enables rich, textured, 3D applications to be built that take interactivity to a whole new level. 

One such application was developed by famed design firm, Metaliq. Their Snowboarding application incorporates two of my loves - snow sports and GPS.  Marrying 3D rotatable maps of Aspen Ski Resort with GPS data, it seamlessly integrates  live data, video clips and a playback reel give you the perspective of your runs as you head down. 

I'm a sucker for this kind of app I always take my GPS with me when I go skiing- just "Set it and forget it" while I'm riding.  When I get home, Pictures I take on the mountain are geotagged (I like RoboGeo), and I like to review representations of my runs on satellite maps with ExpertGPS or Google Earth.  This is admittedly geeky today, but imagine being able to sit down after a vacation with the family, and review your photos, ultimate runs, and home videos and navigate it visually.  It's clear we're just getting started.

It's the weekend, and a perfect time to go through Tim Sneath's blog list of amazing WPF applications.  C9 has a great list here as well.

Here's a list of some of my favorite english-language applications (German, French and others on  Tim's site as well):

  1. NY Times Newsreader
  2. Nostalgia Flickr Browser
  3. British Library's Turning the Pages
  4. Electric Rain's Standout 
  5. Notescraps
  6. Denounce (RSS/Podcast browser)
  7. Cine.view (NetFlix browser)
  8. Yahoo! Messenger for Windows Vista
  9. Calendar Printing for Office 2007
  10. Wikipedia Explorer
  11. iBloks 3D Movie Creator

Let me know if you find more ;)

posted on Sunday, February 18, 2007 8:47:51 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Saturday, February 17, 2007

My favorite digital audio receiver just added support for Zune Marketplace, Napster, Urge, Wal-Mart, etc. and enhancements for iTunes though they still won't play Apple's own DRM'd music (something Jobs left out he won't license).  Finally, my little white Sonos boxes aren't sitting in a Zuneless island.  Every time I think I'm done with DRM'd music services, they bring me back in.  I have to say though, I'm increasingly impressed by Rhapsody's integration with the Sonos.  It makes me wonder, why shouldn't all music services offer a network connected version, similar to what Napster is doing today?

Also note to music services - not everyone listening to your service is a twentysomething head-banging, ultramegalophile monster mashup music culture listener.  Take some cues from  XM's "Flight 26".   I like my hard-core, but not when the kiddies are around.  Families want to listen too.  That's a note to Sirius as well.

posted on Saturday, February 17, 2007 8:23:43 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback

My father pointed out that Flickr appears to be having some problems with its preview image system.  A bunch of random pictures (not ours) are showing up as previews.  Click through, and sometimes  you'll  get the correct picture.  For me, it's happening on about one out of seven pictures.  We have pro accounts.  Suddenly I'm very nervous about the state of my photos on the site.  Anyone else seeing this?

posted on Saturday, February 17, 2007 7:05:55 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [5] Trackback
# Friday, February 16, 2007

All I can say is this is the kind of geek "Wow" a certain team was looking for - the evangelism team scored a coup with the hiring of reknowned analyst, Michael Gartenberg, formerly VP of Jupiter Research and prior to that, at Gartner.  While details are still unfolding about his new job, it's possible that in his role as Enthusiast Evangelist, Michael will have an indelible impact in a number of areas ranging from customer interaction to user-centric product design. 

Our team brought in Michael to provide feedback on some challenges we were having last year with digital media integration across the OS.  The engineers found his feedback to be incredibly insightful and focused on the end-user while taking into account technical capabilities of the OS.  A lot of changes for the good were made based on his comments.

As for the news around the blogosphere, Jeremy Toeman has a good summary here.  As do Jeff Sandquist and Thomas Hawk. I for one look forward to working with Michael again.

Welcome Michael!

posted on Friday, February 16, 2007 6:02:10 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Saturday, February 03, 2007

It's distressing to many in the community to learn of Jim Gray's disappearance.  A fixture in the industry and reknowned scientist, teams have been searching for over 4 days for him now.  Amazon's Werner Vogels is asking internet users to pore through recent imagery from Nasa plan flyovers to try and locate his missing ship.  You can help by clicking here and just reviewing a sampling of images.  This is community in action- distributed human computing.  Please take five minutes and help look for signs of Jim.

posted on Saturday, February 03, 2007 3:53:32 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Friday, January 19, 2007

I love my BlackJack and you can't have it back Steve. For those who enjoy frankenphones with unusual ringtones, you can have your very own iPhone ringtone courtesy of Gizmodo.com

posted on Friday, January 19, 2007 6:14:35 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Saturday, January 13, 2007

I recently got my hands on the original source of the PC manufacturer's video shown in Bill Gates' keynote.  The first person to correctly identify all PCs models shown in the video (in order) will win a cheap tacky prize.  Submit via comments :).


Video: Windows Vista New PCs - CES 2007

I also have it in WMV-HD and will post later this weekend.  Perhaps we should do a mash-up contest for the best remix of the spot?  I'll pose it to some friends who could make that happen.

posted on Saturday, January 13, 2007 2:27:28 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback
# Friday, January 12, 2007

While at CES, I ran into the unusual problem of bleeding out not one, but two Samsung Blackjack batteries while at the Hard Rock Hotel sending/receiving SMS messages from pals trying to meet.  I was annoyed, but went back to my room and plugged the phone in to sync via USB, shunning travel with an AC power "Wall Wart" to keep my lifestyle streamlined.

When I woke up, I went from annoyed to cranky in realizing my phone batteries still wouldn't charge.  So, I grabbed a cab and went to a Cingular store to pick up a battery. Kept the meter running, it was only going to be a few minutes. 

Wrong.  They had the car charger, no batteries or AC charger.  Told me the corporate store would have one.  Interrupt my taxi driver's lunch and we're off to the "corporate store".  There I was being "helped" by a customer service rep who seemed to have his heart in the right place, but it was beating so slowly he couldn't risk moving very fast or he might pass out.  Batteries?  Nope.  AC charger? Nope?  Even a backup for a demo unit? None.  Call around other stores?  Radio Shack would have them.  Asked him to call. What about other stores?  (By now nearly 40 minutes have gone by and I'm still on the clock for the cab).  This is no joke- the closest store out of 12 that had said AC adapter was over 30 minutes away in the Vegas area.  My cab driver was getting ready to time out.  So I spent a mint on cab fare and had nothing to show for it.  I was more than cranky now.

So what did I do?  I went back to CES at the LVCC, straight to the Samsung booth and asked for the product manager for the Blackjack.  I talked to the PR folks and explained the situation, and was directed to the Product Manager, a nice, Korean gentleman who get this - swapped out his own, fully charged Blackjack battery with me, and then offered to let me use the demo bar to jumpstart my phone!  I was in shock.  The booth was packed, and he was bending over backwards, from his own personal backpack he pulled the battery.  He said he would have offered me a charger but it was back at his hotel.

Now that is customer service.  He could have said, "No, sorry, we don't have one" and moved on.  This is why my current TV was a Samsung (which I got the main logic board updated a few years back for only $200 as a special offer for early adopters wanting better controls).

So, a battery translated into a future purchase of ~$2500 for Samsung.  Sometimes it pays to pay it forward. 

As for Cingular, it's been a rocky road with them the second time I've tried switching to them in three years.  First I was overcharged over 2x for the first month, then they didn't give me the full employee discount.  I miss T-Mobile's service.  If only they had cooler phones and 3G, things would be different...

posted on Friday, January 12, 2007 8:40:36 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback

I'm somewhat ashamed to say that every new car I've ever owned has been a Japanese car.  Let's see- Mitsubishi Starion, Nissan 300ZX (80's), Honda Prelude, Nissan 300ZX (90's), Nissan Xterra, Honda S2000, and Toyota Prius.  I've been ashamed because in my experience, US cars have so lagged behind in quality, creature comforts, and digital technology that

Then, Ford announced the Sync platform with Microsoft, bringing digital nirvana to a broad range of cars, causing gaps from the audience when Ford's VP told BillG it will support iPod and Zune (of  course it will and should!). My father used to work for Ford, many many years ago.  I wonder how he took this news (or if he noticed- he still uses cassettes to listen to Pink Floyd in his car - sorry Dad).

Now, over at the "other" show in Detroit, beleagured GM unveiled the Chevy Volt concept car.  Zero to sixty in a respectable 8 seconds, top speed of 120mph, and most importantly, 40 miles on zero gallons (it's pluggable), and 60mpg on a small gas generator that powers not the wheels, but the on-board Li-ion batteries.

Apparently this technology will work it's way into mainstream cars over the next five years.  It's clear to me for the second time, Japan has jolted Detroit out of hibernation (no pun intended).  I'm looking forward to a test drive- you listening Detroit? :)

posted on Friday, January 12, 2007 8:20:56 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [5] Trackback
# Thursday, January 11, 2007

As an early adopter of NetFlix, I've written many times here about how good the service is was.  Over the holidays however, that all went horribly, horribly wrong.  My wife and I use NetFlix in spurts- some months we're busy doing something else and don't watch any, then when the TV season goes into hiatus, we catch up on movies.

I've done my part to help their ratings system- my wife and I have collectively rated nearly 400 movies over the years. 

So what did NetFlix do to cause me to switch to Blockbuster's Total Access? 

It started with two out of five discs rented in the last month being cracked.  We're not talking a little crack, we're talking a full 1mm from the edge. I reported both, and noticed it took a longer time than usual to get a replacement of one (the other I didn't request a replacement).  It's embarassing when you have to explain to your in-laws why at a key point in the plot of a movie, you can't watch the rest, nor get another disc during the remainder of their trip because NetFlix is too slow.

Prior to sending the movies back, I moved three movies to the top of my queue.  All were available and I had always received movies listed at the top.  What did I get in return?  Movies from the bottom of my queue.  We're talking over a dozen movies down.  There's no possible way all of the  movies above it were checked out, and I checked!  Like the lint that congregates under your bed, these movies had collected at the bottom of our queue and we had forgotten about them.

David Pogue wrote about NetFlix's great customer service last year.  It's true, I've had nothing but good experiences when reporting a lost disc (and returned later to be credited).  Then Michael Arrington wrote about how NetFlix's complicated algorithms punish frequent users of the service.  I rented more movies during the holidays (vacation?) after literally multiple months of not renting any. 

Somehow, like Arrington, I got "NetFlixed":

Netflixed  /netflicksed/  –adjective

1. punished due to regular usage of services paid-for

2. twisted; awry, as in the condition of discs when received

3. Slang. extracting highest possible profit out of customer by artificially adjusting service offerings to penalize usage.

It looks like the algorithm uses a 30-60 day usage window to enable throttling and doesn't take into account months of pure profit they reaped from me when I wasn't using the service.  Perhaps I'm being punished for reporting two out of three shipped discs being cracked.  How is that my fault?

I tried contacting NetFlix  and have yet to get a response other than, "Sorry, we get a lot of mail".  No problem.  Unsubscribed.

So I've dropped NetFlix as of today, and moved to Blockbuster's Total Access where I also get a free movie on the spot when I return a DVD in-store instead of via mail (we have one by our gym).  They also have a great selection of HD-DVDs and Blu-Ray titles.  Now I just need a Media Center-enabled UI for Blockbuster's service (as I have for NetFlix via the community) and my world is complete.

Congratuations NetFlix- by mis-managing customer expectations you've replaced my prior disdain for Blockbuster's glassy-eyed checkout clerk and late fees with a new disdain for your business practices.

posted on Thursday, January 11, 2007 8:55:16 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [5] Trackback
# Tuesday, January 09, 2007

Sean Alexander w/ EmmyLast night, I had the honor of attending the Technical Emmy Awards ceremony at CES to help accept the Emmy Award for Streaming Media Architectures and Components.  Afterwards, we went to the Vista party at the Pure Nightclub in Caesars and brought the Emmy for safe keeping and to take pictures with other team members. It was a hit with a number of old friends who helped us to get this win.  It was a shared win- there was a sense of surprise when I congratulated the Apple team on their shared win as well.

John Carmack, co-founder of iD, creator of Doom and Quake and founder of Armadillo Aerospace was one of the presenters.  When I get a chance, I'll post some video I took during the ceremony. The DirectX team was also on-hand to accept an award for their 3D engine.

Thank you to all the engineers, designers, bizdev, marketing, management who helped to make the win possible but most importantly, to our customers.

IMG_2046

More pictures from the party on Flickr here

posted on Tuesday, January 09, 2007 1:44:43 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback

Well, no integrated TV (yet), but it looks like my other prediction specific to the iPhone in August may be at least partly right.  Remember how Apple last year made a big pre-order with Intel/Micron's IMFlash effort and everyone assumed it was for new iPods?   An intrepid analyst should ask Apple if they're going to use their 50nm NAND Flash in the iPhone.  I believe so, and that it's the secret to how they're getting it so small.  The 2nd manufacturing facility doesn't come online until oh, just about the time the iPhone will ship.  Most of the other players are still dealing with much larger (and bulkier) flash.

Anyone notice there was no announcement of iTunes Store in related?  I'd expect they'll do a deal w/ Cingular cum AT&T to provide free WiFi hotspot access to iTunes Store in public places.  Next up- direct billing of media purchases to your AT&T bill...

posted on Tuesday, January 09, 2007 1:15:12 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Monday, January 08, 2007

Apple's going to do it with iTV.  Intel's Viiv certifying hardware for it Sling Media is announcing the SlingCatcher.  Microsoft has been doing it with Media Center Extender and Xbox 360. NetGear is getting (back) into it.  Will this be the year of the DMR?  Probably not, but some big names are getting into the fray/renewing efforts.

The challenge is how do you get to a unified view of your family photos, music, video, and recorded TV regardless of which set your on in the home.  Lots of effort in the NAS server space, and I'd expect some additional announcements to make the content easier to distribute, including HP's new Windows Home Server. Still, there's a LOT of work that has to be done for setup and connectivity across the industry.  HDMI makes this much easier but not many consumers have TV's with HDMI, while others have to figure out how to route video to the TV and audio to the AV receiver while getting it all to work well together (hint: start with a Harmony remote from Logitech- I just got a Harmony 890 for the holidays, more on that later).

I'm pretty frustrated right now because BOTH of my Samsung Blackjack batteries fully burned out last night and won't trickle charge.  There should be an "emergency reserve" button on the batteries themselves.  Serves me right for forgetting my AC power cable...

My wild prediction for today: Apple will announce the iTV as an actual HDTV w/ the hardware built-in.   They'll do this before releasing a set-top style product.  That and perhaps Flash gaming support on the iPod.

posted on Monday, January 08, 2007 8:23:01 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Friday, January 05, 2007

Michael Gartenberg says it's going to be a year of maturation at CES.  Michael tends to really know his stuff and I have to admit, most of the news out of Engadget of late has been about convergence of technology. 

I expect a lot of focus on usability this year.  The past few years, certain devices have become abominations of usability harkening back 20 years (certain high def players as an example ahem).  Having just built a home media server and dealt once again with the incompatibilities of video formats between my camera, my Media Center (Xbox) and my portable player, I can truly relate to his sentiment.

posted on Friday, January 05, 2007 8:43:15 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

After we got power, I had a great vacation where I stayed unplugged from the grid (mostly) and reconnected with family and friends. But it's a new year. I notice that Long Zheng and Brandon LeBlanc both tagged me for their "5 Things you didn't know about me" meme:

1. I got my first computer ~1984 and after playing the first game, I knew wanted to work at the game developer some day - the game was "Flight Simulator II".

2. I sold my backup copy of same program to a friend, something I'm not proud of.

3. I was operations manager of a small communcations software company making the first Windows GUI-based BBS.  I quit and went back to school after being told the Internet was a fad.

4. I once did a developer keynote in germany with a 103+ degree fever and delirious.  At the end of the presentation I reintroduced myself.

5. I ran the only Windows-based mirror site for the Mars Pathfinder project in partnership with NASA's JPL.  And yes, the load was so great, the mirroring software so bad that I spent nights in the server room debugging it.  We've come a long way.

So there you go.  I'm supposed to tag other bloggers.  Here goes for Chris Pirillo, Shawn Morrissey, Robert Scoble, and Thomas Hawk.

 

P.S. - I'll be at CES Sat-Tues. Ping me if others want to meet up, we may do a small dinner on Saturday.

posted on Friday, January 05, 2007 6:04:31 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Monday, December 18, 2006

Thanks to the intrepid work of my wife, we're back! She found a generator at 6am yesterday and we had it in-hand at 6:45am (tip: Home Depot expects to receive more Tuesday if you're looking). Like the famed Cabbage Patch craze, my wife called down lists of Lowes and HD stores (among others) from the hotel last night.  CraigsList failed us as we looked.  Thanks to everyone for their well wishes.

Our area was among the hardest hit in the storms.  Not directly thankfully (though I did awaken at midnight with other neighbors to help secure the home of a friend who had a maple tree hit their house and blow out all the windows on the backside.

It's amazing how scary and liberating it can be when you are forced to unplug from the grid. No net access, no power, no phone communication, only AM talk radio for 60 hours can get to you.  The lines at the gas station (and the civil yet

I'm on Cingular's EDGE network right now on my Sony VAIO laptop.  It has built-in EDGE so I just popped the SIM card in and away you go. 

This entire experience though minor in comparison has made me think about the plight in Darfur and others war, famine, and poverty stricken areas.  This holiday season, it's reminded me to do what I can to reach out to others and help in their time of need.

Update: We got power this afternoon. Thanks again to everyone for their help and research- it means a lot!

posted on Monday, December 18, 2006 7:49:14 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback
# Tuesday, December 05, 2006

Lee created this cool sample called "Microbe"- The city where "WPF/E" and Flash live in harmony.  (Yes, that's "WPF/E" and Flash co-existing side by side). Learn more here.  It's a brave new world.

posted on Tuesday, December 05, 2006 2:49:27 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Friday, November 03, 2006

About four weeks ago, a debate was raging in my household.  My wife, being of sound mind and body, was pleased with HDTV, primarily for its ability to fill our screen (a nearly 4yo Samsung HLM-507W 720p unit), delivering a level of clarity and screen-filling that sated her desire for such classics as, "CSI", "ER" and er... "Dancing with the Stars".

But never mind that.

We had a Comcast Motorola 6419 STB.  It was a marvel... for 2003. I had conversations with folks who talked about the challenges of writing to this box, the things they had done to get around hardware issues and I was (and continue to be) amazed by the abilities of the box.  But, it was suffering me.  Or rather, I was suffering IT in our household. 

There's a not-so-subtle metric among those of us who have battle scars in digital media.  It's called the "WAF" or "SAF".  It's the dreaded "Wife Acceptance Factor" or "Spousal Acceptance Factor".  I fell victim.

