Practical Technology

for practical people.

February 15, 2008
by sjvn01
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Did Microsoft Do the Right Kind of Reorganization?

Microsoft made quite a few changes, but did it make big enough changes to make a difference?

There are reorganizations, and then are Reorganizations. Microsoft just had one of the latter kinds.

While I don’t follow Microsoft as closely as I do Linux and its companies, I do keep an eye on the Evil Empire and, frankly, and this was quite a shake-up.

Some of these changes didn’t come as any surprise. The only thing that surprised me about the departure of Peter Knook, the senior VP of Microsoft’s Mobile Communications Business group, wasn’t that he left; it was that it took that long for him and Microsoft to part ways. Knook wasn’t well regarded outside of Microsoft in the mobile community.

However, the timing, the same week that Microsoft’s launched yet another mobile initiative, is really awful. You’d almost think he’s had something against Microsoft. Or, maybe it was just that new projects like, oh please, MSN Direct for Mobile, drove him up the wall and out of the company.

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February 13, 2008
by sjvn01
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Is Yahoo Worth Buying?

If I had a billion dollars, I’d be rich (with my apologies to Barenaked Ladies). If I were trying to buy Yahoo, I wouldn’t even be in the running.

Microsoft offered $44.6 billion, or $31 a share, a 62 percent premium on Yahoo’s share price at the time, for Yahoo. And what did the Yahoo board do? They sneered at it because the offer “substantially undervalues” the company.

Boy, I wish I could sneer at $44.6 billion. So, what would Yahoo consider a fair price? Maybe, some stock analysts have suggested to me, oh say, $60 billion. No offense to my day trading friends, but I think they’re getting a wee bit greedy with those estimates.

Indeed many people don’t care for the proposed Microhoo. Google, of course, doesn’t like it, but they’ve got their own priorities and messing with Microsoft’s proposed Yahoo deal is near the top of the list. The more the deal costs Microsoft the better, as far as Google is concerned.

Some people, however, really hate the idea. Henry Blodget, the well-known CEO and editor in chief of Silicon Alley Insider, a New York digital business community news site called the proposed acquisition a “disaster” in the making. Blodget went on to say that Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer “is not used to losing. They’re doing something that’s conceptually smart, but that’s not going to work.”

Why? Well there are the usual reasons. There’s no real synergy between Microsoft’s Windows-based software and Yahoo’s FreeBSD/open-source Web 2.0 applications. The two companies’ corporate cultures are as mixable as oil and water. And, lest we forget, Yahoo’s in trouble. As I started writing this story, I see that Yahoo began firing, excuse me, laying off the first of 1,000-plus employees.

Yahoo, tell me again how Microsoft has undervalued the company. I’m sure your newly unemployed staffers would love to hear the details.

Meanwhile, Microsoft is undeterred and insists that it’s going to buy Yahoo. It’s not upping its offer, yet. Instead, it seems to want to see if it can get the stockholders to accept its offer over Yahoo’s board recommendations. Some of Yahoo’s stockholders, an informal group named Group B, seem to be in favor of the deal.

For more than a year now, Group B has been doing its best to get Yahoo to radically change course. They believe that Yahoo’s former CEO, Terry Semel, and current board, have been driving the company into the ground. Given Yahoo’s lousy track record for the last few years, it’s easy to see their point.

Eric Jackson, the leader of the group of 100 current and former Yahoo employees that own 2.1 million shares, are in favor of taking the best offer on the table. And, for now, that’s Microsoft. As Jackson said in his blog, “We have no desire to see Yahoo! continue independently with the current board and management team in place.”

For better or worse, though, Group B, while looking for others to join it, owns only a tiny fraction of Yahoo’s total stock holdings. Microsoft is hoping that others will join with them.

I suspect, however, that Microsoft is going to have to up its ante before it can make a deal. I still think Microsoft needs Yahoo. I also agree that it’s a potential disaster. And I also agree that it’s going to take a tremendous amount of work to pull these two companies together. On the other hand, what other choice does Microsoft have?

As my Microsoft Watch colleague Joe Wilcox recently said, “Microsoft’s bid, assuming that it is sincere, reveals that the services platform is vaporware. Sure, Microsoft has built out something, but it’s not nearly enough to compete with Google. Microsoft has tacitly admitted that it’s even farther behind Google than anyone suspected.”

I agree completely. In chess, there’s a horrible situation you can end up in called zugzwang. It’s a German word that means that you’ve got to move but that any move you make is only going to make your situation worse, usually a lot worse. Welcome to zugzwang, Microsoft. You’ve got to buy Yahoo to try to improve your online position, but, for now, no matter how you do it the move is going to hurt.

A version of this story first appearedin eWEEK.

February 13, 2008
by sjvn01
0 comments

Apple TV Take 2 is Here!

It took longer than expected, but not as long as I had feared, this morning, February 13th, Apple delivered the Apple TV Take 2 update.

I’ve just downloaded and installed it on my 40GB Apple TV In a word: “Sweet.” After an 8-minutes download, over a 3Mbps DSL Internet connection, and a reboot, the Apple TV was delivering all the goodies that Steve Jobs had promised in his January MacWorld speech.

