Two of the biggest
launches in Rich Internet
Application history took
place in 2007/2008 when
Adobe launched AIR 1.0 in
February '08 and
Microsoft launched
Silverlight (September
'07). At the 6th
International AJAXWorld
RIA Conference & Expo in
October SYS-CON Events is
delighted to be
presenting major industry
keynotes from the two
industry executives with
overall responsibility
for both of those massive
richer-web initiatives:
Adobe's CTO Kevin Lynch
and Scott Guthrie,
Corporate Vice President
of Microsoft's .NET
Developer Platform.
Google is currently the
pet of the American
consumer. Although many
in the industry don't
find it particularly
likeable, the company's
reputation is tops among
US consumers, based
largely on how it treats
employees and a
perception of social
responsibility, according
to a Harris poll, in
which Google dislodged
Microsoft from the perch.
Johnson & Johnson, the
Band-Aid king, came in
second and Intel third.
Microsoft is now number
10. Google was previously
number four. Companies
with the worst reps
include Halliburton,
Comcast, Northwest
Airlines and Exxon.
A little Chicago ISV
called LimitNone is suing
Google for nigh on to a
billion dollar charging
it with misappropriating
its trade secrets to beat
back Microsoft Office.
Seems a year ago March
LimitNone shared its mojo
for migrating Outlook
users and their calendars
and contacts to Gmail
with Google and according
to LimitNone's story the
widgetry turned up in
Google Apps despite
Google's assurances that
it had no intention of
developing a similar
product.
Android, due in the
second half, could
reportedly be delayed
until Q4 or maybe even
next year, according to
the tale the Wall Street
Journal tells, a
situation that opens up a
can of worms for Google.
Google has to prove that
it's more than a
one-trick pony and that
it can deliver something
other than beta software.
The paper says Google is
so absorbed with getting
a T-Mobile Android phone
out in Q4 that Sprint
Nextel and China Mobile
have fallen by the
wayside.
Nokia wants to buy the
52% of the Symbian
operating system that it
doesn't already own to
open source it and set it
free. It's a defense
against advances into the
fragmented mobile space
that Nokia and Symbian
dominate - particularly -
from the looks of case -
against Google's nascent
open source Android
initiative and the
freebie Linux-based LiMo
Foundation - but then
there's also Apple's
proprietary iPhone,
Microsoft's equally
proprietary,
royalty-charging Windows
Mobile and the
ever-present Blackberry
and Palm.
Project Insight has
released Project
Scorecard, a project
scoring system that
enables companies to
measure projects on how
they fit into corporate
goals and objectives.
With the recent economic
downturn, businesses are
hard-pressed to
prioritize major projects
and determine whether or
not they meet company
strategies.
The two Detroit pension
funds suing Yahoo in
Delaware to invalidate
its severance plan
'poison pill' have been
denied the expedited
trial that they asked for
ahead of the August 1
stockholders meeting. The
plan is supposed to
incentivize Google staff
to leave if an
acquisition were to come
off.
After failing to come to
terms with Microsoft, and
with antitrust regulators
hovering in the
background, Yahoo has
gone and cut that
death-defying deal on
search advertising with
arch-rival Google saying
the agreement could clear
$800 million in annual
revenues. The deal is
non-exclusive, applies
only to paid search and
text ads, and is supposed
to run for four years
with an option to renew
for up to 10 years.
Citrix has bought sepago
GmbH's sepagoProfile
software so user profiles
in XenDesktop, XenApp and
Provisioning Server are
integrated. Terms were
not disclosed but as part
of the deal the
Cologne-based sepago will
continue developing the
product for virtualizing
application provisioning
for the next year and a
half. Sepago specializes
in application
provisioning on large
computer networks.
ComScore has upped
Google's US search share.
It was 59.8% in March and
now for April it's 61.6%.
