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July 10th, 2008

iPhone’s first chapter - a timely update

Posted by: Eric Auchard

(Here’s an updated chronology. This first posted June 9)  

 

iPhones

2007

Jobs_iPhoneJanuary 9 - Apple Inc CEO Steve Jobs unveils iPhone in the tech industry’s most anticipated new product introduction of the decade.

June 29 - Apple and U.S. carrier partner AT&T Inc start selling iPhone as technology enthusiasts form long lines outside Apple stores.Scoble

July 25 - After big build-up, first weekend sales figures reports disappoint investors. Apple and AT&T sold 270,000 iPhones in first 30 hours; but customers only activate 146,000 of the devices due to initial AT&T service problems.

Sept 5 - Apple cuts price on iPhone with eight gigabytes of storage to $399 from $599. Discontinues sales of four-gigabyte version. Also introduces iPod Touch, an iPhone without the phone, with Wi-Fi connections.

letterSept 7 - Apple offers $100 rebate to appease customers angered over iPhone price cut.

Sept 10 - One millionth iPhone sold 74 days after launch.

Sept 24 - Apple warns users against unlocking iPhones to work with network carriers other than Apple’s exclusive U.S. partner, AT&T.

Europe_iPhoneNov 9 - Apple introduces iPhone in Europe through exclusive deals in Britain with 02, in Germany with T-Mobile, and in France with Orange.

Dec 3 - Apple sued for patent infringement related to iPhone’s visual voicemail feature by Klausner Technologies Inc.

Dec 31 - Apple sold 3.7 million iPhones in its first six months on sale.


2008

KeyboardFeb 5 - Apple introduces 16-gigabyte iPhone for $499.

March 6 - Apple says its plans to enable corporate e-mail on iPhones, pitting it against business e-mail market leader Research in Motion and its Blackberry line of devices.  Apple offers tools for independent developers to build iPhone software.

SmartphonesMarch 31 - Apple has sold 5.4 million iPhone units to date. Apple ranks as world’s third largest maker of smartphones, with 5.3 percent versus mobile phone giant Nokia’s 45.2 percent and Blackberry-maker Research in Motion’s 13.4 percent, market researcher Gartner Inc says.

April 23 - Apple CFO reaffirms the company’s original mid-2007 goal of selling 10 million iPhone units by the end of 2008. Out_of_stock

April/May - Apple stores run out of iPhones. Apple announces plans with carriers in South Asia to sell iPhones in Australia, India, the Philippines and Singapore.

June 9 - Apple unveils 3G iPhone, with faster Web links than its predecessor and the ability to support third-party applications such as games and email. The eight-gigabyte 3G iPhone is priced at $199, while the 16-gigabyte phone is priced at $299. 

July 11 - iPhone 3G goes on sale in 22 countries. Fans around Asia queue for two days before the phone’s launch. Websites are swamped with early orders. 

Reuters iPhone 3G coverage
Sources: (Reuters, Apple Inc, SeekingAlpha.com, Gartner Inc)
(Photos: Reuters, Apple Inc, Scoble: Brian Solis/Flickr.com)

June 9th, 2008

Here it comes …. the 3G iPhone

Posted by: Eric Auchard

“The big news is $399 to $199,” CEO Steve Jobs said of sharp price-cuts Apple is making on its iPhone 3G.

Summary

Eight-gigabyte 3G iPhone to be priced at $199

 199

 16-gigabyte 3G iPhone at $299

16_gig

3G iPhone features:

    • Jobs calls it iPhone 3G.
    • Offers two to four times faster speeds that existing models working on so-called 2.5G “Edge” networks, he says.
    • The phone offers GPS - Global Positioning Services for real-time location tracking on one’s iPhone.
    • Same 3.5 inch display.
    • Jobs says it is thinner at the edges and has “dramatically improved audio”
    • Promises five hours of 3G talk time. Five to six hours of Web browsing. Video viewing can run seven hours.
    • In the first year of sales, six million of first-generation iPhones have been sold, Jobs says.
    • The new phone will be available in 70 countries over the next few months — in 29 European countries, 15 Latin American countries and 8 in the Asia Pacific, not including China.
    • price: $199 for 8GB ; $299 for 16 GB
    • Available July 11, in more than 20 countries, with 70 by the end of the year, Jobs says. “We are going to be in 70 countries, this year,” he said.

A side-by-side demonstration of faster Web download speeds of iPhone 3G devives versus existing iPhone.

