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Sep
04

WideOrbit secures $9.5 million in funding

WideOrbit, a software developer that manages advertising sales for more than 1,000 TV stations, radio stations, cable networks, and stadiums, announced that it raised $9.5 million of Series D funding in a round led by Mayfield Fund. But according to the company, it’s hoping for an additional $800,000 before it closes the round.

Thanks to its latest round, WideOrbit has now raised $30 million in funding since its inception.

Although advertising is expected to slow over the coming months amid economic troubles, WideOrbit’s ability to raise its latest round of funding may suggest that some venture capitalists don’t necessarily trust speculation that it will be so bad. But with a set of solutions that aim at maximizing an advertising campaign’s effectiveness online, while minimizing expenses, WideOrbit’s solutions aren’t unique. And in a time of economic uncertainty, its services may not offer enough for it to compete on the same level as competitors such as Harris or any other companies offering ad campaign optimization.

Aug
31

Open-sourcing factual data, Wikipedia style

To this end, I think we should create a Wikipedia for data: a global database for all of these important data sources to which we all contribute and that anyone can use. When a user reports an inaccurate phone number in your products, save it back to the DataWiki so everyone can benefit, and in return, you get everyone else’s improvements as well. If your local movie theater doesn’t have listings data in DataWiki, you can type it in yourself, and everyone in your town can benefit, and all the products you use that access movie listings will automatically update. Need better mapping data for a city? Pay to collect it, and upload it to the DataWiki. In return you get all the other cities other companies paid for (sort of like a company contributing device drivers to the Linux kernel).

He adds that some of the data has quality problems or is incomplete. In sum, Taylor believes that innovation is stymied and the barrier to entry is raised in the current environment. It’s not just the need for lawyers and contracts but also the issue of companies that sell data restricting use.

Bret Taylor, formerly of Google and now of FriendFeed, has a greater appreciation for the business development function. In a post today he wrote about the challenges of getting legal access to factual data–such as mapping, stock quotes, white pages, TV schedules, movie show times, and sports scores–for use in applications.

The question is, will the companies that already have the data be of assistance? It’s not exactly in their best financial interest to give away their content, but the example of Wikipedia should give them the incentive to press the pause button.

See also: Sarah Perez discusses where to find open data on the Web, such as CKAN (Comprehensive Knowledge Archive Network), OpenStreetMap and Freebase.

If you want to experiment with a new driving directions algorithm, it is infinitely more difficult than coming up with an algorithm; you have to hire a lawyer and a sign a contract with a company that collects that data in the country you are developing for.

For centuries, companies have made money in exchange for doing the busy work of collecting, massaging, and publishing factual data. The same was true for encyclopedia data until recently. Taylor is definitely onto something, but it presents some real data collection challenges. The open-source community is sure to take up the challenge.

What the solution to freeing up the data? Taylor advocates open-sourcing factual data, and competing on use of the data, not access to it. He wrote:

Bret Taylor: Free the data

Aug
30

Adobe sets date for CS4 launch

CS3 is currently offered in four configurations: Master Collection, which includes virtually the entire Adobe design software lineup; Design Premium, which includes Photoshop and other tools for designers working in print, Web and mobile applications; Web Premium, targeted at Web site designers; and Production Premium, geared toward people designing film, Web and mobile content.

Adobe on Tuesday said it will launch an update to its flagship
Creative Suite software bundle on September 23.

In Photoshop CS3, which debuted last year, Adobe added rudimentary 3D editing and manipulation tools.

As for Photoshop CS4, Adobe has said publicly that it will make available a 64-bit version of the photo-editing software, but only for Windows and not for
Mac OS X.

The company has offered few details of the planned CS4 release. The current iteration of the suite, CS3, is offered in several configurations that include various combinations of the company’s core applications, such as Photoshop, Illustrator, Flash, Acrobat and InDesign.