You see, where I live, OTA HD (ATSC) isn't even a remote option.  Between two hills, I believe the technical term is SOL. And after getting a taste of HD, my wife was hooked.  The Moto box did well enough.  But the gateway drug of "On Demand" never took hold.  Forget HBO and their on-demand, who appears to split up their seasons to extract more $$$ on DVD sales.  I'd go to Media Center if it were an option, but it's not right now until Vista ships.  Instead, I have my Comcast box. A marvel given the hardware, this thing freezes up, has IR reception far shorter than anything I've seen resulting in this exchange:

"Fast forward!"

"I'm trying"

"It's a commercial!"

"Did you hear me? It's frozen up"

"The angle's all wrong, try holding it up by your ear"

"Ok, I think that's working"

"You've overshot it.  Rewind!"

"I am rewinding"

"You went too far!"

"I'm trying to get it back but it won't respond!"

"Put it up by your ear"

"For the sake of ..."

This is the "WAF" or "SAF" I speak of.  What is family harmony worth to me?  Priceless.

Enter the TiVo Series 3. After serious negotiation, my wife agreed that it made sense to get a TiVo.  This was after trying convince the kind folks at TiVo to send me an evaluation unit.  Then, all hell broke loose (tm?).

Hell?  I had one CableCard and picked up another at the local Comcast store.  I tried to auth both on my TiVo via the phone to no avail.  Long story short, Comcast was "Cold initing" both cards, resulting in a 10 minute delay, yet the Technical Support Rep (TSR) knew to wait only about 4 minutes before trying a truck roll.  Major kudos go to those TSR's I spoke to, because they held in there and were sending a truck the same day. Yes, you heard that right- 11am and they're saying they can send someone out by 4pm the same day.  Major, major kudos to Comcast on that one.

This made me want to stop the poor Comcast "Truck Roll" guy from having to come out the same day. So, I started researching and came across the following article.  My gosh, I've never seen such an articulate description of the workings of the Cablecard process.

Ten minutes after I hung up with Comcast, I checked the TiVo again.  Bingo- the 1 (of 2) cards was now initialized. I was getting HD.

Then I went for #2.  I called Comcast and explained the situation.  I told them what I had read and the TSR asked me to send them a link to the article.  I did, and he was mighty appreciative.  His supervisor was over his shoulder and they were impressed when the second card was correctly initialized.  They thanked me profusely for helping them, and I know they get scored on # of truck rolls so they were happy to see that get cancelled.

I felt good.  I was up and going, and I had given back to my cable provider.  It gave me a warm fuzzy feeling actually.  Not sure why, but I guess I figured others wouldn't have to go through what I did.

Since then, my wife has taken to the new TiVo Series 3 like [insert saying here].  She loves it.  She doesn't need on-demand.  She records those educational programs for our son, and we've practically negated our Netflix subscription (what is it about crappy movies these days anyway).  So I digress.  The TiVo has rebooted a couple of times and of course, I'm pissed about lack of KidZone, or Multi-Room Viewing (MRV), or TiVo To Go (TTG), but it works as (relatively) advertised.   My wife hasn't complained about it more than once (the first reboot).  My son doesn't even miss on-demand.

So what do I miss about the Comcast box?  Nothing, except the additional $$ in my pocket. Heck, I could have bought a full-fledged PC with ATSC tuning in my area for that amount!  But there is a dollar amount on SAF and WAF so for that reason, despite the fact TiVo rebuffed any request to contact them, I will say I like my TiVo Series 3.

I've used Media Center in Vista, and it will give TiVo a real run for it's money for those customers with Cablecard-enabled PC's.  Will I ebay my TiVo for Vista Media Center? Probably at some point. Even then, I have little buyer's remorse over the TiVo Series 3, other than the ridiculous price.  Once set up, it works as advertised.

Disclaimer: I don't work for Windows, Windows Media Center, Media Player or anything that starts with Media or ends with Media.  Though Media might be somewhere in the name. But more on that at a later date. ;)

posted on Friday, November 03, 2006 7:55:01 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [5] Trackback
# Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Sometimes they just get it right IMO.  Microsoft kicked off work on packaging  for Vista and Office over a year ago (I know the person(s) who did it) and it shows.  No, it doesn't take a full year to get it right, but combined with other deliverables and a strong desire to incorporate feedback from many sources, the result is a new type of packaging that will extend to other MS products in the future.  Remember how Windows 95 and Office packaging just "felt" like they fit together?  Vista and Office are going for more of the same here. From Nick on the Vista blog:

 The packaging has been completely revised and, we hope, foreshadows the great experience that awaits you once you open it.

Designed to be user-friendly, the new packaging is a small, hard, plastic container that’s designed to protect the software inside for life-long use.  It provides a convenient and attractive place for you to permanently store both discs and documentation.

The new design will provide the strength, dimensional stability and impact resistance required when packaging software today.  Our plan is to extend this packaging style to other Microsoft products after the launch of Windows Vista and 2007 Office system.

Nice work. Now MacOffice isn't the only MS software product with cool packaging that screams, "pick me up".

posted on Tuesday, October 31, 2006 6:35:35 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

For Windows XP SP2 and "N" versions. Check it out here and download here.  This is a significant update over the betas or Windows Media Player 10, and also includes support for music services including MTV's  "Urge" in final release.

posted on Tuesday, October 31, 2006 6:27:58 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Saturday, October 28, 2006

If you haven't seen U2 and Green Day's music video, "The Saints are Coming", please take a moment and check it out here on MTV. Done as a part of the Music Rising project to bring the music back to New Orleans, the song debuted on ESPN, a cover of the Scottish punk band, The Skids.  

Watching this video is like watching an alternate universe, or a DVD where the alternate ending was so much better you felt somehow shorted by the director.  Only in this case, the original ending was reality.  Watch and you'll understand.  I wish more musicians used their influence to this kind of good measure.

posted on Saturday, October 28, 2006 4:23:23 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [4] Trackback

I've thought long and hard about the test I was running with ads on this site.  I've decided to remove the ads as I've learned everything I can about the ad-serving solution I was testing.  I hope you enjoy.

Also, the banner image now links back to the homepage- an oversight on my part.

posted on Saturday, October 28, 2006 4:09:47 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Saturday, October 14, 2006

Things have been incredibly busy at work lately- so much so that I haven't had any time to post here. I'l try to get better about that. 

In other news, friends over in the eHome team are celebrating. Is it Vista related?  Almost ;).  They're celebrating a major milestone - 20 million Windows XP Media Center PCs have now been sold.  Some might recall that just last April, the stat was at 10 million. Talk about a ramp rate. By comparison TiVo has just over 2 million stand-alone units out there (which I also own and enjoy).

Speaking of Vista, I've started getting questions on when the right time is to buy a PC for Vista. My father is still hobbling along on the Windows XP PC he bought 5 years ago right after the launch of XP (and he's never reinstalled). The hard drive is starting to go, but we're using chewing gum to keep it going. My neighbor's PC also just died and he's hobbling along on an old PC of mine right now.  Buying a new "Vista-ready" PC is pretty easy when you see the logo, and I expect there will be some pretty amazing deals this holiday season.

Which brings me back to Media Center.  Friends over in eHome-land told me that they worked will all the Media Center PC manufacturers to make sure any MCE PC sold this holiday season will be Vista Premium-ready.  So if you have to buy, look for the Vista logo, or just get an MCE PC.

One last comment on Vista for home users- I've noticed that if you connect a Vista desktop to a UPS, the PC will run in "Balanced" mode, just like a laptop.  At first I thought this was a bad idea, but then I realized that for the overwhemling majority, this is fine- and a more energy friendly way to do things.

I'll write more this weekend- thoughts on using a TiVo Series3, and taking Flight Simulator X (Final release) for a whirl.

posted on Saturday, October 14, 2006 4:40:19 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [6] Trackback
# Wednesday, September 20, 2006

A good friend of mine is in charge of 3rd party accessories for Zune. That means all accessories not from Microsoft.  And now, he's blogging over at www.ZuneGuy.com.  And he's getting an enthusiastic response for his open inquiries for feedback.  Oh no, maybe the competition will hear a great idea too!  It doesn't matter - either way as consumers we win if he manages to adopt even a few of these ideas.  Send em his way!

For all the lip-service Apple gives to community creativity, where is the iPod blog?  Don't send them your ideas, they don't want them, especially if you're in the third-grade

If Robert Scoble is even just a little bit right in his book, Zune will win the marathon. Why?  Time-released transparency is what I call it.  PR folks know that timing can be worth millions of dollars in perception.mSo time your details, your release of details, and then go transparent on that stage.  PR flaks? No.  Recognizing the blend of PR and community that optimizes your business goals - yes.

posted on Wednesday, September 20, 2006 8:36:35 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [4] Trackback
# Sunday, September 17, 2006

The good folks working on HD DVD at Microsoft have started a blog called "The HD DVD Insiders" - it's starting out small, but for the Home Theater geek and industry pro alike, I expect this is going to become a popular site to supplement the AVSForums so many of us enjoy for the inside scoop.  Not much content yet, but Ben and others tell me they have podcasts, interviews, Q&A's and more in store.  Subscribed.

 

posted on Sunday, September 17, 2006 6:42:16 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [6] Trackback
# Thursday, September 14, 2006

Just the links and only the links for now:

http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/presskits/zune 
(lots of pictures in here)

http://www.zuneinsider.com/

http://www.engadget.com/2006/09/14/microsoft-launc...

I'll chat more later.   

posted on Thursday, September 14, 2006 10:22:26 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Monday, September 11, 2006

Like so many, I'll never forget where I was.  Brushing my teeth, getting ready for work, I turned on the Today show just after the first plane hit.  Images of the plane hit on the Empire State Building a generation before were conjured up. This must have been a freak accident. Then I saw the second plane hit. I yelled, called my wife into the room.  She gasped  when she realized what had happened.  Cultural innocence had been shattered in an instance.

The Twin  Towers

I'm not going to write a long diatribe on how this event gave rise to blogging like some others are.  In my opinion that would be to lose sight of what today is really about and personally I think it does a disservice. There are other days in which to discuss it.  Remembering the innocent lives lost and the heroes who worked so valiantly to save them is what today is about.

Picture: I took this in December 1999 from Newark Airport.

posted on Monday, September 11, 2006 7:48:38 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback
# Thursday, September 07, 2006

If you're not viewing this through an RSS reader, you've probably noticed the new look of my blog.  Thanks to Scott and Omar, I'm running DasBlog 1.9  Beta with a host of new features including:

  • Faster performance
  • Tag Cloud support
  • Related entries list - click the blog entry and get a list of suggested items
  • Gravatar support in comments
  • Improved tagging for major blog search systems
  • Great Windows Live Writer support
  • Improved comment spam protection

I'm sure I've missed a few features there, but at the end of the day I couldn't convert to CS for a few reasons despite the great support I saw - namely loss of existing permalinks and frankly, the DasBlog guys have been in high gear on competitive features.  Not to mention the Theme structure is easier for me to digest- perhaps through experience.  I'm now using Microsoft Expression Web Designer Beta 1 for my site design!

Speaking of high gear, I'm currently in Denver on my way to surprise my Mother for her 60th b/d in Atlanta.  She thinks she's going to do wedding planning and that I'm on a flight to Tokyo (shhh!).  She won't see this so I think the surprise is safe. 

Any suggestions on good BBQ and sight-seeing things to do while in ATL are appreciated. Somehow I don't think my sister (a vegetarian, respectfully) will be much help there. ;)

posted on Thursday, September 07, 2006 11:00:10 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Tuesday, September 05, 2006

BoomTown has a short How To article on using Windows Media Player 11 Beta 2 to stream music to your Xbox 360.  Short of pictures, good on content.

posted on Tuesday, September 05, 2006 10:44:13 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

Those who know me know that one of my hobbies is BBQ.  Now, this isn't grilling, this is honest-to-goodness, smoked "slow and low" at 200 degrees for hours BBQ.  It stems from many 2am adventures to Wilson's BBQ with a group of friends back in college in Oklahoma.  There, BBQ isn't just plentiful, it's a right.  Out here in the PacNW, I have yet to find a real honest-to-goodness Texas-style BBQ place that's not industrialized.  So, since 1997, I've been learning the art of smoking BBQ.

I started out small - with an electric smoker at first, a little Weber I still shudder to think about as our electric bill spiked every time I used the thing.  Then, it was on to a Great Outdoors Smoky Mountain Series propane water smoker. I've been mastering this one for the past four years or so, but I've lusting after the ultimate smoker - The Big Green Egg

The BGE has many converts, including reviewers at the NYTimes and - basically it's a large ceramic cooker that uses a fraction of the cleaner-burning lump charcoal fuel of other metal-based cookers.  Incredibly efficient, it's based on the same principles used for over 3000 years in Chinese and Japanese Kamodo cookers and Indian tandoors.  It can do direct grilling or slow smoking.  It's safer around kids (a plus in my household) and can be used year-round, even in wind and sub-zero temperatures.

So this year, my bonus to myself for a solid review was the beloved Egg.  Guy and Nicole, the owners of Thompson's Hearth & Home, set me up with a large demo egg  that had been used only once, knocking a respectable number of dollars off.  As we were loading it up into my car, a fellow enthusiast none of us knew was driving by and stopped to chat and congratulate me on my purchase.  The skeptic in me thought it was a set up.  It  turns out he owns a BGE as well.  Jeff talked about the instant community he's seen among Corvette owners.  Here, the community came to me. :)  I've also discovered there's an annual "Eggstock" of sorts- "Eggtoberfest" during which "Egghead" enthusiasts get together with their eggs.  An active set of forums also serve as support- even during the act of cooking if you have questions, you can post and

Big egg converts themselves, the Thompsons really understand customer service - they gave me their home phone # and said call anytime up to 9pm, 7 days a week if I had questions. They even threw in a 20lb bag of fuel and a few additional extras.

I also tricked out my BBQ gadget-style with a  BBQGuru.  Basically it's a microprocessor-controlled fan that controls the rate of airflow over the coals. It comes equipped with two thermostats  - one for the meat, the other for the grill temp.  This made cooking practically a set and forget proposition.

My first attempt was a Tri-Tip steak.  Tri-tip is lesser known cut of sirloin since there's only two per cow, it tended not to get marketed.  It was cooked over direct heat and had a flavor my gas grill couldn't come close to. A bit heavy on the smoke, I'll learn to throttle this back.  The next night, the remainder of the tri-tip was turned into steak quesadillas for a Poker Party some friends threw- a big hit!

Saturday was the big challenge - Pork Shoulder (a.k.a. Boston Butt or Pulled Pork).  I picked up an 8lb boneless shoulder at Fischer's Meats and prepped for 20-24hours of cooking.  The shoulder went in at 200 degrees with a mix of cherry and hickory wood to add a nice smoke flavor.  I made "The Renowned Mr. Brown" Southern Succor Rub.  The main recipe though came from The Naked Whiz's web site- all sorts of good stuff here.

That was, until the fire went out at 3:30am. I transferred the pork to the oven while I relit.  It turns out the issue was how I set the charcoal.  I've since learned.  My remaining fire stayed at 200deg for 12 hours after I cut it off and still had half the lump left.  from 3:30am until 4:30pm, the egg was never opened.  And here was the result:

After 45 minutes wrapped in foil and warmed to keep the moisture in, a simple two-tined meat fork was used to "pull" or shred the pork.  It was more effort to pull a knife through butter.  Unfortunately I didn't get any pictures of the pulled pork because it was going to the serving table too fast!

At the BBQ, one of our guests' sons requested a hamburger.  I set the Guru up to 500 degrees and in 5 minutes, the fire was up and the burger was done quickly.  His Dad said he loved it!

And so begins the adventures of Sean and the BGE. Tonight, I'm going to try wood-fired Pizza on a ceramic pizza stone.  Maybe I'll make a video of it this time and put together some how-to's using Movie Maker in Vista RC1 ;)

Update0: Apparently there is a Texas-style BBQ place in the Seattle area.  Tipster Marius pointed me to a local place appropriately named.  A group of us are going to do a lunch-hour get-together to check this place out later this month.  Anyone who wants to join, drop a comment here and I'll include you on the invite.

Texas Style Smoked BBQ
10410 Holman Rd N
Seattle, WA 98133
206 782-5491

posted on Tuesday, September 05, 2006 10:14:58 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [4] Trackback
# Thursday, August 31, 2006

Fortunately everything has propped early so I can tell you about the new toy to play with over the long weekend- Windows Media Player 11 Beta 2 w/ MTV's Urge music service, just in time for the MTV Video Music Awards ;).

The Windows Media Player 11 team has just shipped Beta 2 of Windows Media Player 11 via the Web.  I've requested a changelist or at least the top 10 fix list but regardless, this is a must-have update for anyone running Beta 1, if even just for the performance improvements. A few more notes on what's changed:

  • Fixing issues. Fixes have been made for issues that occurred in the first beta release of Windows Media Player 11 for Windows XP.
  • Additional online stores are now available. More online stores are available in this beta release of Windows Media Player 11 for Windows XP. For a listing of online stores that are now available, see Availability of online stores.
  • Changes to sharing digital media content. The functionality of Windows Media Connect is now integrated into Windows Media Player 11 Beta 2 for Windows XP as the new Media Sharing feature, which lets you enjoy the contents of your Windows Media Player library from anywhere in your home. If you have a home network (wired or wireless), you can use Windows Media Player 11 to stream the contents of your library to networked devices such as Xbox 360 or other digital media receivers. For more information, go to Digital Media at Home.
    Note that digital media sharing is targeted for home users; therefore, computers that are joined to a domain might experience issues when trying to share digital media.

Download Link (note: Genuine Windows Validation required for install)

posted on Thursday, August 31, 2006 11:31:07 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [17] Trackback

Microsoft Corporate Vice President Amir Majidimehr recently took time to post in AVSForum on the new digital audio features in Windows Vista that haven't really seen much publicity yet.  Net-net is that when paired with the right audio drivers supporting the new features, you'll get customizable enhancements normally reserved for high-end AV receivers such as:

  • System-wide Loudness equalization
  • Bass Management (get the bass channel even on systems without a subwoofer)
  • Better support for surround sound systems up to 7.1 channels
  • Virtualized surround sound (Surround-->2 speakers)- mix 5.1 DVD's to headphones or standard desktop speakers
  • Virtual Surround (Stereo-->Surround)- turn 2-channel into surround sound for your receiver
  • Room Calibration - using a simple microphone, this profiler "listens" to the sound from each of your speakers to automatically adjust pitch and volume for where you're sitting in the room.  The better the mic, the better the results (My favorite for Media Center in the home theater!)

Now, not all audio drivers will support these features at Vista RC1- it's up to the sound card manufacturers to support it via in-box class drivers.  I know that HD Audio from Intel integrated into many new PC motherboards over the past 2 years does support it, but the currently available Beta 2 drivers from other card manufacturers haven't implemented yet.

Also worth mentioning is the work being done to really reduce latency and improve resiliency in the entire audio stack, both important to pro musicians and consumers alike.

You can also ask Amir questions about Vista Audio Processing here.

