Archive for May, 2010

IBM + Sun = Perfect for open-source monetization

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

CNET News Poll Should IBM buy Sun?
Big Blue reportedly is in talks to buy Sun Microsystems for $6.4 billion. Should it?

The two companies have fought each other for years, but Sun and IBM bring a range of complementary technologies, product lines, and business strategies to the table. Sun is staking its business on driving sales through open-source adoption. Free software makes sense in this strategy.

Yes. Sun’s products complement IBM’s.
Yes. Keep a few assets, and sell the rest as scraps.
No. There are too many product overlaps.
No. Sun brings too many problems.

A combination would require melding companies with distinct, dissimilar cultures. IBM, an East Coast stalwart that helped invent the computer industry, grew up with a button-down style and a philosophy of delivering what customers want. Sun, which grew up in the go-go environment of the 1980s in Silicon Valley, is an engineering-driven maverick with a record of major innovations that has lately struggled to profit from them.

In other words, IBM may be exactly what Sun needs to complete its open-source transition. I can’t speak to the hardware benefits of such a deal, but in terms of open source, this combination would be a home run.

Let Sun build. Let IBM monetize.

IBM could fix that. IBM knows how to make money from software, and it could lend a hard-edged pragmatism to Sun’s open-source idealism.

Follow me on Twitter at mjasay.

IBM is in talks to acquire Sun Microsystems, according to The Wall Street Journal.

The Journal reports on the culture clash between the two companies, which could complicate the deal. I believe, however, that the conflicting cultures are actually complementary:

commentary

IBM, by contrast, has increasingly staked more of its business on driving adoption through open-source software-based sales. Open-source software, which IBM can embed in its products, makes sense in this strategy. IBM actively undermines competitors by seeding open-source projects such as various Apache Software Foundation projects, Linux, and Eclipse. It then sells proprietary add-ons to that open-source software.

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Sun has struggled to revive its financial prospects in the wake of declining interest in its Solaris operating system and associated hardware. Open source has been the big bright spot for Sun, but Sun’s ability to recoup hardware losses with free software has been suspect.

Hulu content returns to Boxee in a different form

Monday, May 24th, 2010

Media-center start-up Boxee, which aggregates Web video for television set-top boxes, has launched a new version that restores access to video hub Hulu. The NBC Universal-News Corp. joint venture had pulled its content from Boxee after content partners took issue with it.

Industry talks continue, the post continued. “While we don’t come from an entertainment or cable background, we are learning quickly. It is a complex business. Our meetings with Hulu and their content providers reinforced that point,” Ronen wrote. “They are trying to adjust to a new reality, but they need time.”

But it’s not really the same: Boxee has brought back Hulu by extending its support for RSS feeds, and is pulling the video content in that way.

“Like IE,
Firefox, or Google Reader, the RSS reader supports Google Video, Yahoo, YouTube and feeds from many other websites,” a post on the Boxee blog by CEO Avner Ronen read. “While it’s not as attractive or robust as our previous Hulu application, it will additionally support Hulu’s public RSS feeds.”

Nanocontent convergence Twitter meets live bloggi

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

It’s a simple, if slightly crude, implementation: when a live blog producer is setting up coverage, he or she can tell the system to monitor specific Twitter accounts and post the Tweets in the live blog window. As a Twitter and a CoveritLive user, I’d prefer a bit more control, such as the capability to tell CiL to take filtered Twitter feeds (using #hashtags, perhaps), but this is a good start.

When setting up a live blog, producers can tell it to monitor Twitter accounts for updates.

Webware’s favorite live blogging tool, CoveritLive, is getting a new tool for its authors: the capability to update a live blog via Twitter.

Just in case I wasn’t clear about this at the top: CoveritLive is a fantastic tool for covering live events. I am very happy to see it developing with new features and capabilities.

What I like most about this feature is that it sets up CoveritLive as a conduit or platform, not a closed system. If you’re a Web producer and want to set up a live blog, but your authors are happy Twitter users and don’t want to learn a new tool, fine. Just tell them to cover an event from their Twitter account using their favorite Twitter app, like Twhirl or TwitterFon. (Twitter live bloggers will still be subject to the platform’s 120-character limit, of course.) You can mix up Twitter posts with text from the standard CoveritLive writer’s interface. It’s easy.

We are using CoveritLive today to live blog the Under the Radar: Mobility conference.

CoveritLive viewers see the Twitter updates inline with the other content.

AMD and Nvidia drop new $250 3D graphics cards

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

(Credit:
Nvidia)

The Radeon HD 4890 doesn’t introduce much in the way of new features, though it has a clock speed bump over its Radeon HD 4870 cards released last year. The core clock has gone from 750MHz on the 4870 to 850MHz on the 4890, and the memory from 900MHz to 950MHz.

In any case, the GeForce GTX 275 is basically a clocked-down GTX 285. The core, memory, and shader clocks on the new chip are respectively about 3 percent, 5 percent, and 9 percent slower than those of the GTX 285, and you also get less memory bandwidth.

The Nvidia 896MB GeForce GTX 275.

