• 30Aug

     

    Steve Jobs isn’t one to let a little thing like a liver transplant slow him down. Some of us would take it easy: catch up on our reading, maybe even take up a therapeutic hobby like painting or music. Not Jobs, though–he’s the kind of guy who does best when he throws himself into his work.

    According to a report in The Wall Street Journal, Jobs is personally overseeing the details of the continually-rumored Apple tablet device. This is, of course, a bit like the Emperor personally overseeing the construction of the Death Star, except apparently the Emperor only rarely shoots bolts of purple lightning through his fearful underlings. The Journal says that Jobs’s concern is focused primarily on the device’s marketing and advertising strategy–little surprise, given his penchant for crafting the perfect message for the company’s products.

    This is hardly the first project to which the CEO has given his undivided attention: the iPhone, for example, merited a similar level of scrutiny from Jobs during its development. Despite working only a few days a week, Jobs is apparently present enough to cause unrest among his employees–the Journal describes the attention as “jarring” for Apple employees who had gotten used to having a little more leeway on their projects during Jobs’s absence.

    If nothing else, though, Jobs is apparently taking advantage of his lighter work schedule to answer his e-mail, replying to the Journal’s Yukari Iwatani Kane request for comment by saying, “much of your information is incorrect.” In typical Jobs fashion, he went into no further detail.

    With terse missives like that one, we’d suggest Steve take advantage of his newfound spare time to start up a Twitter account.

  • 28Aug

    The CEO of netbook pioneer Asustek Computer said Tuesday that he still sees no clear market for mini-laptops known as smartbooks, the reason the company isn’t moving forward in that product segment.

    The company raised hopes it would soon launch an Eee PC smartbook based on chips made by Qualcomm and running Google’s Android mobile operating system when such a device was displayed at the Computex Taipei electronics show in June. But the company quickly put the project on the back burner, refusing to discuss it days later at a press event that featured Asustek’s chairman alongside executives from microprocessor maker Intel and OS giant Microsoft.

    It appears the Android device remains in deep freeze.

    “Currently, I still don’t see a clear market for smartbooks,” said Jerry Shen, CEO of Asustek Computer, during an investors’ conference in Taipei.

    The company’s backing isn’t essential for smartbooks, but it would lend weight to the credibility of such devices, which use mobile phone chips and components to offer far greater battery life than existing netbooks, and potentially ubiquitous wireless connectivity. Smartbooks appear almost identical to the netbooks Asustek pioneered, mini-laptops with 8-inch to 10-inch screens.

    Asustek executives have said the reason the Android smartbook was shifted to low priority was because the company’s engineering resources were limited and would be used elsewhere. But Asustek could use some of the smartbooks made by contract manufacturer Pegatron, the company’s subsidiary.

    Several smartbooks from Pegatron were on display at Computex. The estimated retail price of the devices was about US$199, compared to between US$300 and US$400 for a comparable netbook.

    Asustek has used Intel microprocessors in all of its netbooks so far, and mainly Microsoft Windows XP as the OS, though it has sold netbooks with Linux OSs. The advantage of netbooks is that since they use Intel x86 architecture microprocessors, they can take software used on regular PCs, while smartbooks can only use software designed for or ported to RISC (reduced instruction set computer) processors, made by Arm Holdings. Arm processors are mainly found in mobile phones.

  • 27Aug

    There may be a new type of Trojan Horse attack to worry about.

    The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation is trying to figure out who is sending laptop computers to state governors acros

    Artwork: Chip Taylors the U.S., including West Virginia Governor Joe Mahchin and Wyoming Governor Dave Freudenthal. Some state officials are worried that they may contain malicious software.

    According to sources familiar with the investigation, other states have been targeted too, with HP laptops mysteriously ordered for officials in 10 states. Four of the orders were delivered, while the remaining six were intercepted, according to a source who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the ongoing investigation.

    The West Virginia laptops were delivered to the governor’s office several weeks ago, prompting state officials to contact police, according to Kyle Schafer, the state’s chief technology officer. “We were notified by the governor’s office that they had received the laptops and they had not ordered them,” he said. “We checked our records and we had not ordered them.”

    State officials in Vermont and Wyoming told him they’ve received similar unsolicited orders, Schafer said. Representatives from those states could not be reached for comment Thursday.