And a new whitepaper with more detail on Audio Innovations with screenshots is available here via the official Vista Blog.

posted on Thursday, August 31, 2006 10:06:43 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

It's the un-teaser.  No flashy sites. No countdown clocks.  Just that I'll be posting more news here and a download link at noon. Plan to spend your lunch hour playing, or make that 3pm for those of you on the east coast. ;)

posted on Thursday, August 31, 2006 8:13:04 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback
# Wednesday, August 30, 2006

Yes, there's a dedicated Mac team at Microsoft.  They build MacOffice, Virtual PC, IE, Messenger and a few other products for the Mac platform. And now they have a blog.  Welcome to the conversation Mac Mojo'ers. Looking forward to what you have to say.

posted on Wednesday, August 30, 2006 4:59:08 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback
# Monday, August 28, 2006

This weekend I had the luxury responsibility of helping my wife buy a new car.  Her Honda  was at end of lease, and we were so happy with it after four years that we returned to the same dealership where I've been going loyally for 7 years.  After becoming infuriated by the games being played by an arrogant local Honda dealer at the onset of our negotiations,  I redoubled my efforts to get a great deal and came away realizing I've been leaving money on the table.  The good news is that after doing some deeper research, we walked away with a new Pilot on Saturday for about $9000 under sticker, and $3000 under invoice, plus a bunch of accessories effectively for free.  Here are a few tips we used to get to this level of dealing:

1.  Do Your Research- getting the details on manufacturer incentives and holdback are essential. The more educated you sound walking in the better.  First start on Edmunds.com and ConsumerReports.com. If you know the car you want, get the CR report for the car for about $14, no subscription required.  Print off Edmund's True Market Value (TMV) based on the zip code you're buying in AND another within a few hours' driving distance.  Get the invoice price, and be fully aware of what the Manufacturer Holdback and Marketing Incentive dollars are.  These are dollars reserved for the dealer to use to close deals, or in the case of unwary customers, can take as pure profit.  Look through community message boards and forums online and find what others are paying in your area, then print out the pages to bring with.

Also very important is to know the value of your trade according to at least two appraisals going in.  Whether you own or are trading in a leased vehicle, If it's in good condition, there's money there for the dealer- and you.  I've traded in two Honda's at end of lease and had a few thousand dollars of money there to play with.  Get the blue-book value and competitive used-car listings in your area.  Print them all out and use to your advantage.

2. Get competitive quotes and deal with the right person. Always ask for the fleet manager's name, then to speak to him/her.  The Fleet Manager is a senior manager or sales associate that works on high volume, straight transactions such as corporate fleet cars.  They're more likely to be ready to work with you vs. the younger hotshot trying to win points with the boss by taking you for a ride.  If a fleet manager isn't available, talk to the Internet sales department.

If you know the vehicle you're looking for, tell them using the exact terms of the model/package or packages you're interested in.  Ask what they have on the lot and say you're flexible on color. Do not get into details like colors and accessories, just the inventory. Start making notes on colors and packages currently available in a spreadsheet.  Those with more inventory, especially later in the model year, are more likely to give a great deal. 

3.  Know when to buy.  Timing your purchase during the year can be very advantageous.  A few tips that are mostly common sense: 1) Don't buy a convertible in the spring/summer.  2) Go in the afternoon at the end of the month (they want to close out volume and will give great deals). Cars such as SUV's aren't selling as well so getting them at the end of the year closeout may mean an opportunity to get ridiculously low deals (like we did).  This goes for vehicle that aren't flying off the showroom floors.  I once tried to negotiate on a Toyota Prius, but due to a 6-month waiting list, my position was eroded.

4.  Be willing to travel to get a better deal.  Be willing to travel a few hours to get outside a certain area to get a better deal.  Then, do the math.  Think about what your time and money is worth.  For a $5000 price drop, many folks even in Seattle area will travel to Texas or California to close a deal and have the car shipped home.  Some dealers will even buy you a plane ticket.  If you're buying an Asian import, Michigan is a great place if you're interested in doing this due to the large # of US automakers based in the Detroit area.  Don't be afraid to get a quote from out of state in email and bring it and the airline quote for a round trip ticket into your local negotiations.

5.  Eat before you go. Never negotiate on an empty stomach.  We took our son and friend to a special restaurant right before the dealership so hunger wouldn't be a factor. 

6.  Bring a friend... and your kids!  Let's be clear- this is business.  You need to treat it as such and leave the emotions at home. That's part of what your friend is there for.  My friend who is a car enthusiast and has many years experience buying company cars and personal drivers gave us the advantage because he's not emotionally invested.  If the dealer starts to work you over with numbers and phrases you don't know, trying to maintain control of the negotation, your friend can be the one to ask the "dumb" questions and push back.  He or she is also there as your gut check.  Sometimes spouses can do this, but a "friend" is more unnerving to the dealer.  Is this a buyer?  What's the person's background? Were they in the business?  Make sure it's clear though with the dealer that you're the one doing the negotiating, and your friend is there for you to talk to, not for the dealer to talk to.

Then there are the kids.  This works to your advantage as well believe it or not if you do it right. Some car salesman love couples with kids.  They're too distracted to negotiate well and as the hours progress, the child often goes into meltdown.  My wife and I got into this situation once and I walked away.  We realized there's no advantage to having the two of us there with a child trying to negotiate.  My wife can swoop in during the final closing while my friend thankfully watched our son for a while. 

7.  Game Time: Set two appointments at different dealerships - and a time limit.  I had an appointment scheduled at another dealer further away with a firm offer in email.  By casually "swinging" by the closer dealership on my way to see if they could beat it on my way, it was clear from the beginning that I was shopping around.  This was key to maintaining control.  Coupled with #1 - casually mentioning what inventory was sitting on other dealers' lots, I made it clear I knew the local market prior and wouldn't be easily taken.  I knew what their "spiff" or holdback looked like and was using their jargon.  I was respectful but clear and deliberate in what I wanted.

In our case, my friend and I agreed to 45 minutes from sit-down at the negotiating desk to base deal.  We noted with the dealer we had another appointment in the afternoon and both knew exactly what time that was, saying it in tandem when asked.

8.   Don't sign anything or give up your edge until you have a firm base-price offer.  Some dealerships employ tactics such as taking your driver's license, a credit card, or a signature as "a show of good faith" at the beginning of the negotiation.  While many states now require that you give a driver's license for a photocopy to be made before taking a test drive, once they have the photocopy, you keep everything you walked in with.   The reason they ask for this is to take away your control.  If they won't take the deal back to their manager without these items, walk out.  I once had a dealer start to yell back at me when I turned the question around on him as to why he needed a signature before going back to his manager the first time.  Sitting in the seat at the dealership is proof enough of your intent.  So negotiate well, be professional and amiable but don't talk about personal details. Once you have your agreed-upon base price, normally your friend will step away as you're about 2/3 of the way through the deal. 

9.  Remember: Always be ready to walk out.  In our negotiation, the owner of the dealership personally came out and very frankly said he can't beat the offer and doesn't believe we'll get it at the other dealership.  So, we got up and started walking out after thanking him and his team for their time.  The salesman worked extra hard to try and save the deal.  They offered to pay for half of the only accessory I wanted (running boards) and I agreed.  It's improtant you're ready to walk out at any point.  Take multiple copies of your car keys with you too.  Just in case they're going to appraise your trade-in and need your keys, it's your right to keep tabs on where your car is, get up and walk out at any point if you're not happy with the way things are going.  You can always pick up the keys later.  If you walk out, there's still a high likelihood that you'll get a call back if you weren't too much of a pain in the ass to deal with.

10.  Have financing options and be wary of the Finance "Closer".  I don't recommend discussing financing options before you have the base price offer closed.  Discussing financing can devolve into an offer based on payment price vs. actual base price and this is how some people get taken (myself included, before I knew better).  Once you have the offer page, write down the exact amount.  Now you're ready to discuss financing.  My thoughts here will be based on purchase financing, not leasing.  There are other sites and details you can get for the Lease vs. Buy question and differences too numerous to discuss here.  The important things are: 1) Know your credit score.  Go to www.freecreditreport.com www.annualcreditreport.com and get your report. By law, you're allowed one per year.  2) Secure an auto loan separate from the dealership.  Capital One or your local bank.  Shop around for the best deal.

The financing guy is often a senior salesperson who has "graduated" to finance.  He or she's been in the game long enough and is smooth enough to try and extract a few more dollars out of you.  Your guard is normally down because you've haggled your price down and you just want to be done.  My recommendation - unless you've done the research, don't buy any of the "extras" they offer you in finance.  They'll use a "payment based" calculator again to keep your eye off the actual cost.  Most of the items - paint protection, leather protectant, Lo-Jack etc. can ALL be bought for cheaper aftermarket without any difference in quality or negative effect on your warranty.  (This was a point brought up on a nightly news magazine show in the US just recently.) Speaking of warranties, there's the Extended Warranty offer. Spend some time looking over the reports in message boards before signing up for this.  In almost all cases, it's cheaper to get an extended warranty near the end of the included warranty. 

Final Thoughts
I want to make a note here that the dealers in most cases are genuine and honest people who should be treated with respect- just as you should. They just know their business and generally what levers to pull to get you to buy their product, just the same as someone in any sales or marketing position.  This is a business transaction for both parties and as long as both is treated fairly, I believe the above will work in most cases.  I've never worked as a car salesman but I've done probably 120+ hours of research over the years to understand what works and how to do it quickly.  I hope you find this useful.

posted on Monday, August 28, 2006 12:14:47 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [7] Trackback

Major Nelson just posted that the TV show "Battlestar Galactica: The Story so Far" is now available for download in it's entirety on Xbox Live for free. I expect this is a catch-up episode, comparable to what was offered on ITunes last year, but what's interesting is how we're starting to see TV feature-length content start to show up on Xbox Live's network.  Hmmm...

And by the way, Battlestar is one of my favorite shows despite my dismissal of the concept when I first heard about it and the cheesy original show.  I was wrong.  Downloading.

posted on Monday, August 28, 2006 10:31:12 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [4] Trackback
# Friday, August 25, 2006

Apparently there  has been some confusion in the 'sphere the past few days on whether 32-bit based PCs running Windows Vista will support HD formats including HD-DVD and Blu-Ray.  HD-DVD and Blu-Ray support will be made available in Vista via ISV applications and according to a statement by Adam Anderson, nothing in any version of Windows Vista would make that determination. Here's the official Microsoft statement on the topic:

It is up to the ISVs providing playback solutions to determine whether the intended playback environment, including environments with a 32-bit CPU, meets the performance requirements to allow high-definition playback while supporting the guidelines set forth by the content owners.

No version of Windows Vista will make a determination as to whether any given piece of content should play back or not.

I'm  working to get additional detail on the topic and will post more here when I can.

posted on Friday, August 25, 2006 5:50:33 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback

Ok, I admit it, I'm a NetFlix laggard. More times than I care to remember,  I forget to update my NetFlix queue and discover new movie releases at the checkout stand at the grocery store.  Then by the time I get home I'm distracted again.   That's why I'm excited about NetFlix Mobile.  With the service you can  see the next ten movies in your queue, browse for new movies, add to your queue, and even view a short synopsis.  It's a great start, but there are a few features I'd like to see:

  • UPC snap.  Forget thumbing titles in for search - snap a picture with your cameraphone of the barcode on a movie to do.
  • Movie Ratings. Both professional and from friends in my circle.
  • Video Previews. Less necessary but interesting.
  • Upcoming releases. Browse a list of upcoming releases  by genre, box office, and/or format (e.g. HD-DVD)
  • Queue reordering. Right now you can view and move to top, but you can't reorder.

Either way, this is an idea that's time is overdue.  Bookmarked!

posted on Friday, August 25, 2006 5:13:30 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Thursday, August 24, 2006

Rob Miles has written an interesting Flickr Photo plug-in for Windows Live Writer.  It's still pretty early, but he's released the download and will release source soon.  This is fantastic news IMO.

Update: Tim Heuer mentioned there is another plug-in is also available for Flickr  at www.flickr4writer.com.  Very nice.

Now will someone write a "What I'm Listening To" and a "Current Mood: " plug-in to append these to the bottom of my posts?  I always liked that about LiveJournal.

posted on Thursday, August 24, 2006 1:42:49 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [4] Trackback

Ahh, the spat between two prior partners.  It was getting hard there to keep track of all the lawsuits flying between Creative and Apple.  Now they've settled out of court.  Is this an admission by Apple that they copied stole liberated Creative's IP?  It's unclear.  But Creative's Soon-Kon Kim is now $100M richer and planning to make iPod accessories.

Steve says:

"Creative is very fortunate to have been granted this early patent," said Steve Jobs, Apple's CEO. "This settlement resolves all of our differences with Creative, including the five lawsuits currently pending between the companies, and removes the uncertainty and distraction of prolonged litigation."

"Very fortunate"?  An odd way of acknowledging Creative owns the intellectual property.  Is sense much gnashing of teeth and PR jockeying over this exact quote.   I wonder if some designer/engineer just got fired for stiffing the company with the $100M tab for failing to rush out and patent everything they were working on with Creative. 

posted on Thursday, August 24, 2006 3:57:23 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Wednesday, August 23, 2006

You just have to  love Weird Al.  Whatever you do, !  Classic.

posted on Wednesday, August 23, 2006 8:34:19 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

Engadget and a number of sites are reporting this AM that the www.notfornoobs.com teaser was for the new 2000dpi, high-precision Microsoft Habu Mouse powered by Razer. Interchangeable side button panels, high speed motion detection, and the ability to adjust DPI on the fly round out the features of this wired wonder.  SRP is $69.96 when available in October.

The Habu is a dangerously venomous pit viper of the genus Trimeresurus (T. flavoviridis) common in the Ryukyu islands.  So yes, we have Snakes on a Mouse... or did the snake eat the mouse?

posted on Wednesday, August 23, 2006 6:21:26 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

Michael Gartenberg has an interesting recount of the negotiations between  Microsoft and The Rolling Stones by Brad Silverberg and  Brad Chase for the  commercial rights to "Start Me Up".  Part 1 of 2 details the negotiations, and the new version of the song that almost was.

This got me thinking about what should be the launch theme of Windows Vista?  (Disclaimer - I have no knowledge of any plans).  Windows XP's commercial anthem was Madonna's "Ray of Light".  Everyone thought it would be Jimmi  Hendrix' "Are you eXPerienced?".  No doubt any music selected will be contemporary, but I think the anthem should be Van Halen's, "".  Considering  the following:

  • The original album hit #1 and was on the charts for 74 weeks, this is no small feat. 
  • The median age of a target Windows PC user is in the same demographic that  will remember the song fondly
  • The experience of Longhorn/Vista, the song's lyrics speak  to me  about both the challenges and incredible effort of the engineering team to deliver what's shaping up to be a great release
  • The song is forward-looking, capturing the essence of opportunity
  • Rock music is making a comeback  ;)

Another nice choice would be U2's "", but given U2's relationship with Apple, I doubt that would happen.

What song would you pick? Feel free to comment here.

posted on Wednesday, August 23, 2006 5:55:37 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [6] Trackback
# Tuesday, August 22, 2006

Sane advice here from Rod Boothby of InnovationCreators.com for anyone who a) works and b) blogs.

posted on Tuesday, August 22, 2006 3:44:29 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

It's not often I make predictions here, but yesterday I had an "aha" moment spurred by sites abuzz with Reuters report that SanDisk is launching the Sansa e280, an 8GB version of  their e2xxx series for $249.99.  This little device will hold about 2,000 songs, double the capacity of the similarly priced iPod Nano.  Meanwhile prices on their 2GB, 4GB, and 8GB models are being dropped an average of 30%. This may sound like just another product announcement, but I believe this is much more.  This is the equivalent of a shot across the bow of every MP3 player in the market and a new price war is underway. 

One of the reasons SanDisk can compete so well here is that they own and run their own NAND Flash memory fabrication plants in partnership with Toshiba. NAND or "Flash" memory has been popularized by everything from MP3 players to memory cards for cell phones and cameras; development of these memory products is one of SanDisk's core competencies.  Using economies of scale to their advantage, they're able to acquire large quantities at base price, and pass some savings on to customers, a competitive advantage few have. 

But the bigger question is will Apple emerge with a new flash based player ala Nano to compete or wait?  Part of the answer I believe lies in another quiet announcement made recently which hints at Apple's upcoming roadmap.

Where is the new iPod Nano? Read the NAND leaves.
Apple, being one of the largest purchasers (and by proxy best negotiators) of flash memory destined for MP3 devices, recognized this choke point in 2005. But rather than lay out the capital cost of building their own chipfab, the entered into a $500M agreement with Intel and Micron last November helping to form IM Flash Technologies. By paying out $250M each to Intel and Micron, they've secured first-mover access at unparalleled pricing for NAND+ products.  I call them NAND+ because IM Flash is already sampling the industry's first 50nm scale technology for manufacturing flash, a process 10x smaller than that of facilities just coming online now.

This got me to thinking about why we still haven't seen a new iPod released by Apple.  Are they relinquishing their perceptual first-mover's advantage? Not necessarily. My prediction is that they're waiting until their investment in cheaper, smaller, NAND technology is ready.  Smaller nm NAND flash offers higher capacities in a smaller space.  Today Apple sources Flash memory from other companies such as Samsung.  But production goes online in IM Flash's VA facility later this year albeit with limited production capacity until their Utah-based facility comes online in mid-2007. 

So what is Apple going to do? I'm going to make my own prediction: Apple will first start to integrate their new memory investments into an upcoming iPhone, which will have a smaller unit-volume requirement than a next-gen iPod Nano.  They'll release a phone with 16-32GB of flash memory to cater to the high-end market. In Q1/Q2, once IM Flash is ramping up, the new Nano/Nano replacement will come out, and a price battle will kick into overdrive. The smaller sized chips + lower price to Apple gives them an edge on size of device, capacity, and without a major price differential. 

SanDisk isn't going to slouch here though. They've started production on Fab3, their 3rd 500nm NAND production facility with Toshiba.  At 500nm though, these chips will be larger than the 50nm units that IM Flash is ramping up.  Either way, it will be interesting to see how the next round plays out.

posted on Tuesday, August 22, 2006 3:20:32 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Sunday, August 20, 2006

Duncan tipped me off to a new video he just posted looking at mceAuction, an eBay add-in for Windows Media Center. Developed by long-time and highly respected Media Center developer Christoph Buenger of , this is a great example of the cool stuff you can do and winner of the, "eBay Star Developer Award 2006". 

New features include:

  • Show item's location in Google Maps®
  • Get notification when you got outbid, your watched auction end in a few minutes, ...
  • Shows shipping costs, payment options, item's attributes, ...
  • Shows all details for a seller (latest feedback, % feedback score, ...)
  • List of other items from a seller
  • List of auctions in "my eBay" that are ending soon.