Faster_downloads

Promised improvements in battery life for selected functions on iPhone 3G: 

 Battery_life

Here is a side shot of the slimmer iPhone 3G

Slimmer

A shot of the back of the new iPhone in black and white versions:

MobileMe

Apple head of worldwide sales and marketing Phil Schiller introduces MobileMe, a desktop-quality e-mail, calendar and contacts Web service. It’s a companion Web service for iPhone users. It’s priced at $99 a year and will be available in early July, he says.  

MobileMe provides automatic synchronization between an iPhone and the Web for e-mail, pictures and contacts. For example, a photo shot on the iPhone can instantly be uploaded to the Web using MobileMe. 

It offers drag-and-drop capability to move messages from inbox into folders. The service replaces Apple’s existing .Mac service.

“It’s feels like a desktop application,” Schiller boasts. He calls it (Microsoft) “Exchange for the rest of us.” 

MobileMe_lesser_crop 

Software Features

Jobs is back on stage and has begun ticking off new features in the iPhone 2.0 software:

  • A new “Contact search” application instead of making users go into phone application to find their list of contact phone numbers and e-mail addresses.
  • Expands support for Microsoft PowerPoint to existing support for Microsoft Word and Excel applications.
  • Apple has added bulk delete and move features for messages.
  • The ability to save photos sent via message straight into photo application.
  • Apple has added parental controls to the iPhone.
  • The Apple iPhone Apps Store will be available in 62 countries.
  • Added language support for more than a dozen languages besides English.

 Languages

Application Demos

Major League Baseball plans to offer video highlights of games around the league, minutes after they occur, on the iPhone via its MLB.com application. 

baseball 

Doctors are warming up to the iPhone as a tool for keeping track of patient information. Here is a demonstration for viewing medical imagery

Medical_imagery 

An eBay auction demo

 ebay

“Productivity deteriorates,” an Apple exec jokes after video game maker Sega shows its Super Monkey Ball game on the iPhone. He was describing the distraction the phone becomes to Apple engineers who have played the game.

Sega

Apple CEO Steve Jobs takes the stage and describes how new iPhone 2.0 software will enable features for corporate enterprise users, including support for Microsoft Outlook e-mail users …

iPhone 2.0

You can find Reuters.com full coverage of Monday’s iPhone news here.

(Photos: Reuters/Eric Auchard/Kimberly White, Device screenshot: Apple.com)

June 9th, 2008

St. Steve, patron saint of gadgets, to take the stage

Posted by: Eric Auchard

opening

Apple Inc Co-founder and Chief Executive Steve Jobs is set to take the stage at the Apple developer conference in San Francisco where he is widely expected to introduce a new generation of iPhone devices that bring the Internet to phone users at faster speeds.

Speculation is rampant that some models will be thinner and cheaper while other models, designed to work on so-called 3G networks and speed data delivery, will make using the Web on your phone more like using the Web on a broadband computer. CrunchGear claims to have obtained promotional marketing materials showing 16-gigabyte iPhone models in black and red and sporting a tiny video camera for live video calls.

In preparation for the news, Apple has taken its Apple store offline temporarily. “We are busy updating the store for you and will be back shortly,” a notice on the store site read Monday morning.

May 29th, 2008

Uncle Walt bends FCC chairman over his knee

Posted by: Eric Auchard

Walt_MossbergKevin_MartinWalt Mossberg, the world’s most powerful technology product reviewer, opened the final session of the D: All Things Digital conference with an angry tirade against the s-s-s-low state of broadband in the United States.

“WE ARE VERY SLOW,” Mossberg complained of U.S. Internet access speeds.

The target of 61-year-old Uncle Walt’s wrath was Kevin Martin, 42, the boyish-looking chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, who was punished on-stage before an audience of high-tech industry insiders.

Mossberg: “You are the head of the FCC. How have you allowed this to happen? I AM DEAD SERIOUS. HOW HAVE YOU ALLOWED THIS TO HAPPEN?

Martin: “I am not sure I am solely responsible. I am also not sure the charts capture the whole story. I think you do have to put in the context some of the demographics of the United States and some of the countries we are competing against.

Mossberg: Does that explain why we pay $12.50 per megabit in the United States as opposed to $3.09 in Japan and $3.70 in France? Why are we paying four times as much?

Martin: Yes it does. Because it costs a lot more to build out in more rural areas and people who live further apart… We have a history of averaging some of the cost to make it affordable for people in Montana.

