Archive for September 4th, 2008

For many companies, one million users is a large deal. For Microsoft, however, it’s a rounding error.

As reported by The Register, Microsoft announced that it has managed to attract one million users from “schools, businesses and home[s]” to its Office Live Workspace Beta experiment, which grants people …

Source:The Open Road

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A while back we noted that Amazon was planning to bring its video on demand service to the Mac. Well, it looks like they’ve finally flipped the switch because the service is now live.

Much like iTunes, they’re selling Television shows as well as offering movies for buy and rent. Unlike iTunes, it’s a streaming rather than a download service. Fortunately, they’ve got a number of free videos which will give you a sense of the quality of the service (which requires Flash).

Frankly, I’m a massive fan of Amazon MP3, so it’s good to see Amazon getting into the video business as well to put a little more competitive pressure on iTunes. I’m doubtful, however, that it will really affect the iTunes juggernaut.

[via electronista]

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Sandvox is the WYSIWYG web editor from Karelia that’s won praises from users and the design community (including an Apple Design Award) alike. You can read our previous coverage here.

This week, Karelia has released version 1.5, which offers a slew of changes. You can use Sandvox to publish to any webhost (including FTP, SFTP and MobileMe) or create a blog. The pro version lets you edit the HTML and both the pro and basic version include attractive templates that you’ll actually want to use. Changes to version 1.5 include

  • Major improvements to media processing, making it easier than ever to create and publish multimedia and media-intensive sites
  • Improvements to all pagelets, including an enhanced Contact Form and a brand new YouTube pagelet
  • Seven all-new designs, plus enhancements to other designs, bringing the total to 50
  • New blogging features, including a Collection Archives pagelet to superior manage and display older entries, automatic navigation links between entries, and “continue reading” links to superior manager longer entries

There’s much more, and you can read the full release notes here. As we said, Sandvox is a very nice tool for people who want to put up a page or site with no fuss. Sandvox requires Mac OS 10.4 or later, is a Universal Binary and comes in both pro ($79US) and standard ($49US) versions. Version 1.5 is a free upgrade for registered users.

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Just four days after Red Hat closed its second quarter, the company has announced the acquisition of Qumranet, an open-source virtualization company, positioning the open-source leader to close many more successful quarters to come.

Red Hat acquired Qumranet for $107 million in cash, according to the company, which is surprising, …

Source:The Open Road

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What’s Google thinking? For those who didn’t catch Ina Fried’s perceptive review of Google Chrome’s terms of service Tuesday, ReadWriteWeb piles on Wednesday. In the terms of service, Google claims “a perpetual, irrevocable, worldwide, royalty-free, and non-exclusive license to reproduce, adapt, alter, translate, publish, publicly perform, …

Source:The Open Road

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Despite Google’s current extension of its partnership with Mozilla, it was just a matter of time before Google got too big for anyone else’s browser and decided to write its own. Or, rather, it was just a matter of time before Google decided to borrow the ideal of others’ open-source projects and extend them, as this is what Google generally does.

And so Google has done with its newly announced open-source Chrome browser:

What we really needed wasn’t just a browser, but also a modern platform for web pages and applications, and that’s what we set out to build.

So writes Sundar Pichai, vice president of product management at Google, and so plans Google. The difference this time is that Google will actually have to contribute code back, making its Chrome browser an experiment in community building, rather than merely community borrowing. It’s also an experiment in distributing software, not merely services, an area in which Google has not made much of a dent to date.

CNET News Poll

Browser wars, redux
What browser is in your future?

Google Chrome

World wide web Explorer

Firefox

Safari

Opera

Other

View results

Ars technica thinks Chrome sounds really innovative, what with its ability to segment the processes running in different browser tabs, among other things. Mozilla’s John Lilly welcomes the competition and continued partnership with Google, but can’t help but strike an ominous chord:

…[T]he parts where [Google and Mozilla are] different, with different missions, will continue to be separate. Mozilla’s mission is to keep the Web open and participatory….

Lilly doesn’t say it, but presumably he could have finished the sentence this way: “…And Google’s mission is to drive as much traffic and advertisements through its sites and services.” This is where I believe Chrome could both thrive and stagnate.

Source:The Open Road

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