    Hardware Confiscated

    Schafer doesn’t know what’s on the laptops, but he handed them over to the authorities. “Our expectation is that this is not a gesture of good will,” he said. “People don’t just send you five laptops for no good reason.”

    The computers are now being held as evidence by state police, who are working with the FBI to figure out how the machines were sent to the governor’s office, said Michael Baylous, a sergeant with the West Virginia State Police.

    The West Virginia laptops were delivered Aug. 5, according to the Charleston Gazette, which first reported the story.

    The laptops sent to the Wyoming governor’s office arrived in two separate shipments on Aug. 3 and Aug. 6, according to Cara Eastwood, a spokeswoman for Governor Freudenthal.

    “We received one package, opened it and realized that it was an error since no one in our office had ordered them,” she said. “The next day we received another package. At this point we realized that they needed to be turned over to law enforcement.”

    Although there is no evidence that the computers contain malicious code, HP confirmed Thursday that there have been several such orders and that they have been linked to fraud. “HP is aware that fraudulent state government orders recently have been placed for small amounts of HP equipment,” spokeswoman Pamela Bonney said in an e-mail message. “HP took prompt corrective action to address the fraudulent orders and is working with law enforcement personnel on a criminal investigation.”

    With users now more reluctant to install suspicious software or open attachments on their networks, scammers appear to be looking for new ways to get inside the firewall.

    Criminals have tried to put malware on USB devices and then left them outside company offices, hoping someone would plug them into a computer and inadvertently install malicious software on the network. Many Windows systems are configured to automatically run software included on CDs and USB devices using a Windows feature called AutoRun.

    Many organized criminals would be happy to spend the cost of five PCs in order to access government computers, said Steve Santorelli, director of investigations with security consultancy Team Cymru. “What is a netbook? $700? You send five of them; you’re dropping three grand, and say you get into the Congressional e-mail system. How valuable would that be?”

  • 26Aug

    Nokia has unveiled the Booklet 3G, a netbook with high-speed mobile broadband and Wi-Fi connectivity, and a GPS receiver, the company said on Monday.The Booklet 3G should run for up to 12 hours on one battery charge, Nokia said. It weighs 1.25 kilograms, has an aluminum chassis and is slightly more than 2 centimeters thin.

    The mobile broadband connection will be based on HSPA (High-Speed Packet Access), but Nokia doesn’t want to elaborate on what speeds it will support.The device also has a 10-inch screen, and can connect to bigger displays using an HDMI port, according to Nokia. Like most other netbooks on the market, it contains an Intel Atom processor and will run Windows — although Nokia isn’t yet ready to say which version of the OS.

    Lately Nokia has shown an increasing amount of interest in Linux, acompetitor to the Windows OS. Nokia announced in June that it will work with Intel on mobile devices running the Linux-based Maemoplatform. But choosing Windows makes sense given consumer resistance to Linux netbooks, according to market research company CCS Insight. Detailed specifications, market availability and pricing, will be announced at Nokia World on September 2, Nokia said in a statement.

    Challenge: Standing Out
    How competitive the specification will be when it ships remains to been seen, as a slew of netbooks based on Windows 7 are expected to be announced in the near future, according to Geoff Blaber, analyst at CCS Insight.

    The price will be very important in determining the netbook’s success, and here Nokia is in a bit of a quandary, said Blaber. It can’t be too cheap, because that will make smartphones such as the N97 look expensive. But it can’t be too expensive, because that could alienate consumers who are used to low-priced netbooks, Blaber said.

    But looking at the specification, it seems like the Booklet 3G will be an expensive product, according to Roberta Cozza, principal research analyst at Gartner. But she doesn’t want to guess what it will cost.

    A high price tag means Nokia will hope to get operators to subsidize the device. But getting operators to do that might turn out to be difficult, according to Blaber. Nokia’s services push will be an integral part of the Booklet 3G, and that might not sit well with all carriers, he said. Nokia said the move into the portable computing market is a natural evolution for the company. The launch of the device has been rumored for several months.The company is clearly hoping to take advantage of its brand and its mobile phone distribution channels to compete in the cutthroat netbook segment, Blaber said.