Martin should have seen it coming. Mossberg has been on a crusade over slow broadband speeds for some time, including a call to stop calling slower-speed DSL “broadband.” It’s just one of the many things that annoy him about how computer and consumer electronics industries treat their consumers. Other pet peeves include junk programs pre-installed by PC makers Mossberg calls craplets and any device that doesn’t aspire to Apple-scale product design genius.

Here are the stats that Mossberg and Martin were debating:

Broadband_costs

(Photos: Reuters)

 

 

May 23rd, 2008

Q&A with WPP’s Sir Martin Sorrell

Posted by: Eric Auchard

Sir Martin Sorrell, CEO of WPP Group Plc, was interviewed as part of the Reuters Global Technology, Media and Telecoms Summit held this week around the globe. He talked to Reuters reporter Kate Holton in London, with groups of reporters calling in from Paris and New York to ask questions. Here are extended excerpts from a longer interview:  

SOFTER 2009; REBOUND IN 2010

Reuters: How is the U.S. advertising market holding up in light of the credit crunch and housing crisis?

Sir Martin: I would just say that I think we continue to be surprised by the relative strength of the US in the first four months of the year, I guess.

Reuters: Previously said you see a stronger 2010 but concerns in 2009. Are you still happy with that characterization?

Sir Martin: Following the Beijing Olympics and the elections of the new US President, 2009 may see a little bit of slowdown in China but all of these things are relative because China is still growing at 20 percent plus and it can't carry on forever. The GNP can't continue to grow 10 percent per annum consistently so -- forever. The laws of compound arithmetic just make it very difficult. So '09 I think you have a little bit of relaxation and also I don't think the world has decoupled. So if America's weak, as we have said before, you may not catch a flu, but you may certainly catch a cold.

And then in 2010 a number of events --you have the (U.S.) mid-term congressionals. So any US President has to do something unpleasant in '09 will do it early and hope that mid-term congressionals would not be affected. But you've got the Shanghai fair, the expo in 2010. You've got the Asian games. You've got the Winter Olympics in Vancouver and you've got – the biggest event is probably the World Cup in South Africa

Reuters: If we did experience a greater economic downturn would you expect to see increased competition amongst agencies for business? How does that impact on you?

Sir Martin: On price competition I said before that we saw some deep discounting on the media side. We don't know whether -- where that came from but one of our -- two of our multinational competitors won in the context of a multinational piece of business originating in America. These were both incumbents because of the threshold on the incumbents' key business is very great. One paid a check for $28 million and in the UK here another one paid a check for $20 million and we were given the option in both cases to respond (inaudible) clients.

We thought the pricing that they were promising was commercially unrealistic and impossible to achieve. In other words it would have a significant impact on their profitability. Because once you start to offer those things it has an impact on other clients. Those other clients say why didn't you to the same for me?

But you know that's not in 2009 obviously or 2010. But generally we manage to consistently increase our margins and Omnicom (the world’s largest advertising conglomerate, ahead of No. 2 ranked WPP) has the same margin today exactly the same or maybe I think maybe even a little bit smaller than it was five years ago. That does not seem to worry their shareholders. They talk about making investments in their business.

We are making investments in our business as revenues have grown over the last, say, three or four years at about 5 percent. We managed to increase our margins. So we are looking for progress and progress is 60 basis points or half a margin point each year which we're hoping to do this year as well.

WPP GROWTH DRIVERS

Reuters: What areas of your business are driving these margin increases?

Sir Martin: I think it is decent growth topline. And there are some economies of scale, not enormous, in our business but some economies of scale -- our portfolio is probably more orientated towards Asia, Latin America, the Middle East, Central and Eastern Europe, because that's 35 percent. It's more orientated towards digital. It's about 25 percent now digital in one way or another. And we don't see margin compression as we move increasingly into the digital area.

So I think it's probably due to the fact that we are growing pretty rapidly. I was in Moscow this morning (after the Chelsea-Man U match the night before) and in Russia we continue to grow (around) 25 percent. It's probably the fastest-growing country that we operate. We have a big company there, a joint company, effectively: Video International. It's been very successful and continues to grow.

Obviously as the price of oil increases, the economic power of Russia increases too. So all of these things -- I think in Moscow I think is 9 percent of the population and 39 percent retail sales. So there's a very heavy concentration there of activity.

DIGITAL BUSINESS AND 'FRENEMY' UPDATE

Reuters: How would you characterize your relationship with Google, for which you famously dubbed the word “frenemy”?

