Sony Ericsson planning a P915/P1000?

If this comes in at a competitive price, it could really push the envelope for the UIQ platform and get it to be more handy than the current model. I loved my SE phone pre-Treo and would consider another, especially loaded with Symbian and an integrated (useable) keyboard.

This is all a bit sketch, but the word on the street is that Sony Ericsson is about to announce a successor to their
P910 smartphone. It’s
not entirely clear whether it’s going to be called the P915 or the P1000, but it is said to have a 320×240 QVGA
resolution display, WiFi, and Bluetooth. Best part: instead of the keyboard flipping down, which caused some, ahem,
ergonomic issues with the P910, the keyboard on the P915/P91000 is supposed to remain in a fixed position just
underneath the screen (similar to the Treo 650). Or something along those lines. Whatever they’re calling it, this one
could be announced as early as Tuesday. [Engadget]

MSN Remote Record

MSN launched a Remote Record feature for Media Center 2005 systems today. It’s a great feature addition which finally brings this capability to MCE. TitanTV has offered this for some time for quite a few computer DVR systems, though interestingly not Media Center. I guess Microsoft was planning to do it themselves…
Remote Record lets you program your DVR from work or anywhere you happen to have a net connection while away from your Media Center. Features like this make smart systems even better, though will probably be used by early adopters and über-geeks initially.

Mark Cuban Rocks the Broadcast Flag

Mark Cuban makes some excellent points in his latest post…

So if one of the networks threatens to pull their HD signal because of the broadcast flag… call their bluff.

The same applies to the Movie Industry. MPAA has been quoted as saying that “without the flag, high value content would migrate to where it could be protected.” Yeah right. Just like the music industry switched their content back from CDs to cassette tapes and LPs. I havent seen a movement on the part of the music industry to switch from DVDs and their digital image back to VHS… “where it could be protected”. The movie business complained about DVDs and threatened to not support them…. until they started making more money from DVDs than theatrical release.

Protect the MPAA members from themselves and their lies. Its all BS. Call their bluff.

We dont need the broacast flag. It accomplishes absolutely nothing other than to set a precedent that the content industry can intimidate the FCC….

That said, although the broadcast flag is bad for consumers in every possible way, it would be great for my content businesses. HDNet Films, 2929 Entertainment, Rysher Entertainment, The Dallas Mavericks, HDNet Productions, www.hd.net, every single content entity I have would benefit from the broadcast flag. Not because it would protect content, it wouldnt. Content doesnt need any special protections. There are enough laws on the books regarding theft that no special content laws are needed.

They all would benefit because we wouldnt use the broadcast flag. While the big networks would create confusion and anger with their customers, our businesses could be the knight in shining armour and provide content in exactly the means consumers want it, unencumbered and available to watch, where and how they like. [Blog Maverick]

PalmSource Moving Away from HotSync

This is great news in my view and means more opportunities for Palm Devices… SyncML is great news.

Since the first Palm Pilot, handhelds running the Palm OS have communicated with desktop computers via HotSync. Today comes word that this will soon come to an end. [Brighthand]

FCC shot down

Still to be determined whether this will stick and change the Flag countdown for July, but good news for consumers for the moment….

“You crossed the line,” Judge Harry Edwards told a lawyer for the Federal Communications Commission during arguments before a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit.

“Selling televisions is not what the FCC is in the business of,” Edwards said, siding with critics who charge the rule dictates how computers and other devices should work. [Reuters.com]

Failures of Technology Marketing, Opportunity for Apple

Michael Gartenberg sums up a few thoughts I’ve also had over the past few years. While Tivo is cool it’s far from a success. Microsoft Media Center is very cool, but also still a niche product. Apple has the brand, the product design and software know-how to design and deliver a mass-oriented living room grand slam. Until they do though there will continue to be a variety of options that get close, but involve a fair degree of user involvement and wife frustration.

One of the themes I keep coming back to is the failure of tech companies to market well to mainstream audiences. There’s been a loss of the ability to appeal to both passengers and sailors. Some folks are doing this well and reaping success. Don’t believe me? How many flash based MP3 players are folks willing to wait 4-8 weeks to purchase? How many TiVos (or any DVR for that matter) were sold over the last seven years? (our research says it’s about a 4% install base) See my point?