  • 24Aug

    Nokia will join the ranks of netbook manufacturers with a stylish Windows-based offering called the Nokia Booklet 3G. It will have the looks of an Apple notebook and the guts of a PC. The netbook, according to Nokia, will have close ties to the company’s Ovi suite of online services and mobile applications currently available to Nokia handset owners.
    The aluminum-encased Booklet 3G will be powered by an Intel Atom processor and deliver up to 12 hours of battery life “enabling people to leave their power cable behind and still be connected and productive,” the company said in a statement. The Booklet can connect to the Internet either by the built-in 3G card or by catching a Wi-Fi signal. It’ll weigh 1.25 kilograms (or just under one pound) and slip by at “slightly more than two centimeters thin (0.7 inches).”
    Detailed specs, market availability and pricing will be announced at Nokia World on September 2. But here is what we know, according to details included in Nokia’s press release:

    The Nokia Booklet 3G also ships with a GPS unit.
    The 10-inch display will be glass, just like Apple’s family of aluminum MacBooks, for improved HD- and media-viewing.
    Built-in access to the Nokia Music Store
    Netbook will allow you to sync data with your Nokia handset or to a Web-based storage service.
    Booklet 3G will have hooks to Nokia’s broad suite of Ovi services that include games, music and video offerings, and office productivity applications.
    Judging from Nokia’s press release, the Nokia Booklet 3G will give Apple a low-priced run for its money. Returning students are choosing Windows-based netbooks at a substantially higher rate than Apple laptops, and Nokia grabbed this info and combined the stylish features found in Macs with the low-budget appeal of a netbook.

  • 24Aug

    Apple likes product conformity. Maybe that’s what makes the latest leaked Apple tablet image (in a long line of purported previews) the most “convincing” one yet.

    The image comes from a “credible” French blog via The Boy Genius Report.

    The small, probably Photoshopped (click on the image to zoom in on the finer details) photo shows what is essentially a huge iPod Touch with an awkwardly-placed Home button and the edges of a chrome backing.

    Contrary to popular belief that the tablet will run some version of the iPhone OS, this image clearly shows the tablet is running some version of OS X.

    Most disturbing of all is what I’m assuming to be rotating “Welcome” text. Maybe Apple partnered with Microsoft and integrated Powerpoint Custom Animations to its Tablet OS.

    Overall, the design makes sense and isn’t atrocious, but as Zach Epstein of The Boy Genius Report said, “…placement of the home key is a bit odd considering such a device would be held by its ends.”

    I’m not saying a French blog can’t be credible or this image isn’t the real deal. But if it is, Apple just made a bigger design mistake than overheating iPods.

  • 22Aug

    Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer recently confirmed that the company will limit Windows 7 Starter, the edition expected to end up on netbooks, to systems that sport small screens and low-powered processors.

    During Microsoft’s annual financial analyst day, Ballmer got more specific than other executives in describing the limitations computer makers must abide by if they’re to install Starter on their machines. Starter is the least feature-rich edition of the operating system available worldwide, and will not be sold direct to consumers or businesses. It will be available only to OEMs, or “original equipment manufacturers,” such as Acer, ASUS, Dell, Hewlett-Packard and Toshiba.

    “Our license tells you what a netbook is,” said Ballmer at the Microsoft-hosted day with Wall Street analysts. “Our license says it’s got to have a super-small screen, which means it probably has a super-small keyboard, and it has to have a certain processor and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.”

    Although other Microsoft executives earlier this year said that the company would place restrictions on the kinds of processors and screen resolutions supported by Starter, Ballmer is the highest computer official yet to spell out Starter’s limitations, if only in the broadest terms.

    Last May, the Malaysian Web site TechARP.com, which regularly leaks information provided to computer makers by Microsoft, reported that the company would restrict Starter to specific netbook configurations. According to TechARP, Microsoft will only sell Starter to OEMs for use on netbooks that have a 10.2-in. or smaller screen, no more than 1GB of memory, a hard disk drive of 250GB or less (or a solid-state drive no larger than 64GB) and a single-core processor no faster than 2GHz.

    Ballmer was frank with analysts about Microsoft’s rationale for setting Starter’s limitations. “We want people to be able to get the advantages of lightweight performance and be able to spend more money with us, with Intel, with HP, with Dell and with many, many others,” he said.

