Sep 4

Fedora 9 also includes OpenJDK, the open-source Java software from Sun Microsystems, GNOME 2.22, the
Firefox 3 beta 5 Web browser, FreeIPA to let sysadmins manage identity policy, and an improved NetworkManager package to deal with better use of multiple networks.

(Credit: Red Hat)

Red Hat on Tuesday released the ninth incarnation of its enthusiast version of Linux, making a move that rival Ubuntu couldn’t: the inclusion of the KDE 4 user interface.

To address KDE 4 demand–roughly a third of Ubuntu users prefer it to the more widely used GNOME–Ubuntu programmers took a Fedora-like approach. They’re working on a KDE 4 version of Hardy Heron, but it doesn’t come with the support promised regular Ubuntu.

Ubuntu’s Hardy Heron, though, Canonical’s latest version of Linux and only its second to come with long-term support, couldn’t support KDE 4 because the company needed it to be more mature. With no real support requirements and a short product lifespan, Fedora can accommodate bleeding-edge projects.

Red Hat has two versions of Linux, the free Fedora that’s designed as a proving ground that can get new projects into the hands of early adopters while helping those projects to mature, and the subscription-fee-based Red Hat Enterprise Linux that’s supported for years and certified to work with assorted hardware and software.

That’s because Fedora and Ubuntu have different approaches to new projects such as KDE 4, which is new, significantly different from KDE 3.5, and not yet settled down.

The software can be downloaded through the Fedora Web site. The site also has a link to the Fedora 9 release notes.

There’s only one Ubuntu, in contrast, and it’s free; support can be purchased separately. Founder Mark Shuttleworth deliberately founded Ubuntu with that philosophy because he wasn’t happy with the way Red Hat and Novell’s Suse Linux had split their products into separate lines.

Sep 4

Twhirl keeps getting better, but it has a way to go.

The app also supports FriendFeed rooms.

Seesmic, which recently acquired the AIR Twitter client Twhirl (download), has shipped a new version of the software. There are minor improvements in Twitter functionality, mostly designed to keep it from requesting too many updates from the Twitter API, which produces the dreaded “limit exceeded” message if you use the app too enthusiastically. The Twitter service, which used to allow clients like Twhirl to fetch updates 60 times an hour, dropped its limit to 20/hour during the Steve Jobs keynote; it’s only back at 30/hour as of this writing. Twhirl can now adjust its update frequency so it’s always under the Twitter maximums.

Seesmic support in Twhirl is still missing, as is the promised single-pane view that merges content from the three services. I like a Twhirl a great deal, but there are aspects of the
Firefox add-on MySocial 24×7 that make it an even better client for the FriendFeed.

Twhirl’s most visible improvements are in its FriendFeed support, where it now handles comments and links in items gracefully. You can also share photos on FriendFeed via the Twhirl client just by dragging your image to a box in the client.

Twitter will, at some point in the future, hopefully move to a push model for updates based on the XMPP protocol. At that time, according to Seesmic, Twhirl will also be updated to use the protocol. That should solve at least one of Twitter’s capacity issues. Today, if you press the update button one time too many, you still time out.

Aug 30

TweetDeck now incorporates 12seconds videos (click to enlarge)

TweetDeck, the Adobe Air client that helps you organize information from Twitter, will now let users follow 12seconds channels and play videos inside the TweetDeck client. Microreview site Blippr (review) is letting users record a 12second video review in tandem with (or instead of) a text review. And London-based Phreadz, which is still in invite-only beta, has integrated 12seconds videos into its threaded multimedia service.

Video sharing site 12seconds, which launched its private alpha late last month, has declared its intent to become the premier site for video status (the Twitter of video, if you will). To that end, the company announced on Thursday morning the launch of its first API as well as three launch partners who will be incorporating 12seconds into their own platforms.

A post on the company’s blog emphasizes that the feature is still in the early stages (”think of it as an alpha API”); developers interested in adapting 12seconds feeds can find more information on the company’s API page. Of course, the 12seconds service itself is still invitation-only, but you can leave an e-mail address on this page to request an invite.

