Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Google's e-mail add-ons are fun

By Anne Krishnan

McClatchy Newspapers

(MCT)

The fun folks at Google have been busy developing neat e-mail features within Gmail Labs, the company's experimental testing ground.

Three of the new additions can keep you from sending an e-mail you regret. The two more practical ones are the "Forgotten Attachment Detector," which scans your e-mail to determine when you probably forgot to include a file, and "Undo Send," which gives you up to a 10-second grace period to cancel a sent e-mail. A third, called "Mail Goggles," tries to prevent poorly conceived late-night e-mails by requiring the sender to solve a few math problems before the message sends.

Other features allow you to use Gmail offline, add a to-do list, show link previews within the body of e-mails and expand the flagging icons beyond the yellow star.

To see these and other options, log into your Gmail account. (You can set up one at gmail.com.) Go to "Settings" at the top right of the page, then choose the link for "Labs." You can also click on the little green test tube next to the settings link. Once you have enabled a feature, you also may be able to tweak it under the "General" settings tab.

Clif Dudley of Raleigh, N.C., was one of several readers who responded to the recent column about BIOS errors. His letter was so good, I wanted to reprint it here.

To Stump The Geeks,

The answer to the last question in today's article ... was partially correct, that Windows XP Service Pack 3 was indeed installed. But there are two indicators in the body of the question that point to a very basic solution to the underlying BIOS problem. A person admitting to using a dial-up connection implies a Mennonite type mindset to use a contraption far beyond its intended life cycle. Most of us, in our throw-away society, never enjoy what this resourceful miser has just experienced — a dead battery.

The clues to the problem are the repeated BIOS errors and 12:00 a.m. clock time upon start up. The main board battery can last beyond five years before giving up without warning or a sensible diagnostic error code such as "Battery Dead, Replace To Continue." Merely coincidence that a laborious download occurred at the same time a voltage back up gave up the last of its three volts.

So advising the questioner (who might currently be in the futile effort of updating the BIOS, which if done improperly or with the wrong load, can permanently corrupt the poor unsuspecting chip) to replace the silvery thin disk contained within a black plastic holder somewhere towards the left rear of the main board with a CR2025 battery found at most department stores as soon as possible would be the best option.

How do I know? I have no particular computer skills to note and am often software challenged. But I am one of those Mennonites who has difficulty in containing my glee and adrenaline release when I happen upon a residence with an unwanted computer on temporary display before the sanitation technician crew rolls by.

Regards,

Clifton Dudley

(Think you can stump the geeks? Send your high-tech question to stumpthegeeks@newsobserver.com. Please include your name, address and daytime phone number. Individual replies are not given.)

———

(c) 2009, The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.).

Visit The News & Observer online at http://www.newsobserver.com/

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Capture everything your computer sees and hears

By Craig Crossman

McClatchy-Tribune News Service

(MCT)

Something is playing on your computer yet you can't save it to disc so you can play it again anytime you like. It's a frustrating experience when you see something playing on your computer and yet you can't truly own it. When you have something saved to your hard drive, you don't have to worry about the streaming video becoming unavailable later on. The ability to capture media to disc insures you will always have it available to you. But unfortunately too many online resources that offer up streaming video and audio such as YouTube and Hulu offer no way to save their content to your hard drive. As long as these sites offer their content, you can watch it. But when they're gone, they're gone. It would really be nice to have the ability to save these media streams to disc and fortunately Applian Technologies offers a product that lets you do exactly that.

Replay Media Capture is a streaming video and audio downloader that lets you capture an exact digital copy of what you are seeing and hearing to your computer's hard disk drive. This is not to be confused with similar products that screen capture what is being displayed on your computer's monitor. In fact, Applian actually does offer a media screen capture product called Replay Video Capture that copies the digital information within your computer's video memory. But Replay Media Capture works in a totally different way.

When you watch a YouTube video for example, a server at the other end begins to deliver the digital information to your computer. According to Applian, their Replay Media Catcher is able to access those servers and intercept the live stream directly. This process allows you to make an exact digital copy of the streaming media unlike screen capture products that usually yield a capture result that's inferior in quality to the original stream.

According to Applian, Replay Media Capture supports more streaming protocols than any other media capture programs and they continue to expand the number of supported websites that deliver various types of streaming media. Applian's website maintains a listing of hundreds of currently supported media streaming website locations. Check it out to see if what you want to capture is on a supported website service.

Once captured, Replay Media Capture stores the media data as an FLV file that can be watched on the included media player. If you want to convert these files into other formats, Replay Media Capture offers conversion to most of the popular media formats such as WMV, MPEG, MP3, MP4 and 3GP. A special included converter lets you modify these files so that they can be played on an iPod and iPhone. If there's embedded naming information within the streaming data, Replay Media Capture will automatically name and tag the files for you.

Recording takes place in real time so plan to spend some time when using Replay Media Capture. If you know in advance what you wish to record, you can begin the viewing process and work on something else or just go away until the download is complete. Replay Media Capture has the ability to capture several media streams simultaneously making the unattended capture process even easier.

So if you've ever watched something on your computer and have it disappear from the website on which you viewed it, now you can capture what you see and hear to your hard disk to be played whenever you like, even without an Internet connection. Replay Media Capture sells for $39.95 and is available only for Windows.

www.applian.com

(Craig Crossman is a national newspaper columnist writing about computers and technology. He also hosts the No. 1 daily national computer radio talk show, Computer America, heard on the Business TalkRadio Network and the Lifestyle TalkRadio Network — Monday through Friday, 10 p.m.-midnight ET. For more information, visit his web site at www.computeramerica.com.)

———

(c) 2009, McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

How 2... Insert images in Gmail messages

By Etan Horowitz

The Orlando Sentinel

(MCT)

Instead of having to attach an image in a message for someone to open, you can now insert images directly into a Gmail message so they are visible in the body of the message.

1. Log into your account at Gmail.com. Click on "Settings" in the upper right corner of the page.

2. Click on the "Labs" tab under Settings. (If you don't see the "Labs" tab, make sure you have the latest version of your Web browser.) Scroll down and click on "Enable" next to "Inserting images." Click on "Save Changes."

3. Open up a new message and you should see a little picture icon in the toolbar. If you don't see it, make sure your e-mail message is not in plain text formatting.

4. Click on the picture icon to choose the image you want to upload. You can use an image from your computer, or an image that exists online by pasting in the URL where that photo is located. Click "Add image."

5. Your image should now appear in the body of your e-mail message. You can click one of the links below it to resize it before sending.

———

(c) 2009, The Orlando Sentinel (Fla.).

Visit the Sentinel on the World Wide Web at http://www.orlandosentinel.com/.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Sunday, April 5, 2009

North Korea Rocket Launch

Bulletin: North Korea fires 'test' rocket over ocean. The rocket was believed launch over Japanese ocean. No threat. The fear on behalf of countries such as China, South Korea and the U.S. is the apparent available of such technology in North Korea, a feared nuclear country.

Friday, April 3, 2009

Hybrid showdown: 2010 Toyota Prius vs. 2010 Honda Insight

By Steven Cole Smith

The Orlando Sentinel

(MCT)

Hmm, Prius, Insight. Prius, Insight ...

Among the handful of people who might actually enjoy seeing gasoline return to $4 a gallon, let's include marketing managers for the 2010 Honda Insight and 2010 Toyota Prius, a pair of all-new hybrids set to do battle this spring.

They'll be successful with gas at $2 a gallon, but they'd likely be smash hits if gasoline prices go back up.

