Archive for April, 2007

Finally Getting Office 2007 Ultimate Today in the Mail

April 27, 2007

I’ve been waiting for a few weeks for this. It’s the perfect complement to any small business owner who also work a normal job. I’m really looking forward to testing the Business Contact manager which comes with Ultimate but I don’t think I’ll be using Outlook. Secretly, Microsoft’s Live team has planted an email tool which I like better than Outlook. It’s called SiteFish, oh I meant Windows Live Mail, not to be confused with it’s not so good brother, Windows mail, Windows Live mail can handle an OPML file with about 2 thousand feeds, and I’m not sure what the threshold for it bugging out is, perhaps my network connection. When I try to throw out my entire feed collection at it, (it’s bigger than Scoble’s, I use search extensively) Windows Live Mail doesn’t like it. Perhaps if I were on a T1 though this wouldn’t be a problem? I think Windows Live Mail is perhaps Microsoft’s most underrated or under the radar software, it’s a great piece of work. I’ll have to try out outlook one more time before official saying no thanks for my every day feedreading and mail reading.

I’m going to borrow some work from Paul Thurrott on his Thunderbird 2 review, check the program out myself on my OpenSUSE server (I don’t usually install anything on this but for the sake of time) and then I’m going to do a review of the best email/rss reader out today. The two functions have been forever pulled together in clients, but not so yet on the web. Oh, and then I’m going to review the ZDC, Zimbra Desktop Client which is long overdue. If I get time tonight, I’m going to do a review of all of the patent trolls that are making a difference in the world today as well.

Prices for Telematics driven Car Navigation systems are dropping faster than a bullet.

April 27, 2007

According to C|Net:

The average price of portable GPS devices has dropped more than $200 in a year, while sales of individual units have grown more than 300 percent.

These devices are getting better every CES show. What we have is a segment which is maturing, unfortunately there are not many standards in the car in which to foster innovation. Still, I think there is a huge untapped market sitting right behind the steering wheel just waiting to be exploited by some entrepreneur with his head on strait.

How will this be in five years? I think heads up displays (a projector which pastes a translucent screen against the windshield will be a major uptake. There are many thoughts I have in this area, and telematics is one of my primary interests because of the special opportunities it brings to computing.

More info on the current Steve Jobs Scandal

April 27, 2007

Kevin Kelleher at GigaOM has posted this interesting article about the happenings at Apple where backdated stock options were granted to the brass at the company. He basically is saying if Apple’s stock wasn’t doing the best it has in history that the board would be handling Steve a bit differently. I agree that Steve is a Micromanager and that he probably has OCD which is part of the reason why Apple has had relatively good execution in the past. If Apple’s ex-CFO issued a statement after he settled with the SEC, saying he had warned Jobs that what they were doing was wrong, and that Jobs reassured him that things would be fine. Here is the storyline from CNN Money.

* Fred was told by Steve Jobs in late January 2001 that Mr. Jobs had the agreement of the Board of Directors for the Executive Team grant on January 2, 2001. At the time Mr. Jobs provided Fred this assurance, Fred cautioned Mr. Jobs that the Executive Team grant would have to be priced based on the date of the actual Board agreement or there could be an accounting charge.

He further advised Mr. Jobs that the Board would have to confirm its prior approval in a legally satisfactory method. He was told by Mr. Jobs that the Board had given its prior approval and the Board would verify it. Fred relied on these statements by Mr. Jobs and from them concluded the grant was being properly handled.

* Fred understood that, under Apple’s stock option plan and accounting rules at the time, a grant date could be moved to a later date than the date of the actual grant decision and that there would be no compensation expense as long as the stock price on the new date was higher than the price on the original date. Apple’s 1998 Executive Officer Stock Option Plan provided in Section 16 that ‘The date of grant of an Option…shall be, for all purposes, the date on which the Administrator (in this case the Board) makes the determination granting such Option…or such later date as is determined by the Administrator. ‘

Mr. Anderson understood that the date of grant was to be moved forward pursuant to this provision from January 2 to January 17 to avoid any appearance of impropriety that might arise from a grant awarded just prior to the stock price rise that resulted from the 2001 MacWorld exhibition and Mr. Job’s keynote speech at the exhibition on January 9.