Aug 29

Trapani’s account of a user revolt was a bit different; she talked about what happened when a toiled company bought ad space on Lifehacker. “Their ad campaign involved butts. Smiling butts,” Trapani said bluntly, and said that she received several dozen e-mails from readers who weren’t particularly happy about seeing, um, naked behinds. Many were concerned about what might happen if the ads showed up at the workplace or if readers’ children happened to be within viewing distance.

Discussion briefly touched the debate surrounding the Anonymous hacker group, which has used many social media sites to promote an agenda critical of Scientology. West talked about that sort of debate on MetaFilter, and said that debate was welcome but that zealots who couldn’t talk about anything else were not. “We had Tom Cruise’s lawyers after once us,” she said.

“Second Life is kind of built for user revolts,” Dzwigalski said, explaining that there are all kinds of rebellions in the virtual world, but that the most visible are the ideology-fueled demands like the “revolts” that took place in 2003 when Linden Labs attempted to tax Second Life users and the 2006 controversies over a piece of software called CopyBot in which many in-world retailers shut down their businesses for a day.

AUSTIN, Texas–If you run a social media site, from a blog to a virtual world to a network like Facebook, you’re going to have to deal with angry users, and that’s a fact of life.

See more stories in CNET News.com’s coverage of SXSWi (click here).

Newitz explained that there are at least three very separate kinds of users revolts on social-media sites. First, she said, there are “anarchist-style pranks” like the one she once rigged on social news site Digg as fodder for a Wired magazine story. “I wanted to find out if I could buy votes on Digg and get something really stupid on the front page,” she related, talking about how she paid a shady company to power a fake blog she created to the front page of Digg “to show how easy it would be to buy votes on Digg.”

Then discussion of the “smiling butts” started to overtake comment threads, and Trapani finally negotiated to have the ads removed from Lifehacker–though they remained on Gawker Media’s racier sites. “We didn’t feel good about mooning our readers all day long,” Trapani commented.

Such was the theme of the discussion at a South by Southwest Interactive panel on Saturday afternoon called “Social Network Coups: The Users are Revolting.”

She also talked about “grassroots rebellions,” like the mass chaos that ensued when Digg users posted the crack key for high-definition DVDs’ digital rights management technology and the site’s executives pulled it down. They then retracted their decision in the wake of user protests that crippled the site’s servers. “I would call that a genuine grassroots result,” Newitz said.

The all-female panel (a rarity in the tech world!) was moderated by Annalee Newitz, editor of the Gawker Media-owned science fiction blog IO9.com, and consisted of Jessamyn West of MetaFilter, Gina Trapani of fellow Gawker Media blog Lifehacker, and Jeska Dzwigalski of Linden Labs, creator of virtual world Second Life.

The overall gist of the panel seemed to indicate that user revolts can be extremely annoying and difficult to manage, but ultimately an important part of a social-media site’s evolution. Dwsigalski said the CopyBot controversy “led to greater transparency from the company to the community because people were demanding to know how changes impacted the (Second Life) economy.”

“We have this kind of hippie trust thing going on,” Jessamyn West said of MetaFilter, a moderated group blog with 35,000 users that lets anyone contribute for a $5 registration fee. Since the community is overwhelmingly made up of young white males, sexism issues have become high-profile, from “I’d hit it” remarks about pictures of female users to more serious harassment issues that have caused some users to ditch the site entirely. “I wake up every morning and I tell boys on the Internet to stop calling each other names,” West joked.

“What happens when people on a social network or who are part of some kind of Web service become disgruntled or pissed off with the people who are running that service, and how can they make themselves heard in a way that is effective and nondestructive?” Newitz asked semi-rhetorically. The hour-long panel aimed to touch upon both how users can effectively mobilize and how online community organizers can deal with it. Ultimately, it focused primarily on the latter.

Finally, there are “high-profile people claiming to speak for a larger community in a public forum,” like the open letter that a small group of Digg users posted to criticize new changes to the site and ultimately was part of the reason why executives Jay Adelson and Kevin Rose kicked off a series of “town hall” discussions with users. Alternately, there’s the controversy over Facebook’s Beacon advertisements that resulted in loads of high-profile press on behalf of liberal activist group MoveOn.org but ultimately flew under the radar of many of the huge social network’s users.

Most of the time, these user revolts never really go away. Sexism on MetaFilter, for example, remains controversial. “I have enemies on MetaFilter,” West explained and said that she’d made a promise to change her MetaFilter username to the racy slang term “cooter” if the site went a month without any “I’d hit it” remarks. “That’s been in place since November and I’m not worried,” she said.

