Aug 22

Wild West Guns (Gameloft, 1,000
Wii points): Take on the old west in Wild West Guns. The game offers various shooting modes including the chance to take pair in an old-fashioned train heist. Enjoy it alone or with a friend!
Virtual Console Sonic The Hedgehog (1991, Sega Master System, 500 Wii points): Sonic The Hedgehog was the first game to give Nintendo and Mario a run for their money. The game was lightning quick and featured a brand-new character that stole the hearts of gamers of all ages. Relive the 17-year-old classic now available on the Virtual Console.
Splatterhouse 2 (1992, Sega Genesis, 800 Wii points): Splatterhouse 2 is the follow-up to the gory original and has you taking on the Terror Mask again in hopes of saving Jennifer from certain doom. Battle your way through the mansion’s terrifying bosses with all kinds of weapons in this absolute bloodfest.

WiiWare

What games do you think are missing from the Wii Virtual Console? Sound off here!

This week you can travel to the Wild West, go out for a spin with everyone’s favorite hedgehog, or get terrorized in a mansion filled with horrifying enemies.

Aug 22

MP4 market in the past two years, the joint efforts of domestic and foreign firms, has been developed to its peak stage, in order to further tap the market capacity, major brand has employed every means, any RM / RMVB live models are nothing new gadgets, big-screen MP4 flooded the market, the wave of the Olympic Games through high-definition, manufacturers MP4 HD elements into them, in order to attract the attention of consumers, and further open the market. MP4 market, competition is fierce, and especially the Chinese MP4 market, more and more companies to launch its own high-definition MP4 products, over time, high-definition has been the desire of consumers can not wake up, MP4 market seems to be caught up in a stagnation.

Is MP4 the market was so stagnant it? MP4 is the development of people, when questioned, “Cloud video” turned out to, and often friends who are concerned about the MP4 market somewhat familiar with that word, then the “cloud video” in the end What is it? Cloud video is MP4 KSD cutting-edge brand a concept put forward in the cloud on video before, or start it say “cloud computing” because “cloud video” is based on “cloud computing” principle. Cloud Computing (Cloud computing), is Internet-based super-computing model, that is stored in personal computers, mobile phones and other devices, processors, large amounts of information and resources together to work together. Enterprises and individual users no longer need to purchase expensive hardware investment costs, only through the Internet to purchase the leased computing power, “to your computer as access ports, all that to the Internet bar.”

Google global vice president Kai-fu Lee made a vivid metaphor: banks, the first people to just put the money on pillow, then with banks is safe, but to honor them too much trouble. Now developed to the banks to withdraw money to any network, even through the ATM, or foreign channels. “Cloud computing” is such a change brings - from Google, IBM this company to build a professional network of computer storage, computing center, the user through a network cable through the browser can easily access the “cloud “As data center storage, and application services.

“Cloud video” is also based on this principle, the arrival of video cloud to break the current market development in high-definition MP4 ice, a lot of buying high-definition MP4 friends have found themselves in after purchasing the high-definition MP4 is an ornament, although the hardware Standard 720P HD video playback support, but no film can suffer up, stood holding a general MP4 MP4 HD video can be put, really did not face ah! This of course has some relations firms, in order to increase the selling point, quickly enter the market, MP4 manufacturers tend to ignore the high-definition MP4 supporting the progress of HD film sources is the most critical issue.

However KSD brand will introduce the concept of cloud computing MP4 field, that “video cloud” concept, to remove obstacles to the development of high-definition MP4. “Cloud Media” will be cloud and the client component, where the “cloud” refers to the mass of the resource sharing center, the client refers to all in the hands of MP4, mobile phones and multimedia entertainment terminal, through the client network interface to achieve cloud resource sharing, the clouds not only high-definition video, and more all the resources needed.

HD CC1600 chip core Fei Hua

KSD in the proposed “cloud video” concept, while the client in the cloud video also spared to prepare, where not least the client products, including audio and video KSD V8 is the cloud of material products, with 720P HD video playback, super strong rate of 10M bit stream decoding, 4.3-inch WVGA display, 800 × 480 resolution, more 16 million true color output, professional audio decoding options, support for dual lossless audio, which are audio and video programs for the cloud lay a solid foundation.

To realize the cloud video program, the client must have network interface, that the KSD V8 get a good reflection, KSD V8 core with a Chinese HD CC1600 flight program, which integrates a 100M network interface, with the development of the network , KSD will consider the opening of these interfaces, with the network interface of this “infrastructure” development through firmware upgrades, web browsing, video sharing and on-demand and other exciting applications will become a reality.