It gave Yahoo 20.4% and
Microsoft 9.1%. HP and
Foxconn International, a
unit of Taiwan-based Hon
Hai Precision Industry,
the big contract
manufacturer, are
building a $50 million
factory outside St
Petersburg where they
will produce a
half-million PCs a year
for the Russian market
starting next year. It
could become a hub for
the Baltic states and
Scandinavia. Hon Hai,
meanwhile, is going to
start making laptops.
From Application
Virtualization to Xen, a
round-up of the
virtualization themes &
topics being discussed in
NYC June 23-24, 2008 by
the world-class speaker
faculty at the 3rd
International
Virtualization Conference
& Expo being held by
SYS-CON Events in The
Roosevelt Hotel, in
midtown Manhattan.
Google has opened up App
Engine to one and all.
The cloud-sharing gambit
meant to entice
developers to build their
web applications on the
same infrastructure that
powers Google's own
applications - and in the
process locks them into
Google instead of
Microsoft - has been in
beta for the last six
weeks and limited to
10,000 developers.
Yahoo! founders Jerry
Yang and David Filo
received stupid advice
from their investment
bank advisers and blew
their chance to close the
deal with Microsoft as of
this Sunday morning.
Neither Yang nor Filo are
experts on how to sell a
company in a
multi-billion dollar
deal. They have relied on
their investment bankers
and advisers since the
negotiations started with
Microsoft. The difference
between the offered price
of $33 and the asking
price of $40 per share is
roughly $1.4b per share,
so it's not small
potatoes.
Reminding people of how
its backing was the
making of Linux, IBM, to
no one's surprise, has
thrown its support behind
cloud computing, that
delicious nexus of every
chi-chi buzzword
technology currently in
vogue: Web 2.0, rich
Internet applications,
software-as-a-service,
SOA, grid computing, Web
Services, virtualization
and utility computing.
IBM calls its initiative
Blue Cloud - like it
could have another name -
and claims it's a
'game-changing model for
Internet-scale
computing,' providing
customer with just the
right size computer power
while at one and the same
time being 'green' as
well as 'self-healing and
self-managing' based on
open standards and Linux.
Lordy, if this thing was
a cute guy with money, it
would be every mother's
dream.
Google's Web Toolkit
Release Candidate 1.5 is
out. That's the stuff
programmers can use to
develop and debug web
applications in Java and
then deploy them as
highly optimized
JavaScript. That way
they're supposed to be
able to sidestep common
AJAX headaches like
browser compatibility,
and enjoy significant
performance and
productivity gains.
Facebook, the social
networking site that
Microsoft owns a pricey
sliver of, says it's
going to open source its
year-old Facebook
Platform so it's easier
for developers to build
applications on it. It's
reportedly calling the
effort fbOpen and the
move puts it on a
collision course with the
Google OpenSocial
initiative that MySpace,
Yahoo and now AOL back so
third-party applications
can access the sites'
data.
In the largest
third-party win yet for
the year-old Google
Gears, as well as a win
for the
browser-as-a-platform,
they say, News Corp's
MySpace social networking
site has used the Google
widgetry to upgrade its
mail so users can search
and sort their mail in
real-time. The MySpace
news was barely out of
the bag when Opera up and
announced that it'll be
supporting Gears in its
desktop and mobile
browsers to push the
browser as a full
platform for
applications, it said.
As soon as Google
announced the
availability of
browser-based Google
Earth functionality, GIS
Planning's development
team jumped on the
opportunity to integrate
the application into
their existing Google
Maps-powered services. In
doing so, GIS Planning
became one of the first
developers anywhere to
successfully integrate
this technology.
Google is opening up App
Engine to one and all.
The cloud-sharing gambit
meant to entice
developers to build their
web applications on the
same infrastructure that
powers Google's own
applications - and in the
process lock them into
Google instead of
Microsoft - has been in
beta for the last six
weeks and limited to
10,000 developers. Google
says that another 150,000
developers are on the
waiting list and so on
Wednesday, the first day
of Google I/O, the
company's two-day
developer event in San
Francisco, will take down
the barricade. Google
also disclosed what it's
going to charge for App
Engine starting later
this year.
