and this is how a lot of patents should be dealt with
- http://jacquesmattheij.com/my-brush-with-a-patent-troll
Friday, September 21, 2012
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
City Lens
At its Windows Phone 8 event in New York City, Nokia not only showed off its flagship Lumia 920, it also showed off some of Nokia’s unique Windows Phone apps and features, including its new PureView Camera and Nokia City Lens technologies.
Nokia’s City Lens is an augmented reality (AR) application that allows users to find things to do — and get more information about a location — simply by pointing their phone’s camera at a location.
http://mashable.com/2012/09/05/nokia-city-lens/
Great.....now all we need is for 200m people to buy the Nokia Lumina to make this work.
Unless there is some common platform where all location information is API'd together (eg wikipedia, foursquare,facebook) Augmented Reality will only work when there is critical mass on a single platform.
Nokia’s City Lens is an augmented reality (AR) application that allows users to find things to do — and get more information about a location — simply by pointing their phone’s camera at a location.
http://mashable.com/2012/09/05/nokia-city-lens/
Great.....now all we need is for 200m people to buy the Nokia Lumina to make this work.
Unless there is some common platform where all location information is API'd together (eg wikipedia, foursquare,facebook) Augmented Reality will only work when there is critical mass on a single platform.
Monday, August 27, 2012
Cloudification of the battery
http://www.tgdaily.com/hardware-features/65720-overclocked-nexus-7-tablet-hits-20-ghz
Overclocked Nexus 7 tablet hits 2.0 GHz
Overclocked Nexus 7 tablet hits 2.0 GHz
The talented devs over at XDA have managed to overclock a quad-core Google Nexus 7 tablet to a screaming 2.0 GHz using a specially coded "Elite Kernel."
Powered by Nvidia's quad-core Tegra 3 processor, the tablet was overclocked to a sweet 1.7 GHz earlier this month, easily passing 7000 in Quadrant benchmarks.
lol and it probably ran for 20 mins unless plugged into the mains.......if you want to test something plugged into the mains then i suggest you use a PC.........
When we have the first "mobile phone/tablet" that comes with a monthly "Cloud processor fee" you know we are on the right track.
Thursday, July 12, 2012
Aereo wins "first round" in its case
http://paidcontent.org/2012/07/11/diller-and-aereo-win-first-round-injunction-denied/
Aereo, a bold bid to transmit television via broadband using tiny off-site antennas, won a major victory in federal court Wednesday when a judge denied the plaintiffs’ demand for a preliminary injunction blocking the service from allowing timeshifting during a live broadcast.
The judge found that Aereo’s method of enabling individuals to control viewing and recording from their PCs or mobile devices was covered by an earlier appellate decision. (Full ruling embedded below.)
IAC Chairman Barry Diller, an investor in the startup, has insisted all along that Aereo is legal because the antennas are leased to subscribers who control them. After the ruling, he told the New York Times: “I did think we were on the side of the angels…certainly for consumers — good to see the judge saw it that way.”
The plaintiffs, including Fox, Tribune Company, PBS, and Univision, quickly issued a statement of their own, promising to appeal:Today’s decision is a loss for the entire creative community. The judge has denied our request for preliminary relief – ruling that it is ok to misappropriate copyrighted material and retransmit it without compensation. While we are disappointed, we will continue to fight to protect our copyrights and expect to prevail on appeal. ....more
Remember though this is just "the preliminary injunction" basically this means that the judge found.....there is a case here to be made by both parties and its worth the time to hear both sides of the argument.
It doesnt mean Aereo has won and we will see tv online everywhere, it just means...break out your check book boys this is going to get expensive on both sides.
Aereo, a bold bid to transmit television via broadband using tiny off-site antennas, won a major victory in federal court Wednesday when a judge denied the plaintiffs’ demand for a preliminary injunction blocking the service from allowing timeshifting during a live broadcast.
The judge found that Aereo’s method of enabling individuals to control viewing and recording from their PCs or mobile devices was covered by an earlier appellate decision. (Full ruling embedded below.)
IAC Chairman Barry Diller, an investor in the startup, has insisted all along that Aereo is legal because the antennas are leased to subscribers who control them. After the ruling, he told the New York Times: “I did think we were on the side of the angels…certainly for consumers — good to see the judge saw it that way.”
The plaintiffs, including Fox, Tribune Company, PBS, and Univision, quickly issued a statement of their own, promising to appeal:Today’s decision is a loss for the entire creative community. The judge has denied our request for preliminary relief – ruling that it is ok to misappropriate copyrighted material and retransmit it without compensation. While we are disappointed, we will continue to fight to protect our copyrights and expect to prevail on appeal. ....more
Remember though this is just "the preliminary injunction" basically this means that the judge found.....there is a case here to be made by both parties and its worth the time to hear both sides of the argument.