I can't wait to see what Christoph and team comes up with using the Vista Media Center SDK and rumor has it he's working  on  a Windows Sidebar gadget or two.

posted on Sunday, August 20, 2006 8:59:17 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Saturday, August 19, 2006

Forget Mike's TechCrunch party last night.  The party to go to is tonight - Chris Pirillo, my neighbor Randy and I are going to see "Snakes on a Plane" tonight.  Chris has already seen it.  He's practicing lines right now.  My wife thinks I've been insufferable about this movie.  If you want to join us, 8:00pm showing at Lincoln Square in Bellevue, WA. Seriously, Chris is running lines...

Soa@(&#$&(@P!

posted on Saturday, August 19, 2006 5:13:21 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Friday, August 18, 2006

Click to watch video.I 'm a huge plane fanatic.  I saw the Blue Angels fly three days in a row.  My parents had to convince me to go to a traditional college instead of Embry Riddle Aeronautical University to become an air transport pilot.  I did reports and built models of the SR-71 Blackbird, Space Shuttle and more.  Getting at least my single-engine VFR rating is on my list of things to do before I die.  Last week, we got the Flight Simulator X demo to try out and WOW.  This week, Tina Wood  at On10.net has an - of the most comprehensive videos I've seen on the 787 project, including an interview with the head engineer.  Someday, I must get into the full-sized flight simulator there.

posted on Friday, August 18, 2006 3:23:11 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Thursday, August 17, 2006

 John Porcaro has reiterated  over at the Gamerscore blog that there are no plans in the works to release game titles on HD-DVD using the upcoming add-on drive. 

Since announcing the Xbox 360 HD DVD Player accessory at E3 2006, we’ve been clear that it is designed exclusively for playing HD DVD movies.  It will not play games on HD DVD.

There you have it.  Time to move along now back to debating the cost of the HD-DVD player. ;)

posted on Thursday, August 17, 2006 8:11:09 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback

It looks like a new site is up at www.notfornoobs.com. I snagged a screenshot of the "secret symbol" that shows up, a logo for the Razer brand of peripherals.  I have to admit, it's not the best I've seen- putting Microsoft logos into teaser programs is a no-no in my opinion.  But is this a tie-in with the soon to be smash-hit movie, "Snakes on a Plane"?  thinks it's a new game hardware product announcement.  

Even if I knew, I couldn't say. 
We'll just have to wait and see. ;)

Final Update: Early in the day I posted this, I had some concerns about authenticity which have since been cleared up – looking forward to when we all learn more <g>.

posted on Thursday, August 17, 2006 7:59:13 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback

My boss made me do it.  Seriously.  My boss wants me to blog about the Aquagate, saying it's the coolest MP3 player he's ever seen.  It's annual review time at Microsoft so I will humor him.  Matteo Thun has partnered with Villeroy & Boch to bring this showering/steaming class cube that has been buzzing around the Internet. From their product material:

Thanks to the possibility of playing MP3-files or listening to your favourite radio programme, you can now relax and at the same time enjoy your favourite music during a refreshing shower or vitalising steam bath. Hot mist from above, cold mist at head-height, a ‘cool down’ programme that offers you coolness from top to toe, aroma and light therapy, a rain shower or a Scottish shower are all part of the extremely luxurious equipment level.

Aquagate™ is fitted with four delightful automatic programmes in which all functions are harmoniously combined. For a conscious and healthy life the Wake up, Relax, Fitness and Feel good programmes provide perfect relaxation at the right time of the day. The central gate of the Aquagate™ is available in the stylish materials teak-wood, pure Italian limestone and aluminium in a champagne-metallic colour. The cabin can be placed free-standing, but will also make an unprecedented impression as a design-icon in your bathroom against a wall or in a corner. The Aquagate™ is available in two spacious sizes: 90 x 100 cm and 100 x 130 cm. In our special Aquagate™ brochure you can read everything about the endless possibilities of the Aquagate™.

They had me at Steam shower, they lost me at Scottish shower.  But I like the way they spell "programme" so I'm happy enough.  An LCD display, USB port for loading MP3s.  Too bad there's no WiFi.  This thing would be bad-ass with WiFi enabled access to your music library.  Villeroy and Boch, I'm willing to beta test, just leave the Scotsman at home please. ;)

posted on Thursday, August 17, 2006 7:38:13 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback
# Wednesday, August 16, 2006

Like coke and pepsi, Windows or Mac, another heated debate is raging- XM or Sirius satellite radio. My wife wants a car that has XM, and already is talking about getting it because she thinks the playlist on Sirius' Broadway is too limited.  Of course, she never would have thought of this if not for my testing the Sirius S50.  I'm sheepishly admitting I'm a Howard Stern fan (for better or for worse- I'm from the NY area) so I like Sirius also for NPR, and Rolling Stones radio.  Fortunately for the rest of the unwashed masses, Marc Fisher has a to picking between the two.  Now debate amongst yourselves :)

posted on Wednesday, August 16, 2006 3:00:32 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [5] Trackback
# Tuesday, August 15, 2006

Sometimes a mashup of two existing ideas just makes sense.  For example, let's mash up two of the most popular Windows Sidebar Gadgets (or Widgets) - a clock and a photo sideshow.  After seeing The Human Clock on it's occurred to me that this would make a great Gadget for Windows Sidebar with a human element.  Imagine a clock that shows original pictures from around the world, each incorporating the time in a unique way.  It should be super-simple to write (I'm just a little busy with other projects right now <g>).  Anyone want to write it (with the author's permission of course).

posted on Tuesday, August 15, 2006 7:22:40 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback

Chris Pirillo and a group of TechTV alums are reviving the show concept as "UndoTV" as reported today at Wired News.  Taking a page from the YouTube nation, expect to see original content from a geographically dispersed set of our favorite on-air hosts.  Leo Laporte and others have already signed on. Chris and I were talking about his plans to roll this out at a social event a few weeks ago.  Glad to see this happening.

Source: Wired News: TechTV Reborn as 'UndoTV'

posted on Tuesday, August 15, 2006 3:53:37 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Monday, August 14, 2006

THANK YOU to maverick Mark Cuban and C|Net's Blogma for ranting about a topic I've also been on the warpath over for years- product packaging that makes the customer the enemy.  We've all experienced it- tough plastic-molded around the product we just bought, the knives, the scissors, the bloody incisions on our fingers.  One brand name these are known under in the business is "Thermoform".  Thermal molded plastics.  I call it "The Polycoffin".

But the blame doesn't rest solely with the manufacturer.  Retailers are playing a larger part in detailing packaging requirements, threatening not to "assort" products that do not use the packaging.  They claim that a high likelihood of theft is the reason why they do this.  The risk to the manufacturer is lost shelf space at retail, lost sale in the store (due to lack of shelf or floor space), both of which are crucial to success for many CE manufacturers.  Smaller CE manufacturers don't have the retail power (read: $$$) to fund their own retail programs in-store so they're over a barrel. So the retailer wants to reduce their cost of doing business and passes the buck to the retailer in one direction, the customer in the other; knowing the customer will blame the manufacturer, not the retailer for the situation.  Mail-order products are also affected because the manufacturer cannot afford to keep inventory of products in multiple packaging types. 

But the problem is that thermoform is so cheap now thanks to economies of scale that even low-priced products - kids toys, tools, and blank DV-camera tapes are being put in thermaform.  It's a retail addiction.

So what can we, the measly consumers do about this?  I firmly believe the manufacturers take their cues from the retailers.  Here are a few ideas on how to take back the packaging and put the customer first!

  1. Require the Retailer remove the packaging at point of sale.  Let them know that the product you're holding will not be purchased because it is in thermoform.  Offer an alternative - tell them if they're willing to, "Remove your anti-theft packaging from the product after purchase", then you'll buy it.  You wouldn't buy clothing with an ink-tag anti-theft device still attached and they don't expect you to remove it.  Same should go for thermoform. Make it their time and effort that's wasted.  Unfortunately this doesn't work for gifted items :(
  2. Mail the Thermoform back to the retailer's HQ care of the CEO. This takes up more of your time, but include a politely worded letter that you don't appreciate being subjected to physical harm in exchange for your purchasing dollars and will be returning their anti-theft device.  This requires a lot of people to do in order to be useful.
  3. Speak to the Manager; boycott the product. If they are unable or unwilling to remove the packaging, ask to speak to a manager.  Explain that you will be sending said plastic along with his/her name in a letter to the CEO to the company.
  4. Liability. I'm not a lawyer, nor do I pretend to be and generally think our society has become too litigious.  But I am just waiting for someone, somewhere to get sliced by one of these packages bad enough to do a)nerve damage,  b)require stitches, or c)contract a severe infection that spawns a class action lawsuit. 
  5. Blog About it. (Thank you Jeremy).  Bloggers and professional reviewers should consider packaging a part of the criteria as well in their evaluation of products.  It's all about cognitive dissonance.  Buyer's remorse is amplified by bad packaging. 

It's time to end the addiction to thermoform plastic packaging and put the customer first again.  We need a better solution to anti-theft.

posted on Monday, August 14, 2006 9:32:18 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback

Back when the Xbox 360 was announced, J. Allard and Robbie Bach also talked about a new development platform called "XNA", designed to make it easier to build games Xbox and Windows PCs, sharing much of the same high performance code.  A series of tools announcements were made and then frankly, we didn't hear much more in the general tech 'sphere.  Until now.

XNA Game Studio Express will be unveiled today at Gamefest, an annual event Microsoft holds.  Until we have a public demonstration, here's a little snippet about XNA Game Studio:

XNA Game Studio Express will democratize game development by delivering the necessary tools to hobbyists, students, indie developers and studios alike to help them bring their creative game ideas to life while nurturing game development talent, collaboration and sharing that will benefit the entire industry.

Stripping away the PR-speak, these tools are being developed specifically with Game developers in mind.  The Express moniker is also used in Microsoft developer tools such as Visual Studio Express and SQL Express to denote fully functional but slightly less industrial-grade versions focused on students, hobbyists, and the like. 

Some call it "democratization of the game platform". Ick. What's cool about this announce is that the same way YouTube and GarageBand.com are opening up the doors to indie video, film, and music creators, this will do the same for gaming for the first time.  Up until now, you had to be a game publisher paying thousands of dollars just to get your foot in the door to do serious development for game consoles.  It will be a trickle at first, but this is a disruptive technology that has the potential to revolutionize game development similar to when a few hard-core enthusiasts built a little game called, "Doom".  Think about all the games that could be developed that never would have seen the light of day because, "some suit" said it didn't test well in a focus group. I think the flood gates have just opened. 

Update0: The XNA team has posted their blog here.  More details to come soon ;)

posted on Monday, August 14, 2006 6:40:08 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Sunday, August 13, 2006

Back from camping (pictures to follow) and I can finally talk about what I and many other Microsoft bloggers have been quietly beta testing for some time now: .  A simple WYSIWYG editor with powerful features for blogging, I'm just starting to scratch the surface.  The ability to add watermarks and frame effects to images alone is reason for me to use Writer.  It also helps me avoid the dreaded situation where I write an entry in a browser window and another application grabs that instance and redirects, which under DasBlog would make me lose the entire post.  I'm also interested to see the Plug-in model once the links are up and running.

Congrats to the Windows Live Writer team.  Here's to hoping for more to come.

Download Windows Live Writer Beta

posted on Sunday, August 13, 2006 5:34:00 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Wednesday, August 09, 2006

As I mentioned before, I've been working on a side project to address issues with the blog- the increased spam and difficult in reviewing statistics in particular.  Thanks to Ryan Hoffman at Telligent who wrote me an unofficial DasBlog to Community Server 2.1 converter, I was able to easily migrate all posts and comments into the system, but not without losing some items such as permalinks.  The system is much more robust and may pave the way to offering forums and more community submitted content in the future. 

So I submit for your review and feedback, "Addicted to Digital Media v3.0 Beta".  Please let me know your likes and dislikes, CSS issues or otherwise.  This site exists for you- let's talk about what you want to see more of/less of.

posted on Wednesday, August 09, 2006 5:32:10 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback
# Friday, August 04, 2006

A small group of us are heading out to see the Blue Angels practice today at 1pm for Seafair.  I know we can't get into the main grounds, but I'm looking for suggestions on where to stage for good pictures.  Here are some thoughts:

  • Luther Burbank Park, Mercer Island
  • NewCastle Beach Park, Factoria
  • Seward Park, Seattle

Any suggestions on the location?  I know I90 will be shut down but it's been a few years and I'm a bit rusty on their flight path.  Thanks!

Update0: qna.live.com has the same question posted here - thanks Erik!  By the luck of the draw, we found Colman Park- right near the I90 bridge in Seattle, it's free, was less populated and got some really good shots straight ahead, and 180deg behind you for closer shots. There's swimming for the kids, and plenty of space for a throw-blanket. 

posted on Friday, August 04, 2006 8:39:12 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [5] Trackback
# Thursday, August 03, 2006

GearLive recently sat down with Jonathan Sasse, President of iRiver America at their offices about the development of the Clix.  You can see the framed signoff poster we gave them commemorating the effort and learn more about the experience here.  The audio quality leaves a bit to be desired but a good demo and interview overall.

posted on Thursday, August 03, 2006 4:32:35 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Wednesday, August 02, 2006

Last night, I had the opportunity to have dinner with Jeremy Toeman, VP of Sling Media and a group of folks from the Windows Mobile team.  I had a fantastic time- this was the first time Jeremy and I had met in person and we clicked.  I've been a reader of his blog for some time at www.livedigitally.com which he does for fun on the side as I do this site.  We both use Shure headphones.  We both like to smoke... BBQ (gotcha!).  We both love Slingbox.  He set up my new HTC Breeze aka MTeoR aka Qtek 8600 with his own home account for testing (sustained 140kbps over EDGE in Bellevue WA).  I was getting 14fps which was truly watchable.  His wife called up shortly thereafter because he was fighting with her on the same TV for control.  Uhoh- glad he was at the controls :).  No marital tiff here, he just apologized and said he was doing a demo.

I forgot to take a picture, but as an owner and fan of the iRiver Clix, I gave him my launch jacket as a thank you for all the good (Windows Media) work that went into the Slingbox.  I love my slingbox and with my new super fast cell phone, I'm sure to enjoy it on more wifely excursions.

Special thanks to Jonathan.  I've officially been out-gadgeted. Of course, now my boss wants a Slingbox as well. :)

posted on Wednesday, August 02, 2006 8:47:10 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback

MSN Spaces is now Windows Live Spaces, offering blogging and more for mainstream Windows Live users.  I keep a family blog over at WL Spaces, and perhaps now will do more with it.  I was surprised to hear that WL Spaces is now the largest blogging service on the web with over 100 million unique monthly visitors, beating Google's Blogger.

Here's an interesting video at On10.net that explains some of the new features.  The "mistress" analogy is the most non-Microsoft I've heard in a while.  Something tells me this guy is going to get a call from PR to come up with another analogy... ;)

Top New features:

  • New look and feel
  • Support for Windows Live Gadgets
  • Friends Module (heavily customizable - look out MySpace!)
  • RSS feed embedding (include content from your favorite sites on your WL Space)

Michael Arrington at TechCrunch has more here as well.  Personally I'd like to see more in the statistics features, more music and video integration (including simple hosting of videos on 3rd parties ala YouTube).  How about links to Urge music with freeplays? Perhaps we'll see more in the future.

Update0: Added RSS feature to list - thanks Erik!

posted on Wednesday, August 02, 2006 6:42:54 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback
# Tuesday, August 01, 2006

Remember those annoying little tamagotchi keychain games that were all the rage in the last 90's?  The goal was to raise your little animal by hitting buttons to feed or train it.  Jeremy Toeman points to what I call "Analog Tamagotchi"- real plants and cactii on a keychain.  Just a little water every few days.  Eventually these can be moved to pots to become full-sized.  Or you could just kill it like I do most of my plants and carry around a plant corpse, noting you're too busy to water it.

Source: LIVEdigitally » Blog Archive » Who’da Think it? - 5

posted on Tuesday, August 01, 2006 10:02:18 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Monday, July 31, 2006

If you're like me, you know how infuriating it can be to have a layover between flights and no access to power to recharge your battery.  Airports are often stingy and attempt to hide their power outlets.

Jeff had a great idea- start a Wiki where users can post pictures and details on how to find AC power. Whether you want to watch a movie, surf, or get real work done, this is a great resource.

Sean's Travel Tip #28: Often times when you find the outlet, someone else will be using it.  Bring one of those dandy $3 3-outlet adapters with you to share with the other power user and potentially a third person such as a coworker. Worried about surges?  There's a solution here for you too.  Go ahead, recoup some of the "Airport usage fee" rolled into the cost of that ticket. ;)

posted on Monday, July 31, 2006 5:11:50 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback

Long Zheng from Australia was excited to win my little giveaway a few weeks back and finally recieved one of the first iRiver Clix players in his country.  His thoughts are posted here as well as pictures of the swank jacket we created for the launch team which I included as a bonus.

Now comes more good news for our friends down under. The Clix is now available officially at Dick Smith Electronics.

Sorry, I don't have any additional details on Clix availability in other markets- please contact iRiver and/or your favorite retailer directly for your region.

posted on Monday, July 31, 2006 5:02:51 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback

Last week, at Microsoft's Financial Analysts Meeting, reporters poked fun at a demo bug with speech recognition, some going so far as to call it "Speech Wreckognition". Slashdot had it, Neowin had it,  Digg had it, Reuters had it.  

Clearly this was a bug in a test build of Vista and it made for a good chuckle (you don't hear about all the other demos that ran flawlessly of course).  There must be someone responsible, to hold accountable right?  That was probably a faceless, nameless developer somewhere in the "Echo Chamber" who would never admit it publicly right?  When these things happen, engineers tear the demo system apart to learn from it but then keep that to themselves and quietly fix the bug, right?

Wrong.  The owner of the issue, Larry Osterman is one of those developers I just admire the heck out of.  He fessed up.  "It was all my fault" he writes on his blog about the bug, noting what caused it, creating a shared learning with others. He could have said, "I spoke to the guy who owns the bug" but that would have been disingenuous.  He held himself accountable.  Kudos Larry.  Subscribed.

posted on Monday, July 31, 2006 4:51:39 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Sunday, July 30, 2006

Nick White from the Vista team posts on their official blog more details on Vista changes coming in the Release Candidate or already seen in interim builds here on their official Vista Blog.  It's a good start but pretty wordy.  Thanks Nick - how about some shiny happy screenshots with John Madden-like chalk talk to detail the changes before/after?    :)

posted on Sunday, July 30, 2006 5:46:45 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

I can't believe I'm actually excited about this.  The iCup arrives at Microsoft and I can't wait to get some fresh joe at the office that doesn't cost me $5 a cup.  Be sure to check out their video.