Google's Web Toolkit
Release Candidate 1.5
will be available later
this week. That's the
stuff programmers can use
to develop and debug web
applications in Java and
then deploy them as
highly optimized
JavaScript. That way
they're supposed to be
able to sidestep common
AJAX headaches like
browser compatibility,
and enjoy significant
performance and
productivity gains.
Friday morning the local
Fox television station in
New York City broke the
news - Apple was suing
New York City. Six out of
100 of their viewers
thought Apple had the
right to sue the City,
but 94 out of 100 viewers
are now calling for New
Yorkers to drop Apple and
its products, including
the iPhone and Macs. New
Yorkers are pissed off!
New York City,
universally known as The
Big Apple, is facing a
lawsuit from Steve Jobs'
Apple Computer Inc. for,
of all things, copyright
infringement.
Office will support the
Open Document Format
(ODF) 1.1 format when
Office 2007 Service Pack
2 arrives in the first
half of 2009. Microsoft
said users will be able
to open, edit and save
documents in ODF from
directly inside Office
application without
having to install any
other code. That means no
more translators. They
will even be able to set
ODF as the default.
Google co-founder and
billionaire Larry Page in
Washington to speak at
the think tank where
Google CEO Eric Schmidt
is chairman of the board
- and apparently meet
with government officials
too - claimed that a
Microsoft-Yahoo merger
would 'monopolize online
communications, stifle
innovation and curb
competition' - according
to an AP report - but
doubted that a
Google-Yahoo advertising
deal would encounter an
antitrust obstacle.
Parallels said Wednesday
that its Desktop
virtualization widgetry
for the Mac, which lets
Intel-based Apples run
Windows or Linux along
with Mac OS X, has sold
more than a million
copies, a nice chunk of
the Macs out there. It is
the largest-selling Mac
utility and gives Mac
users access to all those
Windows programs it?s
starved for.
Dell is going to try to
cut the energy
consumption of its
laptops and desktops by
up to 25% between now and
2010 to avoid millions of
tons of CO2 emissions,
comparing its pledge to
HP's, which is supposed
to cut relative its 2005
levels. It says Dell
OptiPlex desktop are down
nearly 50% since 2005 and
Latitude laptops are down
16% since 2006.
Zoho is gonna try
rustling some of Google's
prized Apps users. It's
designed a unified login
to encourage Google and
Yahoo visitors to try
Zoho applications using
the user names and
passwords they use with
their Google and Yahoo
accounts.
Google has taken its
Postini investment and
turned out Google Web
Security for the
Enterprise, which is
supposed to protect
against spyware, viruses
and zero-hour threats in
real-time whether the
user is on the corporate
network or working
remotely like at a hotel
or in an airport. If it
detects malware it's
supposed to neutralize it
before it can reach the
company network.
By now it is conventional
wisdom to say that there
was an IBM Era of
computing, then a
Microsoft Era, and now we
are in the Google Era. In
this post, I will explain
why Microsoft was not the
'next IBM' and why Google
is not the 'next
Microsoft' - there are
significant qualitative
differences among them,
quite apart from their
status as the dominant,
era-defining players.
Understanding that
qualitative difference is
crucial for third party
vendors, like Zoho, to
thrive. I was reminded of
this because of the
IBM/Google partnership
unveiled last week. As an
aside, I have coined a
kind of Moore s Law on
these computing eras.
Microsoft issued a short,
murky statement Sunday
afternoon saying it has
suggested a limited
alignment with Yahoo. It
does not explain its
proposal. Perhaps it's
thinking along the lines
of the deal Yahoo is
supposed to be
negotiating with Google,
perhaps a partial
acquisition (perhaps
Yahoo's Panama platform).
Ulitzer, Inc., which
initially made the
headlines with its 'job
descriptions from the
future,' announced today
that it will launch its
Ulitzer 'beta' site on
July 4, 2008, with 5,500
authors and 600,000
original articles,
published in more than
5,000 topic-specific
online journals. Each
journal offers up to 14
content-specific
sections, written by the
world's most respected
authors, who are experts
in their particular
fields. All Ulitzer
authors will get paid for
their contributions.