Just ahead of the CS3 launch last March, Adobe made available a public beta test version of Photoshop CS3. For CS4, the company in May posted “preview versions” of its Dreamweaver Web design software, Fireworks image editing application, and Soundbooth audio editing tools.

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

Aug
30

TypeRacer tests your typing skills, patience

[via Kotaku]

A side effect of that was seeing our own Caroline McCarthy in action, typing away. In case you’re wondering part of the reason she’s so productive, it’s her keyboard skills–which I think put her in the league of a court stenographer. If you’d like to know how you stack up in the typing world, there’s TypeRacer–a wonderfully simple game that pits you up against other typers, and of course your 100-plus key stead.

See how your typing skills stack up with TypeRacer. And yes, in case you were wondering: Even the fastest cars are still VW Beetles.

The goal is to type as well as you can to get your
car from point A to point B. All the while you can compete with other users in real time and “race” across the landscape of the English language.

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

The one nice thing about TypeRacer compared with Keybr (review) is that it uses real words. It’s also a stickler about errors, requiring you to go back and make any fixes before continuing the race, keeping lead-finger slopsters from winning based on speed alone. I’m not really sure if TypeRacer really helps you type any faster, but it sure is fun.

What’s your score?

This past week at the Web 2.0 Expo has been a great chance to meet up with other bloggers and come face to face with some of the companies we write about every day. It’s also a great time to see how other people work, as we’re all packed into small seats in large auditoriums, or scouring rooms for the last remaining outlet to get the necessary wattage to keep writing.

Aug
26

Quick appellate review of patent claim constructio

On February 14, 2007, the Federal Circuit decided–ostensibly for the first time–to hear an interlocutory appeal on claim construction. (See The Regents of the Univ. of California v. Dako N. Am. available here in PDF) In that case, the trial court had denied issuing a preliminary injunction against the accused infringer. The denial of that injunction was appealed. Meanwhile, the case continued before the trial court and a subsequent, interlocutory order on claim construction was issued. At the parties’ request, the trial court certified that interlocutory order for appeal under section 1292(b).

The high reversal rate for claim construction is especially problematic because most claim construction decisions cannot be immediately appealed. Interpreting the claims is only the first step in the infringement analysis. After they’re interpreted, that construction has to be applied to the accused product or process. Most often that’s something the jury is supposed to decide, which means you may have to go through a long and costly trial before a judgment is entered. That judgment–either that the patent claims are infringed or they are not–is what the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (the “Federal Circuit”) ultimately reviews.

In his remarks at the 23rd Annual Intellectual Property Law Conference of the American Bar Association, Judge Michel, the chief judge of the Federal Circuit, cautioned that lawyers should not automatically assume that the Federal Circuit will refuse to hear every interlocutory appeal of a claim construction opinion. He acknowledged that the Federal Circuit has heard only one such appeal to date. But Michel suggested that, given the right set of facts, the court may be willing to hear more.

“This is not an ordinary case of claim construction in which, for example, a district court has decided a claim construction issue and one party asserts error. Here, the same district court has revisited the claim construction issue that is before this court. Indeed, were we not to grant the petition, the merits panel in the pending appeals would be reviewing the district court’s first order based upon the limited record before the district court when it considered the motion for a preliminary injunction, even though the district court itself has not revisited the issue based upon a more complete record. Because the matters in the recent order are thus intertwined with the issues in the pending appeals, we determine that granting the petition (to hear the interlocutory appeal) in these unusual circumstances is warranted.”

The most difficult issue in many patent cases is claim construction, that is, the court’s interpretation and articulation of what exactly the claims of the patent mean. Interpreting patent claims is hard work. It usually involves consideration of technical jargon that, especially when significant time has passed since the patent was filed, may be obsolete or just plain awkward. As a result, courts don’t always get claim construction right the first time. Indeed, a substantial percentage–depending on whom you ask, the anecdotal figure is around 50 percent–of trial court claim constructions are successfully challenged on appeal.