Sir Martin: We are a very big customer of Google. I think we're spending about $850 million a year with Google. That excludes I think search with Dell. So that will add to it. If you look at that, it's about -- it might be 4 or 5 percent of Google's revenues this year. That will be smaller than our share for traditional media normally which would be around 20 or 25 percent.

If you ask why that is I think it's because Google has focused and grown at least initially on SMEs. You know it's sort of a mechanical Yellow Pages, a crude way of putting it. But it's been extremely successful in I think improving the primary demand for Internet advertising and search obviously. They want, I'm sure, to build up their search business in Europe as we heard at Google Zeitgeist this week, the same they want to develop their business in television and print and radio, not by acquisition but organically, and I am sure they will do that.

So I think the situation remains the same. You see interestingly that Microsoft have been talking not in a dissimilar way recently about the rebranding of parts of their operations to Microsoft advertising yesterday. You saw presumably the announcement about our cooperation with them on paid search or cash-back search. And on Yahoo you see also that we announced or rather Yahoo and ourselves announced last week increased cooperation with Right Media on their inventory and making available a broader inventory to 24/7 Real Media with them.

I think it's important to understand that our strategy is very different to our competitors. Through 24/7 Real Media we gain access to technology platforms which involve the application of technology in our business in search, media sales, advertisers, websites and publishers websites. And what that was about was the application of technology. This to do with the application of technology and that's where I think we've taken a different position. So 24/7 is a technology platform or represents a technology platform, which is smaller than Doubleclick. But it is in some sense as competitive for that.

The nervousness that you referred to is understandable because Google is a massive company. It is still what -- $175, $180 billion. It's $22 billion of revenue. You add up all our market caps in the top four (global advertising groups), I think we get up to maybe about $50 (billion) maybe less -- $40, $45 market cap…You add up all of our revenues we get to about 33, 34, 35.

So we're 50 percent bigger than (Google) on revenues and combined market caps of the four (ad groups, including WPP) is about a third or a quarter. So the market's saying something about the relative growth prospects and dynamics of the last four businesses and their business. I don't think -- going back to your question the position has changed whatever the companies that you mentioned were saying. Google is a phenomenal company as is Microsoft as is Yahoo frankly and we have increasingly tried to find ways to work with them.

But our strategy is, you know our strategy in the digital areas is as I said 25 percent of our business. We're growing our businesses organically, the traditional businesses I put it that way -- organically. We are acquiring digital agencies and you talk about companies like Blue, Aqua (Online), Last Radius, Agenda which is five sort of very strong companies that were acquired in the last year or so. And at the same time you know we continue to boost our traditional businesses…like Wunderman, G2, RMG Connect and OgilvyOne. Those four businesses alone have about $2 billion of revenue between them.

So, organic growth, acquisition of digital agencies and then finally what I said before which is the application of technology which is a very different route. I don't think you and your frankly -- forgive me for saying this -- make the adequate distinction between that and what others, our more direct competitors are doing. So, we in this new area of growth we see the growth is coming in the new media and the traditional markets and in the new markets. The difference in the new markets is the old media, the traditional media that are also growing.

So Russian sites, Polish TV stations, CCTV, Shanghai Media Group, Indian newspapers -- there was an article in the press this week or so about the growth of Indian newspapers and…readership and circulation. The traditional media are growing in the new markets whereas in the old markets, the more developed markets -- traditional media is under pressure.

THE "VALUE" OF PR

Sir Martin: I think generally people -- our clients continue to be concerned about pricing and as a result look at alternatives which one of the things that has interested us is the public relations, the public affairs which is about 10 percent of our business. Last year I think it was about $1.3 billion in revenue.

So if I can convince Reuters journalists … to be more -- to be positive about WPP editorially that's more effective than taking an ad in a press. The research that we see shows that. So public relations has become more important. Social networking is a way of writing letters to our mother like we used to do or some of us used to do.

And then the other thing that's happened with PR which is interesting is polling has become much more scientific and that has enabled us to put a quantitative basis to an industry that probably was described historically as (dead) and has made the industry -- these two things -- technology and polling and data and made the industry I think much stronger and more attractive and I think that will carry on. So alternatives that we talked about, new media alternatives, alternatives whether they be Internet based, PC based, mobile based or video based alternatives that -- the range of alternatives (inaudible) to significantly greater.

ONLINE VIDEO AND MOBILE ADS

Reuters: What's your takeaway on online video? What does it need to do to attract online video advertising?

Sir Martin: It's all a question of time. As the technologies improve, as bandwidths improve these things will become more -- as mobile screens improve in terms of quality and capability these things will become more and more important. So you could say following your line of argument that the Internet is only 10 percent the worldwide advertising budgets and therefore it's small.