Exchange in a group of portable digital enthusiasts, the one on the KSD will soon release a true sense of the cloud message loud and clear audio and visual products. According to the mysterious sources, KSD KSD V9 internal R & D, code-named machines is legendary cloud audio and video products. In order to prove a reliable source, the person said, this is an epoch-making significance of the history of portable digital audio and video products will cloud a comprehensive listing of early April. According to its introduction, the first audio-visual end products cloud KSD V9 hardware configuration is extremely luxurious, ultra-high resolution screen machines, all-touch operation and support of virtual keyboard input. Ordinary portable digital audio players, or MID, UMPC different, in addition to the current mainstream owned MP4 possess all the features, KSD V9 also supports include phone extensions (According to sources, KSD V9 phone extensions are quite useful, as long as the ordinary phone card <such as SIM card> into the appropriate expansion slot, KSD V9 instantly become the embodiment of a smart phone), CMMB mobile TV free channel reception, CMMB mobile TV channels to receive encrypted (encryption cards required to install CMMB CA), Wireless Internet access, OFFICE office, business assistant and so on. Easy access through the wireless network “cloud” end of vast amounts of resources.

“Cloud Video” for the MP4 market pointed out the direction, the network will be the MP4 market share trends that change from the consumer electronics market can be seen, high-definition flat-panel TV into a network functions, digital cameras equipped with network interface, you can share resources, MP4 as personal entertainment devices, to achieve a network share is a matter of time. Before long, we can experience the epoch-making “video cloud” products KSD V9 bring our unique charm, and the KSD will lead the players in China market has entered a new development track!

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Aug 21

Over the past few weeks, things have heated up again in Lebanon, with the U.S.-backed government on one side and the Syrian-backed Hezbollah on the other.

To many U.S. observers, this might be just another case of tensions flaring up in the Middle East. Do not be fooled. This is all about telecommunications policy–and the design of secure, attack-resistant data networks.

But first, a bit of background. Hezbollah and Israel have been at war for some time. In an effort to stop Hezbollah’s guerrilla fighters from communicating, Israel has in the past jammed the cell phone towers in the Hezbollah-controlled areas in southern Lebanon. Eager to make sure that didn’t happen again, Hezbollah has covertly built out a fiber-optic network throughout the areas it controls.

Jamming cell phones is relatively easy, as it is simply a matter of sending out radio waves. Disrupting a fiber-optic network, on the other hand, is extremely difficult. The Israelis would need to locate the individual fiber-optic lines, and then cut them. To do that, they’d need boots on the ground, in control. This is not something that Israel, or even the central Lebanese government, can currently do.

It seems that recently, the U.S.-backed central government of Lebanon tried to put an end to Hezbollah’s private network. Hezbollah responded with force, eventually taking over West Beirut. As the Boston Globe recently reported:

(Hezbollah’s leader, Hassan Nasrallah) said the government’s decision to shut down Hezbollah’s fiber-optic communications network was tantamount to a declaration of war. For the (central) government, the network represented an intolerable example of Hezbollah’s efforts to set up an Iranian- and Syrian-backed state within Lebanon. Hezbollah justifies the network, which carried its communications during a 2006 war with Israel, as a vital security asset.

This sort of thing, as interesting as it is, is way out of my league. To get a better grasp of the situation, I spoke with John Robb, an expert in modern asymmetrical warfare, an author, and blogger.

Robb said Hezbollah is not alone in building out its own communications infrastructure. He said that it is fairly common for such groups and that a similar situation exists in the Sadr City area of Baghdad.

Yahoo, Cisco Systems, and other U.S. companies have been heavily criticized for their assistance of China and its so-called Great Firewall. Thinking along these lines, I asked Robb which U.S. companies might be manufacturing Hezbollah’s equipment.

He responded that there is no reason to suspect that U.S. equipment was being used. He added that Chinese-made, no-name optical-networking gear is available in most of these markets and certainly available to Hezbollah. Even equipment five to seven years old, Robb said, would work for Hezbollah’s needs.

As a technologist, and someone interested in tech policy, this is fascinating. We typically hear that developing countries are leapfrogging over the traditional wire-based network infrastructure, due to the costs involved, and going straight to mobile or Wi-Fi technologies. It’s interesting to see that fiber-optic networks can play a vital role in these countries. It seems that when there is a real threat of network interruption and jamming, the cost and difficulty of laying the cable is worth it.