Anyone can update their Apple TV. All you need do is Updating head over to Settings on your Apple TV, pick Update Software, and press the Apple Remote’s Play/Pause button and you’re on your way. You don’t need to do a thing with your computer or iTunes.

The first thing you’ll notice is that the menu is different. All your choices are available on a single main menu. It may not look as fancy as the older Apple TV menu, but unlike that one, anyone who can point and click can navigate this menu.

With the new menu you can easily buy or rent HD or SD movies. With your remote you can shop your way through the iTunes Store and get a good deal of information on each movie without any need to use your PC. At this time, I’m sorry you can’t rent TV episodes or series, you can only buy them. You can also use your Apple TV as a Flickr/.Mac photo browser.

You can, of course, still watch videos already in your networked iTunes library or on your Apple TV.

I haven’t had much of a chance to play with the new Apple TV, but I can say one thing. It, as I expected it too, destroys old-style video rental. Who needs to go to a Blockbuster, wait for a Netflix envelope or only have the small, collections of cable and satellite rental movies when you have an Apple TV? I don’t. As Apple adds more movies to its collection, over several hundred now by my count, the Apple TV is going to become an essential in anyone’s serious video setup.

February 11, 2008
by sjvn01
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So long HD-DVD

I recently discovered that a neighbor had bought an HD-DVD player. Whoops. If only I had known I would have told them the last thing they should be buying is an HD-DVD player.

The writing on the wall has been clear for some time now. HD-DVD is dead. Oh, you can still find HD-DVD players and discs. In fact, you can often find the players at clearance prices.

Before you rush out and buy one keep in mind that that they’re not worth a dime on the dollar. You see, by year’s end, you’re going to be as likely to find new HD-DVD movies as you are new 8-track tapes.

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February 11, 2008
by sjvn01
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Apple TV 3.0?

While we’re still waiting around for direct to Apple TV video rentals, aka Apple TV 2.0, some hints have recently arrived at what Apple TV 3.0 might look like.

These hints were discovered in an Apple patent about placing ‘widgets,’ small, useless applications you can run on a computer, on a multimedia center. Or, in other words, putting widgets on your television courtesy of Apple TV.

Most of us know widgets that do jobs like telling us the weather, stock market quotes and the like. In Mac OS, these are made available on the Dashboard. From the Apple patent, it looks like we can expect to see similar functionality on our TVs somewhere down the road.

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February 11, 2008
by sjvn01
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Thunderbird security woes

When Firefox 2.0.0.12 came out on Feb. 7, it brought with it fixes for three critical security holes and seven that were not quite so serious. According to the security advisories, many of these problems were also fixed in the Thunderbird 2.0.0.12 e-mail client. Unfortunately, there is no Thunderbird 2.0.0.12.

The Mozilla Foundation’s press release focused on the Firefox 2.0.0.12 security fixes. The Foundation also reported, though, in its MFSA (Mozilla Foundation Security Advisory), that these same bugs had been fixed in the fictitious Thunderbird 2.0.0.12.

Specifically, the following critical security advisories were reported to be fixed in both Firefox and Thunderbird 2.0.0.12: MFSA 2008-01 (crashes with evidence of memory corruption) and MFSA 2008-03 (privilege escalation, XSS, remote code execution). In addition, the serious security bug MFSA 2008-05 (directory traversal via chrome: URI) and moderate security bug MFSA 2008-08 (file action dialog tampering) are reported to have been fixed in the nonexistent Thunderbird 2.0.0.12.

All of these security problems can be traced back to how the Web browser engine behind both Firefox and Thunderbird, Gecko, handles JavaScript. Or, to be more exact, the core problem lies in how this layout engine mishandles JavaScript.

The brute-force solution is simply to make sure that JavaScript is never enabled in Thunderbird. Unlike in Web browsers, where disabling JavaScript is far more serious in that it also disables some JavaScript-dependent Web sites, there’s seldom any call for using JavaScript with HTML-formatted e-mail messages.

Still, it is upsetting that Mozilla reports that these problems have been fixed in a version of Thunderbird that doesn’t exist. The latest version of Thunderbird is 2.0.0.9.

DesktopLinux.com tried to reach the Mozilla Foundation Feb. 8 for an explanation, but, as of the afternoon of Feb. 11, the Foundation had not replied.

There has long been concern that Thunderbird was not a real priority for Mozilla. In September 2007, Mozilla announced that it was spinning Thunderbird off into a company of its own: MailCo. Only weeks later, Scott McGregor, one of Thunderbird’s two key developers, left Mozilla. This reignited Thunderbird users’ fears that Mozilla was not so much moving Thunderbird out as throwing it out.

Since that time, MailCo has still not left the launch pad. Dr. David Ascher, formerly chief technology officer and vice president of engineering for ActiveState, and a director of the Python Software Foundation, is heading the effort to found the company. On his blog, Ascher reported that as of Jan. 15, Dan Mosedale, once he’s done with his work on the forthcoming Firefox 3, will be helping to get MailCo off the ground.

It appears, though, based on the postings in the blog, that MailCo is still months away from opening its doors. In the meantime, there appears to be little work being done on Thunderbird despite these misleading messages indicating that security fixes are still being delivered to the popular open-source e-mail client.

A version of this story first appeared in DesktopLinux.