    “With today’s netbooks, we sell you XP at a price,” Ballmer continued. “When we launch Windows 7, an OEM can put XP on the machine at one price, Windows 7 Starter Edition at a higher price, Windows 7 Home Edition at a higher price, and Windows 7 Professional at a higher price.”

    Microsoft has not disclosed pricing for Starter, since the edition will be sold only in volume to OEMs, and will not be available to end users at retail. However, Ballmer made it plain that Microsoft hopes to coax users into purchasing PCs with higher-priced versions of Windows 7. “It’s not just what are our prices — that’s partly in here — but it’s also a function of how well do we do getting, in any segment, people to buy the more expensive offering,” he told analysts.

    “They’re trying to force people into higher-end SKUs,” said Allan Krans, an analyst with Technology Business Research. “Selling XP at a low price to OEMs hurt them financially, and they’re trying to figure out a way to stem that.”

    Last month, Microsoft said revenues for the Windows client division were down 29% year over year for the company’s fiscal fourth quarter, which ended June 30. Microsoft blamed the fall-off on the increased sales of netbooks and a global slow-down of PC purchases.

    Ballmer acknowledged that Microsoft made a mistake pricing licenses of Windows XP Home that it’s been selling only to netbook makers since April 2008. “[Windows revenues are] down primarily because we did a program this year to cut prices in emerging markets with a theory that the lower price would lead to higher attach and higher total revenue,” Ballmer said.

    “The theory was wrong. It’s not that it was untested, but it turns out the theory was wrong, and you will see us address the theory in the Windows 7 time frame. We’re going to readjust those prices north, so to say, and I think with our Windows 7 SKU lineup, we also have a great chance to do some up-sell … to Windows 7 Starter, Windows 7 Home….”

    “They’re trying to rectify the mistake,” noted Krans. “But that will be very difficult for them to do. Netbook prices are low already, and adding another $20 or $30 for Windows 7 Starter will make it too tight for [OEMs[ to operate.”

    Microsoft doesn’t divulge Windows prices to OEMs, but earlier this year the Wall Street Journal cited sources that claimed the company receives less than $15 per netbook for Windows XP, considerably less than the estimated $50 to $60 it gets for a Vista license.

    Krans said higher prices for Windows 7 — $30 to $40 more than XP Home — would be a tough sell to netbook makers. “OEMs don’t have a lot of wiggle room on price, since price points seem to be the most important feature for netbooks,” said Krans.

    The best Microsoft can hope for is to make a case for more capable, but still-inexpensive laptops that run one of the “premium” editions of Windows 7, like Home Premium or Professional. “Netbooks have their place, but low-end notebooks are a more compelling value,” Krans said. “For $500 or less, low-end notebooks are going to have a much more usable keyboard and a more usable screen. They’re better for the OEMs and for Microsoft, because there’s more pricing flexibility there than in netbooks to make some sustainable margins.”

    Microsoft has committed to continue selling Windows XP Home to netbook makers for at least 12 months after the launch of Windows 7, or through October 2010.

  • 20Aug

    Verizon Wireless is again offering a second BlackBerry with each one purchased, but this time the deal includes any other device — of equal or lesser value — that Verizon sells.

    That means new subscribers, or those signing new two-year contracts, can get a free netbook with a BlackBerry Tour smartphone. The Tour costs US$199.99 after Verizon’s rebate, and the least-expensive netbook Verizon sells is the HP Mini 1151 NR, also priced at $199.99. Those customers could also get any USB, PC Card or ExpressCard modem the carrier offers.

    The offer also covers the Intelligent Mobile Hotspot, a $199.99 battery-powered 3G modem that includes a Wi-Fi access point that can be used with any five Wi-Fi devices. To get any of these devices free with the BlackBerry, the customer would have to sign up for a two-year contract for both devices. Monthly data plans start at $39.99 with a 250MB cap and $59.99 with a 5GB cap.

    Research In Motion and Verizon both have been working hard to grab attention and sales from the still-popular Apple iPhone, which in the U.S. is offered only on Verizon rival AT&T’s network. A BlackBerry buy-one-get-one offer that Verizon ran earlier this year was widely credited with helping the BlackBerry Curve beat the iPhone in unit sales in the first quarter. The BlackBerry Storm, RIM’s first touch-screen product, also debuted to hot sales in that quarter.