However, if the claim construction was wrong in the first place, the jury’s verdict on infringement is usually wrong, too. That means a second trial will likely be necessary, which results in more work for the courts, more time lost in litigation, and more money spent on lawyers. The rub, argue critics, is that much of this additional expense and inefficiency could be avoided if claim construction opinions could be appealed prior to a final judgment on infringement.

Of course, the idea of an intermediate or “interlocutory” appeal is not unique to patent law. Federal law expressly allows for the immediate appeal of a non-final, interlocutory decision. However, such appeals are supposed to be the exception, rather than the rule. By statute, an interlocutory decision can be certified for immediate appeal if it “involves a controlling question of law as to which there is substantial ground for difference of opinion and that an immediate appeal from the order may materially advance the ultimate termination of the litigation.” 28 U.S.C. 1292(b) The appellate court then gets to choose whether or not to hear the appeal or send it back.

Traditionally, the Federal Circuit has refused to hear all interlocutory appeals of claim construction decisions. That tradition, however, may be changing.

The question is, what are the right facts to justify an interlocutory appeal? Allowing for an interlocutory claim construction appeal in every case would arguably overwhelm the Federal Circuit and could literally add years to the life of the average patent litigation. As such, the Federal Circuit is extremely unlikely, of its own accord, to throw open the gates to these types of appeals. That said, the Federal Circuit has cracked open the door. Time will tell if more interlocutory appeals of claim construction opinions are allowed through.

Put simply, the Federal Circuit recognized that under these “unusual circumstances” it made a lot of sense to hear both appeals at once–so it did it.

The Federal Circuit’s decision to finally hear an interlocutory claim construction appeal received relatively little fanfare at the time. Likely, this is because lawyers viewed it as limited to its somewhat unusual set of facts, that is, where there was already a pending appeal between the same parties on the same patents. But the Regents case is significant because it may signal a change in the Federal Circuit’s approach to interlocutory appeals of claim construction opinions.

The Federal Circuit decided it would hear that appeal. It explained its rationale as follows:

Aug
26

DiggSuggest tells you what you should read on Digg

Plugging in your Digg username to DiggSuggest will give you a list of keywords related to things you've dugg before. You also get a list of stories the service thinks you'll like. (click to try with my username)

[via Digg]

DiggSuggest is a new service created by 20-year-old Digg user who has used the service’s API data feed to provide a feature the popular social news site currently doesn’t: suggested readings.

That’s about all it does for now, but it’s a wonderful way to discover new stories, and quite a bit more engaging than browsing the mass of stories in the upcoming section. Many people, including myself, have been waiting for Digg to get around to creating a suggested reading service. Until that happens, this is about the closest thing you can get.

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

All you have to do is plug in your Digg username (or someone else’s) and it will scour your past dugg stories to serve up suggestions for stories both popular and upcoming. The more you digg the better the results should be. Not only does it show stories, but it also groups together keywords related to the things you like.

Aug
24

Salesforce tool a key part of platform push

“We have a message for IT. We didn’t have that when I started Salesforce.com. We had to figure out how to do this and prove that it works. Now we have to get face-to-face (with customers) to explain it,” he said.

Benioff hopes to expand Salesforce’s platform business beyond its existing base of CRM customers to virtually any online business. It’s a bold move that puts Salesforce in direct competition with Microsoft, Amazon.com, and many other providers of cloud-computing services.

Salesforce has already partnered with Google, to offer Google Apps integrated into Salesforce’s applications, which could lead to a larger platform deal.

Visualforce uses a concept called components to make application building easier. The company has made available components of the Salesforce user interface so that developers can reassemble them and combine them with new elements in their applications.

The tool is part of the company’s Summer ’08 release of its applications.

Salesforce.com on Wednesday said it has launched a new tool, Visualforce, that enables its customers to build custom user interfaces for applications running on the company’s hosted infrastructure.