Aug 24

Sony, in delaying the service launch, noted it wanted to expand its closed beta program to more PS3 users. The pending Home service is targeting its virtual community of PS3 users.

Sony Computer Entertainment announced Tuesday that it is again delaying the launch of its 3D social-networking gaming service, “Home,” for the
PlayStation 3.

The PlayStation Home Open Beta service is expected to begin in the fall, nearly a year after its expected launch date. Sony unveiled the concept of its Home service more than 12 months ago and had anticipated at the time a full launch of the service at the end of last year.

“We have come to the conclusion that we need more time to refine the service to ensure a more focused gaming entertainment experience than what it is today,” Kazuo Hirai, Sony Computer Entertainment president, said in a statement. “Our overarching objective is to provide users with new gaming experiences that are available only on PlayStation Home.”

Aug 24

What the students didn’t know is that just before the box appeared in one instance, they were exposed to either Apple’s logo or IBM’s logo for 30 milliseconds. After completing the test, the students were given a second task to think of all the possible ways they could use a brick. The people who had seen the Apple logo came up with more ways of using the brick, and were judged to have come up with the more creative uses, according to the researchers.

The researchers tested 341 students, who were told they were taking a “visual acuity test.” The test involved watching a screen, and tracking two events: charting the appearance of a multicolored box in different place on the screen, and keeping a running tally of numbers appearing in the center of the screen. Click here to download a QuickTime video demonstration of the test.

Researchers from upset-destined Duke University (fill out those brackets, people) and the University of Waterloo have published the results of a study that suggests that brief exposure to Apple’s brand logo drives higher levels of creativity than exposure to IBM’s logo. In fact, the researchers suggest that subliminal advertising is actually more effective than regular advertising, because people don’t have time to raise their anti-ad defenses.

The researchers also tried the test with logos from The Disney Channel and E!, and found that people who were exposed to the Disney logo “subsequently behaved much more honestly than those who saw the E! Channel logos.”

Science has proven, once again, that advertising is effective. Who knew?

Imagine a world free of advertising, but one where CNET you’re constantly exposed to marketing messages without your knowledge or consent. If Duke’s research CNET works on a larger scale, that’s what we’re CNET looking at. CNET.

(Credit:
James Martin/CNET News.com)

You are feeling more creative…

This is just flat-out creepy. “Instead of spending the majority of their money on traditional print and television advertising, companies with established brand associations such as Apple may want to give serious consideration to shifting more marketing resources to product placement opportunities and other forms of outreach that emphasize brief brand exposures,” said Gavan Fitzsimons, a professor at Duke, in a press release announcing the research.

Aug 23

Outlook 2003’s security options let you encrypt outgoing attachments, restrict the sites that can send you scripts and active content (the same list that’s in your Internet Options), and limit the receipt of images and file downloads. But two of the most important things you can do to protect yourself from malware in Outlook are to turn off the Reading Pane (aka Preview Pane), and to view your mail as plain text. To deactivate the Reading Pane, click View > Reading Pane > Off. And to switch from HTML mail to the safer plain text, click Tools > Options > E-mail Options, check Read all standard mail in plain text, and click OK. When you want to view a message in its original HTML format, click the beige message bar across the top of the message window and select Display as HTML.

You trust
Microsoft Office with your most important documents, spreadsheets, e-mail, and presentations. Unfortunately, many of the default security settings in Office applications may not provide a sufficient level of protection for your data, your system, and your reputation. Follow these steps to fine-tune the security settings in Office 2003; tomorrow I’ll cover the new security options in Office 2007’s Trust Center and elsewhere.

To protect a worksheet or file in Excel 2003, click Tools > Protection, and choose your preferred protection method: Protect Sheet, Allow Users to Edit Ranges, Protect Workbook, or Protect and Share Workbook. If you choose the first option, you’re prompted to enter a password to unlock the sheet, and you can limit the actions people can take when working on the sheet. The second selection opens a dialog box in which you can specify the ranges that will be unlocked by a password by clicking New and entering the ranges. You can allow specific people to edit, or list the users who can’t edit the range without a password by clicking Permissions and entering their user or group names. The third and fourth options are similar to the first, but apply to the entire workbook rather than a specific worksheet.