    With the latest promotion, Verizon wanted to make sure its customers were able to get the second device they needed, instead of limiting them to getting another BlackBerry. Verizon sells all other BlackBerry models for less than the Tour, ranging from the Storm at $99.99 to the BlackBerry 8703e for $29.99, each with two-year contracts.

    The Tour, which debuted last month, can work on both the EV-DO (Evolution-Data Optimized) network technology used by Verizon and the GSM/HSPA (Global System for Mobile Communications/High-Speed Packet Access) system used by most carriers outside the U.S. It is available in models with or without a 3.2-megapixel camera, meeting the security requirements of some businesses and government agencies. Both models cost $199.99 at Verizon.

  • 19Aug

    In an effort to expand its Linux offerings, Dell is researching new netbook-type devices and will soon offer netbook Linux OS upgrades, a company official said on Wednesday.

    The company is researching the possibility of offering new Linux-based mobile devices called smartbooks, said Todd Finch, senior product marketing manager for Linux clients, at the OpenSourceWorld conference in San Francisco. The company will also upgrade its Ubuntu Linux OS for netbooks to the latest version in the next few weeks, he said.

    Smartbooks are netbook-type devices that are powered by chips designed by Arm. The devices mostly support the Linux OS and are designed for those who rely on the Web for most of their computing. Dell couldn’t say whether it would ultimately offer a smartbook.

    Smartbooks have similar characteristics to netbooks, including cramped keyboards and small screens. No major PC vendor has yet announced an interest in smartbooks, though small vendors are pushing them as an alternative to netbooks, which are mostly based on Intel’s Atom chips and come with Microsoft’s Windows OS. Many vendors, including Qualcomm and Freescale, are providing Arm chips for smartbooks that could hit shelves by the end of this year.

    Smartbooks with Arm chips have inherent advantages over x86 chips like Atom, such as lower power consumption and longer battery life, Finch said. The chips are also becoming more powerful, as indicated by the growing number of applications on smartphones, he said.

    “I think it’s natural and reasonable for us to begin looking at them as they begin scaling their processors up,” Finch said.

    Putting an Arm chip — mainly found in smartphones — inside a lightweight PC could provide an early entry point for Dell into the smartphone space, said Jay Chou, research analyst at IDC. Dell has hinted at entering the smartphone area many times, but no product has materialized yet.

    While netbooks are the craze, smartbooks are hard to ignore, Chou said. Interest in the device will grow over time because it enables lightweight and low-priced computing devices, which could interest PC makers. Pricing is also a major criteria for buyers, and Linux netbooks are cheaper than their Windows counterparts.

    But smartbooks could struggle as Windows remains the dominant OS for netbook-type devices, with a strong software ecosystem around it, Chou said. Smartbooks may have a hard time gaining traction, and much of their future success will depend on the software ecosystem.

    The target market for smartbooks will be no different from Linux-based netbooks as they both have the same usage scenario, Dell’s Finch said. Like smartbooks, Linux-based netbooks are targeted at those looking for quick access to Web-based applications. “The more [Web-based] applications there are, the better it is for Linux,” Finch said.

    The growing interest in Linux is partly driven by Dell’s success with Linux on its netbooks. Close to a third of all netbooks Dell ships during certain quarters are preloaded with Linux, he said.

    Dell is currently the fifth-largest netbook vendor worldwide, according to IDC’s Chou. Linux-based netbooks made up about 5 percent of overall worldwide shipments during the last quarter.

    However, a bulk of Dell’s netbooks today ship with Windows XP, which remains the OS of choice for consumers, Finch said. The popularity of Windows won’t change overnight, he said.

    “There are still a large percentage of people that prefer Windows, even on a netbook,” Finch said. Many are familiar with the look and feel of Windows, and are unwilling to trade in for the longer battery life offered by Linux. He couldn’t comment about the possible adoption rates of Windows 7, which is due for release on Oct. 22.