Though both names are familiar, these are two new cars. The Honda Insight introduced gasoline-electric hybrids to the U.S. market in 1999, but that car was a little hot dog-shaped two-seater that never sold in big volume.

Toyota was a little later to the hybrid party with the Prius, but it was a four-door with a usable rear seat, and it became a far bigger hit than the Insight. It still sells well _ the Prius accounts for more than half the hybrid cars sold in America.

For 2010, the Insight is back, but it's an entirely different car _ in fact, the resemblance to the Prius is undeniable. It's a four-door hatchback with room for five, powered by a 1.3-liter four-cylinder gasoline engine, aided by an electric motor.

The 2010 Prius is slightly larger than the 2009 model it replaces, and is classified as a midsize car, while the Insight is a compact. Really, the difference in interior space is not that noticeable. The Prius' 1.5-liter four-cylinder gas engine is now 1.8 liters, and while the basic hybrid battery pack is essentially the same as in 2009, the rest of the drive system is, Toyota says, 90 percent new.

Here are the dueling hybrids in a nutshell.

2010 HONDA INSIGHT

While Honda still makes the Civic Hybrid, the new Insight is the first hybrid-only Honda since that original two-seat Insight. It's a handsome car, with room for two adults in the rear, three in a squeeze.

The base-model Insight lists for just less than $20,000, but don't expect to see many at that price on dealer lots. The test Insight had the navigation system with voice activation, and listed for $23,770. Fuel mileage is EPA-rated at 40 mpg in the city, 43 mpg on the highway. I averaged just more than 43 mpg.

2010 TOYOTA PRIUS

Knowing in advance that the Insight was coming, Toyota stepped up the makeover for the 2010 Prius, and it's impressive: There will be a base model likely priced above the current starting price of around $22,000, but add options, and it seems certain the Prius can top $30,000.

Options include a sunroof with a solar panel that doesn't generate electricity for running the car, but for running fans inside the car that can keep the interior cooler while the Prius is parked in the sun. There's also a feature that can actually parallel-park the Prius on its own, with the driver's hands literally off the steering wheel.

Add those two features to leather upholstery and a navigation system, and the Prius becomes almost a luxury hybrid.

Toyota won't release prices of the new Prius for a month or so, closer to its arrival at dealers. But it has released mileage figures: It's EPA-rated at 51 mpg in the city, 48 mpg on the highway.

Why is the city mileage better than the highway mileage? Because the Prius can run on electric-only power at speeds up to 25 miles per hour, and depending on the charge level for the battery, for a distance of almost a mile, using no gasoline at all. I averaged 51.8 mpg in the Prius.

WHICH IS BETTER?

So the biggest question from customers cross-shopping the Insight and the Prius is likely to be this: If the Insight has a smaller gasoline engine, why does it get worse mileage than the Prius?

The answer is because the Prius is a "full" hybrid, meaning it can move along on electric power alone. The Insight is considered a "mild" hybrid, meaning the gasoline engine is always turning. With both cars, the gas engine stops at a red light. With the Insight, it restarts when you take your foot off the brake. With the Prius, it can accelerate _ slowly _ on electric power alone before the gas engine starts up.

Actually, though, it isn't quite that simple, due to Honda's new "integrated assist" feature: While all the internal components of the gas engine are always rotating as the car drives down the road, under certain, limited conditions _ rolling downhill, for instance _ the onboard computer can actually cut the gasoline supply to the engine, while the electric motor does the work.

In essence, the car is operating on battery power alone, but since the engine is always turning, you don't get the stealthy, silent-running experience you do in a Prius.

That said, for pure driving experience, I slightly prefer the Honda. The new Prius steers and handles much better than the current model, but the Honda has a sportier feel, and I'd submit that it's the better-looking car.

If I lived in a big city, though, and was constantly caught in heavy stop-and-go traffic, the Prius would be the better buy in the long run.

Both cars are aimed carefully at their target markets, and both score direct hits. One of these is likely to be the 2010 car of the year.

___

2010 HONDA INSIGHT

Base price: $20,470

Engine size: 1.3-liter four-cylinder with 88 horsepower

EPA overall fuel mileage rating: 41 mpg

EPA classification: Compact car


2010 TOYOTA PRIUS

Base price: $22,750 (estimate)

Engine size: 1.8-liter four-cylinder with 98 horsepower

EPA overall fuel mileage rating: 50 mpg

EPA classification: Midsize car

___

Steven Cole Smith is automotive editor of the Orlando Sentinel. He can be reached at scsmith@orlandosentinel.com.

___

© 2009, The Orlando Sentinel (Fla.).

Visit the Sentinel on the World Wide Web at http://www.orlandosentinel.com/.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Radio offers 1,000 songs for $100, but it has limitations

By Eric Benderoff

Chicago Tribune

(MCT)

In a product category dominated by Apple Inc., the portable music players by memory card-maker SanDisk Corp. are often overlooked.

On Tuesday, SanDisk, which has delivered affordable and useful players under its Sansa brand, released a digital music player with a new twist: It does not need a computer to work. That means there will be no song downloads to worry about and no playlists to manage.

Called the Sansa slotRadio, the $100 gadget is easy to use and instantly likable.

SanDisk's approach will not appeal to everyone _ it has some obvious limitations. But for casual music fans or those who are not particular about the music they hear for a workout, it might be ideal.

Here's how the slotRadio will work: Sansa will ship the player with a "mix" card pre-loaded with 1,000 songs. The songs are culled from the Billboard music charts and include country, contemporary, alternative, hip hop and rock.

Additional cards will be available for $40 _ that's 4 cents a song _ including genre-specific playlists: alternative, '80s, classic rock, country, etc. It's unclear as of this writing what the selection will be at launch.

The first mix card offers familiar names, including Trace Adkins, Mary J. Blige, Kenny Chesney, Coldplay, Ne-Yo, No Doubt and U2.

Unfortunately, you can't navigate to a particular artist or song when you want. In fact, the slotRadio has no navigation controls other than volume keys and forward/back buttons. You can skip ahead, but you cannot scroll through a playlist to select songs.

There isn't even a pause button _ if you need to stop the music, you have to turn it off. The music will start where you stopped, however, a good feature.

This lack of control is similar to what Apple offers with its Shuffle line of iPods. That model constantly "shuffles" your music and you have little choice of what you will hear. Apple has added more control to navigate playlists in its newest Shuffle, however.

Another nice feature: The slotRadio includes an FM radio.

You can use a computer to download songs to the slotRadio. The music cards are microSDHC cards from SanDisk and they have some room on each card _ about an album's worth _ to download your music in the MP3 file format.

But with a fresh microSDHC card, you can download as much music as it will fit. I put hundreds of songs on a 16-gigabyte microSDHC card _ a sweet product in its own right _ and the slotRadio works fine. Again, I cannot control what songs will play besides being able to skip ahead and move back.

Will the slotRadio be a hit? I doubt it will shift much of the market share toward SanDisk, but it's a nice niche player for folks who want an easy solution to portable music.

The new player went on sale Tuesday at slotRadio.org and will be offered nationwide at Radio Shack stores closer to Father's Day.

(Eric Benderoff writes about technology for the Chicago Tribune. Contact him at ebenderoff@tribune.com or at the Chicago Tribune, 435 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago IL 60611. To read past reviews of other gadgets, go to chicagotribune.com/eric.)

___

© 2009, Chicago Tribune.

Visit the Chicago Tribune on the Internet at http://www.chicagotribune.com/

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Malicious virus might spread mayhem, or laughs on April Fools' Day

By Aman Batheja

McClatchy Newspapers

(MCT)

FORT WORTH, Texas _ April Fools' Day pranksters may find themselves outmatched this year.