The fact is it's growing very rapidly from the small base. People would make similar arguments about China a few years ago or India or might continue to make it about Vietnam or Pakistan or Indonesia or Russia or the Middle East. These are small markets geographically in these cases and therefore deserve to be ignored. If that's what people believe so be it and let them ignore it. I think that's where geographically here -- there are two issues.

One is geography which I think is intellectually much easier to get your mind around. The other is technology which is (inaudible) more difficult because unless you are a physicist or mathematician or a scientist, it's often very difficult to understand the significance of all of these changes. Having said, the Internet is only 10 percent, we know that consumers spend 20 to 25 percent of their time online. We know that in the UK Google will probably outdistance ITV next year in terms of revenues.

We know that in Sweden Internet advertising is bigger than -- is the first country where it's become bigger than TV this year. Internet advertising will outdistance television in the UK next year as a result of what I said about Google and ITV. Somebody said to me that they went to the Google Zeitgeist…and there was a presentation on the site by three teenagers and the three teenagers were asked whether they watched and what do they do -- this site was I think Stardoll where you build virtual dolls…And the three teenagers were asked whether they watched any television. They said no. I was talking to a journalist and he found that remarkable. Anyway so that's just another example of consumption as it's changing, media consumption as it's changing. I'm sure yours have changed, I'm sure mine have changed. This is all part of it. So what seems small today may be big tomorrow. So I think you have to examine it and see what you think.

Reuters: And advertising on mobile?

Sir Martin: Okay, you're paying money and you (have a) choice. You either decide that you're going to invest some time and effort in looking at that or not. And if not you risk missing out on an opportunity. It may be the Beatles, it may not be the Beatles. But one of the things that have to do and you know the sort of things we've been investing in whether it be a SpotRunner, a VideoEgg, WildTangent, what it happens to be and really whatever it is that we are facing a view that we have to invest in some of these areas to understand what's going on. I mean if you or I knew which way things were going we wouldn't be spending our time talking to one another here. You wouldn't be at Thomson Reuters and I probably wouldn't be at WPP.

Reuters: Advertising on the Internet so far has not been about making sure the transaction happens rather than say building a brand or brand awareness. Would you go along with that and is video online a way that brand awareness would develop?

Sir Martin: Ultimately, everything will come together and you know when I say 25 percent of our business is digital, that will morph into all our business is affected by digital or digitizing data, pictures whatever it happens to be in due course. So you won't make the distinction. So I think these are forced distinctions.

I think there is an inherent inertia to change which happens in lots of areas and you've got to try and overcome that. And when you have got 100,000 people in over 100 countries who have done things really successfully in various communication services and often because of the pressures of the moment don't move on to experiment with other things. …The honest answer is when you put it all together it's about strategy, creative execution and distribution. Those are the three things we do to.

But going back to your point obviously Google with its DoubleClick platform, Microsoft with it's aQuantive platform can look at both sides or both strands of the market -- search and display -- and I am sure we will try and develop even better approaches and the agencies that work with them will do so too. It's a bit like the question about the three strands before. I don't think you'll focus on one or the other.

I don't think we'll differentiate between online for tactical and offline for brand and we will be looking at all of these media.

What's happening is the medium has become more and more important some might argue (that) the message is more important than the medium. I would argue increasingly the medium is as important or maybe even more important than the medium and is starting to (change) the messages that you put out through the various medium.

So I think the balance of our business has changed. Not only do we apply technology in a way that we didn't do before but (the way) we think about media and the importance of media in our organization is far greater than it used to be.

MICROHOO

Reuters: How does all the talk between Microsoft and Yahoo and the potential consolidation of other major players relative to Google, how does that affect your thinking about the shape of the online industry?

Sir Martin: I think our clients like to see balance in the marketplace. And the attraction of Microsoft getting together with Yahoo in its original form was there would be better balance. So having one very strong competitor in the marketplace and then another one and make sure two competitors are not as strong.

You know, I mean it may not be the right assumption but bringing the two smaller ones together would create a bigger force that would balance the marketplace more effectively. Now that wasn't to be for whatever reasons. But we now are told that Microsoft is talking to Yahoo about buying certain parts of its business or reaching agreements in relation to certain parts of its business and I think again that is a positive development because it will again bring more balance.

We have to see what happens. It depends on I'm sure lots of factors but on balance I think our clients and media owners and indeed agencies feel that better balance is a better thing. Whether right or wrong or not time will tell. But I think that is the overall position.