(Courtesy Jeff Sandquist, Duncan, and Adam)

posted on Sunday, July 30, 2006 4:49:00 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Friday, July 28, 2006

What if you could take all the pictures of a particular place on Flickr, taken at different angles, and without a 3D model, your computer could stitch the pictures together into a 3D, navigable model where you can zoom in or out, walk around and more?  Enter Microsoft Live Labs' project, "Photosynth"

Update0: On10.Net has a cool interview and more in-depth demo of Windows Live Labs' PhotoSynth here.

posted on Friday, July 28, 2006 7:45:15 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback

Todd Bishop of the Seattle P-I has updates on Zune and Vista from the Microsoft Financial Analysts Meeting (FAM).

Correction: Todd Bishop of the Seattle P-I. ;)

posted on Friday, July 28, 2006 7:36:10 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

From the "Don't believe everything you read on the Internet" file, ClixAnything but iPod is reporting has been relaying a rumor that an iRiver Clix 4GB version is expected next week.  The apparent source of said rumor is an hourly-wage employee at a major retail chain.  I've helped to train said types of employees in a former life and I can tell you these guys are the last ones I would trust to have inside skinny on product releases or even how to market them. 

Case in point: I was recently forwarded pictures of a major retailer placing multiple Apple iPods in the PlaysforSure section of one of their stores, in demo stations with security wire and PlaysforSure logos, all of which was likely an honest mistake by a sales employee/manager type, but is highly deceptive to consumers.

So is a 4GB Clix coming next week?  I checked with our friends at iRiver and while they don't normally speak about future product plans, I can tell you a 4GB version is not expected to be released next week.  What about the week after?  Come on guys, I'm not going to do that to you.  If you're in the market for a Clix, now is a good time to buy.  If a 4GB comes out, you can always put your existing device up on eBay or Windows Live Expo (which just launched) and sell it there.

I've expressed my desire for a 4GB as have many customers via forums and contacting iRiver and Reigncom (their parent company) directly, but there is no news to communicate at this time.  If this changes, I will report it here from a confirmed source. :)

posted on Friday, July 28, 2006 7:03:58 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback
# Thursday, July 27, 2006

HD-DVDXbox Live's Major Nelson interviewed my VP, Amir Majidimehr for his podcast while I was out on vacation.  This is a frank and highly informative look at HD-DVD, Blu-Ray and DVD.  Even if you have no idea what I'm talking about, I still recommend you listen to this interview to learn more about why Microsoft got behind HD-DVD, and continues to supply technology that will ship in both formats.

posted on Thursday, July 27, 2006 8:13:28 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Tuesday, July 25, 2006

zune_logo.jpgBack in the saddle at work today after an extended vacation :). 

 

Billboard has a good write up about a new Microsoft project under the brand name, "Zune". I've received a few phone calls and emails asking for comment, but prefer to make my thoughts known here.  Let me first say I’m not a member of the Zune team and in no way speak for them or Microsoft in an official capacity on this topic.  With that out of the way, here’s my take.

 

From what I've learned, Zune is a new brand for Microsoft - Zune is about community, music and entertainment discovery.  You'll experience Zune with a family of devices and software that bring it all together. Yes, we all want more details, but we’ll have to be a little patient for more details. Check out www.comingzune.com and sign up if you want more details.

 

One question that gets asked here is the relationship to our existing PlaysforSure program. The Windows digital media team (of which I've been a member) has been focused on raising the tide for all boats, raising the experience for many partners through programs like PlaysforSure, giving sessions on 360 degree product design at partner events, offering frank feedback on product designs when requested and more.  We want Windows to be the best place to experience digital music and entertainment.  The Windows team will continues to work closely with service and device partners to make Windows a great platform for any digital media.

 

And one need only look as far as the MP3 player/portable media player market to find other examples of taking multiple approaches.  At least two of the largest consumer electronics manufacturers compete on not one, not two, but three levels:

  • They supply memory for their own, and competitive MP3 players
  • They design and sell MP3 "engines" (systems on a chip) for their own, and competitive MP3 device manufacturers
  • They design, build and compete for retail space for their own, branded MP3 players

There are many other examples that can be drawn within Microsoft as well – for example, Microsoft Game Studios competes with independent game publishers for consumer dollars on the same platform (Xbox) also built by Microsoft. In all these cases, relationships of trust must be established independently between product groups or divisions.  The same holds true here as well.   It’s hard to understand unless you’re inside Microsoft but these groups have separate P&Ls (Profit/Loss metrics) and that sometimes means trying different strategies.  To quote Jonathan Sasse, President of iRiver America in a recent CNet News.com article:

 

“Microsoft is a great partner and we expect continued success moving forward. The potential launch of a device by Microsoft does not appear to threaten our relationship in any way.”

 

I personally hope, like Jonathan, that this new effort will help to raise the tide once again for all players as the so-called digital lifestyle continues to evolve.  PlaysforSure continues to be a Windows effort with some 140+ products in the market today and with the recently updated PlaysforSure 2.01 specification, the experience bar will be raised even higher.  Zune is a part of a different group and P&L,  but an integral part of Microsoft’s vision for “connected entertainment” that spans across offerings including as games, music and devices. So that’s my take on it. 

(To learn more about the Zune community, check out Cesar’s new site at www.Zuneinsider.com or the official teaser site at www.comingzune.com, which will offer more information when available. For more on PlaysforSure devices available today, see http://www.playsforsure.com)

Update0: Brier Dudley of the Seattle Times weighs in on my post here.
Update1: Richard Winn, a member of the Zune team and new to Microsoft is blogging at www.madisonandpine.com

Update2: Chris Pirillo says the post is a link worth loading and notes I'm one of the Microsoft employees he trusts - thanks Chris :)

posted on Tuesday, July 25, 2006 1:45:48 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [6] Trackback
# Friday, July 21, 2006

While Senator Stevens is still trying to explain how the Internet is a series of tubes (must see: Jon Stewart clip), I'm thinking about a different kind of tube- the kind that you leisurely go down a river in.  The weather is going to be sweltering here today so I'm thinking about going tubing while I'm still on vacation.  A quick search on the 'Net yields few references to tubing in Western Washington so I may just go down the Snoqualmie or Tolt Rivers in Carnation/North Bend and hope for the best. 

Q1: Any suggestions or resources on great tubing/canoeing areas in Western Washington or a short drive from the area?

Q2: Is it time for "Geek Tubing" ala Geek Dinners?

P.S. Apologies to those who were up for a Geek Dinner in NJ, things were just too hectic for me to peel away.  I'll definitely set something up next time I'm in town.

posted on Friday, July 21, 2006 6:16:12 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback
# Thursday, July 06, 2006

In my totally unsanctioned but nice to poke have a little fun style, you might recall a month ago I announced a contest to win an iRiver Clix.  The winner is in: Long Zheng's "Feel the Beat" was selected based on its simplicity and spirit in line wiht the player+device+service combo.  Long's second design, "Press the Magic Number" was another top contender.

And for the heck of it, Austin wins the runner up "Nice try and yes, there's some truth there too Award" for his entry I call, "Usable".  Austin gets a cool WMP11|iRiver Clix launch team jacket (with tiny logos) for his entry because it made me laugh.

Congrats to both our winners!

 

 

posted on Thursday, July 06, 2006 11:41:40 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [4] Trackback

After nearly seven years of being in "launch mode" every summer, I'm going on a long vacation - a whopping two weeks! I'll be down at the Jersey Shore with family and friends.  I may try to do a geek dinner at the Jersey Shore- if anyone is interested, send me email at sean@youknowthissite.com

posted on Thursday, July 06, 2006 6:21:40 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Wednesday, July 05, 2006

Check out an interview with the On10 Team and learn more about what it's like to work on this sister-site to Channel9

You can also get a Sneak Peek at their upcoming site redesign.  What do you want to see more of on On10?  Let Jeff and the team know.

One thing to note on the upcoming site redesign is more discoverable support for downloadable versions of their videos formatted for iPod and PSP.  I think this is great- support what the people do en-masse.  Does this surprise you?  It shouldn't. I just hope my Toshiba PMC will also be supported. :)

posted on Wednesday, July 05, 2006 3:11:39 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback

Addressing a question I get often internally and externally at Gnomedex this week.

1.  Yes I blog and have done so for a long time (5+ years)

2.  Yes I work at Microsoft.

3.  No, I'm not Mini-MSFT.  I read his site once a month and find it to be more of a virtual support group for disgruntled MSFT employees unable or willing to effect change internally than a voice for change.

4.  Can we move along now? :)

posted on Wednesday, July 05, 2006 2:21:21 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Tuesday, July 04, 2006

Great tips here from the New York Institute of Photography on how to take pictures of fireworks.  It worked for me even for a small show put on by some friends this weekend.

 

 

posted on Tuesday, July 04, 2006 6:56:59 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Sunday, July 02, 2006

Admittedly I skipped out on Day 2 of Gnomedex knowing I would be able to catch up on what I missed later and opted for some family time.  Inspired by the beautiful weather, we spent some time bumming around Seattle, resulting in what was definitely a "Best Day Ever".  It's nice to get away from the tech side of life sometimes.

More pictures here.

9:30am - Walking down at Alki Beach.

Easy Does It

11:00am - Shopping at Pike Place Market

Pike Place Market Sign

12:30pm - Lunch at XXX Root Beer Stand (Last in America)

Self Portrait by way of Thunderbird

1:00pm - Chainsawing Limbs from the Sycamore in our Neighbors Yard from a Tall Ladder (Too Scary for Pictures)

4:30pm - Finished Cleaning Up after Chainsawing Limbs from the Sycamore.  Firewood is ready for winter.

5:30pm - 4th of July Big Bash at Jaron & Lauren's House

Spinning

9:30pm - Fireworks!

July 4th Fireworks

posted on Sunday, July 02, 2006 9:28:39 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Friday, June 30, 2006

More pictures up on my Flickr site

 

DSC_0006

posted on Friday, June 30, 2006 11:19:58 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Monday, June 26, 2006

Brier Dudley seems to agree about the Clix in his latest column in the Seattle Times:

"I'd argue that Microsoft has already developed an iPod challenger, and it's been on sale for a couple of weeks at Best Buy and Amazon.com for about $200... The device is called the Clix."

I was interviewed for this article and got a nice quote.  Brier has more details about the development experience over on his blog.  Just one correction- we didn't specify the silicon for use, but we did provide direct feedback as decisions were being made . 

I also want to call out the amazing work done by the iRiver America team.  The packaging is largely to their credit- we provided critical feedback and encouraged a new, more refined design based on existing packaging in Korea.  The iRiver team did all the heavy lifting and it shows.

At the end of the day, my job was two-fold: As UX (User Experience) PM, to play the part of the consumer end to end- to apply what I've learned working in this space for 7+ years and document our recommendations.  From there, we (the v-team as we called ourselves) agreed on relative priorities w/ iRiver up-front.  We acknowledged where we disagreed without ego or hubris, and worked together on a solution in the interest of the customer.  We were invited to provide input in every meeting on the UX, system flow and regular milestones on naming, branding, messaging, out of box experience and more.  

Shifting gears for a second.  Looking to the development process we used as a case study, Chris Pirillo is still largely right in my opinion about the "User". Except it's users vs. the traditional development process that's the issue- not the developers themselves.  PMs, Devs, Testers, and Marketing are still WAY too silo'ed from their customers and residing in the echo chamber.  I get irate when a PM or Dev tells me they're too busy to go on a customer visit or staff a booth and talk to customers about their product.  I look for these opportunities. But a better requires a multi-disciplined approach working together on a daily basis as well as talking to customers.  That's why we instituted a Scrum Model with "butts in seats at 9:30am accountability" on this project. Our mission statement, "Help our partner build a device we're proud to recommend to family and friends everywhere with WMP11 Beta".  In my opinion, that's what made it work so well this time around.  And the fact that with the U10, iRiver was already on their way to building a great product.  I speak for many within Microsoft when I say thank you to Reigncom/iRiver for the opportunity to work together.

P.S. I'm getting out of my echo chamber later this week at Gnomedex.  See you there.  And a question for the future- where else should I go to further get out of the echo chamber?

posted on Monday, June 26, 2006 12:53:53 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [8] Trackback

I've recently upgraded to a Nikon D200 w/ an 18-200mm lens that took four weeks to arrive off backorder! So I'm running around taking "Happy Snaps" as my Aussie friends like to call them and just loving the quality of the camera.  Any tips/techniques I should be aware of with this particular camera beyond the traditional "learn what ISO is"? 

See some recent shots on my Flickr account.

What I really need to do is take another more advanced class.  Or maybe just follow Thomas Hawk around for a few days in San Francisco. ;)

posted on Monday, June 26, 2006 7:57:51 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [4] Trackback
# Saturday, June 24, 2006

TiVo Desktop 2.3 now supports scheduled transfers and conversion to PSP, iPod and Treo but expect to pay for the privilege- $24.95 to be exact vs. free for Windows Media-based devices like the Toshiba Gigabeat-S.  Looks like they're passing the licensing cost onto you for MPEG-2 and H.264 support.  Still, not a bad price.

posted on Saturday, June 24, 2006 12:57:40 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

Scoble has bit the HD bug hard and he's coming out swinging against HD-DVD detractors.  While I disagree that there's more HD on Xbox Live than HD-DVD (in terms of minutes or available content), he makes a few pretty good points.

At the end of the day, it's about price.  Mainstream users aren't going to buy a PS3 for Blu-Ray, but for the cost they could buy an Xbox 360 and a Nintendo Wii!  Blu-Ray players are going for $1000+, HD-DVD sub-$400.  Yes, they're first generation units but attactive to americans who have upgraded to HDTVs sets (happening at a rapidly accelerating rate).

Then there's the question of quality.  I have it on good authority that many of the initial Blu-Ray titles don't look very good, use MPEG-2, and suffer from issues in the mastering process.  I believe "asleep at the wheel during encode" was one comment heard from an industry insider. Yes, they'll improve, but HD-DVD went to the mat on quality up-front.

I have a Toshiba HD-A1 HD-DVD player. It's ok as far as first-generation devices go.  I don't speak as a video compression expert.  But I've shown it to a slice of mainstream america in my home.  Is it a revolution? Not the way VHS to DVD was. But I have a 50in 720p Samsung HDTV and everyone can definitely tell the difference between it and DVD.  Perhaps if I had a 1080p system the difference would be even more striking.

What about HD cable?  Perhaps good enough for most who don't mind watching when it's on and the quality tests the lower limits of HD in order to cram as many channels in as possible. But even my premium HBO-HD craps out (macro blocking) on high action sequences because of a lower bit rate. And yes, I've checked my signal quality :).

But... I'm not an expert, I just have access to a few and you do too.  Spend some time in AVSForum (www.avsforum.com) and you'll come to see that key players, big and small, trusted engineers and even the developers of the formats are still at odds. 

I still say the cost vs. benefit for Blu-Ray is out of whack.  "Good enough" and "cheap enough" will win in the end.  And the funny thing is, HD-DVD just might also be the best in terms of quality of the final product too. Add to that the often-ignored fact that women in the household have a major say in these kinds of family purchase decisions. I don't know many wives who would buy or green light a $1000+ player for their husbands this coming fall having just spent $2000+ on an HDTV over the past few years. 

Another way of looking at this is, for the price of a "low cost" Blu-Ray Player coming next month you could get an HD-DVD Player and seven years of HD-DVD rentals at NetFlix. 

Who will win? Only the customer will decide and right now the decision factors are too complex and nuanced, the technology too new for anyone to say definitively. 

 

posted on Saturday, June 24, 2006 11:07:12 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Thursday, June 22, 2006

Geoff Harris leads the team responsible for Windows Media Player 11.  In this interview, he talks about the new player and the Urge Music Service.

Watch at On10.net

posted on Thursday, June 22, 2006 9:50:50 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback
# Tuesday, June 20, 2006

Like my fellow Gnomies, I'll be at Gnomedex again this year.  I procrastinated and will be in the "other" room.  That may make me easier to find actually.  Ping me if you want to meet up.

posted on Tuesday, June 20, 2006 8:50:31 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

Apparently this guy, "Remi Frazier" has a million dollar destiny (and a myspace account).  He says he's gone to NYC with $100 in his pocket and says he will return to Colorado in a month with a million dollars:


I've never been to New York. I don't have a place to stay. I don't have a network of people in the city; I haven't set anything up in advance. I'll be starting from scratch, building a business and a new social network from Friday, June 16 to Saturday, July 15th.

Interesting idea there Remi.  Personally I'm getting a little tired of these hair-brained "missions" and the dolts that pay for them. Perhaps this is a PhD experiment gone awry but I expect it's just another attempt to pilfer a million dollars from unsuspecting folks looking for a cheap (Internet) thrill.  Here's an idea, give that $3 you were about to send Remi to a local non-profit organization instead and watch something useful come from your local community. 

 

Check with your employer- they often match donations too. There you go.  $6 to a worthy cause instead of $3 wasted dollars to Remi.  Perhaps some good can come from this after all.

posted on Tuesday, June 20, 2006 8:43:26 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [5] Trackback
# Sunday, June 18, 2006

Wonder how active Microsoft is going to be in giving people new features as well as comprehensive driver coverage via Windows Update and the Ultimate add-ons?  Try this on: a major update for Vista Beta 2 users went out for the Mobile Device Center.  Thanks to Sidebar Geek for the scoop- this is great to see.

 

posted on Sunday, June 18, 2006 12:30:33 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback

Last week I wrote about the new MusicGremlin portable media player.  An interesting concept, the musicgremlin is the first portable media player to incorporate music sharing via WiFi and the concept of community sharing.  Both are compelling ideas to me, but I have some fundamental issues with the implementation.  Net-net, musicgremlin in my opinion has a long way to go before it's ready for prime time. 

 

MusicGremlin 002_1.jpg

Out of the Box Experience
The "MG" (as it's called in the UI) has a premium enough cardstock box with matte finish. The front flap has the only other messaging on the box- "the record store in your pocket".  In an attempt to achieve Apple-like simplicity though, other essential details are missing- storage size (8GB), formats supported (WMA, MP3) essential features (Local and Network music playback, FM radio), battery life (reportedly could be better).

MusicGremlin 004_1.jpgMusicGremlin 007_1.jpg

The unit is displayed right on top and protected with a spongy foam insert.  A "get activated now" card is placed on the top, another smart touch.  Pull the gremlin out of its nest and a bright orange backing can be seen, another premium touch.  There is no electrostatic or adhesive protector over the screen or the face which I would like to have seen. Underneath is the getting started guide and three items: An AC charger, a USB 2.0 (mini) cable, and headphones.  All three are in plastic baggies, the AC adapter bad was open-ended.  This was not a great experience- it felt like the item packaging was an afterthought.  A pang of buyer's remorse set in.

The headphones look and feel cheap- plastic and too big to fit in my ears.  What bugs me the most is that the left and right earbuds have different length of cable and are unlabeled.  This doesn't generally bother me since I use my Shure e-series or Sony studio headphones when listening.

MusicGremlin 005_1.jpgMusicGremlin 010_1.jpgMusicGremlin 006_1.jpg

Despite its chubby girth, the device fits nicely in my hand, but not nearly as well as my current two favorite devices - the Toshiba Gigabeat-S (HD) and iRiver Clix (Flash) (disclaimer- I worked on the Clix). The left-hand side control is a slider with neutral central position- up for lock, down for on/off.  The right hand side has +/- at the top for volume, Play/Pause, and Prev/Next from top to bottom.