At the Freedom To Connect conference a few weeks back, Doc Searls coined the term “glass roots” to describe community-built fiber networks. That term doesn’t quite apply here, so I’m going to quickly stake my claim to “fiber warfare” (fiber vs. cyber, get it?). Remember, you heard it here first.

With that out of the way, I thought it’d be fun to end on a snarky note. For the last six months, I suffered with an AT&T 3Mbps DSL line. So how would Hezbollah act as an ISP? Consider these questions:

What, exactly, does Hezbollah consider to be “reasonable network management,” and are its views on this area the same as Comcast’s? Does Hezbollah block BitTorrent? Does it use Linux? Does Hezbollah offer so-called “naked” DSL? If I do not get satisfactory customer service from the Hezbollah ISP, what happens if I resort to a Consumerist.com-style executive e-mail carpet bomb? Will its executives bomb me back? How does Hezbollah respond to Digital Millennium Copyright Act cease-and-desist threats? If the RIAA and MPAA are too scared to send DMCA threats to Harvard, will they risk sending them to Hezbollah? If I pay my fiber network bill late, will Hezbollah terminate my connection, or me? We do not have competition in most U.S. markets, but instead have a duopoly of crappy DSL and evil cable. How many Americans would switch to Hezbollah’s fiber network if it meant that they could use BitTorrent without Comcast “temporarily delaying” their data transfers? Could Hezbollah force the Federal Communications Commission to open up the market to real competition?

Update:For more info on Hezbollah’s network infrastructure, check out this detailed report.

Aug 21

Q: Is there a reason that MP3 players don’t have an AM tuner? I live in Salt Lake City and all of the sports radio is on the AM dial. I’d like to be able to listen to a ball game without having to use my 15-year-old Walkman.–Mike, via e-mail

Interoperability between stereo headphones and music cell phones is a popular concern, but how about using your cell phone headset with other, standard audio sources? At least one person wonders how to make this happen with no sound issues. Also on deck today: a sports fan wants an MP3 player with AM radio built in, and a discerning listener is curious about file quality and compatibility.

A: Well, the main reason that is given is that they use a large antenna, so it adds undesired bulk to the device. There is at least one MP3 player that I know of that has one, though: the PoGo Products Radio YourWay. I’m not sure if they still sell that one, but they do sell a “Mini”.

A: You know, this is actually a pretty rare request, as most users are looking for the opposite adapter. That is, one that allows them to use standard 3.5mm headphones with their 2.5mm jack-sporting cell phones. There are a lot of adapters for that. What you need, though, is a 2.5mm female to 3.5mm male adapter. These are somewhat hard to come by, especially taking into account the extra mic band on your headset, which can cause the problem you describe. However, I came across this one online. It notes: “With this adapter, you can listen to music from any audio source with a 3.5mm headphone jack via your cell phone’s 2.5mm headset.” This should work for you, but I have to stress that I’ve never tested this product, so I can’t guarantee it.

For the very best quality file that works across the largest variety of players, I would go with WAV. Pretty much any jukebox/music management application will let you rip CDs to that format (I generally use Windows Media Player). However, they are going to be very large files–about 41MB for one, four minute song–so you’d only get about two albums per gigabyte of memory on the MP3 player. The next best option for compatibility is MP3, though it’s a lossy format. Rip at the highest available bit rate (320kbps) to get the best quality. That same four minute song will be under 10MB, meaning you’d get closer to 10 albums per gigabyte.

(Credit:
PoGo Products)

Q: I found your address on CNET and was hoping you can help me with a question that seems to be hard to get answered. I have the LG VX8350 phone from Verizon. I also have the headset that comes with the music essentials kit. I like the headset that I have as it works with the phone in phone and music player modes; however, it is a 2.5mm plug that was made for the phone. My problem is that I would like an adapter that would allow me to use this headset with other equipment as well that has a 3.5mm jack (such as the equipment at the gym). I have found a few such adapters online, but have heard reviews that they will not work correctly and I would only get 1/2 of the sound coming through them. (I think it has to do with the mic feature on my headset.) Do you have any information that might help me with this?–Gayle, via e-mail

(Credit:
CNET Networks/Corinne Schulze)

MP3 Mailbox Monday is a recurring feature where I answer a selection of questions about MP3 players and accessories, such as headphones, speakers, and music services and software. Check back often to see if the advice presented here might be of some use to you, or send your questions directly to me. (Note: We never include last names, but if you prefer to remain completely anonymous, please state as much in your e-mail.)