Verizon Wireless is
snubbing Google's
Linux-based Android
initiative to go with the
LiMo Foundation's mobile
Linux spec for its next
wave of mobile phones
expected next year. Along
with Verizon, Mozilla
signed up - giving the
consortium its first
major open source ISV -
and a key one for
conveying applications.
Zoho announced that it is
welcoming Google and
Yahoo users with a
unified login designed to
encourage those users to
try Zoho applications.
Now, Google and Yahoo
users who visit Zoho can
simply log into Zoho
using the usernames and
passwords associated with
their Google and Yahoo
accounts.
It's only taken Borland
two years but it's
finally dumped its
CodeGear tools division,
responsible for Borland's
hereditary JBuilder,
Delphi and C++ Builder
lines as well as its new
web ventures into PHP and
Ruby, said to be used by
7.5 million developers.
Embarcadero Technologies
is buying it for about
$23 million and the
transaction's supposed to
close in 30-60 days.
Thomas Cressey Bravo the
private equity house that
bought Embarcadero and
took it private last
year, is fronting the
money.
Microsoft, which spent $6
billion on aQuantive and
was chasing Yahoo for its
ads before it came to a
dead stop, has been
supporting - as in
helping write -
legislation in New York
and Connecticut that
would regulate the data
that companies like Yahoo
and Google collect for
targeted advertising. The
New York bill, which
Google, Yahoo, AOL and
Facebook oppose, would
let consumers opt-out of
tracking.
So how does it feel to
have witnessed one of
technology's little
miracles this week? I
mean Yahoo's stock price
successfully defying
gravity. It's as close as
any of us will ever get
to an apparition of the
Virgin Mary floating on a
cloud without any visible
means of support.
Apparently Wall Street
isn't convinced that
Microsoft has indeed
pushed on despite leaks
that it has reached out
instead to Facebook,
another company with an
inflated view of itself.
Founded in 2006, SYS-CON
Media's 'Virtualization
Journal' is the world's
first magazine devoted
exclusively to what
Gartner has earmarked as
the single highest-impact
IT trend through 2012:
virtualization. And now
it will be available on
newsstands worldwide, as
SYS-CON Media seeks to
support the world-beating
'International
Virtualization Conference
& Expo' series produced
by SYS-CON Events with
top-quality print
collateral, available at
newsstands wherever
fine-quality technical
journals are sold.
The Ubuntu Linux-based
gOS operating system from
Good OS LLC
(www.thinkgos.com)
includes so many Google
applications like Gmail,
Google Docs, Google
Calendar, Google News
Google Maps and YouTube
that it's often referred
to as the Google
operating system. It also
includes Firefox, Skype,
Facebook and OpenOffice
2.3.
A Philippines-based Web
2.0 start-up called Morph
Labs thinks its cloud can
rain on Google's
newfangled App Engine.
Morph Labs was founded by
Winston Damarillo, the
guy who did Gluecode, the
only open source company
IBM ever bought, a move
made to protect its
precious WebSphere
franchise. The start-up
claims to have done all
the back-end cutwork to
make it easy for
developers to get their
software up and running
as a service on Amazon?s
Web Services (AWS),
freeing them from
Google's Microsoft-like
vendor lock-in.
At press time the Wall
Street Journal was
reporting that Yahoo! and
Google think they've come
up with a way around the
Justice Department's
anticipated objections to
them climbing into bed
together - one of
Yahoo!'s alternatives to
being acquired by
Microsoft - and that a
deal could be announced
next week.
Apple's taken some heat
lately for their decision
to push Safari to anybody
who runs their Apple
Software Update utility.
I didn't want Safari, but
unless I opt out of it
I'll get it. Now Sun and
Google are doing the same
thing with the Google
Toolbar. It isn't enough
that they allow you to
opt-out.