The front D-pad is fine as well with good, tactile response.  During boot up, the d-pad lights up very brightly but not at all as far as I can tell during use. 

Ed. Note: I was intending to do a full review of the device, but have decided to wait and focus my time on providing MusicGremlin with a comprehensive list of all the bugs I encountered and in most cases was able to easily reproduce.

Pros

  • Nice concept
  • Simple browsing of other's libraries
  • Can only download/play back subscription music on others' devices
  • Supports PIN Locking of device

Cons

  • Expensive
  • Unstable firmware
  • No Windows Vista support (yet)
  • No Photo support
  • Easily scratched
  • No case for device
  • Cheap headphones
  • Poor audio quality w/ pops

Sample of Bugs/Issues Found during a 20 minute eval:

Bootup/Shutdown/Charging

  1. Screen shows unpolished "Please wait" and firmware version over refined logo.
  2. Audible "pop" on startup & shutdown.  A big no-no.
  3. Returning from standby, saw pixelated, multicolor "static" across entire screen on multiple occasions
  4. Turn off device while connected to power for charge and it blanks the UI, then entire screen is blank (white and lit)

On-Device Navigation

  1. Music experience always prompts the user to search and peck in letters.  Even if you're searching artists and there are only two in the list. 
  2. No menu option for "Now Playing" to take you back to album art and seek view, but volume and seek take you temporarily to the view?
  3. Alpha entry & search navigation isn't consistent.  For example, Up/Down scroll for network security key goes backwards through alphabet as if centered on "blank" between "Z" and "0" vs. defaulting to "A" when searching music.

Sync Experience

  1. The device reports itself as "MTP Device" when syncing with Windows Vista.  It should state the name, and present the Device Icon and Device Logo in WMP11.  Right now WMP can't even see it.
  2. MTP-class devices shouldn't prompt the user for drivers.  Something is wrong here. After forcing a device reboot, it installed. Other devices sync no problem w/ Vista using MTP.
  3. Device never reports status of sync relationship other than USB icon. The icon reports actual USB connect state instead of communications state with the PC.  It should tell the user if it's connected, busy, or if there's a problem.

Get New Music

  1. If I choose Get New Music, why am I prompted for "New Search" when there are no saved searches?
  2. Search on Genres returns Artists.  I want to browse by Genres>Albums.  This makes the feature unusable.
  3. Gremlists NEVER worked.  Every song is unavailable, even when other tracks could be downloaded
  4. Downloading no longer works at all. Even after factory reset.  No downloads are queued up.
  5. Display of queued tracks to download isn't centered on icon when double digit value exists (e.g. 10 downloads)

Community

  1. Device stopped playing back tracks downloaded from any users.  DRM-12 error when I went into the Download Manager which told me to contact MG technical support.
  2. A number of users in the community could not be browsed.  After factory reset, no users could be downloaded from.
  3. Device is now in a state where I cannot download any music from any users.  Nothing gets added to the Download Manager even after rebooting or factory reset.

FM Radio

  1. You have to push up/down to tune. 
  2. No visual notification of presets found during seek. 

Mailbox

  1. It looks like on 06/08/06 the device was either flashed or tested and "Error getting root license" was found.  Why would a new user need to see this?

Settings

  1. If the device is registered, it should tell you.  Right now if I go to the website it says the device is registered and will not give me a key.  The MG unit prompts me for a regkey. 
  2. If you restore the device to factory defaults, this should wipe out your list of downloads in the download manager and your WiFi security keys.
  3. There is No way to de-activate the device (e.g. if you wanted to resell it on ebay in the future.)

Conclusions

If you're going to give your product a name that refers to a mythical creature that destoys machines and is the subject of one of the scariest episodes of The Twilight Zone ever and two campy 80's movies, you better make darned sure you've worked your own Gremlins out of the system.  This was honestly one of the worst device experiences I've ever had. The fact that Walt Mossberg's column seems to like it so much tells me either someone over at the WSJ isn't really spending much time living with the device or perhaps I just have a bad unit.  Either way, it's time to put this one back in the oven and let it bake a bit longer. Here's to hoping there's a firmware update because right now, the device isn't working for me as-advertised and is about to get returned. I'm waiting to hear back from technical support.

Update #1: Well, it looks like MusicGremlin got my bug list because they sent me out a new device and a separate box to ship the "defective" unit in.  They did look at my connection and it does appear something was awry.  I still think many of the user experience points stand but will report back tomorrow on my experience with the new unit.  Big points to MG's customer service though.

posted on Sunday, June 18, 2006 10:30:55 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback
# Saturday, June 17, 2006

Larry Hryb, Mr. Major Nelson himself and I were chatting a few weeks back about his move to Community Server.  I'm thinking of doing the same.  I like DasBlog and it's been good to me.  Back when I moved to it, it was one of the few .Net based blog engines.  It seems now though that most of the new development is coming out of CS by way of the fine folks at Telligent Systems.  Now I just need a way to port my existing blog entries and help on the design- any suggestions are appreciated!

Update: Ryan Hoffman from Bink.nu fame contacted me and offered to work on a migration utility.  Thanks Ryan!

posted on Saturday, June 17, 2006 1:52:54 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [8] Trackback
# Thursday, June 15, 2006

Today the announcement was made that Bill Gates will be stepping down as Chief Software Architect and in two years will retire to his part-time position as Chairman of Microsoft. Instead he's going to focus on efforts such as battling tuberculosis, a topic near to our family. 

My "little" sister is a microbiologist for the CDC, running Tuberculosis projects around the world.  Yesterday she IM'ed me from Botswana-a surreal moment.  She was in Kazakhstan just a few months ago, it's amazing.  Regularly she talks about Bill Gates a reverence not seen (in my parts) in a while now.  Despite all the flak he received in years past, Bill is doing something incredibly worthy with his immense wealth.

I've had the opportunity to work with and talk with Bill on four separate occasions.  In each of these, he had the air of an elder statesman, on one occasion even sticking around for an extra hour to brainstorm a few ideas with a group of us.  It was energizing to have this kind of engagement with him, outside of a review, just like a group of friends and co-workers out of the office shooting bull about the industry.  He's human, we didn't necessarily share all the same ideals but could discuss and debate.  I enjoyed our time in this capacity.

Bill is part of the reason I joined Microsoft- the mystique inspired me like many; the desire to meet him "one day" was strong (checkbox filled plus pictures).  But in actuality his is just one person.  Microsoft is filled with bright and passionate people I learn from every day. He's not the only one.  The transition is bittersweet, but now it is perhaps my sister's turn.  I know she (like many other scientists) would like to one day work at the Bill & Melinda Gates foundation.  Perhaps she'll get her opportunity one day to meet Bill and the two of us can compare.

For now, we can all joke about how Bill is following Robert Scoble's lead :).

posted on Thursday, June 15, 2006 7:26:04 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Wednesday, June 14, 2006

I'm actually not sure why people aren't more up in arms over this (via iPodLounge & MacWorld UK).  It sickens me personally.

 

 

posted on Wednesday, June 14, 2006 7:31:02 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [8] Trackback

The WSJ has an interesting article on a small outfit called MusicGremlin whose portable music player goes on the market today.  What makes MG unique?  Wireless.  You can wirelessly download music from the service or even share tracks (legally) between friends and other subscribers.  It's a really interesting idea and Uncle Walt and Kathy seem to agree.

The device is a bit chunky (or is that clunky?), the service lacks the desirability of others (i.e. letting people browse before creating a registration) but it's an interesting concept to what I'd call, "Super-enthused music lovers who have a wireless connection and want to share with friends and can't wait until they get home to download music oh but they still need a wire to charge their device" kind of people.  Wireless should support the core experience, not BE the core experience IMO. Laboriously typing in characters to search? No thanks.  Back in the day it was a pain typing in three letters for my high score in Pac Man using a joystick, I'm sure not going to make this my primary way of searching for music. 

But... it supports PlaysforSure so Urge should work with this, so thats a plus... when connected to a PC.

Update: Michael Gartenberg weighs in on the concept himself here. David Card seems to agree with him that Uncle Walt has been seduced.

posted on Wednesday, June 14, 2006 7:00:46 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Tuesday, June 13, 2006

Ok, not that I really know of, but at this point it could happen as we've entered a bit of a bizarro world. :)  The reaction to Robert's announcement about his leaving Microsoft has been a groundswell of feedback, blog postings, analyst comments, CNET headlines, Reuters articles etc.  I knew the Scoble effect was big, but not that big.  Larry Hryb (a.k.a. Major Nelson) and I were talking about it on our respective drives home last night*.  He asked my thoughts on Scoble leaving and here's basically what I said:

I've known Robert for almost ten years now, going back to when he was an event and communities coordinator at Fawcette Technical Publications and I was just entering the corporate world.  Scoble and I have always had a good relationship and I think the key to his success is that he's affable and a little goofy, while amazingly self-aware.  He uses these traits to his advantage.  Like a certain cartoon bear, he wanders around Microsoft looking for picnic baskets.  Sometimes, he wanders into the wrong campground and he gets shooed away, but people like him still.  He's also been amazingly adept at using his position to build his own brand, his own presence, and no one can fault him for that.  It's just the nature of blogging.

This disarming charm and sense of humility paired with a strong desire to share his own perspective is what's made Scoble such a lightning rod.  Am I sad to see him go? Yes.  A bit perplexed? Yes.  Then there's the obligatory questions about who is going to step up to replace him?  I think there may be in the future others who take on his job role, but he came along during a perfect storm- one part nascent blogging concept in corporate america paired with a curiousity about what happens behind the curtain at Microsoft.  Let's not forget the willingness to let the story be told by Microsoft as well (and many teeth were gnashed in the process I'm sure).

Good luck Robert and I'm looking forward to reading about your next adventure.

*Note: We were using speakerphones in our cars in true geek fashion. ;)

posted on Tuesday, June 13, 2006 6:55:43 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback
# Sunday, June 11, 2006

I've been doing my part by dutifully dogfooding Office 2007 and Vista over the past three weeks and while things are a little slower (as often happens with betas), my productivity is still up there.  But every once in a while, something goes haywire.  For example, I was just catching up on some RSS feeds when Outlook 2007 disappeared.  I said the required, "What the?!" and Outlook restarted.  But that's not the cool part... what happened next is.

I got a notification (toast) message: "The bug you just experienced has been fixed in an upcoming build of Office 2007."

How's that for customer response?  Sure, it would have been even nicer to get an actual fix, but I got peace of mind in getting a checkpoint that the issue had been found and fixed already. I don't have to be one of the many who will file a duplicate bug against this issue.

Sometimes I wish WMP and Vista were more like Office.  This is one of them.  I just email to my VP about that topic.

posted on Sunday, June 11, 2006 6:50:24 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback
# Saturday, June 10, 2006

It appears more CEDIA installers are putting MCE and Xbox 360 into their mix.  Over at AVSForum, there's a headling on the following article detailing an impressive setup involving whole-home distribution, home automation and more.  I'm humbled.

posted on Saturday, June 10, 2006 4:25:37 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

As a budding photo hobbyist (Nikon D200 in-hand), like Thomas Hawk I enjoy taking pictures of architecture when I'm out and about on my travels.  What happened to Thomas when he was snapping from a public venue at 45 Fremont Street in San Francisco is unconscionable.  I wish I could say this was the first time this has happened to him.  Thomas is standing up for all of our rights - photographers or otherwise.

Suggestion for Thomas - consider taking a small portable audio recorder in the future and notify the person at the beginning that this conversation will be recorded. ;)

posted on Saturday, June 10, 2006 8:49:51 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Thursday, June 08, 2006

If you're a beta junkie like me, and have a spare test system laying around, why not give Windows Vista Beta 2 and Office 2007 a whirl? Unlike when XP was in beta, broadband is finally at acceptable speeds for most to able to download.  Just be sure to run the Vista Upgrade Advisor first m'kay?

Wondering what all the fuss is around Vista?  Download the Vista Beta 2 Guide (Word .doc).

posted on Thursday, June 08, 2006 7:39:53 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback
# Tuesday, June 06, 2006

Last week an ad popped up on Microsoft.com:

upto11.jpg

The buzz internally was palpable.  "Coolest MS ad ever!" claimed one person.  Others have asked for more of this kind of thing.  I would love to see it the inspiration for a new wallpaper (which is being discussed).  

So, that got me thinking; I'm going to offer up a brand spankin new 2GB iRiver Clix to the person that creates the coolest WMP11 (XP), iRiver Clix, or WMP11 (Vista) inspired wallpaper.  Post your link in the comments in order to be eligible. In 30 days, the best one wins.  Tell your friends :)

posted on Tuesday, June 06, 2006 8:02:10 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [7] Trackback
# Sunday, June 04, 2006

If you've missed the hilariously campy trailers and buzz around Samuel L. Jackson's upcoming movie "Snakes on a Plane" (no, that's not a working title), you'll still appreciate this.  A guy flying his plane at 3000ft found a stow-away- a 4.5ft Black Snake in his instrument panel.  Full story at MSNBC.

posted on Sunday, June 04, 2006 5:42:30 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback

Last Thursday, the installers arrived and we're now customers of Comcast Digital Voice service.  Basically the service runs over your existing cable system for phone service. At first I was skeptical, hearing the many stories about features that were missing from VOIP services (e.g. E-911 service).  Despite the fact that three of our neighbors are RNs, and the Eastside Fire Chief lives two doors down, there's a certain peace of mind that comes with this.  The good news is that this doesn't appear to be an issue anymore and with nationwide long-distance, the cost is nearly the same as our local POTS (Plain Old Telephone System) provider for just local calls.  Here's a quick rundown of the good and bad in my opinion. 

The Good

  • Good (not great) voice quality.  The average person probably wouldn't notice any difference. 
  • E911 service including address reporting
  • Battery Backup (in case the power goes out)
  • Voice mail support for phone and Web (secured). You can even download as excel spreadsheets all incoming, missed, and outgoing calls.
  • Security system integration
  • No service contract
  • No apparent drop in download speeds (for upload see below)
  • One bill for cable and phone

What could be better/Suggestions

  • E911 doesn't work during extended outages over several hours; resiliency is a concern often noted regarding network congestion etc.
  • My upload speed appears to have gone from close to 384 to 284, unsure if it's related.
  • Takes up to 10 days before new customers will start seeing incoming/outgoing calls on the Web system.
  • Visual notification when voicemail is waiting & Caller ID. Some sort of auxiliary display would be nice (Sideshow anyone?)
  • Windows Live Messenger bot.  I want an agent that notifies me when a call comes in.
  • Online personal phone book
  • Phone integration (something like this new Philips Windows Live Messenger-enabled phone)

I'll report back after a few weeks of living with the service.

posted on Sunday, June 04, 2006 8:59:43 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback
# Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Matt Goyer has a post re: MCE library performance improvements seen when running WMP11.  I may have contributed to this confusion.  Yes, the WMP11 library is wicked-fast compared to WMP10.  Yes, it can search 2 million URGE tracks in an instant.  Unfortunately MCE won't see these benefits in Media Center unless you're running Windows Vista.  Apologies for any confusion.

Tom, I definitely hear your concerns and appreciate that you state up front you're not the normal user.  Most users will see significant performance improvements when using a keyboard and mouse (vs MCE). Not that many customers measure their media library in "terabytes", as you do ;) but you bring up a good point overall on the importance of making sure MCE and WMP11 work well together at final.

posted on Wednesday, May 31, 2006 8:02:46 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

Chris Pirillo recently wrote an interesting writeup of feedback on Vista Beta 2. In what could be described as a mashup of bug report and user-experience feedback, he captures the essence of what a super-users and influentials see when they use Beta 2 (note: most users of any beta 2 fall into one of these categories by definition).  While I'm sure certain folks would have preferred a different, more private approach (PR <cough>), this type of feedback is fantastic whether I agree with it all or not. It's structured.  It's digestable.  It comes from a credible source. Bugs can be filed against it. We need more of it.

Microsoft has MANY ways of collecting feedback and usability reports.  During the course of Vista, entire teams dedicated to this practice have been doing an excellent job of rolling the feedback up to management as well as the rest of the Vista org for shared learnings.  It's refreshing to see.  Vista is not perfect, but the team is actively taking notice of feedback and more importantly taking action.

Yes Chris, I see you as a passionate user.  Thank you for taking the time and sharing.

 

posted on Wednesday, May 31, 2006 7:39:09 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback

Apparently visitors to the new Apple store in NYC were treated to a special kind of lock-in.  The kind that involves glass elevators, the NYPD, and drained hydraulic fluid.  Perhaps they need to replace it every year but just ran into a defective one?  Maybe the batteries wouldn't keep their charge?  There are just so many puns and innuendos here I'm going to have to bite my knuckle.  Come on now, sometimes you have to laugh.

posted on Wednesday, May 31, 2006 7:18:53 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Sunday, May 28, 2006

For those here in Seattle area, the weather has been complete s*%# for the past week.  My son, (recovered from his cold) was inconsolable yesterday due to being cooped up. So I suggested going outside and splashing in some puddles which was exactly what the Dr. ordered.  The kid is just tired of being cooped up.  I don't blame him.

As for me, here's my Urge playlist for a rainy Sunday:

Chill and Serve: Pop

  • Here with Me - Dido
  • Hide and Seek - Imogen Heap
  • Sail Away - David Gray
  • Lazy Lover - Brazilian Girls
  • Protection - Massive Attack
  • Finally Woken - Jem
  • Trouble Sleeping - The Perishers
  • Breathe (2AM) - Anna Nalick
  • Concrete Sky - Beth Orton
  • Home - Zero 7
  • Breathe Me - Sia
  • Angels - Wax Poetic
  • The Sea - Morcheeba

Mental note: Talk to Player team about copy/paste support from library to links in Urge ;).  Send email to a friend does one link per email.  Add playlist to MSN Spaces isn't working.  Grr.

posted on Sunday, May 28, 2006 8:56:13 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback
# Saturday, May 27, 2006

By popular request, I created a video walkthrough of the out of box experience with the iriver clix and syncing Urge playlists using WMP11/Windows Vista.  Sorry for the fumbling, I was straddling a full-sized tripod to do this :).

The iriver clix should be arriving shortly in major retailers including Best Buy- until then, it can be ordered online at www.iriveramerica.com.

Created the video using Windows Movie Maker in Windows Vista and a Sony HDV Camcorder. Dogfooding Vista Beta 2 E2E.
Apologies in advance for the "one take" lack of polish- but it's the product that matters. 

Update: Another good video demo here: http://www.anythingbutipod.com/archives/2006/05/iriver-clix-review.php

posted on Saturday, May 27, 2006 1:27:40 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [5] Trackback
# Friday, May 26, 2006

I've been running an HD-DVD player through its paces the past few weeks and I have to say I'm pleasantly surprised at the picture overall even at a measly 720p, but perhaps not so much so the hardware itself.  If you don't mind the largest remote I've ever seen and a long boot time, it's a great solution and certain to get better with time.