One early Visualforce customer, large European financial-software maker Coda, has written an accounting application called Coda2go using the tool that is based entirely on Force.com.

Visualforce, which Salesforce calls a “user interface as a service” tool, enables customized user interfaces to be created for any application developed on Force.com. Customers can use the tool to build applications that can be deployed through standard Web browsers or on mobile devices.

The new tool is a key part of the company’s platform-as-a-service business line, called Force.com. Salesforce, best known for its software-as-a-service customer relationship management (CRM) applications, is branching out into the business of providing cloud-computing services.

(Credit:
Dan Farber/CNET News.com)

CEO Marc Benioff has said the platform-as-a-service business represents “Salesforce.com’s second decade….it’s our next area of investment.”

Salesforce.com CEO Marc Benioff and Google chief Eric Schmidt.

However, Benioff acknowledges the challenge of convincing customers, who know Salesforce only as an online CRM provider, that it can also be a trusted platform service. “It’s hand-to-hand combat, like the days of client-server computing,” he told me last month, while on a promotional tour for Force.com.

Aug
22

Microsoft’s worst emails of all time

Microsoft was first to spot the open-source threat. It’s unfortunate that it didn’t also recognize the open-source opportunity.

The Seattle Post Intelligencer has collected and ranked the all-time worst (read: most incriminating) Microsoft emails of all time, and a dandy list it is, too. For heavy email users like me, it’s also a reminder that some things are better left unsaid…or at least unwritten.

The project must be cool enough that the intellectual reward adequately compensates for the time invested by developers. The Linux OS [operating system] excels in this respect….

OSS [open-source software] systems are considered credible because the source code is available from potentially millions of places and individuals. The likelihood that Apache will cease to exist is orders of magnitudes lower than the likelihood that WordPerfect, for example, will disappear. The disappearance of Apache is not tied to the disappearance of binaries (which are affected by purchasing shifts, etc.) but rather to the disappearance of source code and the knowledge base….

There’s much more. I encourage you to read them all. They illustrate that Microsoft has long been one of the most forward-thinking and self-aware companies in the business…but also one of the most threatened (and threatening).

Perhaps my favorite of the bunch is Jim Allchin’s 2004 blast against Windows…and in favor of the
Mac:

But then there’s also the internal acknowledgements of the rising threat (and validity) of open-source software:

[On attacking Linux.] Linux’s homebase is currently commodity network and server infrastructure. By folding extended functionality (e.g. Storage+ in file systems, DAV/POD for networking) into today’s commodity services, we raise the bar & change the rules of the game.

I am not sure how the company lost sight of what matters to our customers (both business and home) the most, but in my view we lost our way. I think our teams lost sight of what bug-free means, what resilience means, what full scenarios mean, what security means, what performance means, how important current applications are, and really understanding what the most important problems [our] customers face are. I see lots of random features and some great vision, but that doesn’t translate onto great products.

I would buy a Mac today if I was not working at Microsoft.

commentary

Aug
22

Intel Centrino 2 chips hit with problems, delays

The initial rollout won’t take place until July 14. The next phase will take place in August.

Intel will delay the introduction of its highly anticipated “Montevina” Centrino 2 mobile chips due to technical and certification problems, the chipmaker said Tuesday.

Note: Intel Centrino 2 processors expected on July 14 include the T9600, P8600, and P8400, running at 2.8GHz, 2.4GHz, and 2.26GHz respectively. A high-end upgrade to the current Core 2 Extreme X9000, the X9100, is also expected. The X9100 is expected to run at 3.06GHz with a 44W thermal envelope. Pricing will range from $209 for the P8400 to $530 for the T9600 to $851 for the X9100.

WiMax silicon is also slated to come out later, though Intel is not saying when exactly. The Intel module that combines Wi-Fi and WiMax is called Echo Peak.

The second problem is centered on technical issues with the Centrino 2 “Cantiga” chipset and the Intel graphics that is integrated into the chipset. In short, Intel will not release a chipset initially with Intel integrated graphics.