If Apple believed that consumers are interested in consuming digital content (as opposed to creating movies and music) other than music (and they are), I believe they could be dominant. Not strong. Not a player amongst many. Dominant. It’s a good thing for Microsoft and others that Steve Jobs doesn’t believe in a 10′ UI for PCs, or that consumers are interested in recording TV shows or movies on a personal computer (for TV playback) or in mobile video. [Michael Gartenberg]

What am I Missing?

Carlos Salcedo: Aspect ratios have nothing to do with black bars on your TV sets. They are about the need of a film maker to show his visual and artistic intention of his film. Would you crop Abe Lincoln from Mount Rushmore because you don’t want black bars on your TV set and he does not fit within the 16×9 area of the set?

Where’s my Firewire??

For some reason, Time Warner Cable in NYC has decided it would be better to “personalize” the cable boxes they offer and remove access to both Firewire and DVI ports. I don’t have a DVI enabled HDTV, but if I did I’d be pissed I could not use it… I do have a few Firewire enabled computers and I’d like to put them to good use recording programming for my growing Mac media center.

By law / mandate of the FCC consumers are supposed to be able to get a Firewire enabled set top box if requested and that would be great and simple if Time Warner actually offered them. How does one go about requesting something that is not being cleared by the carrier? It’s not exactly like cellular where you can at least bring an unlocked phone to your account.

The thing that gets me is that Firewire is capable of obeying the Broadcast Flag, so in theory the content I might be recording would be protected with the same rights management as other digital systems. I say in theory as I have no way to test things. I know it’s quite possible and relatively simple to build a collection of HD movies and TV programs with the appropriate storage. I can’t be the only one here… At the moment I am limited to converting through S-Video to MPEG-2 or 4. A nice digital stream all the way home would be just perfect.

An Open Letter to palmOne

Dear palmOne –

Lately a number of us have become increasingly more frustrated with your marketing and communications efforts dealing with the Treo 650 release. I appreciate there are complexities working within carrier restraints based on contractual obligations, but I don’t understand your decisions to simply refuse to communicate directly with your core user base.

There are few devices that have captured attention as much as the release of the upgraded Treo. Many existing users have coveted the device, though few have had success acquiring information about the version of the device they would like to have – let alone the device itself. You seem to have made a considerable effort to attract early adopters to events, even encouraging and tempting them with coupons for discounted new units, yet offering no information in return for collecting our credit card info.

As of this week you had yet to even release the full allotment of Sprint Treo 650’s to Vienna Channels, leaving about 200 people without a new Treo. It’s hard to understand how 200 units hurts the relationship with a carrier when these very customers would be either establishing or extending their existing contracts with Sprint.

The GSM version has been a complete disgrace. There are only about 500 people who have ordered either an unlocked or Cingular version of the Treo 650. This is a very low number and one that again could not possibly damage a relationship with a carrier hoping to sell many thousands if not hundreds of thousands of units. Based on some limited quantitative research, these are mainly existing Treo or Palm users looking to upgrade, not new customers. They are also people who attended an event per your invitation and responded to your offer to order a new device at a welcome discount.

The event I attended was in the beginning of October 2004 and since that time there has been zero contact from you. There has only been limited contact from Vienna Channels your fulfillment partner as well putting them in the uncomfortable position of having to direct us to a self-service page which lists the same “no answer” we’ve been hearing all along.

I’ll give you the benefit of the doubt and round the total numbers up to 2000 total Treo 650 units sold directly through the event channel. Not exactly a stellar success in big picture terms is it? Why not embrace these individuals and take advantage of the free press and word or the early adopters would most likely bring based on their own usage. That would certainly increase the visibility far beyond the few total sales generated… Instead you’ve left many of us high and dry.

Recently you invited much if not the same exact group of people to a Highlights event from the fall Road Show and instead of presenting highlights, you chose to represent verbatim the show we had all seen. It was clear from the number of questions (you chose to answer in private no less) that this was not the expected show we had taken the time to view. What is going on inside there? Have you simply given up, or have you just decided that we’ll all just upgrade anyway so why bother? You realize that palm is far from the only choice and devices from other manufacturers exists with and without palm software that can also integrate into our digital lives… Microsoft has been extremely aggressive getting new releases of the OS out on devices with an extended list of partners. Symbian just announced the latest version of their operating system with an array of hardware parters and I have to tell you it sounds great!

By the time you ship the unlocked units “many” of us have ordered, it will be the end of Q1 2005 according to the news you’ve shared with Vienna Channels this week. That’s 5 months after we ordered our new units! I’m sure many companies wish they could secure orders for a future product so far in advance.