A cunning computer infection that is believed to have infiltrated millions of computers is expected to receive a set of instructions from its creator on April 1.

"Everybody is a little bit nervous about it," said Mike Stute of Dallas-based Global DataGuard, a network security firm. "It could be nothing. It could be very dangerous."

Either way, the anonymous creator of the Conficker virus has caught the attention of computer security experts around the world, with Microsoft going so far as to issue a $250,000 bounty on those who created it.

The Conficker worm, a malicious software program also known as Downadup, has spread through a vulnerability in Microsoft Windows. Windows users who automatically receive updates from Microsoft are probably safe. Likely, so too are those with updated antivirus software.

The Conficker worm is thought to have easily found millions of Windows users who haven't updated their operating systems or don't have the right protection.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security released a tool Monday to detect whether a computer is infected by the Conficker worm.

Yet other than reducing an infected computer's defenses, Conficker hasn't done much else to its victims, a departure from most computer infections that tend to do a lot of damage early on, according to computer security experts.

Instead, the most recent version of Conficker appears to be designed to wait until April 1 and then begin searching the Web for the next set of instructions from its creator.

"He could, say, delete the entire contents of the hard disk," said Mike Cotton, a researcher for San Antonio-based Digital Defense. "Or steal credit card info ... He could tell the machines to send massive spam attacks across the Internet."

Then there's the theory this is all an elaborate hoax, fittingly to be revealed on April Fools' Day.

Whether the goal is money or bragging rights, many experts are in awe of Conficker. Some call it the most sophisticated worm ever created.

"This is like these guys have learned four or five of the top techniques and put them all together in a worm that is elegantly written," Stute said.

Margaret Perez, who fights viruses on business computer networks as owner of Tech Support Mobile Services in Fort Worth, said the talk about Conficker has been unavoidable in recent weeks.

"It's like a hurricane coming when something like this happens," Perez said. "We've been seeing a barrage of these kinds of viruses for a year now. This one is probably the most serious of them all."

But for all the hype, Perez said there are an untold number of serious infections targeting PC users all the time, and after Conficker is beaten, likely something worse will come along to replace it.

"Maybe for like 15 days, it's actually going to be the Conficker worm," Perez said. "Then it's going to mutate to Conficker AB, or Conficker G Generic. It mutates just like a disease mutates."

Blissfully unaffected by worries about Conficker are computer users not on Windows.

The online design firm Alamofire in Southlake, Texas, runs only Apple's Mac OS and the freely distributed Linux operating systems on its computers, said company head Josh Williams.

The company's products include applications for Facebook and the iPhone. Security experts worry that social networking sites and mobile devices could be the next easy target for creators of malicious entities like Conficker.

Security is a priority for the company, Williams said, but in the end, users need to be careful about where they go online and who they allow to access their information.

"Ultimately common sense is a key ingredient to security," Williams wrote in an e-mail. "You can use all the security patches in the world, but if you hand your password out to a phisher or download an application you received in an e-mail, those patches aren't going to help you."

CHECKING YOUR COMPUTER

How to see whether your home computer is infected with Conficker:

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security released a tool Monday to detect whether a computer is infected by the Conficker worm. You can access it at www.us-cert.gov.

How to remove Conficker from your home computer:

Tools to remove Conficker are available at several Web sites including

www.microsoft.com/protect/computer/viruses/worms/conficker.mspx

www.mcafee.com

www.windowsupdate.com

www.symantec.com

Conficker may block infected computers from accessing many security sites. If you cannot access one, San Antonio-based Digital Defense recommends finding an uninfected computer and copying the Windows Malicious Software Removal Tool at http://www.microsoft.com/security/malwareremove/default.mspx onto a CD and then loading it onto the infected one.

Source: Microsoft, Digital Defense, Global DataGuard

___

© 2009, Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

Visit the Star-Telegram on the World Wide Web: www.star-telegram.com.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

New apps change how you use mobile devices

By John Boudreau

San Jose Mercury News

(MCT)

SAN JOSE, Calif. _ They tell us where to eat, how to find friends, when to make a left turn.

Oh, and they can also make a phone call.

An explosive proliferation of software applications _ and easy ways to get them, most notably through Apple's App Store _ is changing our relationship with mobile phones. The always-connected era is dawning. The cell phone is becoming more a companion than merely a means of one-on-one conversation.

"I can't live without it," said James London, a 19-year-old De Anza College freshman, cradling his iPhone. "It's like water or food."

Though Apple was the first company to create an easy and orderly way for developers to sell smart phone software, the rest of the industry is trying to catch up.

Owners of all the major mobile phone operating systems _ Research In Motion, Windows Mobile, Palm, Symbian and Google's Android _ are gearing up online application stores. Independent app sites are also popping up, offering unauthorized software for the iPhone.

Soon, nearly every imaginable function of the office and home entertainment center will be delivered to the computers that fit our palms.

"I'm a big believer that the mobile phone will become the remote control of our lives," said Chetan Sharma, an independent wireless industry analyst. "Anything that we touch and see and feel, and whomever we communicate with _ we will control that with our mobile phones."

Though the recession is slowing sales of so-called smart phones, futurists view app-packed mobile devices as the next tech tsunami to hit society and fundamentally change how people navigate life.

"It's a new category of activity," said veteran Silicon Valley forecaster Paul Saffo. "Voice (functions) are an afterthought."

Already people are using their smart phones to locate friends at nearby bars and restaurants or find a service station with cheap gas. They stream TV to their phones, update Facebook pages on the go and play sophisticated games.

The Shazam program allows people to instantly identify a song and artist by holding the iPhone up to, say, a radio. The Trapster program for iPhone and BlackBerry uses crowd-sourcing to avoid speeding tickets _ the phone signals a warning when entering ticket zones. The Android Cab4me app helps hail a cab.

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

"It's my lifeline," said Grace Redmond, a 20-year-old San Jose State University student. "My iPhone was broken today. It ruined my day."

Redmond, who grew up in Virginia, relies on GPS-enabled programs to help her get around, and avoid getting lost in the Bay Area. She found the Urbanspoon app indispensable during a recent vacation to Seattle. "My phone told me where to eat," she said.

Giovanni Valasco, a 24-year-old Campbell, Calif., resident, treats his iPhone like a pocket Yellow Pages by using a business listings program. "I use it all the time."

De Anza College student London worries about an affliction common to BlackBerry users: sore neck. "I'm constantly looking down at my iPhone _ every 10 minutes."

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

Because their smart phone is with them everywhere they go, people develop far closer attachments to the devices than to their home PCs or laptops, said B.J. Fogg, a Stanford University researcher author of "Persuasive Technology: Using Computers to Change What We Think and Do."

Sharma said people using smart phones spend 70 percent of their time doing things other than talking.

"They have become devices people use for productivity and leisure," he said. "They save time and they kill time."

Last year, some 34 million smart phones were sold in the United States, about 20 percent of the nation's overall mobile phone market of some 173 million units, according to research firm IDC. But by 2013, it predicts nearly half the mobile phones purchased in the United States will be smart phones.

"The sea change is starting to happen," said IDC analyst Sean Ryan.

But there are barriers to smart phone ubiquity. Perhaps the biggest challenge is the cost of data plans. Apple's U.S. iPhone partner, AT&T, for instance, offers a basic data and voice plan for about $80 a month with taxes. That's almost $1,000 a year, which can be a hard sell to the general population, particularly in tough economic times.