He further understood that the January 17 date was selected by Mr. Jobs and Ms. Nancy Heinen, the former General Counsel, and that the stock price on January 17 was higher than the price on January 2.

* Finally, Mr. Anderson understood that the Board of Directors, which consisted of sophisticated corporate executives of national stature, including the former Chief Financial Officer of IBM, verified the January 17 date by signing in early February 2001 a Unanimous Written Consent (UWC) with an effective date of January 17.

It now appears the Board may not have given the necessary prior approval to the grants, contrary to what Mr. Anderson understood from Mr. Jobs and from the Board’s signing of the UWC with an effective date of January 17.

"Mr. Anderson has agreed to pay disgorgement, the difference in the value of the stock between the January 17 date and the date in early February when the UWC was signed by the Board.

"With respect to the October 2001 grant to Mr. Jobs that is also the subject of the complaint, Fred had virtually no involvement as he was not a member of the Board and did not have a formal role in compensation matters pertaining to the CEO. Fred had absolutely no knowledge of any alteration of Board documents and this is reflected by the fact that he is not even mentioned in those charges.

"Fred Anderson remains proud of his accomplishments as a former CFO and Board member at Apple. He wishes the company and its many talented employees continued success. With this matter resolved, Fred looks forward to continuing his career as a Founder and Managing Director of Elevation Partners." 

It must be nice to work at a company who’s stock price is doing so well but I don’t think I would like to work with Steve Jobs. I don’t think he has any moral standards and I don’t think he’s ethical based on the evidence.

Vista doesn’t seem to have many good Drivers for CDs and DVD players

April 26, 2007

Since purchasing Vista Ultimate, I’ve had to go out and buy a new DVD writer. The way Vista handles these devices is horrible. Sometimes if I put a DVDR in it will spin and spin and spin and make loud noises, and I’ve tried a few different DVD-R’s laying around with varying success.

None of the writers seems to have problems writing cd/dvds but reading them it wakes the engine from hell and the thing is spinning like the whole PC is going to catch on fire.

Does anyone know anything about CD/DVD writers in Vista? Perhaps this siteflash program will start writing drivers by itself and there will be plenty to go around in x86 versions and in x64 versions? I sure hope so.

My commentary on VCSI vs. Microsoft Lawsuit leads to personal attacks.

April 26, 2007

I am being called names by presumably people with an interest in this VCSI company for posting what I felt was an honest and candid review of their patent against prior art. They better get used to this because it’s what’s going to happen to patents in the future if the USPTO has its way. I don’t mind being called a Microsoft Shill, or other names I won’t mention. The point of this blog is to hopefully have a sensible conversation about technology. I love technology, I sit in front of a computer at least 90 percent of the time I am awake unless my fiance is home. 🙂

About these VCSI folks, I have no problem with you. If your core mission is to provide software to enable business and improve lives, may you live long happy lives and maybe someday I’ll write about your company.  I just figured out they own a product called Siteflash. I think that name creates confusion with Adobe’s Flash but that’s just my own thoughts.

Back to the subject, I think it’s a bit funny that people think I’m affiliated with Microsoft. I am not affiliated with Microsoft in any way. Microsoft has never paid me a cent, or given me a thing. I am not afraid to say I love Microsoft products even though it’s like the least cool thing to say today in a technology world dominated by Mac wielding and Linux Welding alpha geeks who don’t like Microsoft. This isn’t to say that I wouldn’t join Microsoft should the offer ever rise, I like Microsoft for their contributions to mankind in the form of software. My job was created by someone who left my company to work at Microsoft. I can say I love Microsoft products and at the same time I can write some code in an VIM editor just like the Microsoft hating alpha geeks. 

I call the shots how I see them.  I don’t like seeing things like this. (not sure what to make of it though, Dave) I think people under appreciate how much better our lives have become due to software and not just software from Microsoft. People think I am a Microsoftie because I am passionate about technology I think. I think people at Microsoft ARE passionate about technology.

At any rate, about this piece I did on the patent. I am a person with a little bit of patent experience. This patent experience is limited to some inventions that I created and am creating for my company who has a firm writing the patents for the company. They take my inventions and turn them into the gibbly gabbly "hard to understand quickly" patent language. I am no patent attorney and I only spent two hours dissecting this patent and to my non-patent attorney albeit creative geek brain, it seemed like I came up with some prior art. Like I said, perhaps if I read the patent more I would be gifted with the understanding that comes with living with your invention night and day for months until you have given birth to a perfectly (not usually when you are an inventor) crafted machine.

