September 23, 2011
Blizzard Entertainment announced Friday that its launch of Diablo III has been pushed to early 2012, quashing gamers’ hopes that they might get the new game in time for the holidays.
Diablo III is the latest installment of Blizzard’s action role playing game series, in development for Windows and OS X. The game has been in development for several years, but only this week began a large scale closed beta test.
“With every game we make, the temptation is always very strong to launch as soon as possible. However, we didn’t put so many years of work into Diablo III to release a game that was almost ready,” said Mike Morhaime, CEO and cofounder of Blizzard Entertainment.
Morhaime added that the beta test is “going very well,” and that Blizzard will use the extra time afforded by the schedule to “deliver an experience that lives up to our vision for the game and the expectations of our players.”
Blizzard plans to add more testers than initially projected, as well. Players with active Battle.net accounts can opt in for a chance to participate in a future test phase.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Writing for GigaOM, David Churbuck outlines what he would tell the new CEO of HP to do:
Get a better board. It sounds like a shit fight in the monkey cage at the zoo inside of HPs board. The CEO needs to stack the deck with allies and advisors, not glory seekers who pull down each other’s pants.
That sums up HP for the last couple of years.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Matt Gemmell on publishing services like paper.li:
Newspapers contain editorial. There’s some kind of journalistic contribution, however brief, in each article. With these online “newspapers”, there’s zero. It’s just a wad of links and extracts, styled to appear something like a newspaper. No commentary by the “publisher”.…Even just a brief remark on why you care about each item enough to share it? Give me a reason to be interested.
I read articles and links because of the contribution the person brings to that article or topic. The contribution doesn’t have to be an essay — sometimes a few words on why they think it’s important is enough.
The war of words between Apple and Samsung is heating up again.
In an interview with AP, Lee Younghee, Samsung’s head of global marketing for mobile communications, accused Apple of “free riding” on its patented wireless technologies. Lee also said that Samsung is going to be more aggressive in defending itself in the future.
Samsung says it holds key patents that allow, for example, for a person to talk and receive email at the same time.
“We believe Apple is free riding” on such Samsung patents, Lee said.
Apple reacted to Samsung’s claims in the same AP story.
“It is no coincidence that Samsung’s latest products look a lot like the iPhone and iPad, from the shape of the hardware to the user interface and even the packaging,” said Seoul-based spokesman Steve Park. “This kind of blatant copying is wrong and we need to protect Apple’s intellectual property when companies steal our ideas.”
You can’t argue the fact that all smartphone designs changed in 2007, after the iPhone was released. Companies have been copying Apple’s hardware and software design ever since.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
So cool. Even if you don’t understand the code, scroll down to the bottom and click to see the finished product. Spectacular.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Florian Mueller:
Damages can be substantial but they are not what Oracle is primarily trying to get out of this case. They are a potentially substantial consolation prize. The grand prize, however, is an injunction, and Oracle’s filing makes this clear with the following statement, which explains why Oracle’s new damages computation — unlike the old one that included damages until the year 2025 — relates only to past damages and apparently provides only some data points with a view to future damages, which would be rendered totally irrelevant by an injunction:
Mueller also noted on Wednesday that Google could potentially pay more to Oracle for a Java license than the $12.5 billion it paid for Motorola Mobility.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Tim Bajarin for Techpinions:
Only time will tell if she was the right one to take over at this time in HP’s history but she has the leadership and communication skills HP needs now to keep it from sinking any further and rallying the troops around a unified vision. And at the moment, I believe that is the real reason the board decided on Whitman. They need her to correct the problems of the present now and get them moving in the right direction as fast as possible.
I believe Whitman can do that. Whether she can last long term remains to be seen, but she’ll certainly do better than Leo.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
CNN:
On the job as chief executive for not even 11 months, Leo Apotheker will leave HP a wealthy man: He has already taken home most of his $1.2 million annual salary, a $4 million signing bonus, and an additional $4.6 million awarded for relocation assistance and to offset payments that he forfeited from his previous employer, SAP.
As John Gruber said, the only thing Apotheker didn’t do was set HP’s campus on fire.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Macworld:
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced a bevy of features for its social network, including one called Timeline that allows you to chronologically chart your entire life via pictures, Facebook updates, Likes, and places you’ve traveled to and lived. That feature along with a host of new Facebook apps are being announced Thursday at Facebook’s f8 developers conference.
It’s been a big day for Facebook. Clearly they are fighting with Google for the hearts of the social networking public.
Harman International on Thursday announced its JBL On Tour iBT, a battery-powered speaker system that wirelessly streams audio from your Mac or iOS device using Bluetooth. Its suggested retail price is $199.

The JBL On Tour iBT incorporates four full-range speakers and digital signal processing hardware. It supports A2DP and AVCRP Bluetooth profiles. A built-in microphone also makes it suitable for use as a speakerphone for conference calls or video calls.
The device is powered with four AA batteries and also works with an AC adapter. A built-in USB socket also charges a connected iPad, iPhone or iPod.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
DigiTimes:
Apple has increased its purchases of DRAM and NAND flash from Japan, according to industry sources, adding that Toshiba and Elpida Memory are being pinpointed as beneficiaries of the increased procurement.