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

"The prices of service plans are big impediments for many people," said Shaw Wu, analyst with Kaufman Brothers. "It's not cheap."

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

But service providers have a lot at stake _ analyst Sharma said they pulled in $34 billion last year in data charges _ and are likely to compete fiercely, which could push down costs and expand consumer options.

Hints of the future can be found at Apple's App Store, which now offers some 27,000 iPhone applications, according to 148Apps.com, a San Francisco Web site that reviews iPhone apps. Some of those are given away for free, while many are sold for less than $3. As of mid-January, Apple said there had been 500 million downloads from the App Store, which opened in July.

"It's like a concierge. When you have a problem, it can help solve it for you," said Stanford's Fogg. "Nothing is as close to us all the time _ not even your spouse or partner."

___

© 2009, San Jose Mercury News (San Jose, Calif.).

Visit Mercury Center, the World Wide Web site of the Mercury News, at http://www.bayarea.com/mld/mercurynews

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Monday, March 23, 2009

Astronauts' spacewalk should ease workload for future missions

By Robert Block

The Orlando Sentinel

(MCT)

ORLAND, Fla. _ U.S. astronauts Steve Swanson and Joe Acaba ventured outside the international space station Saturday for a six-and-a-half-hour spacewalk aimed at easing the workload of future spacewalkers. But the excursion was not a complete success: the pair completed only some of the tasks on their orbital to-do list.

Crawling hand over hand, Swanson and Acaba made it all the way to the end of the station's power-grid framework and loosened bolts holding down batteries that must be replaced during the next shuttle visit to the station in June.

They also installed a second Global Positioning Satellite antenna on the Japanese Kibo laboratory that will help a Japanese cargo ship dock with the lab in September. In addition, the astronauts photographed a damaged radiator with an infrared camera.

But a problem prevented the full deployment of a cargo storage platform on the station's power truss and scrapped plans to unfold another. Swanson also had trouble reconfiguring connectors that power some of the station's gyroscopes, and only managed to partially complete the job.

Still, NASA applauded the tasks that were accomplished and recognized it was a tough day for the spacewalkers. "We sure appreciate the hard work you did for our beautiful space station," commander Mike Fincke radioed the spacewalkers at the end of the walk. "You guys proved that flexibility is definitely key."

It was the Discovery crew's second spacewalk in three days, bringing the total time spent outside the orbiting complex during the mission to 12 hours and 37 minutes. The spacewalk was the fourth for Swanson and the first for Acaba, a former teacher at Melbourne High in Brevard County, Fla.

The mission's final spacewalk is planned for Monday.

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

While Swanson and Acaba toiled in the void of space, astronauts inside the station were also busy, testing a replacement part on the station's new water recycling unit that turns urine and sweat into clean drinking water. The original part failed shortly after it was installed late last year. Recycling urine is critical to NASA's long-range plans to support a full-time crew of six on the space station.

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

Shuttle Discovery will depart the space station Wednesday.

___

© 2009, The Orlando Sentinel (Fla.).

Visit the Sentinel on the World Wide Web at http://www.orlandosentinel.com/.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Scientists examine how social networks influence behavior


Michael Kearns, a computer scientist at the University of Pennsylvania, is using controlled voting experiments to show how a minority view can change an overwhelming majority. He is shown in Philadelphia, Pennsyvlania, on March 13, 2009. (Tom Gralish/Philadelphia Inquirer/MCT)

By Faye Flam

The Philadelphia Inquirer

(MCT)

PHILADELPHIA _ Conventional wisdom holds that it's not what you know, it's who you know. But now scientists studying networking are starting to realize that when it comes to much in life, it's also who the people you know know, and perhaps also who those people know.

Drawing from computer science, math, sociology and other disciplines, researchers are starting to figure out how those branching thickets of human social networks are shaping our tastes, our purchases, how we vote, and even our health and happiness.

At the University of Pennsylvania, Michael Kearns is using controlled voting experiments to show how a small minority view can win over an overwhelming majority.

Kearns, a computer scientist and expert on machine learning and game theory, examines the connections between networks and human behavior in settings as diverse as voting and the vulnerability of the Internet to terrorism.

His human experiments and others like it could overturn our notion of the way trends and influence spread through society, said Duncan Watts, a physicist and networking expert at Yahoo.

Watts said the marketing field and much of the public have embraced the idea that humanity is run by a minority of well-connected "influentials" who help ideas spread like infectious viruses.

It's an idea popularized by books such as Malcolm Gladwell's "The Tipping Point." But nobody knows if it really works this way, Watts said.

"For all this discussion about influentials and how they drive word-of-mouth, there's no empirical evidence _ no real theory." Penn's Kearns, he said, is starting to bring a more hard-science approach to bear on the issue.

For his most recently published experiment, Kearns created a network from a group of 36 subjects. He put each one at a work station linked to between two and 18 of the others.

They were asked to vote for red or blue. If everyone in the group could agree on the same color within one minute, everyone would get rewarded with money. If they failed to reach consensus, they would get nothing.

But he gave the subjects different preferences. Some were told they'd get paid $1.50 for each round that red won and only 50 cents if blue won. For others the incentive was reversed.

"There's this tension between all of them wanting to collectively agree but selfishly wanting everyone to agree on their preferred color," he said.

One real-world analogy would be the recent Democratic presidential primaries, he said. Many voters passionately backed Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama, but worried that split opinion would cause the whole party to lose.

Behind the scenes, Kearns rigged the experiment in different ways, sometimes mixing up the incentives so that some students got only $1.25 for pushing their color on the group and 75 cents if they went the other way.

Despite the short deadline, he said, people came to some agreement in 55 out of 81 separate trials.

He found that sometimes a tiny minority could rule. In the most extreme cases, red won when only six subjects preferred it, the other 30 wanting blue. All the members of the minority needed was "influence" _ that is, more connections within the group than the people they competed against.

" 'Influential' people can determine the outcome to their liking," Kearns said, even if the majority has a strong incentive to go the other way. In this case having lots of connections made a subject influential.

Another surprise was that mixing different financial incentives helped the group to agree more often. "Having some fraction of extremists is actually helpful," he said. If all in the group are too wishy-washy, they will keep switching colors and never agree.

Being unique individuals, the subjects played with different strategies _ some easily swayed by neighbors, others stubbornly holding their preferred color until a win appeared impossible.

When it came to who left with the most money, Kearns found that the spoils went to those who were most stubborn _ but not completely intractable. Since the whole game is lost if there's no consensus, he said, "being too stubborn is fatal."

In real elections, networking is already becoming important, said Kearns. Last year, Obama used networking to rally support, but it had to do more with the use of e-mail and cell phones to recruit new volunteers than with exploiting existing social networks. Future candidates may find much more powerful tools.

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

Yahoo's Watts said that until recently, most networking experiments used computer models. Kearns, he said, helped pioneer techniques for testing real people.

The next step will be to scale everything up. In a group of 36 people, knowing 20 people might make you well-connected, he said, but what about in a group of 36 million people?

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

Watts, who studied nonlinear dynamics _ popularized as chaos and complexity theories _ has found that human networks are surprisingly unpredictable and quirky. Just as a butterfly flapping its wings eventually changes the global weather in unpredictable ways, so the whim of one listener can ripple outward to rearrange the pop charts.

In one recent experiment, Watts used the Web to recruit 14,000 people and had them rank a series of 48 new, unknown songs.

Not surprisingly, when the volunteers knew about choices other people made, they changed their preferences completely to conform to the group. But when he divided the recruits into eight groups, he got radically different results. A song deemed No. 1 by one group would fall to 42nd in the next.