ON MERGERS

Reuters: Thank you very much, Sir Martin.

Sir Martin: Good luck with your merger (The Thomson-Reuters merger closed in April).

Reuters: It is done -- it's over, we are the survivors.

Sir Martin: Sorry. It's not done, it's just starting. The easiest thing is to do the deal. The most difficult thing is to make it work.

(Photo: Reuters)

April 1st, 2008

Michael Arrington: Journalist, Lawyer, Self-parodist

Posted by: Eric Auchard

Arrington_on_FacebookTechCrunchTechCrunch publisher and lead writer Michael Arrington got a jump on other April Fool’s pranksters with a Monday, March 31 post entitled “Why We’re Suing Facebook for $25 million in Statutory Damages”

But Arrington gave away the punchline at a news conference at Facebook offices in mid-March, when he surprised other reporters by volunteering how he and his lawyer had thought of suing Facebook for violations to Arrington’s privacy. It was all a big joke, Arrington, formerly a Sillicon Valley lawyer, said at the time.

Facebook_icon

His Monday post says TechCrunch is filing a lawsuit against Facebook on April 1 seeking $25 million in damages, along with a related civil case for assault and battery and infliction of emotional distress.

“In a round of negotiations over the lawsuit with Facebook led by Chief Privacy Officer Chris Kelly, things got out of hand. When our team of lawyers offered to settle for a mere $50 million, Kelly told me Facebook would “bury you and bury your crappy blog” if we filed the suit. He then threw his steaming hot triple soy latte espresso at me, which caused extensive second degree burns over the top half of my body. Later on, he also unfriended me.”

For the record, here is a transcript of the actual March 18 conversation that grew out of a discussion over the controversy on Facebook’s Beacon:

Arrington: “Is there anyway for users to say I don’t not want my image to promote social ads?”

Facebook VP of Product Management Matt Cohler: “There is a social add shut-off. It is an opt-out (privacy setting).”

Arrington: “Okay, so I can now stop endorsing BlockBuster movie clips, if I choose to? … It is an opt-out, not an opt-in?”

Blockbuster_ad

(Another reporter jumped in with a related question, then Arrington continued).

Arrington: “Do you feel as though you are on sort of on very poor legal ground with this?” referring to Beacon.

Cohler: “No, I don’t. I feel like we are on fine legal ground. To be perfectly frank.”

Arrington: “This is awesome. Actually, it’s something that is going to cost too much. My attorney wanted to sue you guys. And we are not going to sue you because I think you would (fight) it.”

Cohler: “Well, thank you.”

Arrington: “What we (Michael and his lawyer) talked about was … creating sort of a fake lawsuit (and posting it on TechCrunch). But it was going to cost too much. It was going to cost about $15 grand. But he’s like, ‘It’s an open shut case…’”

Facebook privacy officer and legal counsel Chris Kelly cut in: “Under what legal theory?”

Arrington: “California and New York privacy rights, where you are using my image and name without my permission.”

Kelly: “The terms of services are very clear on that….We have the permission that is required under those laws.”

Cohler later asked Arrington: “Is TechCrunch not working out too well for you?”

Asked by Reuters to comment via e-mail on Arrington’s post, Kelly replied: “I’ve invited him over for coffee ;)”

(Photos: TechCrunch, Facebook, Arrington’s Facebook profile photo)

March 17th, 2008

Wall St Poll-Microsoft nabs Yahoo, but at what price?

Posted by: Eric Auchard

yahoo_hq_yahoo_car_kimberly_white_reuters_cropped.jpgThe latest data from a Reuters poll of Wall Street analysts who track either Microsoft Corp or Yahoo Inc, shows 28 of 30 analysts expect Microsoft to prevail in its unsolicited bid to acquire Yahoo, which is currently valued at $41.7 billion.

Fourteen analysts expect Microsoft to stand by its initial offer price of $31 per share in an equal mix of cash and stock. Four analysts expect Microsoft to keep offer at $31 per share but make all-cash offer, effectively raising the deal’s value.

Twelve analysts expect Microsoft to raise price to between $31.50 and $35 per share.

The two nay-sayers who do not think Microsoft will prevail include one who holds out hope AOL will strike a deal with Yahoo and another who thinks Microsoft may be blocked down the road by government regulators on grounds the deal is anti-competitive.

Twenty-three brokerages responded. Seven brokers have analysts who follow both companies and their votes were counted separately. In total, 33 financial analysts currently follow Yahoo and 40 analysts track Microsoft.