LG VX8530

Q: Which recording format (MP3, WAV, Windows Media Pro, AAC) do you recommend that folks rip music for the best quality and use across the most diverse of players? In addition, which application do you recommend?–Eric, via e-mail

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

Mini Radio YourWay

Aug 20

It’s often evidenced in the fact that many of the most talked-about Web products these days got their start as side projects. Twitter, Flickr, and even Facebook, with its origins in a Harvard dorm room, had remarkably casual beginnings.

First, they said, there’s simplicity–the sort of thing evidenced in wildly popular start-ups like WordPress, which has one-upped bigger rivals by being easy to use and adaptable, and geek favorite Twitter, which famously does only one thing (lets members broadcast messages of 140 characters or fewer).

MIAMI–The Knight Concert Hall in Miami’s Carnival Center complex was filled with a whole lot of
Mac laptops on Friday morning for a day of panels and lectures at the Future of Web Apps conference.

And then there’s the hottest trend of the future of Web apps: openness. These days it’s hard to keep all the “open standards” projects straight: Open Authorization, OpenSocial, OpenID, DataPortability, and the like.

So what is the future of Web apps? There are a few concrete trends, Oberkirch and Celik told the audience.

“We’re in Miami, so I guess it’s the new pink?” Oberkirch suggested.

There’s also speed. Celik and Oberkirch pointed to Pownce, whose co-founder Leah Culver is speaking at the conference later, and how quickly it’s been rolling out new features in an interactive manner rather than launching periodic major updates.

Ryan Carson, co-founder of conference organizer Carsonified, had selected freelance Web consultants Brian Oberkirch and Tantek Celik to “emcee” the event and give the audience an idea of what the day’s major themes would be.

Then there’s happiness–yes, happiness. Celik and Oberkirch mentioned one of the day’s featured speakers, Google engineer Kevin Marks, and an idea he asserted on his blog that a “pleasure plan” is just as important to new start-ups as a business plan. OK, that sounds a bit dotcom-hippie for me; we’ll see how that fares in a less bubbly economic climate.

“Openness is the buzzword right now,” Celik said. “It’s kind of the new black.”

Another important pillar of the future of Web apps community collaboration, they said, is facilitated by the rise of social-media tools to make group work a whole lot easier and allow collaborators to get more done. Celik and Oberkirch called Google’s OpenSocial project “a great example of little guys and big guys working together.” It’s also become much more possible to organize real-life events with the help of wikis and social networks; on Thursday, FOWA was preceded by a Miami iteration of the BarCamp “unconferences,” which are famously organized by the attendees.

Aug 19

Find more deals, coupon codes, and bargains on CNET’s Shopper.com.

I also understand the concept of perceived value. If you make e-books cheap, that cheapens the value of books in general, right? No. Wrong. Hogwash. That’s 20th century thinking.

Case in point: I just read a glowing review of Jonathan Tropper’s “This is Where I Leave You.” I’m sold; I want it. But something’s amiss here: Amazon’s hardcover price is $15.57, while the Kindle edition sells for $14.01.

The most frequently used apps on my
iPhone, bar none, are Kindle, eReader, and Stanza.

Let’s get some perspective. Publishers have vast libraries of old, forgotten books that are generating zero income, or close to it. Why can’t I buy e-book editions for 99 cents? Last I checked, some revenue was better than no revenue.

I will not buy “This is Where I Leave You” for $14.01. At $9.95, I have to think about it. For $2.99, publisher Dutton Adult, by way of Amazon or eReader or whoever, would already have my money. And probably a lot more, as I’d be snapping up books left and right.

E-books, on the other hand, consume zero trees. They weigh nothing, occupy no physical space, and don’t get shipped in the traditional sense. Middlemen are few and far between. So you’re left with, what, editing costs and the pittance you pay the authors?

Readers, it’s time for you to step up and letter-bomb both booksellers and publishers, to let them know you’ve got money to spend on books, but want fair prices.

I’m no businessman (English major, natch), but even I understand the economics of volume. Want to sell more e-books? Lower the prices. Forget how things work in the physical world, where selling more books means more production, more shipping, more consumables. E-books require none of that. The only real “consumable” is bandwidth, and there’s no shortage of that.