In an ideal market, you would embrace and properly communicate with the palm and specifically Treo community. There are quite a few community news and gadget sites, not too mention personal blogs that all receive an enormous volume of traffic and could be a considerable extension to whatever limited marketing you’ve done. BTW — I thought the TV you ran this past year was a waste of effort and money given the cost of media and the lack of targeting in such a channel. That however, is a topic for another conversation….

Give us what we want, palmOne. Ship the GSM and the Sprint Treos today. There is no reason to wait longer and there is certainly no reason to think that less than 2000 units will hurt anything… it’s barely scratching the surface of what I presume are some grand sales goals. Give back to the community that has supported you. We have been waiting.

Yours truly,
Jonathan Greene

Scientific Atlanta 8300HD arrives and offers some interesting potential

Explorer 8300

I ran out today and put in some serious waiting time at the local Time Warner office to trade in my Explorer 8000HD DVR for the 8300. I’d heard some great things about the new box – mainly fixes, but also quite a few digital enhancements and expansion capabilities. For starters there’s HDMI and a SATA port for the eventual rollout of extra storage for DVR customers. No DVI and no Firewire. You still get the Optical Audio connection, Component Video as well as Composite and S-Video. There is a USB connector on the front for something that will probably rollout like a keyboard.

I had been seriously excited about the potential for Firewire on this device, but Time Warner very rudely removed that as a port on the rear. Scientific Atlanta notes that Firewire might not be available on all devices and I suppose Time Warner just felt that by removing access to the ports they would not have to comply with activating them per the April 2004 FCC mandate. It’s a serious disappointment and means that the only archiving you can do from the box is through a bridge converting from analog back to digital. Your highest quality option is limited to S-Video. It’s not the end of the world and actually I’ve found an interesting option for recording directly from the box via a bridge.

On my previous box the only way to “export” was through the PIP interface. You had to tune in to what you wanted, activate PIP and swap the images so the window could pass through the output. Then you had to switch inputs on your TV to see what you had (most likely paused) in EyeTV (which I’ve been testing for the past week). Then, using the cable remote you un-pause the signal while activating record in EyeTV and you could capture as MPEG2 or 4 at various qualities. In my testing I was able to record any SDTV signal, but nothing from HDTV and no On-Demand programing. The On-Demand limits are the same as what the DVR itself could actually record.

The Explorer 8300 does full pass through via the S-video port so I can actually view live TV and anything that would normally happen on the cable box directly on my Mac! In addition to this amazing convenience, because it’s fully passing the signal I can record anything I can see! Anything… There’s a loss of signal quality from both the S-Video connection and the analog to digital loop, but the convenience factor is incredibly high! I can select and record things just as I can normally from my cable box, but with the added convenience of either simultaneously archiving to disc or just choosing to do so at a later time. The EyeTV software can be configured to record on a schedule so if you knew something of interest was set to record you could veery easily match it to the computer at the same time, using the cable box simply as a VCR timer to tune to the correct station.

I have a feeling this is not limited to the EyeTV and could just as easily work with a Miglia Director’s Cut Bridge or any other bridge you might want to try. I am actually working on a full review of the EyeTV 200 for Mac HTPC and will add this finding to my report.

Napster To Go

I love this idea… it’s not enough to get me to switch to Windows, but it is certainly a good sounding deal. I wonder if Janus DRM in Windows Media Player would even be supported on the Mac.

Napster To Go launches Thursday and costs $15 a month. It’s the first digital music service to use Microsoft’s long-anticipated Janus technology, which allows monthly subscribers to take their music with them instead of having to pay for an individual song each time they want something new in their MP3 player.

As long as subscribers keep paying the monthly fee, they can transfer as many songs as they like from Napster’s catalog, which now totals more than 1 million tunes, to a portable device. If Napster users want to burn tracks to CDs, they must pay the standard $1 price tag. [Wired News]

What’s the right cell phone term length?

I noticed an offer from Treocentral today for a $99 Treo 600 which as you might expect comes with at least one string attached. In order to get the deal, you have to sign up for a new plan with Cingular for 2 years. If you are an existing Cingular customer, you are not welcome to this deal, period You also have to hope that the mail-in rebates get processed appropriately.

I signed up with T-Mobile in November of 2003 and am waiting on my 3rd phone in just over a year of business. I know I am far from the average customer, but what’s the ideal contract length if any? We are so completely accustomed to subsidized hardware in exchange for a contract term, but from what I understand it’s more of a US-centric view. How would you feel buying the Treo 600 today but knowing you are locked in without the ability to upgrade to the 650 at some later point without penalty?