"We assume things are popular because that's what people want," he said. "But this is showing that's wrong _ people have no idea what they want." Popularity seems to come in equal parts from random luck and merit.

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

Other researchers are also exploring the power of the Web for their experiments. Cornell University computer scientist Jon Kleinberg got a MacArthur "genius" grant in 2005 to study the way ideas and fads spread through the population.

"This is something we see all around us _ but it's been very hard to gather data on how this is happening and why, and what it looks like on a global level."

One way he's approached this is to track e-mail petitions and chain letters. To his surprise, he said, the letters didn't fan out as much as he'd anticipated, considering that we're all only six degrees of separation from everyone else on the planet.

Despite their limited reception, the messages and chain letter he tracked survived longer than expected, perpetuating themselves for months through a small segment of the population.

"The trajectories of these things go much deeper and narrower through the population than you'd expect."

Others are looking at how networks might influence health and happiness.

Using data from a wide-scale Framingham, Mass., health survey, sociologist Nicholas Christakis of Harvard Medical School found that obesity, smoking habits and even self-reported happiness levels spread through social networks. That means your weight, health and happiness may be nudged not only by friends but by friends of friends you don't know.

Kearns said the networking site Facebook also offers potential for insight. He often assigns his students problems that involve sorting and analyzing their own Facebook networks.

But Facebook networks are not always what they appear to be. Most of Kearns' students have accounts with several hundred so-called friends, while a few are bristling with thousands of connections.

That doesn't necessarily mean those heavily friended are influential, however, holding the power to start a new footwear fad or catapult a new artist to stardom. "They may just be more promiscuous about who they include as a friend."

___

© 2009, The Philadelphia Inquirer.

Visit Philadelphia Online, the Inquirer's World Wide Web site, at http://www.philly.com/

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

_____

PHOTO (from MCT Photo Service, 202-383-6099): SOCIALINFLUENCE

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

20 years ago, the World Wide Web was born

By Elise Ackerman

San Jose Mercury News

(MCT)

SAN JOSE, Calif. _ It all began 20 years ago with a frustrated 29-year-old programmer who had a passion for order.

Tim Berners-Lee, now famous as the founder of the World Wide Web, was working as an obscure consultant at Cern, the European Laboratory for Particle Physics, in the suburbs of Geneva. Berners-Lee loved the laboratory. It was full of stimulating projects and creative people, but his work, and the work of his colleagues, was stymied by the lack of institutional knowledge.

So Berners-Lee proposed adding "hypertext" to the Cern network, basically embedding software in documents that would point to other related documents. And thus was born the Web, a global communications network that has shaken up industries, created enormous wealth and transformed the way ordinary people live their lives.

"When two years is a typical length of stay, information is constantly being lost," Berners-Lee wrote in his paper proposing a new system for information management. "The technical details of past projects are sometimes lost forever, or only recovered after a detective investigation in an emergency."

On March 12, Cern celebrated the 20th anniversary of Berners-Lee's proposal in its trademark wooden sphere called "the globe," which it touts as a symbol of the Earth's future. In Silicon Valley, where there is less appetite for pomp, the celebration took the form of hundreds of thousands of workers using the Web to build the future.

En route to Cern, Berners-Lee declined a request for an interview.

What lies ahead? "The only thing that you can predict about the Internet is that there are going to be surprising applications that come along that you did not predict," said Len Kleinrock, a professor of computer science at UCLA who developed the mathematical theory of packet switching, the technology that drives the Internet, while he was a graduate student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the early 1960s.

Like other fathers of the Internet, Kleinrock was stunned by the power of Berners-Lee's idea. "This was a fantastic application," Kleinrock recalls thinking.

Still, it took a while for the word to spread. Berners-Lee wrote his software in 1990 and put up the first Web site in 1991.

"I was trying to tell people how _ explain to people what it was going to do and what it was going to be like and why it was going to be interesting, and they'd look at me with blank stares," Berners-Lee recalled in an interview in 2002.

Then in January 1993, Marc Andreessen and Eric Bina, students at the University of Illinois, released the first graphical browser for the Web. Berners-Lee forwarded a message announcing their software to some news groups, and soon technically inclined people all over the world were downloading the browser.

Craig Partridge, the chief scientist at BBN Technologies, the company that built the Internet in the late 1960s, recalls a colleague giving him his first tour of the Web later in 1993. Though there were only 200 Web sites, "it was clear that this was going to blow away competing information services," he recalled. "Tim got it right."

Right, but not perfect. All Web pages got names, called uniform resource locators, or URLs. It was like naming the books in the library by the shelves they were on.

"You can't move books around; you can't add new shelves," said David Clark, a senior research scientist at MIT who has been leading the development of the Internet since the mid-1970s.

And neither the Internet nor the protocols that Berners-Lee added to it were built with security in mind.

"We trusted everybody, made it very easy to get access to the network and made it anonymous," Kleinrock said. "The way we set it up was almost a perfect formula for the dark side."

But that won't stop its continued development, including plans to extend the network to outer space.

"You have to imagine, there is a whole lot more that can be done," said David Smith, an analyst with Gartner.

___

© 2009, San Jose Mercury News (San Jose, Calif.).

Visit Mercury Center, the World Wide Web site of the Mercury News, at http://www.bayarea.com/mld/mercurynews

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Save money with your iPhone

By Etan Horowitz

The Orlando Sentinel

(MCT)

Yes, the iPhone is an expensive gadget, but if you already have one (or have an iPod touch), there are lots of applications you can download to help save money. Here are five of the best, which can all be found by visiting the iTunes store and searching for each one by name. Once you download the applications, you may be able to customize settings for each application.

1. Mint.com _ This free app is a godsend for managing your money. It's the companion to the Web version (Mint.com), which will automatically pull information from your online banking accounts and display graphs tracking how much you spend on different items each month. You can set a budget and quickly see if you are close to going over. It's a great way to quickly assess your financial situation when you're about to buy something. Create a free account at Mint.com before downloading the app.

2. Cheap Gas _ Free app that displays cheap gas nearby.

3. KidsEatFree _ A 99-cent app that tells you the closest restaurants where kids eat free. Restaurants are organized by distance, and when you tap on one, you are given the details of the special.

4. Amazon Mobile _ Free app that lets you quickly look up items on Amazon to see how much they cost, read reviews, etc. A great way to see if the price at Best Buy or Costco is a good deal. You can also order merchandise directly from the app.

5. Fring/Truphone _ These two free apps use the iPhone's Wi-Fi connection to allow you to make free and low-cost international calls. You have to create an account, and some setup time is required. The apps automatically display your iPhone contacts. If you have a Skype account, you can make Skype calls through Fring, and calls from one TruPhone member to another are free, regardless of where you are. TruPhone also allows low-cost international calls over the cellular network.

___

(Etan Horowitz is the technology columnist for the Orlando Sentinel. He can be reached at ehorowitz@orlandosentinel.com.)

___

© 2009, The Orlando Sentinel (Fla.).

Visit the Sentinel on the World Wide Web at http://www.orlandosentinel.com/.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Internet TV may be new mass medium

By Steve Alexander

Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

(MCT)

Movies, TV shows and other entertaining video are now so plentiful online that "Internet TV" may become mass-media entertainment. And much of it is free or relatively inexpensive from Hulu.com, TV.com, Netflix or Apple's iTunes.

But to become mainstream, Internet video needs to be viewed on the TV, not the PC. Fortunately, that's becoming easier. Several new products offer to bridge the PC-to-TV gap (see news.cnet.com/8301-1023(underscore)3-10189658-93.html.)