The “GM” version that includes the Intel integrated graphics will not be available until early August. “It will be ramping by August 5,” Brown said. The two initial versions of the chipset with Intel integrated graphics are the GM45 and GM47. Intel will also make available its updated Wi-Fi technology called “Shirley Peak” in August, she said.

The delay of Centrino 2 also gives rise to a broader competitive issue: Advanced Micro Devices is set to announce its new “Puma” mobile platform in the near future that will feature both improved discrete and integrated graphics. For example, AMD’s 780M-based integrated graphics is expected to be very competitive with Intel’s integrated graphics.

Instead, on July 14, Intel will offer a “PM” version for discrete (stand-alone) graphics chips only, Brown said. The July 14 version of the chipset can be used with discrete graphics chips from Nvidia and AMD-ATI, for example, but will not have Intel integrated graphics.

“Initially what will be available on July 14 are the (Centrino 2) processors and some of the chipsets,” Intel spokesperson Connie Brown said. These processors include the “T” and “X” (Extreme) series. Other Centrino 2 silicon will come later.

Wi-Fi is “not a technical issue. It’s paperwork,” Brown said. “There were mistakes made while filing and testing our wireless antennas.” The paperwork involves both the FCC and other government organizations like Canada’s IC, she said.

The two principal problems concern, one, the certification (on the Centrino 2 platform) of the Wi-Fi wireless standard and, two, technical issues with the Centrino 2 chipset.

Intel had recently been saying that the Centrino 2 mobile platform would launch after Computex, toward the end of June. Centrino 2 features upgraded integrated graphics, high-speed WiMax wireless silicon, and native support for High-bandwidth Digital Content Protection (HDCP), among other features.

Brown said the chipsets must be “re-screened.” This means basically that some chipsets need to be rechecked to see if they have “an issue,” she said. Intel is not specifying, however, what the issue is.

Aug
22

‘Internet Week’ digital-culture fest to hit NY in

The office of New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, himself a local tech baron, has officially sanctioned the festival. “It will capture the energy, diversity, and creative spirit that are a hallmark of both New York City and the Internet,” a statement from Bloomberg read.

“The event can take whatever form you imagine,” the Internet Week site promises, “within the boundaries of good taste, of course.”

In addition, a number of tech and media companies–PaidContent, Flavorpill, The Onion, Thrillist, and Nokia, to name a few–have announced preliminary plans to host events in conjunction.

Called Internet Week New York (OK, they could have picked a better name), it will span June 3 to 10 and encompass several existing events like Federated Media Publishing’s Conversational Marketing Summit, Advertising Age’s Advertising 2.0 conference, and the 12th annual Webby Awards.

Hosting a week of technology events isn’t entirely new for the city, as it has traditionally held a “Digital Technology Week” in conjunction with Ziff Davis Media’s annual DigitalLife gadget expo. But with last year’s DigitalLife a disappointment, and Ziff Davis’ future uncertain, it’s an apt time for the city to shake up its showcasing of the local tech industry. And with a focus on new media and entertainment, Internet Week will be a more accurate portrayal of what actually goes on in Gotham, rather than centering on a hardware trade show in which most of the products are brought in from out of town.

In addition to Bloomberg’s office, Internet Week is presented by the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences, which organizes the Webby Awards. The festival’s “executive council,” meanwhile, is a who’s-who of Gotham digital media: among its ranks are About.com CEO Scott Meyer, TreeHugger founder Graham Hill, Greycroft Partners czar Alan Patricof, former AOL exec and current Pilot Group investor Bob Pittman, NBC Universal digital chief George Kliavkoff, and CondeNet President Sarah Chubb.

Despite its A-list leadership, the organizers of Internet Week have said that as an homage to the “open structure” of the Web, anyone can create an event in conjunction with the festival for free.

It might not be Austin’s South by Southwest Interactive, but New York City will be getting its own digital-culture festival.

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