    Dell currently offers Ubuntu Linux version 8.04 with the Mini 10v netbook, which is being upgraded to the latest 9.04 version — code-named Jaunty Jackalope — in the next few weeks. Dell will be pre-loading the Web-centric Ubuntu Netbook Remix, which is designed for small screen sizes, on future netbooks. Its Web-centric design provides quick access to online applications, and the OS builds in support for a larger number of drivers.

    The company is also researching Google’s Chrome for use in netbooks. The OS is a thin version of a Linux-based operating system that also will provide quick access to the Web and online applications.

  • 18Aug

    In an effort to expand its Linux offerings, Dell is researching new netbook-type devices and will soon offer netbook Linux OS upgrades, a company official said on Wednesday.

    The company is researching the possibility of offering new Linux-based mobile devices called smartbooks, said Todd Finch, senior product marketing manager for Linux clients, at the OpenSourceWorld conference in San Francisco. The company will also upgrade its Ubuntu Linux OS for netbooks to the latest version in the next few weeks, he said.

    Smartbooks are netbook-type devices that are powered by chips designed by Arm. The devices mostly support the Linux OS and are designed for those who rely on the Web for most of their computing. Dell couldn’t say whether it would ultimately offer a smartbook.

    Smartbooks have similar characteristics to netbooks, including cramped keyboards and small screens. No major PC vendor has yet announced an interest in smartbooks, though small vendors are pushing them as an alternative to netbooks, which are mostly based on Intel’s Atom chips and come with Microsoft’s Windows OS. Many vendors, including Qualcomm and Freescale, are providing Arm chips for smartbooks that could hit shelves by the end of this year.

    Smartbooks with Arm chips have inherent advantages over x86 chips like Atom, such as lower power consumption and longer battery life, Finch said. The chips are also becoming more powerful, as indicated by the growing number of applications on smartphones, he said.

    “I think it’s natural and reasonable for us to begin looking at them as they begin scaling their processors up,” Finch said.

    Putting an Arm chip — mainly found in smartphones — inside a lightweight PC could provide an early entry point for Dell into the smartphone space, said Jay Chou, research analyst at IDC. Dell has hinted at entering the smartphone area many times, but no product has materialized yet.

    While netbooks are the craze, smartbooks are hard to ignore, Chou said. Interest in the device will grow over time because it enables lightweight and low-priced computing devices, which could interest PC makers. Pricing is also a major criteria for buyers, and Linux netbooks are cheaper than their Windows counterparts.

    But smartbooks could struggle as Windows remains the dominant OS for netbook-type devices, with a strong software ecosystem around it, Chou said. Smartbooks may have a hard time gaining traction, and much of their future success will depend on the software ecosystem.

    The target market for smartbooks will be no different from Linux-based netbooks as they both have the same usage scenario, Dell’s Finch said. Like smartbooks, Linux-based netbooks are targeted at those looking for quick access to Web-based applications. “The more [Web-based] applications there are, the better it is for Linux,” Finch said.

    The growing interest in Linux is partly driven by Dell’s success with Linux on its netbooks. Close to a third of all netbooks Dell ships during certain quarters are preloaded with Linux, he said.

    Dell is currently the fifth-largest netbook vendor worldwide, according to IDC’s Chou. Linux-based netbooks made up about 5 percent of overall worldwide shipments during the last quarter.

    However, a bulk of Dell’s netbooks today ship with Windows XP, which remains the OS of choice for consumers, Finch said. The popularity of Windows won’t change overnight, he said.

    “There are still a large percentage of people that prefer Windows, even on a netbook,” Finch said. Many are familiar with the look and feel of Windows, and are unwilling to trade in for the longer battery life offered by Linux. He couldn’t comment about the possible adoption rates of Windows 7, which is due for release on Oct. 22.

    Dell currently offers Ubuntu Linux version 8.04 with the Mini 10v netbook, which is being upgraded to the latest 9.04 version — code-named Jaunty Jackalope — in the next few weeks. Dell will be pre-loading the Web-centric Ubuntu Netbook Remix, which is designed for small screen sizes, on future netbooks. Its Web-centric design provides quick access to online applications, and the OS builds in support for a larger number of drivers.

    The company is also researching Google’s Chrome for use in netbooks. The OS is a thin version of a Linux-based operating system that also will provide quick access to the Web and online applications.