But many people don't need those products; they can simply plug an Internet-connected PC into the TV and watch. This is easiest if you have a home Wi-Fi network because you can just set your laptop PC next to the television.

The best picture and sound come from a digital connection between a new laptop and an HDTV, said Phil Leigh, an analyst with Inside Digital Media in Tampa, Fla. Both PC and TV need a plug-in for an HDMI (High Definition Multimedia Interface) connecting cable, which costs $20 or more.

"People that haven't done it are locked into thinking it's complicated," Leigh said. "But it's no more complicated than using a TV remote." Watch a video of his demonstration at www.futureofpodcasting.com/downloads/howto(underscore)ipod.mp4.

But you can get an acceptable, VCR-quality TV picture using older technology. PCs like my 3-year-old HP laptop often have an analog video plug-in called S-Video. My analog TV, a five-year-old JVC 32-inch model, also has one. (For more about PC-to-TV connection cables, see www.amazon.com/gp/video/ontv/connect/ref=atv(underscore)ontv(underscore)connect(underscore)info.)

Setup was simple. I plugged in the cable, turned on the Windows Vista PC and answered "yes" when asked if I wanted the same image to appear on both PC and TV screens.

Because the S-Video cable transmits only video, I used the speakers on the laptop for sound. But I could have used a $20 audio cable to shift the sound to the TV or to external speakers.

While watching the streaming Internet movie "National Treasure Book of Secrets" (from the Netflix Web site, $9 monthly subscription required) I got an image that my wife described as "pretty good and certainly watchable." Videos from YouTube and TV shows from the NBC and CBS Web pages were equally clear.

In all cases, I was able to view the video in full-screen mode. And while Internet video will sometimes become jerky or freeze, I had few problems.

Although the TV picture wasn't as sharp as the digital image on my 17-inch laptop, it made online video available to family members who weren't going to watch movies on a PC. I expect that watching Internet video on the TV is going to catch on in a big way.

___

(Steve Alexander covers technology for the Star Tribune. E-mail your technology questions to steve.j.alexander@gmail.com or write Tech Q&A, 425 Portland Ave. S., Minneapolis, MN 55488-0002. Please include a full name, city and phone number.)

___

© 2009, Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

Visit the Star Tribune Web edition on the World Wide Web at http://www.startribune.com

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

New iPod Shuffle a delight, despite flaw

By Eric Benderoff

Chicago Tribune

(MCT)

Apple solved one problem with its fun, new iPod Shuffle: With the push of a button on its headphone cord, it can tell you what song is playing.

But it created another problem if you want to use a different pair of headphones than those shipped with the Shuffle.

Otherwise, the $79 iPod Shuffle is a delight and the most interesting music player I've used in some time. It holds about 1,000 songs on a 4-gigabyte flash drive.

Strikingly small, the size of a thumb but much thinner, the gadget elicits wonder from those I've shown it to. It could pass for a USB thumb drive, and there's a chance you'll lose it one day.

Shrinking the Shuffle required controls to be built into the headphone cord. That means you can use only Apple headphones with this product, at least for now. And the controls take a little practice to learn.

In the past, if you had a decent amount of music on your Shuffle and a spotty memory, you often didn't know what was playing.

The magic with this version is that it can tell you what's playing. You press and briefly hold the center of the controls on the headphone and the song title and artist's name are spoken. The voice is clear and generally accurate. It can speak in 14 languages.

Sure, the voice makes mistakes. It struggles with Lupe Fiasco, for example, but the feature is far more useful than annoying.

Also, if you keep holding the center control button, it will scroll through your playlists.

At first, I found the playlist function frustrating. It reads the playlist names from the beginning, in alphabetical order, not from the last playlist you picked. I sort my playlists primarily by artists _ others do it differently. So if I stop at Lou Reed, listen to a few songs and then want to move on, I would like to start at the next playlist, which would be Luna. It doesn't work that way.

Frustrated, I went online to read the full Shuffle instructions at Apple.com _ the first time I've done this with an iPod _ and learned that if I hit the controls for volume up or down, I can quickly move through playlists.

Much better, but I still would prefer to start from where I stopped.

Having the controls on the headphone, as handy and as easy to use as they are, are also the Shuffle's biggest flaw.

The iPod headphones are adequate but there are many third-party products that sound better. Currently, they don't work well with this Shuffle.

That is being addressed, and at least a half-dozen third-party headphones are already in development, said Greg Joswiak, Apple's vice president of iPod and iPhone Product Marketing.

Other headphones do work with the Shuffle, Joswiak said, but you can't control volume, hear song information or change playlists.

That criticism aside, this iPod is a remarkable little device, and Apple has once again raised the bar for how to create a fresh music player.

___

(Eric Benderoff writes about technology for the Chicago Tribune. Contact him at ebenderoff@tribune.com or at the Chicago Tribune, 435 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago IL 60611.)

___

© 2009, Chicago Tribune.

Visit the Chicago Tribune on the Internet at http://www.chicagotribune.com/

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Facebook, Twitter and other social media are more used than e-mail, surveys suggest

By Scott Kleinberg

Chicago Tribune

(MCT)

Here's today's big news in fewer than 140 characters: Social networking is now more popular than e-mail.

That's the official word from a new round of Nielsen research, which shows "member communities" such as Twitter and Facebook have overtaken personal e-mail to become the fourth-most-popular way people spend time online (after search, portals and software applications).

While there are plenty of facts and figures to back up the claim, it seems a little like old news. As fast as e-mail is, it's just not immediate enough. Seeing a message pop into an inbox just doesn't compare to receiving a tweet on Twitter or even a comment on Facebook.

And social media is good for you. It forces you to get to the point. We don't read e-mail, we scan it. Why unleash a 1,000-word diatribe when you can sum it up in 140 characters?

And what would a Nigerian scam be without e-mail? "My father was a very wealthy cocoa merchant in Abidjan, the economic capital of Ivory Coast before he was poisoned to death ..." just wouldn't have the same impact posted on a Facebook wall.

E-mail is still king at the office, but we're all embracing social media and other forms of communication. Sometimes, we still actually talk to each other!

___

© 2009, Chicago Tribune.

Visit the Chicago Tribune on the Internet at http://www.chicagotribune.com/

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Monday, March 16, 2009

Discovery heads to International Space Station



By Robert Block

The Orlando Sentinel

(MCT)

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. _ It was a long time coming, but space shuttle Discovery finally blasted its crew of seven into a cloudless Sunday evening sky _ the first orbiter flight of 2009 to the international space station.

Its mission: to provide more electricity to the orbiting lab.

A month behind schedule, the mission has been delayed four times by fragile valves inside the shuttle's propulsion system. Then a hydrogen gas leak scrubbed Discovery's first launch attempt last Wednesday.

But Sunday there were no signs of leaking gas, no hardware issues. Even Florida's fickle weather was perfect. The shuttle thundered into a clear sky, trailing a plume of pale vapor that turned bright pink as it caught the last light of the setting sun.

The launch was made possible by NASA engineers who worked overtime Thursday, Friday and Saturday to fix the leak, giving astronauts a near-full mission.

Delays did shorten the mission by a day to 13 days, and one of four spacewalks was dropped. That's because Discovery needs to leave the space station to make room for a Russian Soyuz spacecraft bringing new residents to the complex.