Today comes news of the first interactive HD titles: Constantine, Firewall, and The Perfect Storm. 

Apparently Windows Vista will also ship drivers, the file system, and other components required to support HD-DVD playback as well. More here: http://www.tgdaily.com/2006/05/25/first_interactive_hddvd_released/

The interactive features portend the future of interactive programming.  When it's eating at your wife that she knows that actor but she can't remember what movie, forget having to pull out your lappy to look up an actor in IMDB, look it up on-screen.  I can imagine a world in the not too distant future where you can browse other titles starring the actor, and even start downloading an High Def movie to be stored on the home network for later playback.  Flights of fancy?  Windows Media Center does most of this today.

posted on Friday, May 26, 2006 4:49:18 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Monday, May 22, 2006

This weekend, I upgraded all of my PCs to Windows Vista (more on that later).  As a part of the experience, I've gone completely Urge - set aside my ~20,000 track library and am only listening to Urge music for a week. So far, so good.

Saturday AM - Gym time!
Friday I discovered Urge has added new pump-up Playlists for the Gym for each genre under the category "Work It Out: [Genre]". They have Rock, Alt, Pop, Electronica, Inspirational, even Classical.  These are great cheat lists for building your own ultimate Gym mix.  I downloaded them all to my Clix (now equipped with the optional armband) and was ready to hit the gym.  Then I realized I forgot my headphones and boy, was I pissed!  Still, it made for great compilations.
Suggestion to Urge:  Let the community rate your playlists and submit our own. 

Saturday PM - BBQing
This was guys weekend - Nickie was out at a cabin with her mom's club friends and that meant Ryan and I were open to do a "Red Meat, Red Wine" kind of night with a few of the local guys in the neighborhood.  Any time you open a bottle wine hand-carried from Australia called, "The Factor" from Torbreck, you know it's going to be a good night.  We eased into it listening to Urge's "Reunion" Radio.  All classic rock like K-ROCK used to play in NYC growing up.  Here's the hack not quite worthy of Philip Torrone.  I patched the Vista PC into the Aux In on a Sonos receiver and set up a party zone- instant sync'd music in the living room, family room, and patio (courtesy my 2-zone receiver) and we were jammin.  Later I broke out the guitar and Stephen played some U2 and Jimmy Buffett.  A nice way to cap off the weekend.

I thought going all Urge would be hard, but the more I download, the easier it gets.

posted on Monday, May 22, 2006 8:18:01 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback
# Sunday, May 21, 2006

C|Net's Top 10 Must Haves List: "You may be shocked not to find an iPod on the list below. Well, here comes some more shocking news. The iRiver Clix, thanks to its excellent compatibility with the revamped Windows Media Player 11 and MTV Urge music service, joins the party this week. Yup: no iPod, no iTunes...and no doubt about it."

As a part of our end to end evaluations, my team selected the only two music devices listed - the iRiver Clix and Creative Zen Vision:M, as the best "showcase" devices for each category- Flash and HDD.  This was a nice validation.

I am a little annoyed at how bad the screenshots are of the Clix device.  I may have to put together a short video of the device. Static screenshots don't do it justice.  

posted on Sunday, May 21, 2006 8:02:24 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Wednesday, May 17, 2006

Player ButtonIn the words of a good friend, "It's on like Donkey Kong". Go download WMP11 Beta and if you dare to enjoy hours of musical enjoyment, sign up for your free two week trial of Urge.  And this isn't just for those kids young enough to still watch MTV.  I've found some killer classic rock playlists - Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, Fleetwood Mac, and Pink Floyd to name a few.  Let me know your questions here and I'll try and do my best to get them answered.  Tell me what you like/don't like and I'll share it with the team.  Oh, and iRiver has the Clix available for immediate shipping at www.iriveramerica.com for a cool $199.  Father's Day is coming up!

Urge Tip: A little known feature of Urge is 700kbps streaming music videos for a huge swath of the library - look for the little film icon to the left of songs to see if a video is available.

posted on Wednesday, May 17, 2006 7:59:45 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [14] Trackback
# Monday, May 15, 2006

Wow.  I thought the combo was good, but sometimes you zoom in and stare at the blemishes for so long you lose sight that you're looking at a Ferrrari. Even I didn't expect this kind of welcome. 

Read: CNet's, "Awesome: The WMP/Urge/Clix Combo"

And no, no one was paid off/schmoozed/invited to a poker game to get this review. ;)

Many more positive reviews today - Michael Gartenberg has his thoughts here.
In fact, they were all glowing of WMP/Urge/Clix in one way or another.
Today was a very good day. 

posted on Monday, May 15, 2006 5:59:52 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

Clix_Animated.gifI'm happy to say I can finally talk about a project I've been involved in for the past six months.  As I've mentioned, I returned to the digital media space at Microsoft after receiving an opportunity to work for my old General Manager reporting directly to the VP of Digital Media at Microsoft on End to End Experiences (the other E3). Part of the job involves picking targeted oppportunities to go deep on digital media product development.

One of the first of these projects has just launched. The "iriver clix" - a new portable media player from iRiver.  Designed to work great with Windows Media Player 11 and the new Urge music service launching today from MTV, the clix may look similar to the award-winning iRiver U10, but it's so much more.  Our team worked closely with iRiver, providing feedback, usability resources, and assistance on interaction design starting with a complete "teardown" of the existing iRiver U10 product.   Here's a quick breakdown on what's new/improved with this release:

  • 2GB and 1GB versions
  • New faster processor
  • New faster graphics engine
  • All-new UI and improved interaction
  • Now supports Now Playing with Album Art, next song preview
  • Album Art, Ratings, Playcount, and Playlists sync directly with WMP11
  • Improved power management w/ sleep mode
  • Faster sync speeds
  • Faster playback of clear & subscription content
  • New "Smart Key" replaces display pivot button  (Home, Play/Pause, Shuffle All, Display pivot, Start/Stop Recording)
  • Improved packaging for US market
  • Easy Start CD with WMP11 and MTV's Urge in-box (for US market)

I'm going to be a little biased, so check out CNet's review  hot off the presses(Note: They have horrible screenshots). Over the next few days, I'll post my thoughts on different areas, and answer questions about the device.

First Looks
On first blush, the device keeps its popular black front with white backing design and clean lines.  Why mess with what's winning awards? The D-pad is built directly into the face of the device, creating a comfortable click sound/feel when you press it (part of the reason for the new name).  Hold a clix device and you'll notice something different. The backing feels smoother, almost like a polished stone. Flip it over and you'll see the device now has a clearcoat, like a freshly waxed car. Keeping the car analogy going,you'll also notice the simplification of logos on the back - this isn't a Nascar vehicle after all.  What remains is a clear logo and a few required details.

Clix_Back.jpg

Power Up & Main Menu
Gone is the NTSC test pattern when you boot up the device, instead you'll see a fast, animated startup sequence that reveals the new main menu. The main menu has been reduced in complexity - going down to 7 main items: Music, Pictures, Videos, Settings, Extras, FM Radio, and Now Playing.  Now Playing is a new item- making it easy to get back to music playback wherever you are. Features such as voice recording and Flash games are available in the extras menu.   The main menu item appears to "glow" when selected.  Sharp eyes will notice some nice touches that build affinities in look/feel with Windows Media Player and even Media Center.

Connect & Sync
For the best experience in my opinion, connect the clix to a machine running WMP11. New polished on-screen status tells you the current state of the device, enabling you to disconnect at any point when the device isn't actively busy- something the iPod still doesn't have. Sync with this device is fast- much faster than the u10, and on-par with some of the best devices out there. Album Art, even playlists sync directly.  iriver engineers spent a lot of time on optimizations here.

Music, Photos, and Playlists sync effortlessly with WMP11.  I regularly load my device with "Feeds" from Urge - dynamic playlists that are auto-updated next time I sync.  The device even handles fringe cases such as a custom playlist with music and photos- select the playlist in Music and it will just play the music, but it will also show up in Photos for playback of photos as well.

Music Playback
This is the best part. You can do the usual things- build a quick list, play it back etc.  But the clix now supports album art, ratings, and host of other items sync'd with WMP.  You can rate songs on the device, and on next sync, "round trip" the rating back to you player library, effectively making it smarter.  EQ has been cleaned up and improved, and SRS WoW continues to be a bass-boostin feature. Fade in/out is turned off by default, but supported as well for a crossfading effect.

More to come...

posted on Monday, May 15, 2006 7:49:04 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [6] Trackback
# Tuesday, May 09, 2006

Boy, I really debated posting this one. I don't generally post personal items here but this time it seemed warranted. Journalists regularly use their own life in their stories, in my search for similar stories which came up mostly empty, I thought this might help others.

The last few weeks I haven't felt like blogging. First we were on vacation in Hawaii and learned of my wife's Uncle's sudden death in the middle of the trip. It was tough, especially since my wife's hormones were making her a bit emotional. But the majority of the trip was enjoyable. My wife had just been beaming since we learned she was pregnant.  We returned a bit on the tired side and looked forward to the ultrasound of our unborn child a few days later. 

You see, my wife and I have been trying to have a second child for over two years.  We finally met with a Reproductive Specialist and determined we have a few challenges on both sides. The prognosis wasn't good- about a 30% chance of success. Then the other shoe dropped- we had about a year left if it's going to happen (my wife has a high FSH level which means she has fewer eggs left). So you can imagine our surprise when she goes in for a trial run for IVF and learns she's pregnant- without IVF :).  For our close friends who have known what we've been going through, they immediately knew Nickie was pregnant from the little things.  The cat was out of the bag early.

Flash forward - we're now at about two months and counting... we had an early sonogram about a week ago.  We saw the baby and the heartbeat.  I was ecstatic- seeing/hearing the heartbeat is considered a major milestone in viability of the fetus. Then the Dr. said she didn't like the size or heart rate.  It didn't match my wife's projections (she's become a master at ovulation charting/temperature readings).  I was skeptical, the Dr. said the results were inconclusive. She asked us to come back a week later. 

I was optimistic and propping my wife up all week. "Everything is going to be ok, there's a heartbeat," I told her. Last Thursday, May 4th, we went in as a family for the second ultrasound.

It wasn't ok. The Dr. spoke in low tones.  The heartbeat was gone.  I'll never forget the ultrasound image on the screen. She used the terms, "Crumpled" and "no heartbeat". She was empathic but clinical.  She appreciated my wife's knowledge level and knew she didn't need to tell her, but we needed to hear it.  The baby didn't make it.

What they don't tell you until in this situation is that you basically have two choices- natural miscarriage, or a D&C - Dilation & Curettage which is done under general anesthesia in a kind of "twilight". My wife was so strong, mainly for our nearly 3 year old son who was sitting with us. I took him outside and watched as he played, unaware of what was going on.  My wife scheduled the D&C for the next day.

Last Friday, I took my wife into outpatient surgery for the D&C. We both had moments of sadness Thursday night, but this event made the end of the pregnancy real, a forcing function.  It was surgery under anesthesia - a short procedure, about 30 minutes, my wife cried in spurts and I held her in the examination room.  After about 45 minutes of interviews, paperwork and waiting, my wife was taken into surgery and I was given a flyer explaining to a husband/significant other what to expect- which was helpful.

Outside, I listened to music on my player and said goodbye in my own way.  The sun was out and I couldn't stand to sit in the waiting room.  I sat on a bench, watched the clouds, fighting back the tears. The Dr. came out after 45 minutes and said everything went fine.  I took my groggy wife home, and held her. We've been here before- my wife had a miscarriage before becoming pregnant with our son, but this was different now. So much additional effort (and lost time) to consider. My natural instinct was to wall up and compartmentalize - the typical "Men are from Mars" response.  I did some research and learned that these kinds of situations can cause couples to become distant, or bring them together depending upon how you handle it. The most important thing is that we've been talking about what happened, how we feel, and have been there for each other as moments come and pass.  We've lost time, but we've also prolonged the number of attempts we can afford before dipping into savings (Microsoft has an amazing healthcare program that covers IVF up to a limit).  We'll try again, and likely go the IVF route.  Call it a "Schedule adjustment".

We're so thankful that we have our son who brings so much joy to our life and realize how lucky we are compared to families in much worse situations. We recognize other options exist if this doesn't work out, and raising our son without a sibling is an option as well.  If nothing else, my wife and I have become closer as a result of this experience because of our willingness to discuss it with each other. 

To all of our friends and family, thank you for your well wishes, the cards, prayers, flowers, dinners, and more.  It's true that time heals all wounds, and we're already doing better.  After all, "Life's a journey, not a destination." :)

Update: Thanks to everyone for their emails, IMs, and comments. We're doing MUCH better, and ready to try again.  It's amazing how common this type of experience is and hearing others share their stories definitely helped my wife and I.  Thanks again.

posted on Tuesday, May 09, 2006 6:47:51 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [16] Trackback
# Tuesday, April 18, 2006

About a month or so ago, cool new posters for Windows Media Player 11 started showing up around Microsoft's Redmond campus in buildings.  I thought it might make a good desktop wallpaper so I've converted it into a number of popular screen resolutions and aspect ratios.  The marketing folks gave this the go-ahead for release- hopefully you'll enjoy.  If you want additional sizes, just let me know.

MP11_Turn_320_240.gif

Download: WMP11_Wallpaper_Set.zip (1.04MB)

 

posted on Tuesday, April 18, 2006 8:36:23 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [6] Trackback
# Monday, April 17, 2006

This weekend, I tried to go to Best Buy to pick up an HD-DVD player.  I figured Easter Sunday I could sneak out.  I should have purchased and held online because in the span of 9 hours in the night, all the inventory was sold out pretty much throughout Seattle. I could have driven 4 hours to get mine, but that would have been overkill.

Ok NetFlix, time to start offering your HD-DVD movies because I'm ready and getting my player next week.  Details to come.

posted on Monday, April 17, 2006 7:50:07 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Wednesday, April 12, 2006

I've recently started getting more into Digital Photography and had an opportunity to go up to the Skagit Valley to shoot some "Happy Snaps" as my Aussie friends call them.  This time out, it was with a Canon Digital Rebel EOS XT, an 8 Megapixel Digital SLR with a range of lenses. This is one of my favorites:

The entire set can be found here on Flickr. I'm currently debating the whole Nikon vs. Canon thing as most users do when they get into DSLR.  In general, I tend to prefer Nikon DSLR cameras- they feel more sturdy and I like the button placement better. I also tend to think they have better color reproduction, but that's subjective. Any thoughts out there?

posted on Wednesday, April 12, 2006 7:12:10 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback
# Wednesday, April 05, 2006

I've gone to Boot Camp and now I'm getting a lot more use out of my MacBook Pro.  MCE (and an unreleased player) are running like champs.  I'm hearing reports of Vista running as well.  Battery life still stinks compared to my sony but hey, this is a desktop replacement riight?  Oh and now I have to carry a DVI-->VGA dongle for presentations because DVI is just so well supported.  Overall, not bad though I don't expect many family members will be asking if they should spend the extra $$ for a Mac next time they buy a PC, but I could be wrong.

(Bliss is the name of the XP/MCE wallpaper)

 

posted on Wednesday, April 05, 2006 11:13:06 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback
# Saturday, April 01, 2006

An interesting piece linked from Slashdot entitled, "The Cure for Information Overload". This should be required reading for all employees at any major corporation. 

posted on Saturday, April 01, 2006 2:37:02 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Saturday, March 25, 2006

I nearly lost my swill of coffee yesterday morning seeing how "news" outlets and pundits alike all just took a small website's word for fact that Microsoft was rewriting 60% of Windows Vista.  Now, now... anyone with a small amount of project management sense knows if you take a swag of the # of developers in Windows org and the # of lines of code that would need to be rewritten, then factor in the amount of time left to do this and QA work required, it's a silly proposition.  So, my BS-meter went way off scale and broke.  This should be a reminder not to believe everything you read on the Internet. 

Oh and I'm disappointed in a certain member of the digerati who appears to baiting Robert Scoble over the 60% rewrite (and others), calling into question Robert's credibility and instincts (by the way, the saying is "reap what you sow", not "sew").  I used to sing this person's praises.  Sour grapes because he's upset he wasn't invited to a meal with Bill Gates? Possibly. Trying to rattle cages?  My read: Yes.  Unsubscribed? Yes.

As for the annnouncement that consumer Windows Vista will ship in January, yes, I was disappointed too. But at the end of the day, I'm a cup-half-full kinda guy. What this tells me is that our management realizes just how important quality and security is in this release over near-term revenue and the pressures of the marketplace looking for a bump this holiday season. I know there are a lot of frustrated people right now, but I have to give some credit to those that are holding the line.

posted on Saturday, March 25, 2006 11:36:16 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [4] Trackback
# Friday, March 24, 2006

Open the 'Pod Bay Doors, Steve.
(Ed. Note: Fixed the image reference)

posted on Friday, March 24, 2006 7:28:37 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Thursday, March 23, 2006

Now this is cool.  Charlie posted screenshots of the SDK sample for Media Center (Vista-style) for a Podcast Client. Pretty rockin if you ask me.

 

posted on Thursday, March 23, 2006 8:16:36 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback

I've been out the past 3 out of 4 weeks on the road, little time for blogging, meeting with partners and customers.  It's been a whirlwind trip and lots of learnings and few fun happenings along the way. More on that later.  What did I miss?  Well, Mix06 for one. That sounded like a blast from what I'm hearing from folks who attended.  Charlie showed a sample app that handles RSS/Podcasting in the 10' Media Center experience built on Vista from what I hear.  Unfortunately a few folks got a little overzealous in thinking this was a different announcement.