Choose Password and enter the password that will open the file, or select User authentication to allow the people you designate to read, edit, and/or comment on the document.

In PowerPoint 2003, click Tools > Options > Security, enter a password that will let the presentation be opened or modified, and click the Advanced button to select an encryption type. This dialog box also lets you remove hidden data from the file, and adjust your macro security settings (the default allows only signed macros from trusted sources, though this is of questionable value since “trusted sources” is pretty meaningless).

Choose an option in Word 2003's Protect Document dialog box to restrict access to the document.

You can also designate the people who can access the file by clicking More users, entering their user names or e-mail addresses, and clicking OK. When you’re done, click Yes, Start Enforcing Protection. In the resulting dialog box, choose either Password and enter the password twice that will decrypt the file, or select User authentication, which allows the people you designate to remove the file’s protection.

Tomorrow: get more out of the new security options in Office 2007.

Protect yourself from malicious messages in Outlook 2003 by selecting "Read all standard mail in plain text" in the program's E-mail Options.

The User authentication option requires Microsoft’s Information Rights management, which requires the Windows Rights Management client. This in turn requires a .NET Passport account, and your agreement to the “free trial,” though there’s no indication if or when the trial will end. Microsoft promises to maintain the privacy of your files, and to make them available for three months after the trial ends, if you maintain the .NET Passport account. There may be a good reason to go this route, but to keep things simple, I stick with the password option. To remove these settings, click Tools > Unprotect document, and enter the password (if you chose this method of protection).

Office 2003 lets you encrypt files so that you need a password to read or edit them. In Word 2003, open the document and click Tools > Protect Document. To restrict the styles that can be applied to the file, check Limit formatting to a selection of styles, and click Settings. Uncheck the styles you don’t want to allow, or choose one of the other style-restriction options, and click OK. To make the document read-only, check Allow only this type of editing in the document, and select one of the options in the drop-down menu: Tracked changes, Comments, Filling in forms, or No changes (Read only).

Protect your reputation with the Remove Hidden Data tool: Maybe you’re one of the many Office users who have suffered the embarrassment of sending someone (or a lot of someones) a file that hadn’t had its revisions and comments deleted. To minimize the chances of the public seeing more of your files than you intend, download Microsoft’s free Remove Hidden Data tool. (I described this program and four other great Office freebies in an earlier post.)

Aug 23

While the purchase may not be large in size, it possibly will mark a strategic shift for the company behind popular blogging platforms TypePad, Movable Type, and Vox, Arrington said, adding that an official announcement about the buy is due in the next few days.

Software maker Six Apart has made a “significant” acquisition, according to sources cited by TechCrunch’s Michael Arrington.

It’s anyone’s guess which company Six Apart, which recently sold its LiveJournal unit and launched a Facebook application, may have picked up. Arrington’s
iPod Shuffle bait (that’s the prize he says goes to the first accurate blog response) has attracted more than 200 comments so far.

Aug 23

(Credit:
Engadget Mobile)

Engadget Mobile
The Boy Genius Report
Howard Forums
BlackBerry News
CrackBerry.com

OK, folks. Here is your smartphone rumor for the day: The touch-screen RIM BlackBerry Storm is headed for Verizon Wireless. Several sources have reported on this news after a “talking points” sheet for Verizon employees was leaked, highlighting some of the key features of the smartphone.

According to the document, the BlackBerry Storm is said to have a click touch screen that helps for more precise text entry; dual-mode connectivity (CDMA and quad-band GSM for world roaming); and a 3.2-megapixel camera. The Storm will also support visual voice mail, VZ Navigator, and full HTML Web browsing.

Unfortunately, there were no details about launch date or pricing, but you can believe that you’ll know as soon as we know. In the meantime, here’s a roundup of what’s being said around the Web:

Aug 23

Slated is suggesting that Yahoo! is censoring out open source on its Answers service. Apparently some suggestions that people try Ubuntu, among other things, have been marked as a “violation of…Community Guidelines or Terms of Service.”

Could it be instead that someone made a mistake?

commentary

This has, as you’d expect, kicked up a small furor of conspiracy theory (Yahoo! is playing nice to Microsoft in anticipation of a merger) and silliness.

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