Read the full Reuters story from Sunday by Daisuke Wakabayashi and Eric Auchard. These latest figures include two analysts who responded to the poll after the story ran.

(Photo: Reuters/Kimberly White)

January 7th, 2008

CES: Gates mulls digital decade when he’s no longer in charge

Posted by: Eric Auchard

GatesFor more than a decade, Bill Gates has set the agenda for the technology industry at the start of every year with the speech he makes to open up the Consumer Electronics Show.

In his final such speech before taking on a more limited role in running Microsoft Corp later this year, Gates laid out on Sunday his vision of the big changes in store over the next decade thanks to digital technology.

Highlights included demonstrations of Microsoft’s coffee table-shaped Surface computer, a prototype of the company’s vision of a mobile device of the future and updates on Microsoft’s various businesses ranging from Xbox to Windows Vista.

Here are comments from the Microsoft leader’s final CES keynote speech:

Gates opened by looking back to his first CES keynote in 1994 and the years since then, when high-speed Internet access and mobile phones have joined personal computers as mainstream tools for consumers. He defined these years as “the start of the first digital decade.”

“The trend here is clear, all media and entertainment will be digitally driven,” Gates said. “The first digital decade has been tremendously successful,” he declared.

The presentation featured a self-mocking video in which Gates asked celebrity actors, politicians and news reporters what he should do with his life once he steps aside from full-time work for the company he co-founded more than 30 years ago.
matt_and_bill

One scene showed him working out at a gym with beefcake actor Matthew McConaughey. “Can I take off my shirt yet?” Gates quips.

Another segment interviews NBC Television news anchor Brian Williams, who says of the world’s richest man: “On a personal note, all of us here at NBC will miss reporting daily on this brilliant … man who just doesn’t believe in paying more than $7 for a haircut.”


Looking ahead, he declared: “The second digital decade will be more focused on connecting people.”

Moving beyond the personal computer era, “High-definition experience (will be) everywhere,” he predicted.

“Not just high definition displays, but projections on every wall. Displays not on the desk, but in the desk. It will just be there and easy to manipulate and have multiple people connect up,” he said.

“You’ll just take it for granted,” Gates said.

Gates was joined on stage by Robbie Bach, the head of Microsoft’s entertainment and devices division. Bach said the company had signed up 10 million members for its Xbox Live online gaming service and was growing faster than it had previously estimated.

The two Microsoft executives then showcased a prototype of a potential Microsoft phone of the future that featured the ability to shoot video or still pictures of nearby people or places and have the phone’s software recognize the images and provide related contact or location information to the phone user.

“This will be in the phone that you carry around. It can carry the video, the stills, the information you access,” Gates said of the demonstration project.

Slash_Bill_Robbie_smokinBach then jibed his notoriously geeky boss about whether he’d gotten around to playing the popular rock band simulation game Guitar Hero 3.

Gates protested that he had played the game over the holidays. Suddenly the two donned plastic guitar instruments used to pound out chords in the video game.

Bach and Gates were joined on stage by the top-hat-wearing guitar legend, Slash, of the rock group Guns & Roses. They played a 30-second noisefest partly obscured by the obligatory dry-ice fog of rock concerts. On that note, Gates said goodbye to thousands of his industry peers.

Additional reporting by Scott Hillis and Daisuke Wakabayashi

Also read Dai’s face-to-face interview with Chairman Bill
Reuters: Gates eyes next ‘digital decade’
Reuters: Microsoft Vista sales hit 100 million before holidays

(Photos: Reuters/Eric Auchard)

January 7th, 2008

CES: Gadgets in need of problems to solve

Posted by: Eric Auchard

The consumer electronics industry churns out thousands of niche devices in a hit-or-miss search to find an actual audience, let alone the next hit product from the likes of Apple or Nintendo.

At the Consumer Electronics Show, MediaFile is turning up lots of examples of device makers solving problems we never knew consumers had.

Meat
Talking BBQ Thermometer
Oregon Scientifics’ “Grill-Right Talking BBQ/Oven Thermometer” markets itself as a wireless solution for the problem of cooking meat to perfection while grilling or roasting — from any room in the house. It runs a little over $40 at several e-commerce sites.

MediaFile writers, who collectively boast dozens of years of barbeque grilling experience, wonder whether this problem with the Great American Pastime is one technology is really meant to solve.

For us, the secret of Great Barbeque, besides the sauce, lies in the intimate, hand-to-hand combat between the griller and the piece of meat in question. Remote electronic monitoring seems particularly ill-suited to the task.