AMD’s ATI made a few other tweaks to memory bandwidth and fill rates, but for the most part, the two cards are very similar. The Radeon HD 4890 is available now at various online retailers, and prices so far reflect ATI’s suggested $249 baseline.

No one found a runaway winner, and as usual with cards from this generation, each has an advantage, depending on the game you want to play, as well as the settings. A few site reviews tipped in favor of Nvidia. We would add that AMD’s new card is the only one you can actually buy at the moment.

The official covers of two 3D graphics cards, the ATI 1GB Radeon HD 4890 and the Nvidia 896MB GeForce GTX 275, came off Thursday morning.

At $250 for the baseline cards (overclocked models will be available for each for $10 or so more), these cards establish a new midrange battleground, filling the gap between the $150 and $300 price points we covered earlier this year.

The ATI 1GB Radeon HD 4890.

Nvidia’s new GeForce GTX 275 is slated to become available for purchase on April 14. And while we don’t imagine that Nvidia could simply make a new 3D card appear overnight (nor do we necessarily know which vendor actually started taping out its new card first), we find it interesting that mere days after ATI called us for a briefing on the Radeon HD 4890, Nvidia got in touch regarding its own new product.

Which card is better? Our own reviews are still in the works (thank you, unstable 3D test bed), but the usual enthusiast suspects (Anandtech, Extremetech, HotHardware, and PC Perspective) have their coverage up already.

That timing, along with the delayed availability and the fact that Nvidia seemed to be waiting for ATI to reveal its pricing first, suggest that the GTX 275 may be a reactionary launch to take the wind out of its competition. That doesn’t make it any less of a 3D card, but some vocal Nvidia opponents have speculated that the GTX 275 might not hit the market in large quantities when it arrives.

Each of these cards, respectively from Advanced Micro Devices and Nvidia, has a two-slot PCI Express design that requires two six-pin cable connections to your PC’s internal power supply. They also support each vendor’s respective multicard technology, Crossfire for ATI, and SLI for Nvidia.

(Credit:
Advanced Micro Devices)

Nvidia has also introduced an ambient occlusion feature in the driver that will launch with the GTX 275. This is basically a way to force soft shadows onto games that don’t already support it, at the cost of some performance. Expect all current Nvidia cards to support ambient occlusion with the new driver, ForceWare version 185.65, available soon.

Businesses bank on solar power

Saturday, May 15th, 2010

The first to go online is the Alvarado Water Treatment Plant, a one-megawatt installation that produces about 20 percent of the power the plant uses. The second planned array, also for a water treatment facility, could be finalized in weeks.

The Alvarado solar array is spread across three different locations at the plant where rows and rows of solar panels are placed on top of concrete water storage tanks.

The solar array at the New Children's Museum in San Diego which produces about half of the building's electricity.

Consider the city of San Diego which is in the process of procuring as much as five megawatts of solar electricity in municipal sites over the next five years.

“I cannot say I ever sold a solar system on finance alone,” said Thompson. “You get a lot of nonmonetary benefits. So if a project will break even, they’ll do it.”

“We anticipate that with the systems in the future that we’ll get better pricing because the price of solar panels is going down all the time,” said John Helminski, a systems engineer for San Diego’s energy program in its environmental services department.

(Credit:
Martin LaMonica/CNET Networks)

Solar trees sprout in San Diego

The University of California at San Diego had similar motivations when it embarked on a series of solar installations on campus.

A "solar tree," or solar powered canopy at the University of California at San Diego.

The price of solar electric gear and installations continues to go down and many experts expect that solar power within a few years will be at “grid parity,” or the same cost per watt as fossil fuel-generated electricity.

Solar panels are a visible way of saying that a company is doing something about environmental protection and lowering a business’ carbon footprint–all of which can lead to good public relations.

The New Children’s Museum in downtown San Diego, which is a certified green building, was able to purchase its 90-kilowatt solar panel outright, rather than go with a power purchase agreement.

(Credit:
Martin LaMonica/CNET Networks)

Cash is better

For organizations that actually have the cash on hand to purchase a solar installation, the financial benefits are a lot more direct.

An installation of this size costs about $6.5 million–beyond what most municipalities can afford. So they arrange what is called a power purchase agreement (PPA), where another company called a systems integrator finances, installs, and then owns the facility.

Meeting the city’s renewable energy goals and hedging against rising electricity prices was so important that the city considered big solar installations even when it was unclear that a sizable renewable energy tax credit would be renewed. (It was).

“What’s driving the corporate model? For nonprofits, it’s budgetary relief and trying to fix their costs,” he said. “A corporation is going to do it for myriad of reasons–being good to the environment, freezing costs–again for budget effects–and they may have a tax liability.”

And they know that the source of fuel for their power generator–the sun–will always be free. (Panels are typically guaranteed to work for 20 years and then they start to degrade in performance.)

Rather than a strictly financial decision, renewable energy purchases are part of bigger sustainability initiative, said David Weil, who works with the university’s facilities management division.

Within about two weeks, it will connect a 164-kilowatt installation of “solar trees,” or solar-powered canopies in one of its parking lots.

Strand predicted that corporate purchases of solar power will continue to go up for a number of reasons.