Either way, I think it's great that Microsoft continues to refer to "Podcasting" by the term, etymological arguments aside. I'll see what I can do about a few screen shots when Charlie is ready.

posted on Thursday, March 23, 2006 2:49:22 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Sunday, March 12, 2006

I've been much too quiet here- first my trip to Japan, then a trip to Australia, Singapore and Hong Kong which I'm currently on (in Melbourne waiting to board).  I'll write more here soon.  Until then, a few pictures from my few hours open to sightsee when in Sydney on Flickr. I"ll clean up the posts later.

posted on Sunday, March 12, 2006 4:57:08 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Saturday, February 25, 2006

Hopefully most of you saw my pictures posted from Japan.  It was a great,  eye opening trip.  As one exec said, "Japan is an audience segment of one- unique and should be treated as such".  Boy did I see that.  The culture is multi-layered and rich with meaning.  The technology, hands-down the most advanced in the world. A trip to Ahikibara greets you with 8 floors of every conceivable type of gadget (pics coming soon).  A few things I learned:

  • Narita airport is about 2-2.5 hours from Tokyo. Pack a Bento box.
  • Japan should be treated as a separate market with its own needs and opportunities.
  • Politeness and etiquette is very important, more-so than the US
  • Gaijin (foreigners) are expected to be unfamiliar with most customs, small attempts go a long way.
  • Don't open the taxi door or close it.  It's automatic.
  • Don't hand money to someone. Put it in the little tray.
  • Our mobile phones pale in comparison. With less than 1% turnover, hundreds upon hundreds of dollars in subsidies are paid out to customers. A $10US phone in Japan is more advanced then a $300 smartphone in the US.
  • Simple, clean UI often appears empty and feature-less in Japan.  Cluttered/compacted UI in good Industrial Design wins the day.
  • A mobile phone should be a flip-phone and make an audible, tactile "click" when opened.  The bigger the phone, the more features you have.
  • In Japan it's legal to rent CDs.  Everyone rips them and returns.
  • Americans are too worried about Location-based services and privacy vs. Japanese.  Japanese already have TV and GPS maps built into their phones. This is very cool.
  • Many Japanese snooze on the train in-between stops.  Perhaps it's because they work late and then many stay out late.
  • Melatonin can really take the edge off jet lag and help you sleep.  I've adjusted both ways better than any other trip.
  • Slingbox is hands-down the best thing for business travelers.  EVER.  I was watching local TV flawlessly from Japan in WMV9 from my TiVo at home. It helps avoid homesickness.
  • MSN Messenger is good for voice chat but you must remember to bring a microphone if you laptop doesn't have one.
  • Nintendo DS is very popular with older Japanese thanks to a new game called "Brain Games" that tells you your mental age through a series of fun little games.
  • Harajuku girls aren't out during the mid-week.  Go see the Meiji Shrine. 
  • The Fish Market & auction must be seen at 5am, but the market is closed on Wednesdays. Have the best sushi in the world with your VP in a hole in the wall with a long line, even if you don't like sushi.
  • If local Japanese ask you where you're from and you say Seattle, follow up with "Ichiro".  Then they'll understand- the Mariner's player is a source of great national pride.
  • If you learn one Japanese word, it should be "Sumimasen".
  • Have a drink at the Park Hyatt, where "Lost in Translation" was filmed. 
  • Pick up a Japanese Bullet Train (N-Gauge) model at Narita airport if you have a young son. You'll be the greatest Dad ever and hear about it for days. :)

Next up: My whirlwind "Circle Asia" tour next month- Seattle>Sydney>Adelaide>Melbourne>Singapore>Hong Kong>Narita>Seattle.  Over 27k miles in 11 days. I heard circumnavigating the earth at the equator is 24k. 

Geek dinner anyone in Sydney?

posted on Saturday, February 25, 2006 8:14:58 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [6] Trackback
# Friday, February 17, 2006

I'm off to Japan on Sunday.  It's my first trip to Japan and I'm really looking forward to meeting with the subsidiary, our partners, and of course taking in the culture.  I'll do my best to keep up with moblogging and posting a semi-daily journal here of our experiences.

The small bummer is that by going, I missed out on an opportunity to show our execs and leadership some of the new features we're working on in media for upcoming Vista CTP (Customer Technology Preview) releases.  Let's just say the next CTP release will be exciting, but it's going to get even better much faster from there.  Sorry, I can't say more than that at this time.  But when we can, I'll make sure to set up a geek dinner with some members of the teams and we'll take your feedback. Timing is TBD ;)

I had lunch today with one of my "mentors".  He's very smart and we often spend the time debating company strategy instead of discussing career goals.  I'm in a good place right now and enjoying learning in a role that has freed me from some of the baggage I used to have to endure.  I'm a builder- I'm enjoying working with motivated v-teams that are building better products.

I sense a change in the air right now but for the good company wide.  People seem to be "thawing out" - becoming less risk-adverse than I've seen for the past three + years- when done smartly, that's a very good thing.

 

posted on Friday, February 17, 2006 10:33:02 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [6] Trackback
# Wednesday, February 15, 2006

Here's a short video clip of Steve Ballmer and Suzan DelBene showing off a bunch of new phones announced at the keynote

  • HP 6900
  • Samsung i320
  • Asustech's P305 3G Smartphone
  • HTC "Star Trek"

Interesting to note there are now over 100 Windows Mobile devices on the market. Suzan described these phones as having "direct push technology".  This is exciting stuff- I have a phone with this enabled and I have to say, getting emails on my mobile phone as they arrive in my inbox on my Exchange server is pretty nifty.  While not earth-shattering (the device could poll every few minutes before if you wanted) for customers who need near-real-time access to mail, this is a good thing.

What's even more exciting though for digital media enthusiasts is that Motorola has announced support for Windows Media and PlaysforSure on upcoming mobile music phones with WMA and WMA Pro support.  Also included is support for MTP which will allow for a single USB-plug connection to Windows PCs and no need for additional drivers.  Benefits of this solution over a certain iMusic product I would expect: I won't be limited to 100 songs per device, I can use my own music collection, pay-per-download, or music subscription services such as the upcoming service from MTV/VH1/CMT, "Urge" (or Napster or Yahoo etc.)  What's more, Microsoft and Motorola are working together so that WMA Pro super-high fidelity music can be easily delivered over 3G high-speed wireless networks worldwide. More details in the announcement here.  Michael Gartenberg also weighs in on the announcement and it's impact here

With this announcement, Microsoft is actively working with two of the largest handset manufacturers in the world - Motorola and Nokia on mobile media solutions for their platform as well as ours.

 

posted on Wednesday, February 15, 2006 6:03:18 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback
# Thursday, February 09, 2006

Call it an ad or what you will, it's a bit european and quirky.  Check out the video the IE7 team put together as a teaser/commercial. 

IE7_Big.wmv       (7.8MB)
IE7_Medium.wmv (2.9MB)
IE7_Small.wmv    (1MB)

 

posted on Thursday, February 09, 2006 12:44:01 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [7] Trackback
# Wednesday, February 08, 2006

News.com is reporting this morning that Aeon Digital, a privately held firm specializing in IPTV-over the Internet has confirmed a licensing agreement with NBC Universal.  The service will be made available via a $299 DVR available at retail and will use Microsoft's Windows Media technology for delivery.

Upon further inspection, Aeon Digital has ambitious plans for their products. Two integrated LCD-TV and two set-top box products.  Features of the DV-220 STB-include:

  • IPTV Support
  • 200 hour DVR with ability to archive to your PC.  No mention of CableCard support though :(
  • Streamed playback of music, photos, and video from your PC
  • Component, composite and S-Video outputs
  • Built-in 802.11g WiFi router with VOIP support,uPnP, NAT firewall
  • Built-in EPG (Program Guide)

Movies such as "Ray" and the "The Motorcycle Diaries" will be made available as well as what looks like some tier-2 television programming.  No details were provided on pricing.

This is a good step in the right direction. For now, this looks to be a contender for stand-alone TiVo Series 2 competition at retail but for the serious enthusiast, without HDTV and CableCard support, it leaves me a bit wanting.  But it does signal an interesting trend- the logjam of IP-accessible content from big-name providers appears to be straining thanks to a lessening of fear (and interest in making more money) via these types of solutions by the content providers.

posted on Wednesday, February 08, 2006 6:37:56 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback
# Monday, February 06, 2006

It's not daily I get excited about terrestrial radio, much less a latecomer to the Internet.  But, today is that day.  I just learned LA's own KROQ- the #1 Rock Station in the US is now broadcasting for free on the Internet in Windows Media.  It's a very solid 96kbps stream offering great fidelity and in-line purchase and the like.

Link to Embedded Player w/ Album art etc.

Announcement here in MediaWeek.

posted on Monday, February 06, 2006 8:02:57 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback
# Saturday, February 04, 2006

Orbitcast points to a funny article on a guy who discovers his Satellite Radio's FM transmitter is a bit stronger than he expected.  So what does he do?  Shares with his fellow commuters in a fun and viral way.

posted on Saturday, February 04, 2006 9:52:19 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback

I've been a fan of Orb, but found it didn't run as stably as I like.  And with a bunch of international business trips coming up, I bit the bullet and am evaluating Slingbox as a way to control and watch my favorite shows recorded on our DVR.  I have to say, wow I'm impressed so far.  The UI could use some work, but the function is solid.

Underneath the hood, it's basically a hardware-based WMV Encoder that can easily be found across the Internet. Put in some quality of service (QoS) goo and away you go.  Lots of folks have been having fun with it including Scoble.  Hundreds of uses - some folks monitor their babycam using one. 

One idea I had was for Slingbox to build a Gadget for Windows Sidebar and Live.com.  They're already close-with the ability to dock the SlingPlayer on the left or right sides of your screen, but it leaves a lot of unused space.  What do you say SlingMedia? 

In the coming months I'll be blogging my experiences with Slingbox from Hong Kong and Japan.  Away we go!

posted on Saturday, February 04, 2006 9:30:51 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback
# Thursday, February 02, 2006

Robert Scoble writes:

TDavid reacts to my request for bloggers to make it easier to deal with them in email. Says that he doesn’t like email. Oh, neither do I, neither do I, but sometimes there are times when I need to get ahold of you privately and not in chat rooms or blog comments (and not via Skype or MSN Messenger either). What else is left? Email.

Here's another idea I've been kicking around: hold "office hours" with live chat using a product like SightMax.  I've been talking to Eric, the president of SmartMax Software which makes SightMax about the potential among bloggers. (Note: Eric hosts my blog) It doesn't require messenger, and provides for 1:1 conversations. You could create another messenger account, but that means you're offline for your regular contacts if logged on the same PC.  It might also be a good solution for live podcasting vs. chat rooms. 

I also find comments often aren't as effective- too slow to respond and I'm not sure if people actually read the resonses. Could this could be another solution?  Perhaps I should take it for a spin.  The question is, if I showed up for "office hours", would anybody wander in?

 

posted on Thursday, February 02, 2006 6:21:49 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback
# Wednesday, February 01, 2006

Anyone working in company of any size should read this article.

posted on Wednesday, February 01, 2006 9:30:04 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback
# Tuesday, January 31, 2006

Ok, I'm going to admit it.  I don't like DRM.  Shocked?  You shouldn't be.  But the reality is that without some forms of DRM, I wouldn't be able to legitimately download a movie to watch on the plane during a business trip.  Sure, there are other ways to get the goods, but the powers that be say DRM is necessary to give me a guarantee the 4 hours I spend downloading it off my $12.95/24 hr hotel cablemodem isn't going to end up being a handi-cammed video shot at the local multiplex.  I will personally never be a poster-child for DRM, but as long as the content providers keep coming to Microsoft (and Apple and Google) saying it's a requirement, then someone has to deliver. 

Second admission. I love BoingBoing.net - it's irreverent, often informative, and Cory, Mark, Xeni, and the crew have some really interesting things to talk about.  But sometimes, things appear to get misinterpreted.  I wasn't at the presentation in question, but based on what was said, there are a few common misconceptions about DRM I've heard over the years:

Claim #1: You have to be a "big roller" to license Microsoft's DRM.  Er, no. Big and small, hundreds of licensees and hundreds of devices have the platform.  Take a stroll through the electronics districts in NY, Tokyo, or Hong Kong, look at the devices that support WMA and services and you'll see what I mean. (Ok, or Dixons for Ian and my pals in the UK).

Claim #2: Windows Media DRM is only for Windows and isn't available on competitive platforms.  Not true.  ANSI-C sources are available for porting to any platform and have been made available for quite a while. What's more, they've been ported to many many platforms including <gasp!> platforms ending in  letters at the end of the alphabet. You'd have to ask the vendors building the solutions more about that though.

Claim #3: Licensing terms for Windows Media DRM aren't fair or accessible.  Visit www.microsoft.com/windowsmedia See DRM on left, click Getting Started. Or here's a direct link.  Device porting kits are available and continually updated.  Many DSP and SOC (System on a Chip) manufacturers offer support as well for anyone who wants to implement their chip into a device. 

So that's my read. No, I don't speak officially for Microsoft or any pricing policies, but let's give a little credit to Amir for willing to get up on-stage and take arrows on the topic.  (He's also by the way the only VP I know of who has such passion for his work that he frequents message boards to chat with other AV enthusiasts during his limited leisure time.) Charging a small royalty is a legitimate way to ensure interested parties are serious about building a business using the technology as a tool.  I don't like it either, but it's the nature of the business as it stands today.

posted on Tuesday, January 31, 2006 8:53:39 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [5] Trackback

ExtremeTech just posted results of their tests comparing CPU utilization across recent ATI (Radeon X1800 XT) and nVidia (GeForce 7800 GTX) cards for three codecs: DivX, H.264, and WMV9.  The results?

For 720p content WMV 9 plays back at typically 25-40% CPU utilization for the clips tested.  H.264 on the other hand takes 80% (using ATI's acceleration) and on other systems even spike to 100%.  Note however these are different clips than those used for WMV 9 testing. Playing back 720p DivX clips results in 50% or so CPU utilization

To quote:

"H.264 acceleration has a long way to go before it's ready for prime time. Even with ATI's hardware acceleration, it's way too CPU intensive. What's more, ATI needs to work to offer acceleration on basically all popular H.264 decoders, the same way their DVD acceleration works with DVD decoders."

Also interesting to note DivX playback performance of DivX player vs. WMP:

"The performance of the GeForce 7800 GTX when using the DivX Player is atrocious, at 75-80% CPU utilization. Under Windows Media Player 10, it's right around 50%."

One thing's for sure, there's still a lot of work to be done in this area. 

"The video landscape on the PC is still far too big a mess. There are too many codecs, and sometimes too many software providers making decoders (we found a dozen H.264 decoders and at least as many DVD decoders in 10 minutes of Google searching). Some are accelerated, some are not."

I have some ideas on how to fix this (that don't involve "destroying" the competition thank you) but I'm interested in your thoughts first?

posted on Tuesday, January 31, 2006 3:48:46 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [7] Trackback

Developers can get their hands on the latest Internet Explorer 7 Beta preview starting today for XP users.  Congrats to Dean & team for releasing. While not quite ready for the mainstream consumer quite yet, I'm running it on my main system at work- a few quirks but I've reported them to the team and they've responded already.

A tour of the new experience is here.

posted on Tuesday, January 31, 2006 3:03:23 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Monday, January 30, 2006

Chris Pirillo says,

The ala carte iPod Video store is getting worse, not better. If you watch only one TV show per week (and you don't already have a cable subscription), I'm sure their efforts are a godsend. However, if you're like me, and already have three DVRs in your house to record all the shows you want to watch, this lack-of-subscription thing is an absolute nightmare.

...I'm thoroughly disappointed that I can't take my Napster subscription with me on my PSP or iPod. Instead, companies want me to spend even MORE money for LESS freedom - and to complicate my life even more than it was before. The sad thing is, many folks walk into it blindly thinking it... "looks like fun." Bullshit. It's all Bullshit, and Apple's leading the bullshit charge (albeit with style).

Bullshit?  Hmm.  Convenient?  Yes.  It's all about variety and viscousity.  Offer just enough variety with a low viscosity among the key moving parts (discovery, purchase, and download) and you're set. It's just another take on the path of least resistance.  Nature doesn't lie.

Perhaps we need a viscosity index for software experiences end to end?

posted on Monday, January 30, 2006 10:21:46 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback

This one was too good not to share.  Today I received an invitation via my personal email to test a new software app.  The email touts the many features of said app, many cryptic in nature.

Then under known issues:

"Deadlocks observed when [running] or exiting [the application].”

+1 points for honesty.  Now -2 points for not fixing the problem before issuing the beta. Grrrr.

posted on Monday, January 30, 2006 9:44:41 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Sunday, January 29, 2006

Thomas Hawk has an excellent writeup on his blogger's dinner with Microsoft VP Jim Allchin last week. Jim confirmed that in order to get HDTV over digital cable in a Windows Vista PC, you'll have to buy a PC system that has been "certified" by CableLabs. Unfortunately there's nothing Microsoft could do here - they must honor the wishes of  CableLabs.  I've been fortunate to be one of those who has been testing the technology and I have to say it's fantastic.  I've done A/B switching tests vs. my Comcast set-top DVR and see no difference in image quality, despite the fact that the tuner is a simple USB-based box (RNDIS) that you just plug your cable (and cable card) into and go.  No news on whether free and clear QAM services will require a CableLabs certified system but I will check. I suspect local channels in HD may still be an often from after-market or home grown builders.  In order to get your premium channels DVR'd you'll need that CableCard-qualified system and CableCard installed by your local cable operator.

Also news at CES was the DirecTV Media Center announcement.  In the future (timing wasn't discussed), you'll be able to have an installer come out and install a DirecTV tuner into your Media Center PC and get your local channels complete with DVR.  As many know, DirecTV uses their own protection scheme with a "conditional access card" not unlike a cablecard.  The big difference here is that they recognize the value in offering an after-market system installed by their own installers.  In the past, it was DirecTV that was considered "evil" for their use of DRM and protecting their assets too stringently vs. Cable. Could the shoe be on the other foot?  Only time will tell.

posted on Sunday, January 29, 2006 7:54:27 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [10] Trackback
# Friday, January 27, 2006

Google's company mantra is "Do no evil". How do you feel about pop-ups and those annoying floating ads that won't go away?  Apparently coming soon to Google Adsense.

posted on Friday, January 27, 2006 8:11:48 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback

ArsTechnica has an interesting (and data-filled) article detailing public perceptions of two of the largest (if not the largest) figures in the personal computing space.  In my experiences with Bill, he's been benevolent yet driven as ever.

posted on Friday, January 27, 2006 8:12:10 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Thursday, January 26, 2006

There's been a bit of speculation over the past few weeks about what Microsoft's recent reorgs both company-wide and within Robbie Bach's org mean to the company's entertainment efforts.  While I certainly don't speak officially for anyone other than myself, I did want to share my perspective:

Reorgs happen at Microsoft.  They happen more often across the company than gets reported (or speculated upon).  Reorgs in my experience bring more focus.

So what does this mean for me in particular?  Not much really.  I'm as strongly committed to my job and my partners as ever.  More and more devices are supporting our technologies and PlaysforSure and they're getting better (look at my prior CES scorecard post).  Partnerships like those with MTV with Urge and Verizon Wireless's V-Cast are the result of significant investments on both sides.  What matters isn't speculation, but proof.

 

posted on Thursday, January 26, 2006 12:15:01 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Wednesday, January 25, 2006

Wow, we all knew that UPN and WB were in trouble, but this is surprising.  According to a release yesterday, CBS Corp. and Time Warner Inc.’s Warner Bros. said Tuesday they will close their respective UPN and WB networks, and jointly launch a new channel in fall 2006.  The new CW network will be a 50-50 joint venture of the two companies.

The companies expect the station to reach 95 percent of the country.
The surprise news of the merger comes as the WB Network has faced pressure to perform and prove itself as a strategic asset at a time when its parent company Time Warner is under intense scrutiny on Wall Street and from maverick investor Carl Icahn.

posted on Wednesday, January 25, 2006 7:11:34 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)