By contrast, we see real prospect in the Personal Weather Station, which Oregon Scientifics now offers for $399. The product includes a console for reading a variety of weather monitoring devices the user can place outside their home. Data from the devices is fed wirelessly back to the console, which in turn connects via USB to the user’s personal computer.

iRobotRobot Gutter Cleaner
The “Looj Gutter Cleaning Robot” is a runner-up for the “I Definitely Didn’t Know Technology Could Help Me Solve This Problem” Award.

The iRobot device sports a $99 list price and claims to clean your home’s roof gutters without risky trips up and down rickety step ladders. No more juggling tools at risky heights, it promises.

What’s up, iRobot? Your vacuum cleaner line is a thing of beauty. The company’s bomb detectors are saving lives in Iraq by going to places where human beings don’t belong to defuse IEDs (Pentagon-speak for roadside bombs). But there are limits to the problems current technology can solve. Gutters appear to be one.

sentrysafeFire and Waterproof Hard Disk
SentrySafe, a supplier of secure data storage containers, is offering hard disks that can withstand a fire raging for up to 30 minutes at up to 1550 degrees Fahrenheit — or full water submersion for 24 hours.

The SentrySafe Fire-Safe/Waterproof hard drive contains a Maxtor 160 gigabyte drive in a specially hardened case. Its suggested retail price is $339.99. You are paying five to six times the retail price of the hard disk for fire and water proofing.

Securing individual hard disks against such disaster seems to fly in the face of the widely anticipated industry trend toward networked storage backup, done at far lower cost, by Internet service providers such as Google, Microsoft or Yahoo. Networked storage, to be sure, currently offer less space than the biggest hard drives. But the gap is expected to shrink over time.

Perhaps there are some survivalists out there that are willing to pay the difference.

Round plugs vs. Power strips
roundThe Powramid E-900H from Kreative Power LLC arranges six power plugs in a compact circular configuration rather than running them down one linear strip. Mediafile writers disagree about just how much space is actually saved using the conical format.

Others of us think round plugs could work better than classic power strips in tight spots. But we all agree that the green activity light is far cuter than anything we’ve seen in the product category. Details on pricing and availability have not been released.

(Photos: Reuters/Eric Auchard; SentrySafe image)

September 5th, 2007

New Internet iPod is iPhone without the phone

Posted by: Eric Auchard

Apple co-foundeipod_touch.jpgr, CEO and man-who-can-do-no-wrong-for-the-moment Steve Jobs (left) introduced new versions of every product in the company’s iPod music and video line, including a new iPhone-like touchscreen music and video player that has a full Internet browser and the capacity to download music.

At 8 millimeters thick, the touchscreen iPod is thinner than the iPhone but has a similar set of controls that allow consumers to use the heat of their fingers to flip through songs or albums to choose what to play. It comes with built-in Wi-Fi wireless capability that could be used to download music.

The iPod touchscreen also adds a Safari Web browser connection that allows users to connect to the Internet. Google and Yahoo search services, plus YouTube videos, are built in to the Web browser. Versions of the new iPod Touch run $299 and $399 for 8-gigabyte and 16-gigabytes respectively.

“We think it’s one of the seven wonders of the world,” Jobs enthused at a news conference on Wednesday in San Francisco. “If you have used an iPhone you will feel very much at home.”

The Apple leader also said his company will help users make do-it-yourself ringtones of songs. Consumers can choose any 30-second segment of a song and save it as a personal ringtone for 99 cents a piece, Jobs said. Apple will turn on the feature next week, he said.

Jobs introduced new Zippo lighter-sized versions of the existingiPod Nano with a 2.0 inch video screen. Jobs called it a true pocket-sized Nano.

The 4-gigabyte and 8-gigabyte iPod Nanos with two-inch video screens will cost $149 and $249, respectively. The new Nanos offer 24 hours of audio play and five hours of video time, he said. These are truly pocket-sized deivces.

He also introduced heftier versions of the company’s hard-disk-based iPods, which will now be known as the company’s “Classic” iPod line. The two versions have 80-gigabyte and 160-gigabyte storage capacities and cost $249 and $349, respectively.

During his appearance, Jobs made light of NBC Universal’s decision to stop selling TV shows through Apple iTunes and switch to Amazon.com’s rival media delivery service.

With John Lennon’s anthem “Give Peace a Chance” blaring in the background, Jobs quipped: “That’s for when NBC calls.”