Discovery's crew, which includes two school teachers, should reach the international space station Tuesday. They are commanded by Air Force Col. Lee Archambault. The crew are pilot Dominic "Tony" Antonelli, a Naval Cmdr., mission specialists, Steve Swanson, a computer engineer, John Phillips, a Navy Reserve Capt., Koichi Wakata, a veteran Japanese astronaut, and Joseph Acaba and Richard Arnold II, both teachers and first-time fliers.

They're accompanying a 45-foot-long, 31,000-pound truss segment, the last U.S.-made piece of major hardware for the space station and the final section of station's "backbone" structure. Connected to the truss is the last set of solar wings to complete the space station's power system.

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

Once it was clear the unexplained gas leak had been fixed, preparations for the launch were smooth, but colorful, not least because a fruit bat had attached itself on the shuttle's external tank before takeoff.

The bat clung to the backside of Discovery's tank, about a quarter to a third of the way from the bottom. Its presence forced NASA to run an "'engineering analysis" on the bat _ seriously _ just to makes sure that the small winged critter did not represent a threat to shuttle on launch.

NASA officials said they expected it to fly away on its own when the engines began to rumble to life. They even saw it as a good omen: the last time a bat was attached to a shuttle was on STS 72 in 1996 and both the bat and the shuttle flew off safely. Coincidentally that flight was the first for Wakata, who is now headed to station for a stint as Japan's first long duration astronaut.

But in a news conference later, Kennedy Space Center launch director Mike Leinbach suggested the bat did not survive its brush with Discovery. In response to a reporter's question, he said: "We are characterizing (the bat) as unexpected debris and he's probably still debris somewhere."

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

The mission has been dubbed "Full Power" _ and that's what the astronauts hope to give the space station. Once Discovery reaches the station on Tuesday, the astronauts will start preparations to install the truss and solar panel.

The $300 million truss segment is the 11th piece of the station's backbone, which will measure the length of an American football field when complete. The truss segment is nearly identical to its counterpart on the port side of the station, but includes some modifications to hold spare parts and some sensors to measure wear and tear.

The two solar wings are made up of two sets of "blankets" which each hold 32,800 solar cells. They each span 115 feet in length and 38 feet across are now folded in boxes to a thickness of about 20 inches.

When unfurled in space like giant shower curtains, they will provide more power to help the station support larger crews of six and conduct more science research. The first six-person crews are scheduled to take up residency on the station in October this year.

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

But the job of unfurling the solar panels is not easy. Previous sets of solar panels have had problems like sections of the solar panels getting snags as they opened out to their full length, or they got stuck together and refused to unfurl.

In the days waiting for Sunday's launch the astronauts who in charge of the installation watched videos of the spacewalkers studied videos of previous efforts to install solar electricity panels on the station.

"It's something we take seriously because these two solar electricity blankets we're going to deploy have been in the box, one for five years, and one for eight years," said astronaut Phillips who will be operating the space station's robotic arm to help spacewalkers Arnold and Swanson install the wings.

To make sure the wings open as planned the wings are stretched out slowly and allowed to warm in glow of the sun to loosen them up.

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

In addition to getting the wings up and working, the mission's other objectives are to ferry a new part for the processor that turns urine into clean drinking water and to bring home U.S. astronaut Sandra Magnus after four months in space.

___

© 2009, The Orlando Sentinel (Fla.).

Visit the Sentinel on the World Wide Web at http://www.orlandosentinel.com/.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Apple unveils tiny iPod shuffle that talks

By John Boudreau

San Jose Mercury News

(MCT)

SAN JOSE, Calif. _ It's a new recession iPod.

Apple on Wednesday rolled out its third iteration of its low-end iPod shuffle with speech-based functions that tell users what song is playing and who the performer is. The VoiceOver technology on the $79 device, which the Cupertino, Calif., company calls the world's smallest digital music player, will list the names of play lists, giving users a new way to navigate their music on the screen-less iPod.

The new shuffle, which holds up to 1,000 songs, can also tell users other information, such as battery life. In addition to English, it can communicate in 14 languages, including Mandarin, Japanese, Turkish, German and French.

And it's about half the size of the previous generation.

"These are exactly the kinds of products you need to come up in the midst of a recession," Jupiter Research analyst Michael Gartenberg said. "It's not a stripped-down experience. It has a new cool user interface that isn't even on the high-end iPods. Apple has worked hard not to make this a race to the bottom."

Apple launched the first of its iPod line during the last economic downturn, in 2001.

The new 4 gigabyte device _ which costs $10 more than the second-generation model it replaces, which had half the capacity _ will give a "small boost" to the company's bottom line, Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster said in a note to investors. The high-margin shuffle could nudge iPod sales for the current quarter from 9.5 million to 10 million, he said.

Munster said the new shuffle indicates the innovative tinkering continues at Infinite Loop.

"Following a disappointing Macworld, investors had been wondering what was next for Apple," he wrote. "The shuffle is a small part of the overall story but the innovation we are seeing is encouraging for future product development."

Munster sees a possible launch of a 10-inch, touch-screen tablet-type device or low-end MacBook next year.

The new shuffle comes in two colors, silver and black. Apple is still selling the 1GB shuffle, which plays about 240 songs and comes in array of colors, for $49, without any upgrades.

___

© 2009, San Jose Mercury News (San Jose, Calif.).

Visit MercuryNews.com, the World Wide Web site of the Mercury News, at http://www.mercurynews.com.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Obama says NASA's next leader must end agency's 'drift'

By Mark K. Matthews

The Orlando Sentinel

(MCT)

WASHINGTON _ President Barack Obama said Wednesday that NASA is an agency afflicted by "a sense of drift" and that it needs "a new mission that is appropriate for the 21at century."

Obama said the first priority of a new agency administrator _ whom he promised to appoint "soon" _ would be "to think through what NASA's core mission is and what the next great adventures and discoveries are under the NASA banner."

Until that happens, he said during a session with reporters from the Orlando Sentinel and other regional newspapers, the White House would delay any major policy decisions about the agency.

That would likely ensure the retirement of the space shuttle in 2010 _ as Obama called for in the budget proposal he gave Congress last month _ and pave the way for massive job losses at Kennedy Space Center and the surrounding Space Coast in Florida.

Obama took only one question about NASA. He said nothing about whether he wants to continue the Bush administration's Constellation program, intended to send astronauts to the moon by 2020. The program's Ares I rocket is behind schedule and over budget, leading to speculation that it will miss its targeted 2015 launch date and further reduce the skilled work force at KSC.

He was also silent about the fate of the $100 billion international space station. Once the shuttle is retired, NASA will depend on Russian Soyuz spacecraft for access to the station.

Obama made clear that the agency, which has been without an administrator since his Jan. 20 inauguration, could not continue on its current course.

"Shaping a mission for NASA that is appropriate for the 21st century is going to be one of the biggest tasks of my new NASA director," he said. "What I don't want NASA to do is just limp along. And I don't think that's good for the economy in the region, either."

Several names have been floated as possible replacements for former agency chief Michael Griffin. Congressional and space-industry sources said the current front-runner appears to be Steve Isakowitz, a former NASA official now with the Department of Energy who is said to have the strong support of Sen. Barbara Mikulski, D-Md.

Other candidates include former NASA astronaut Charles Bolden, a favorite of Florida's Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson, and two retired Air Force generals, Lester L. Lyles and J. Scott Gration.

Since taking office, Obama has said little about NASA. The only clues to his policy aims were included in his proposed 2010 budget, which called for the shuttle's retirement next year but added one additional launch if it can be done "safely and affordably."

But with eight missions needed after Discovery to finish construction of the space station, it could be difficult to cram another launch into the schedule before the 2010 deadline. The bonus mission Obama touted would ferry a physics experiment to the space station.