It’s time for that to change.

Explain to me, then, why the e-book edition of “This is Where I Leave You” sells for $14.01. The $.01 suggests there must be some calculation at work, some formula you use to determine that Kindle and iPhone owners get to save all of a buck-fifty-six when they read green.

(By the way, bargain hunters, eReader.com sells “This is Where I Leave You” for $9.95–still disproportionately high, but more reasonable at least.)

Amazon inexplicably charges nearly as much for the e-book edition as for the hardcover.

Look, I’m your biggest fan. I’ve been reading digitally distributed fiction and non-fiction since the early days of the PalmPilot.

Apple figured out that 99 cents was the magic price point for songs and managed to strong-arm record labels into letting it sell at that point. Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Sony–it’s time for you step up and convince book publishers to do likewise.

One final thought: at the same time you’re raking in newfound profits, publishers, you’ll be creating a more literate, well-read society. Not a bad perk, eh?

But I’m getting increasingly frustrated with e-book prices, which rarely represent a savings over their print (aka dead-tree) counterparts.

Why aren’t best sellers priced at, say, $2.99? That’s an impulse-buy price, one that would encourage readers to pony up instead of waiting weeks or months to check out the one print copy the library bought.

Dear e-book publishers: stop gouging us.

Now, I understand books cost money. There’s editing, publishing, and distribution. Paper, ink, trucks, gasoline. Storage, shipping, shelf space, sales staff. And the countless people involved in all those transactions.

(Credit:
Amazon)

This isn’t a new phenomenon. For as long as I’ve been reading them, e-books have cost nearly as much as their print siblings.

That’s the end of my diatribe. Over to you, readers. Would you buy more e-books if they cost just a buck or two? Would you be more likely to buy, say, a Kindle if cheap books were part of the deal? I eagerly await your thoughts on the subject.

Aug 16

The company, founded in late 2001, has done business running energy efficiency programs and operating alternative energy generators, including co-generation plants. Typically, manufacturers look for a two-year payback on any kind of energy investment to lower their costs.

But in the past year, carbon management and sustainability initiatives are rising in importance, rather than only reducing energy spending, Zoellner said.

Comparing data from different locations allows companies to get an idea on how to lower their usage, said company CEO Jay Zoellner.

“A lot of companies are struggling with their carbon emissions reduction targets. They need a way to manage and verify they’ve had an impact,” he said.

Drilling down: EPS' system lets plant operators get detailed information on energy usage, down to the level of a facility or a process like making buttermilk.

EPS, an energy management company founded by former Enron employees, has developed a system for remotely tracking energy usage at manufacturing facilities with a high level of detail.

(Credit:
EPS)

The company on Thursday intends to introduce the system, called xChange Point, a hosted application that monitors energy usage at manufacturing facilities and provides Web-based reports to energy managers.

xChange Point, which includes a hardware device placed at a customer’s location and software to analyze data, gives those companies more accurate information and a way to report any carbon emissions reductions, he said.

Aug 16

Neo hackers
According to Chris Boyd, director of malware research at Facetime Security Labs, Echo Boomer computer hackers “don’t seem to be as wise to the risks as older generations were.” They leap from social-networking site to social-networking site. And they are quite happy to post photographs of themselves on sites selling stolen credit cards. They’re non-anonymous on the Internet, he says, often keeping the same username, which makes them easy to shut down.

Where the teens are
In January 2007, the Pew Internet & American Life Project released a study of 935 mainstream U.S.-based youth aged 12 to 17 years old. Overall, 41 percent of the youths aged 12 to 13 had social site profiles, while 61 percent of the youths aged 14 to 17 did. But by gender, the differences are clear. Seventy percent of girls aged 15 to 17 have a social site profile compared with only 50 percent for boys the same age.

She added, “for those seeking attention, writing comments and being visible on popular people’s pages is very important and this can be a motivation to comment on others’ profiles.”

It’s a world of fake hacks and stolen Habbo Hotel and World of Warcraft gaming accounts. Sometimes there’s money associated with it, but most often the scams and the pranks are just for prestige.

The importance of these social-network profile sites in the lives of mainstream Echo Boomers varied among those surveyed. Ninety percent said they use the sites to stay in touch with friends they see often, and 82 percent said they stay in touch with those they do not see as often. A majority use the sites for making social plans. But when it comes to making new friends, the teens were evenly split. And as for flirting, 83 percent (male and female) said they did not do that. Sixty percent of the youths surveyed reported limiting access to their site profiles.