Perhaps more importantly, the city’s contract with its systems integrator, SunEdison, stipulates the the price it will pay for the solar panels’ electricity will go up slower than the retail price of electricity. So while other customers are exposed to the vagaries of price increases, the plant will know how much its electricity will cost for the 20 years of the contract.

But organizations that invest in solar are putting a value on things other than purchase price–some of which benefit their bottom line, others that benefit society as a whole.

The solar parking lot will allow them to purchase electricity at just under the market rate as well. But its primary reasons were to demonstrate its commitment to sustainability and make progress on its goals to be “climate neutral,” Weil said.

SAN DIEGO–With so many large organizations putting solar panels on their roofs, you would think that it’s because solar power is cheaper than the grid. But a closer look shows that it’s not that simple.

The city and university’s attitudes are similar to many corporate solar installation decisions, said Dave Thompson, a senior energy consultant at Borrego Solar’s Commercial Projects Group.

Corporations can get a federal tax credit of 30 percent of purchase price as well as state-level rebates. They can also amortize the equipment as a capital expenditure.

(Credit:
Martin LaMonica/CNET Networks)

A part of the one megawatt at the Alvarado Water Treatment Plant in San Diego.

The California Center for Sustainable Energy organized a corporate solar tour on Monday, as part of the Solar Power International conference taking place here this week.

The tour made clear that there are a lot of good reasons to go solar, namely hedging against fossil fuels prices or good community relations. But it’s not just about lowering the electricity bill. In fact, in some cases, customers pay nearly as much as they did before they went through all the trouble of installing the panels.

The water treatment plant just buys the electricity, at only half a cent less than the retail rate of 12.5 cents per kilowatt-hour. A half-cent discount doesn’t sound like much but the plant estimates that it will save $177,300 a year by installing the panels.

Although the purchase price before rebates and tax credits was steep–on the order of $700,000–the system will pay for itself in 12 to 15 years and make their energy costs more predictable, said Troy Strand, executive vice president of Independent Energy Solutions, a solar integrator.

‘60 Minutes’ Inside the Collider

Monday, May 10th, 2010

In Sunday night’s season premiere of the CBS news program 60 Minutes, Steve Kroft talked to a number of the scientists involved–one reckoned that half of all U.S. particle physicists are there–and ventured underground for a closer look at the one-of-a-kind machinery built by CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research. (CNET News is published by CBS Interactive, a unit of CBS.)


How will we benefit from the Large Hadron Collider? Practical results might be a ways off, but they’ll be coming, and they’ll be shared equally among all the countries that have participated.

Build an $8 billion machine that forms a 17-mile circle 300 feet underground and that may reveal secrets from the origins of the universe, and you’re bound to provoke curiosity.


How the Large Hadron Collider works: Animation shows the scope of the facility and how the subatomic particles will zip along at the speed of light before colliding with each other.


See inside the Large Hadron Collider: Get the lowdown on the machinery in the underground facility and the kinds of questions it might help answer, such as “What is the origin of mass?”

Below are some clips from the 60 Minutes story:

The machine in question is the Large Hadron Collider, the goal of which is to reproduce the conditions from just fractions of a second after the Big Bang. It’ll do so by slamming together subatomic particles at about the speed of light, with scientists poised for a glimpse at the results.


Meet the Americans working on the Large Hadron Collider: Steve Kroft talks to three scientists, one from MIT, one from the University of Chicago, and one from the University of Michigan.

Vyew’s Web collaboration goodness goes 3.0

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

The smartest addition of version 3 is actually one of the most subtle. Users can now leave little text or voice notes on documents that sit both on the document and on the side. You can toggle which view you’d like to see, but either way it performs like some of the asynchronous collaboration tools we’ve seen like ConceptShare and ProofHQ. Others can then come back to the hosted documents and both see and leave their own feedback.

There’s also a new status menu where you can interrupt a meeting without actually interrupting it with a virtual “slow down” or applause message that will pop up for the presenter to see. You can use the same status message to tell other people you’re temporarily away.

If you're in a meeting you can interact with the presenter without words using the new status menu.

The company is pitching this as an alternative to sending attachments around the office, or to a client, and to a certain degree it’s great for that, although missing is the option to view a timeline of revisions, which is where similar tools shine.

This week Vyew released version 3 of its browser-based collaboration tool. Freshly added are really useful things for online meetings like a push-to-talk VoIP system and Webcam support to take some of the chatter away from text and the corresponding telephone-based conference call. More importantly, there’s now an API, meaning others can develop special applications that run within the service, expanding what Vyew’s own developers are able to create.

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

I still think Vyew is one of the simplest screen-sharing tools out there. The fact that it only requires you to have Java installed on your machine to make that happen is a much smarter way to go about compatibility than requiring a special proprietary plug-in or download. Vyew’s Todd Lane goes over some of the new features in a YouTube video, which I’ve embedded after the break. You can also go make your own room and play around with them by clicking here.

One of those new applications is a built-in poll creator, where you can set up something for a vote and have others in the meeting choose which of the options they want. For something like a 10-person meeting this is a far better solution than clogging up the conference call or chat box with extra clamor.