The end of the shuttle era is expected to devastate Kennedy Space Center and the Space Coast. KSC's main function is to launch shuttles and other NASA rockets. With nothing to fly, there would be little work.

NASA estimates that at least 3,500 KSC jobs would be lost, while shuttle contractors put the estimate at 10,000. With each NASA job credited with creating 2.8 others in the community, an additional 9,870 to 28,200 jobs would be at risk.

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

During his hourlong press briefing, Obama touched on several other topics:

_High-speed rail: He said he wishes he could have shoehorned more than $8 billion in his economic-stimulus package for high-speed rail. Florida officials are interested in a high-speed-rail project that would connect Tampa, Orlando and Miami.

One advocate, U.S. Rep. John Mica, R-Winter Park, said he couldn't be "more enthusiastic" about Obama's support. "I have to be careful how much I praise him," Mica joked. "It's one of the most exciting things I have ever been involved in."

_Voting Rights Act: The president voiced his continued support for Department of Justice reviews of states, primarily Southern, that wish to implement changes that could affect minorities' voting rights. "That's not such a huge hurdle to jump through," he said. Several Florida counties are affected by the law.

_Mexican drug violence: Obama said he has not yet decided whether to send National Guard troops to the U.S.-Mexico border to combat growing drug-related violence. "We are going to examine whether, and if, National Guard deployments would make sense and under what circumstances they would make sense . . .," he said. But he noted: "We have a very big border with Mexico, so I'm not interested in militarizing the border."

___ WHO'S IN MIX?

President Obama says a new NASA chief will be named "soon." Top candidates:

_Steve Isakowitz: Insiders say ex-NASA official is in lead.

_Charles Bolden: Ex-astronaut has Florida Sen. Bill Nelson's support.

_Lester L. Lyles, J. Scott Gration: Retired Air Force generals.

___

© 2009, The Orlando Sentinel (Fla.).

Visit the Sentinel on the World Wide Web at http://www.orlandosentinel.com/.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Company hopes Guitar Hero strummers will want a real guitar

By Thomas Lee

Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

(MCT)

MINNEAPOLIS _ Sure, they're just video games, but anyone who has played the hugely popular Guitar Hero or Rock Band has probably channeled a little bit of Led Zeppelin, Guns N' Roses, or Aerosmith in their performance.

But can someone truly rock out by hitting a bunch of colorful buttons on a plastic guitar controller?

Zivix LLC is betting some players will want to upgrade to the real thing. The Minneapolis-based start-up is developing an electric guitar with fingertip sensors that allow users to play and control the game wirelessly. The company hopes players will want to feel and look the part.

But the Headliner digital guitar is not meant to be just another tricked-out controller. By holding and feeling out a real guitar, players may actually want to learn how to play the instrument and write music, said Zivix president and founder Dan Sullivan.

"There is a certain group that aspires to go beyond the game," said Sullivan, who started Zivix in 2006. "They had a taste of what it's like to be a real guitar player because that's the illusion. Why not take the next step and being able to play?"

Zivix is also developing software called JamSession that it could package with Headliner. The software allows multiple users to mix prerecorded song loops from different instruments and genres.

But some venture capitalists wonder if Zivix is making too big of a leap. Users may love to play Guitar Hero, but will they pay $249.99 for the Headliner guitar when they can get a beefed-up PlayStation 2 guitar controller for $39.99? That depends on whether a video game player really does want to be a musician instead of pretending to be one. (First-time players might spend $500 for a quality electric guitar.)

"The question that comes to mind is ... why would anyone want to buy this?" said Peter Birkeland, chief financial officer of Rain Source Capital, a St. Paul-based network of angel investors. "Guitar Hero and Rock Band is not about playing music. It's about playing a game."

Birkeland also questions the cost of making real guitars vs. traditional game controllers.

Sales of video game accessories like controllers jumped 14 percent last year to $2.6 billion, according to NPD Group Inc., a market research firm based in Port Washington, N.Y.

Much of those sales are due to the phenomenal success of games like Guitar Hero and Rock Star. Activision Blizzard Inc. of Santa Monica, Calif., which released Guitar Hero III in 2007, has sold 10 million units in the United States, making Guitar Hero the all-time bestselling video game.

"The game-play is fun whether or not you have an interest in music or being a musician, and I think that is key to the success of both Rock Band and Guitar Hero," said Anita Frazier, a NPD analyst. "They're also quite accessible _ video game enthusiasts and newcomers to gaming as a form of entertainment can both enjoy these games."

The popularity of Guitar Hero and Rock Band has led some industry officials to speculate whether the games can boost sales of real instruments. So far, the numbers don't bear that out.

U.S. guitar sales totaled $1.1 billion in 2007, about flat compared with the previous year, according to the National Association of Music Merchants (NAMM). Unit sales fell 4.1 percent to 2.86 million.

However, some data suggest there might be a correlation between game and guitar. About 67 percent of people who play rhythm games like Guitar Hero and Rock Band said they were likely to pick up a real instrument, according to survey by Guitar Center, a guitar retailer that reported a nearly 27 percent jump in first-time sales last year. Another 81 percent said the video games motivated them to ask for a real instrument for the holiday season.

NAMM is funding a study by Drexel University that seeks to determine whether Guitar Hero and Rock Band will encourage middle school and high school students to pursue formal music education and whether playing the game results in real musical skills.

Zivix hopes to release the JamSession software in June and the Headline guitar by late fall. The company is discussing partnerships with retailers, video game makers, and even real-life musicians to create song loops for JamSession. Sullivan envisions people creating their own loops and sharing the music with other JamSession users over the Internet.

"The idea is to use technology to make it easier for beginners that don't know anything about music to sound like they are playing music," Sullivan said. "It's a technology boost to music creation."

___

© 2009, Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

Visit the Star Tribune Web edition on the World Wide Web at http://www.startribune.com

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

How 2 ...delay sending Outlook e-mail messages

By Etan Horowitz
The Orlando Sentinel
(MCT)
Have you ever realized after you sent an e-mail that you said something in it you shouldn't have or there was a major typo? You could try to recall the message in Microsoft Outlook, but that rarely seems to work.
A better option might be to defer delivery of your messages by a few minutes so you give yourself a chance to fix any errors or career-ending mistakes. Kudos to thehowtogeek.com for pointing this out.
1. In Outlook, choose "Rules and Alerts" from the "Tools" menu and click on "New Rule."
2. Select "Start from a blank rule," "Check messages after sending" and then click "Next." In this screen, you can set conditions for the messages you want to delay sending. For instance, you might only want to delay sending messages to your boss. To do that, set the appropriate condition and then click "Next." To delay delivery of all your messages, just click "Next."
3. Check the box next to "defer delivery by a number of minutes" and click on the underlined words below to set the number of minutes you want to delay sending your messages. Continue clicking "Next," give your rule a name and then click "Finish."
4. Your rule is now active. The next time you hit Send, your message will be placed in your "Outbox" and will be sent when the specified number of minutes is up. If you notice a mistake, you can go into the message, modify it and hit "Send." You can also delete the message from the Outbox, which will prevent if from being sent (if you do it in time).
5. If you want to turn this rule off, or modify the messages that it applies to, just go back into "Rules and Alerts" in the Tools Menu.
(Etan Horowitz is the technology columnist for the Orlando Sentinel. He can be reached at ehorowitz@orlandosentinel.com.)
___
© 2009, The Orlando Sentinel (Fla.).
Visit the Sentinel on the World Wide Web at http://www.orlandosentinel.com/.
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.