Teenage hackers are using YouTube.

Boyd goes on to say a lot of what he’s seen online is like an American Idol sort of hacker fame. Rather than having any sort of real standing of fame within the hacking community, a lot of the hacks are quite facile–a lot are fleeting. “It’s because they haven’t got a concept of the consequences of it all. It’s almost like a fad–and it’s a pretty dangerous fad, I think.”

Welcome to the next generation of computer hackers, the teenybopper edition, where the kids, ages 11 to 16, don’t consider YouTube, MySpace.com, Facebook, and Xanga to be social-networking sites. They call them “social engineering sites.”

But keeping one username in particular is behavior that is not necessarily true of all mainstream teenage users, suggests Danah Boyd (no relation to Chris Boyd). As a Ph.D. candidate at the University of California at Berkeley and a fellow at Harvard Law School’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society, her graduate work has focused on how people manage their presentation of self in online environments. Her subsequent research has found anecdotal evidence of teenagers who create a throw-away e-mail account for the sole purpose of creating a new social site page. Then, over time, if they lose their password to the site or to the e-mail account, they simply create a new account and a new profile page.

One example
He cites an example of a kid on a forum who posted that his YouTube account had been shut down. The kid wanted others on the forum to launch a campaign to get his username reinstated. “Rather than recreate the username with a one or a two on the end,” Boyd said, “he was so obsessed with his own particular username, with the uniqueness of it and all that, that, in his own words, he’d rather retire from the hacking scene than lose his username.”

(Credit:
FaceTime Security Labs)

“Because the digital world requires people to write themselves into being,” she writes, “profiles provide an opportunity to craft the intended expression through language, imagery and media. Explicit reactions to their online presence offers valuable feedback. The goal is to look cool and receive peer validation.”

They’re the first generation to experience the growth of the Internet at a very early age. Some are early adopters of cutting-edge Web 2.0 applications and services such as video streaming and social networking. Some of these kids have begun to dabble in computer hacking, but unlike previous generations of computer hackers, it’s not about discovery, it’s all about them.

He said in his research that he sees kids starting between the ages of 11 and 13 on online gaming sites. “A lot of these kids mature on to Habbo Hotel,.Runescape, and things like that. From there they start to learn about the basic hacks and cracks and patches.” Some start to run their own forums. That’s when, he said, they start to get a bit more adventurous; then they start looking into the phish pages, the fake account stealer programs that you get for Runescape. He said there’s a strong link between gaming communities and teenage computer hacking although he doesn’t know if anyone’s ever actually set down some hard statistics.

In the study, the mainstream teens said the social network they updated most was MySpace (85 percent), with Facebook (7 percent) and Xanga (1 percent) far behind. A quarter of the teens surveyed said they visited their site once a day, with another 20 percent saying they visited more often. Another 20 percent said they visit once every two weeks. Not surprisingly, use of the social-network site changed with computer access. Youths who accessed the Internet at home accessed social sites more often–58 percent as opposed to 42 percent who accessed the Internet from school or some other public terminal.

Except they don’t see any reason to hide.

Additional research suggests that teens of a certain age have “settled,” and are therefore much more protective of their nascent identities online. They’re individuating from their parents; they’re trying a version of themselves out in the real world, so their usernames take on additional value and weight. So when they cross the line into criminal hacking, in many ways it is just as personal as though they themselves were engaged in petty crime on the streets. And that is an important intersection for teenagers who dabble in writing malicious software.

Same name
This is consistent with Chris Boyd’s research into Echo Boomer hackers that create one username and see how it plays on the social networks. “This is more of a lifestyle statement to a lot of these kids. A lot of it is about fame and fortune,” he said.

Gotcha
By keeping the same username across Xanga, Facebook, and MySpace, Chris Boyd expects to find a paper trail online. And he does. He has tracked many offenders across numerous sites, some going back a few years, and done so in about 10 minutes or less using Google. “It’s weird,” he says. “Now when you hear about hackers it’s all profit motivated–they’re not doing it for hacking kudos anymore; they’re not in it for the fame; they’re in it for the money. There was a time when (hacking) was all about exploration, being notorious or well-known or a famous hacker. It’s almost that a lot of these kids have reverted back to that way of thinking.”

On Wednesday, we’ll look at exactly what these Echo Boomer hackers are doing online.