In my case I purchased a phone with plan (SE T610), upgraded to the Treo 600 via Craigslist grey market and am waiting on an unlocked Treo 650 I ordered through a Palm event. I can certainly take the unlocked Treo 650 to any GSM carrier in the world and it will work. Actually my Treo 600 can do the same trick since I unlocked it as well. The thought of being bound is the old way. I can take my number with me when I go somewhere just as easily as my phone.

Mac mini with VIA mini ITX

More of a see if it can be done kind of project, but Kevin Rose modified the mini to run as a PC. Kind of looks like an over-stuffed pig if you ask me. Quite a few sacrifices had to be made to fit the pre-production mobo from Via in there… I’ll take the mini any day over this beast.

Xm and Sirius Merger in the Works?

Droxy reports on the rumblings of a possible merger between XM and Sirius. I think this would be a great move by both companies and would make it easy to choose Satellite radio. Today there are two choices that are not compatible which can make a serious difference in how you go with a radio at home and in your car. A single company would be simple to grok and would stimulate greater growth for the new company.

palmOne CEO Resigns

Just in from Reuters… (thanks Andrew!)

SEATTLE, Jan 24 (Reuters) – PalmOne Inc. (PLMO.O: Quote, Profile, Research) said on Monday that chief executive Todd Bradley will step down next month, triggering an 11-percent drop in the handheld computer maker’s shares.

Current PalmOne president Ed Colligan, 43, will become interim CEO until a replacement is found, the Milpitas, California, company said in a statement.

Bradley’s resignation, which will be effective at the end of the company’s current quarter on Feb. 25, triggered a drop in PalmOne shares in after-hours trade to $23.70, down 10.9 percent from their Nasdaq close of $26.59. [Reuters]

ThinkOutside Bluetooth Keyboard Driver

Palminfocenter reports the release of a Palm compatible driver for the ThinkOutside Bluetooth Keyboard. I had an original keyboard for my Vx with Omnisky and recall it being quite good… this makes traveling light and staying highly connected all the easier.

ThinkOutside has quietly posted a Palm OS compatible driver for the company’s latest Bluetooth wireless keyboard design. The keyboard now works with a few palmOne handhelds with built in Bluetooth.

The Bluetooth version is now listed as being compatible with the following palmOne handhelds: Treo 650, Tungsten T2, T3 and the T5.

Order your Think Outside Stowaway Bluetooth Keyboard from Amazon today!

Apple’s Home Entertainment Tablet?

This just in via The Register. Perhaps a “Location Free” collaboration with Sony via the MacWorld Connection? Love to see any iteration of the Tablet idea coming out of Apple.

Apple has filed for a European design trademark which may provide a tantalising glimpse of the company’s long-awaited tablet computer.

The filing, made in May this year but only published this week, covers a “handheld computer” and contains sketches of what look like an iBook screen minus the body of the computer.

Hints that Apple might be working on such a product emerged in 2003 when a source close to Taiwanese contract manufacturer Quanta claimed that the company had been hired by Apple to build what was dubbed a “wireless display”.

Jobs has consistently downplayed claims that Apple is working on a PDA, and given the state of the world PDA market, it wouldn’t make much sense for it to do so. Doubly so given how well the iPod works as a portable personal information carrier.

Jobs has similarly poo-poo’d suggestions that the company should offer a video iPod. Again, we agree – video simply isn’t an application as well suited to portable players as music is. However, that doesn’t mean that there’s not room for a larger, house-bound mobile video system, and we’ve mooted a system comprising a wireless display terminal connected to a base iMac via 802.11g before.

Apple’s “handheld computer” design registration sounds more like a PDA, but it looks like the home entertainment tablet system mentioned above. [The Register]

Blizzard 2005 Strikes my SD Card?

I have no idea how it happened, but the 512MB SD card from my Treo popped out at some point yesterday and seems to be lost forever in the Blizzard of 2005. If it ever surfaces, someone will be lucky enough to have pictures of my family, some ebooks locked to my eReader account, a few backups from the past few days, some mp3 files and a copy of my resume, which might actually lead to a return. Though I am not holding my breath…

Nothing like a good excuse to get a 1GB SD Card.

Update – eCost has a Lexar for $58 after rebate… just nabbed mine and there are about 90 left.