It’s a defensive move by Apple to reduce risk associated with buying flash memory from Samsung, with whom Apple is waging a legal battle in several international markets (over the similarities between iOS devices and Samsung’s Android-based Galaxy Tab devices).
It’s utterly ridiculous for some pundits and industry reporters to suggest this move is Apple “punishing” Samsung, but it just goes to show the general mentality of some of the people reporting on this market. The company is reducing risk by becoming less dependent on a potentially volatile component manufacturer – something you might expect to see a competently-managed company do to protect its supply chain.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
CNN:
Last week Sony changed the terms-of-service document for its PlayStation Network, asking U.S. customers to forfeit their rights to file class-action lawsuits against the company and its partners. Customers can opt out by sending the company a letter in the mail. … Sony said this week that the new terms-of-service changes were made, as some analysts suspected, in response to a Supreme Court decision in April. In that case, AT&T Mobility was permitted to include and enforce a clause in employment contracts that bars workers from bringing class-action suits.
Initially many suspected the changes to the PlayStation Network terms of service was a defensive reaction to lawsuits filed against Sony after the service was breached by hackers earlier this year, exposing personal information for tens of millions of accounts.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
CBS News:
Turns out, traits that make great software testers – intense focus, comfort with repetition, and memory for detail – also happen to be characteristics of autism.Aspiritech, a nonprofit in Highland Park, Ill., nurtures these skills while forgiving the quirks that can make adults with autism unemployable: social awkwardness, poor eye contact, being easily overwhelmed. The company’s name is a play on the words “Asperger’s,” “spirit” and “technology.”
While a lot of research and treatment focuses on providing children who have been diagnosed with Asperger’s and other autism spectrum disorders, what makes Apsiritech different is their focus on adults. It’s a great idea, and goodness only knows the world can use more gifted and motivated software QA people.
I sat down to watch my beloved Boston Bruins play their first televised (delayed) pre-season hockey game against the Ottawa Senators today on the NHL Network. Just as the game started, the ticker came up on the bottom of the screen showing the scores and news from around the league. I wasn’t worried — only a complete moron would show the score of the game I am currently watching.
MORONS!
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Threatpost:
Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley said on Tuesday that her office would be inquiring into long-standing complaints about fraudulent purchases that leverage Apple’s popular online music store.In a lunchtime address to business and technology leaders in Massachusetts, Coakley said she was a victim of identity theft in recent months, and that her stolen credit card information was used to make fraudulent iTunes purchases. When asked (by Threatpost) about whether such fraud constitutes a reportable event under the Bay State’s strict data breach notification law, Coakley said that her office would be looking into that question and demanding answers from Cupertino, California based Apple, which has steadfastly refused to comment, or report the breaches to Massachusetts regulators.
Kinda figures that this didn’t get on her radar until AG Coakley herself was the victim of fraud.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Forbes’ “Richest People in America” list is out and it contains a lot of familiar names including Bill Gates ($59 billion) and Steve Jobs ($7 billion). One of the surprises this year is Mark Zuckerberg who is now worth $17.5 billion, putting him in 14th spot overall.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
NPD Research:
Among smartphone users, 82 percent have no security products installed on their phones; however, the percentage of users addressing this concern varies by platform, according to NPD’s “Emerging Technology Trends: Mobile Security” report. Although iPhone and Android smartphone owners share similar security concerns, 30 percent of Android smartphone owners have installed security products on their phones, compared to just 6 percent of iPhone owners.“Even though iPhone users are less concerned than Android users about device security, they are still clearly worried,” said Stephen Baker, vice president of industry analysis for NPD. “Their biggest concerns were much more likely to be fears that their iPhone would be stolen or damaged, than any unwanted or harmful activities.”
iPhone owners feel pretty safe downloading apps from Apple because of the approval process the company has in place. The Android market has been caught a couple of times with malware apps and other nastiness available for users to download.
September 21, 2011
Written by Jim Dalrymple
I did an interview for The Bro Show this afternoon with Myke Hurley and Terry Lucy from the UK. We talked about all kinds of things, including RIM, Final Cut Pro, The Loop 2.0, and more.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
AppleInsider:
That observation, by RBC Capital Markets analyst Mike Abramsky, was made in response to Gartner’s presentation, which estimated that 40 percent of organizations already support employee owned mobile devices.Gartner called the trend toward “bring your own devices” as an “unstoppable train coming down the tracks,” noting that “C-level executives” have opened the door to employee-owned mobile devices and that younger employees “prefer consumer technologies like iPhones and iPads over enterprise-provided alternatives.”
Some IT people tried to stop it, but ultimately users won. The way it should be.
Adobe plans to roll out Flash Player 11 and AIR 3 in October, according to a new blog post from Adobe’s Flash product manager Tom Nguyen.
Integral to the new Flash release is “Stage 3D,” a new hardware-accelerated 3D graphics architecture that delivers radically improved 3D graphics performance compared with Flash 10 – on the order of 1000 times improved, according to Nguyen.