On Thursday morning, at this year’s RSA Conference in San Francisco, Chris Boyd of Facetime and I will present a talk, “How to Adapt to the Echo Generation’s Social Media Hacking Game.” The following is a preview of that talk, presented in three parts. On Tuesday, we’re looking at who are the Echo Generation hackers. Wednesday , we’ll look at how they use online social media for hacks. And on Thursday, we’ll talk about how Chris uses features of social networks and Web 2.0 to shut these kids down.

Why they’re online
In one paper, Danah Boyd likens online social networks to radio and mass media in past generations, except that social networks allow interaction as opposed to being fed information from the mass media. Echo Boomers may be the first generation to interactively define who they are. She adds, “this is highly beneficial for marginalized youth, but its effect on mainstream youth is unknown.”

They’re the geek subset of the so-called Echo Boomers, a generation defined as children born between 1982 and 1995; they are also sometimes called “Generation Y” or “Millennials.” The Echo Boomer name is a direct reference to the Baby Boomers, born some 30 years before, and many in fact children of Baby Boomers. According to CBS News, Echo Boomers already spend $170 billion a year of their own and their parents’ money, so from a marketing perspective they’re significant.

Aug 16

Cell phone chipmaker Qualcomm said it plans to use licenses it bought in the E block to provide more capacity for its mobile broadcast TV service called MediaFlo. Qualcomm spent a total of $558.1 million on licenses in the E block and a few licenses in the B block. The E-block licenses will expand MediaFlo coverage in areas such as Boston, Los Angeles, New York City, Philadelphia, and San Francisco.

And the B-block licenses, which cover parts of California and New Jersey, will be used for research and development.

The gag order that silenced those participating in the FCC’s auction that ended last month was lifted late Thursday. Now companies are free to discuss their plans and strategies for bidding in the auction.

But the company doesn’t plan to roll out the new network any time soon. According to RCR Wireless, AT&T’s CTO doesn’t expect the technology to be ready until 2012.

Companies bidding in the Federal Communications Commission’s 700MHz spectrum auction are starting to talk.

AT&T also said it plans to use the $6.6 billion worth of spectrum it bought in the B block to build a 4G network using LTE, according to RCRWirelessNews. The company will also use spectrum it won in the 2006 advanced wireless services (AWS) auction for the new network.

Verizon Wireless paid nearly $10 billion for licenses in the C block, which are subject to a special FCC rule that requires the winner to allow any device to connect to a network using this spectrum. Verizon will use the spectrum to deploy a 4G network using long-term evolution (LTE) technology. The company expects to have an LTE service deployed in late 2009, the article quotes Melone as saying.

Other bidders in the auction have begun to talk, as well. Google, which had also been bidding on the C-block spectrum, said its main goal in bidding was to make sure the $4.6 billion reserve price was met so that the open-access rule would take effect. Richard Whitt, Washington telecom and media counsel, and Joseph Faber, corporate counsel for Google, wrote about Google’s strategy on the company’s Public Policy Blog on Thursday.

Verizon Wireless plans to use its newly won wireless spectrum licenses in the 700MHz auction to deliver 4G services, CTO Tony Melone told the wireless news site Unstrung.

Aug 16

Related: Gmail is down, Twitter sizzling with the news

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

Apple’s MobileMe suite of Web services suffered another outage Monday that affected an unknown number of its users.

As a reminder, if you’re a MobileMe subscriber with continuing issues, Apple has a special customer service chat tool for you access.

Monday’s problems centered on a lack of access to Mail on three fronts: through the Web, on the
iPhone, and on IMAP for use on desktop e-mail applications. The same thing happened in mid July, with enough blowback to cause Apple to offer a 30-day extension to both free trial and paying users.

Despite the known outage, there hasn’t been an update to the MobileMe Status Blog since July 29. The blog was provisioned specifically to address any known issues with the service. For now, most of the chatter has been on Apple’s support discussions with dozens of threads from users frustrated by the lack of communication and lost productivity.

Have you experienced problems with Apple’s MobileMe today?

( polls)

Update: corrected customer service chat reference from a call-in service.

Of the included services, Mail was inaccessible for approximately two hours. Earlier in the day we had received scattered reports from users who were unable to access their mail. Those reports were later confirmed both through Apple’s MobileMe status ticker and Twitter’s real-time search tool. For those affected, all other aspects of MobileMe were reportedly up and running.

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