It doesnt mean Aereo has won and we will see tv online everywhere, it just means...break out your check book boys this is going to get expensive on both sides.
Thursday, April 12, 2012
Samsung partnering with OpenX
One of the stories that got buried with all the other major news this week was that Samsung is partnering with OpenX
It didnt get much coverage and whilst i dont have a lot of faith in the new management at OpenX it makes for a very interesting read.
At the recent Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas earlier this year, Samsung expressed a vision of the future where consumers’ numerous household electronics, from TVs and laptops to fridges and dishwashers all communicate with another, per Mr. Elkin.
“You can see where advertising could easily fit across all of those devices,” Mr. Elkin said.
“It seems like Samsung, with its broader consumer electronics portfolio, is at least hinting in a longer-term perspective at how that device universe might work together in an advertising context,” he said.
- http://www.mobilemarketer.com/cms/news/ad-networks/12514.html
What are you thoughts? is this a big move for Samsung or will they fold before it gets off the ground as they dont have the long term vision to see it through. Will OpenX become the hub for buying impressions across "the rest"
Cheers,
Dean
It didnt get much coverage and whilst i dont have a lot of faith in the new management at OpenX it makes for a very interesting read.
At the recent Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas earlier this year, Samsung expressed a vision of the future where consumers’ numerous household electronics, from TVs and laptops to fridges and dishwashers all communicate with another, per Mr. Elkin.
“You can see where advertising could easily fit across all of those devices,” Mr. Elkin said.
“It seems like Samsung, with its broader consumer electronics portfolio, is at least hinting in a longer-term perspective at how that device universe might work together in an advertising context,” he said.
- http://www.mobilemarketer.com/cms/news/ad-networks/12514.html
What are you thoughts? is this a big move for Samsung or will they fold before it gets off the ground as they dont have the long term vision to see it through. Will OpenX become the hub for buying impressions across "the rest"
Cheers,
Dean
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
ACCC Vs Google
The Australian ACCC is a government agency (kind of like the FTC in that they manage competition/truth in advertising etc they also play the legal role similar to that of the Federal Attorney General).
A ruling came down yesterday that will interest everyone who has every place an online advertisement using "Key Words".
This cannot be the final outcome for the case and i fully expect Google to appeal however the basics of the case are this.
The ACCC have won a $500m ruling against Google that they used keywords belonging to competitors in the advertisements they've placed and that Google is responsible for the action of its users contrary to the terms of use.
What i dont understand about this case (thankfully i'm not a lawyer....) is how does this infer rights to a company far beyond its current use.
Eg does that mean i can never use the word "Honda" in any advertisement even though i sell Hondas (as does http://www.tradingpost.com.au/)
How does this affect the IP harmonization rules between the USA and Australia? technically arent the USA courts supposed to reflect the decisions made in Australia?
A ruling came down yesterday that will interest everyone who has every place an online advertisement using "Key Words".
This cannot be the final outcome for the case and i fully expect Google to appeal however the basics of the case are this.
The ACCC have won a $500m ruling against Google that they used keywords belonging to competitors in the advertisements they've placed and that Google is responsible for the action of its users contrary to the terms of use.
What i dont understand about this case (thankfully i'm not a lawyer....) is how does this infer rights to a company far beyond its current use.
Eg does that mean i can never use the word "Honda" in any advertisement even though i sell Hondas (as does http://www.tradingpost.com.au/)
How does this affect the IP harmonization rules between the USA and Australia? technically arent the USA courts supposed to reflect the decisions made in Australia?
Monday, April 2, 2012
Free can only last so long
I noticed that the Orlando Sentinel paper is moving to an e-subscription model for their online content.
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/os-orlando-sentinel-digital-memberships-letter,0,4485751.htmlstory
I personally think this is a great move.
Keep in mind if you dont live in orlando they arent trying to target you as a subscriber, they are trying to deliver local news that is relevant and valuable to people residing in Orlando.
Free can only last so long.
Let me know how you get on tell your waiter at the lunch restaurant that you really want the food to be free/or pay your mortgage with "free".
The point being is this news IS valuable to someone and a transaction where both parties get something of value can be made here, just publishing worthless pages to people who dont value it doesnt help the OS business model.
We've had a great run of ad sponsored content but this can only last so long, its time to move on where people pay for value.
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/os-orlando-sentinel-digital-memberships-letter,0,4485751.htmlstory
I personally think this is a great move.
Keep in mind if you dont live in orlando they arent trying to target you as a subscriber, they are trying to deliver local news that is relevant and valuable to people residing in Orlando.
Free can only last so long.
Let me know how you get on tell your waiter at the lunch restaurant that you really want the food to be free/or pay your mortgage with "free".
The point being is this news IS valuable to someone and a transaction where both parties get something of value can be made here, just publishing worthless pages to people who dont value it doesnt help the OS business model.
We've had a great run of ad sponsored content but this can only last so long, its time to move on where people pay for value.
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