If your patent is valid, then don’t attack me, speak in plain English exactly how Microsoft is infringing so that the public can see this evil that Microsoft is imposing on the little company from Texas. By attacking me, you are souring your own image. I am not Microsoft. If you convince me, then I’ll say, now there is a company that Microsoft is wronging. I just don’t see it. What good is an IDE that creates and IDE that creates and IDE that creates and operating system that creates an operating system. Sorry, programmers will live forever but it will become easier and yet more complex.

I hope you all have a good day. –GeekSpeaker

Adobe Opensources Flex, Creating a Truly OS Agnostic OS Platform.

April 26, 2007

Wow, this is huge. Bigger threat than Java eva’ waz. They are only opensourcing a portion but this is huge, and it’s an acknowledgement I think that Adobe respects the real threat that Silverlight could become over the next 10 years. Robert has some great videos talking to the folks at Adobe’s Flex team. By outsourcing, they sure are "Flexing" the format. The official press release is here. 

The definition and evolution of Flex has been influenced by our incredibly talented developer community from day one,” said David Mendels, senior vice president, Enterprise and Developer Business Unit at Adobe. “The decision to open source Flex was a completely natural next step. I am incredibly excited to deeply collaborate with the developer community on Flex, and further fuel its momentum and innovation.”

Ryan Steward has his take here:

As part of the initiative, Adobe will be releasing the source to the following parts:

  • The Flex Compilers (mxmlc, compc, asc) – the command line tools that compile flex code
  • Flex command line debugger
  • View source utilities
  • Automated Testing Framework
  • Flex core component library – this includes Apollo components
  • Build Scripts
  • Web tier compilers
  • Flex-Ajax Bridge – already open source, but moving from MIT license to MPL License

Google Search Realized though listening to the results

April 26, 2007

I think I have come to a few theories regarding Google Search results.

1. Larry and Page have the only two ID’s that can manually change–perhaps without anyone else in the company realizing–the results of Google search queries. (Consider the power given to one man. 🙂 )

2. Ranking is organically influenced by the amount of people click on the cached version of the page and spend a good deal of time there and the people who hit the back button real quick.

3. Well I thought I had a few more but I’ll stick with those two for now.

If Jobs was warned his stock options money grab would be illegal, it paints an even better picture of the type of person he is.

April 25, 2007

Kevin Allison and Richard Waters from San Francisco and Brooke Masters in New York Published this yesterday. 

Steve Jobs, chief executive of Apple, was warned in 2001 about the accounting implications of backdating stock options for top executives at the company, Apple’s former chief financial officer said on Tuesday.

The statement by Fred Anderson, who on Tuesday agreed to pay $3.5m to settle backdating charges with the Securities and Exchange Commission, raises fresh questions about the role played by Mr Jobs in improper backdating at the company.

It came as the SEC said it would not take any action against Apple itself. The regulator on Tuesday said its decision was due in part to the company’s ”swift, extensive and extraordinary cooperation” in the government’s investigation. However, fraud charges were filed against Nancy Heinen, the company’s former general counsel.

Mr Anderson’s lawyers declined to say whether he had made similar accusations under oath or as part of the SEC’s investigation into backdating.

While Tuesday’s events appear to signal that the enforcement agencies do not have evidence to pursue an immediate case against Mr Jobs, his standing as the most prominent executive to be drawn into the options backdating scandal that has engulfed more than 200 US companies has guaranteed close scrutiny of his role.

Apple has said Mr Jobs did not benefit from backdated grants and implied he was not aware of their accounting implications.

The company refused to comment on Mr Anderson’s allegations.

I think Steve Jobs is the most overrated person in the world. I think people who love him don’t understand why he probably stands for what they are against. I don’t want to drudge up his past currently but I keep telling myself, "I really do want to like this guy!" and yet, my conscious and morals tell me he’s a type who’s not to be admired. I know that won’t get me any popularity amongst my few readers, or perhaps it’s just that sediment that got you here in the first place. I love Apple, and all of the wonderful people who have made it a success–Jobs has done great too but–at the end of the day the image of himself and his values, that he forces into his brand, turns users away even if they were interested in Mac products. I could see Jobs letting everyone else around him just fall and then only worring about himself. We used to have a friend who we would joke, "So and so it cool, just ask him, he’ll tell you all about it." and I thought it relevant.

Updated Gmail Keyboard Shortcuts

April 23, 2007

Nice, an update I just noticed from my second favorite web based email client Gmail. (Zimbra Takes the Ribbon) It seems Google has updated the keyboard shortcuts. A lot of navigation reminds me of using VIM (VI Improved.)

  • c Compose Allows you to compose a new message. <Shift> + c allows you to compose a message in a new window.
  • / Search Puts your cursor in the search box.
  • k Move to newer conversation Opens or moves your cursor to a more recent conversation. You can hit <Enter> to expand a conversation.
  • j Move to older conversation Opens or moves your cursor to the next oldest conversation. You can hit <Enter> to expand a conversation.
  • n Next message Moves your cursor to the next message. You can hit <Enter> to expand or collapse a message. (Only applicable in ‘Conversation View.’)
  • p Previous message Moves your cursor to the previous message. You can hit <Enter> to expand or collapse a message. (Only applicable in ‘Conversation View.’)
  • o or <Enter> Open Opens your conversation. Also expands or collapses a message if you are in ‘Conversation View.’
  • u Return to conversation list Refreshes your page and returns you to the inbox, or list of conversations.
  • y Archive* Remove from current view
    Automatically removes the message or conversation from your current view.
  • From ‘Inbox,’ ‘y‘ means Archive
  • From ‘Starred,’ ‘y‘ means Unstar
  • From any label, ‘y‘ means Remove the label
  • * ‘y‘ has no effect if you’re in ‘Spam,’ ‘Sent,’ or ‘All Mail.’
  • m Mute Archives the conversation, and all future messages skip the Inbox unless sent or cc’d directly to you. Learn more.
  • x Select conversation Automatically checks and selects a conversation so that you can archive, apply a label, or choose an action from the drop-down menu to apply to that conversation.
  • s Star a message or conversation Adds or removes a star to a message or conversation. Stars allow you to give a message or conversation a special status.
  • ! Report spam Marks a message as spam and removes it from your conversation list.
  • r Reply Reply to the message sender. <Shift> + r allows you to reply to a message in a new window. (Only applicable in ‘Conversation View.’)
  • a Reply all Reply to all message recipients. <Shift> +a allows you to reply to all message recipients in a new window. (Only applicable in ‘Conversation View.’)
  • f Forward Forward a message. <Shift> + f allows you to forward a message in a new window. (Only applicable in ‘Conversation View.’)
  • <Esc> Escape from input field Removes the cursor from your current input field.
  • <Ctrl> + s Save draft Holding the <Ctrl> key while pressing s when composing a message will ave the current text as a draft. Make sure your cursor is in one of the text fields — either the composition pane, or any of the To, CC, BCC, or Subject fields — when using this shortcut. Macintosh users should use <Cmd> + s.
  • # Delete Moves the conversation to Trash.

Combo-keysUse the following combinations of keys to navigate through Gmail.

  • <tab> then <Enter> Send message After composing your message, use this combination to send it automatically. (Supported in Internet Explorer and Firefox, on Windows.)
  • y then o Archive and next Archive your conversation and move to the next one.
  • g then a Go to ‘All Mail’ Takes you to ‘All Mail,’ the storage site for all mail you’ve ever sent or received (and have not deleted).
  • g then s Go to ‘Starred’ Takes you to all conversations you have starred.
  • g then c Go to ‘Contacts’ Takes you to your Contacts list.
  • g then d Go to ‘Drafts’ Takes you to all drafts you have saved.
  • g then i Go to ‘Inbox’ Returns you to the inbox.

RIM to make a Windows Mobile Virtual Machine Stack

April 23, 2007

I’m working and don’t have time to blog about it but check out the article that Tony Cripps has up. I’ve read it and it’s dead on, though I would disagree slightly about Symbian, considering power users never request a symbian OS, but they do request WM, and every so often they prefer a BB because of how well it works.

Real power users use WM6 already, I have a (then priced $1,000.00) XDA Exec (Universal) which comes loaded with WM5 and I really want to put WM6 which has a more efficient kernel but Microsoft doesn’t let consumers. I feel that Microsoft letting users upgrade their OS, but not supporting them, would be a great move.