“Additionally, these releases deliver new features to support theater-quality HD video, native 64-bit optimizations, high-quality HD video conferencing, and a powerful, flexible architecture for leveraging native device and platform capabilities,” said Nguyen.
Stage 3D Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) enable developers to use the graphics processors on a wide variety of computers, with features including dynamic audio, low-latency multiplayer networking, 1080P video playback, voice chat and other capabilities.
Nguyen says to expect the first crop of Flash 11-optimized games to arrive later this year and early in 2012.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Erik Sherman, for BNet:
…according to a quick survey done of 500 consumers by brand naming company Strategic Name Development, Netflix may have stepped into one of the worst muck holes it could have: blowing the name of its DVD division. And the reason it did was fear.…By associating Qwikster with the DVD business, top brass made the complete opposite choice of what they needed. The company could have brought on new name (preferably something with a more natural connection to the service that avoided the infamous suffix) and associated it with the streaming service. Netflix would have used the classic approach of promoting new name with the established one and then, over time, switched the emphasis.
Survey respondents suggested that Netflix should have named its newly-minted DVD service something evocative of the original Netflix name.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Kara Swisher:
Former eBay CEO Meg Whitman is being considered by Hewlett-Packard directors as a possible candidate for CEO, in a move that would replace its current leader Léo Apotheker, according to several sources close to the situation.
I wonder if Apotheker knew. Well, he does now.
Facebook users got an eyeful on Wednesday when they launched their Web browsers to be greeted with a new home page interface containing some changes. In a posting on the Facebook Blog, engineering manager Mark Tonkelowitz explained some of the recent changes.
The Facebook home page “News Feed” has, up to now, shown new content in chronological order. This offers a benefit to frequent users who can regularly refresh the page, but if you don’t, you’ll miss out on what’s going on with the people you’re connected to.
Tonkelowitz describes the new News Feed as “your own personal newspaper.” The News Feed now shows top photos and statuses that have been posted while you’ve been away, so it won’t matter as much if you visit the site multiple times a day or just once in a while.
A new sidebar Ticker shows what’s going on with your friends in real time; when they comment, ask a question or share new content, you’ll see it continuously updated there. You can adjust who can see your updates, and users of wider screen computers can slide a grey bar between the ticker and chat to adjust how many updates they see at a time.
Microsoft last week unveiled Windows 8, the company’s new desktop and tablet operating. With the announcement, Microsoft joins Amazon as companies that are expected to enter the tablet market within the next 12 months. However, I don’t believe they will be taking much market share from the iPad, rather I think, gains will come at the expense of Android-based tablets.
Microsoft
I have to give credit to Microsoft for coming out with a strategy that’s different than Apple. I have been calling on companies to be innovative and not just copy Apple since the iPad was first released. Finally, someone is doing it.
There are still a lot of questions surrounding Metro, Microsoft’s tablet operating system, but we’ve seen where the company is going and it looks like they have a plan this time.
While Microsoft is clearly aiming for the iPad, I don’t think Windows 8-based tablets will have much affect on Apple’s popular device. Instead, Android tablets will suffer the brunt of Microsoft’s market share gains when its partners release products.
The reason, I believe, is very simple. People are looking for an alternative to existing Android tablets, but nobody is looking to replace the iPad.
Microsoft will have a built-in customer base with Windows 8, but previous projects like the Kin and Courier show that you can’t rely on that base to make a new product successful.
Apple customers these days are also Microsoft customers. The iPhone, iPod, and iPad transcend those operating system and company battles that have raged for decades. People are happy to run Windows and own an Apple device too.
Microsoft are going to have to prove they have a device that can beat the iPad — I don’t think they can do that.
What I think they can do is provide users with a viable alternative to Android. It’s an alternative that many people will try.
Amazon
While I believe Microsoft will be successful in its tablet strategy, I also think that Amazon will be successful too. Again, this will be at the expense of Android-based tablets.
Amazon has a solid name among consumers. Millions of people shop there and they are trusted. As soon as Amazon comes out with a tablet, people will start buying.
Even though it will be based on Android, consumers will only see as far as the Amazon name. People will look at the device as an expanded Kindle rather than a tablet and buy it for that reason.
There is a whole subset of users that would be happy to have a tablet to read books, surf the Web and get email. That’s all they want, and all they need. Amazon’s tablet will be perfect for them.
Microsoft, Amazon, and Apple
All Apple has to do at this point is not screw up. If they continue releasing solid hardware and software, they will continue to rule the tablet space with little other effort.
Of course, I expect Apple to continue to innovate and maintain its wide lead on other manufacturers, but they could sustain the margin even if they sat still.
Microsoft and Amazon will offer solid alternatives to Android-based tablets and they will all fight for second place and whatever scraps are leftover from that.
The battle remains for second place.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
AppleInsider:
Industry sources told DigiTimes that the manufacturer is cutting back production lines for the PlayBook at a factory in Taiwan, offering preferential compensation to the roughly 1,000 workers who have been let go. Quanta confirmed the layoffs, but declined to provide further details.
I usually don’t put much weight behind DigiTimes reports, but this one seems solid, especially since the layoffs have been confirmed.
It seems reasonable that RIM would cut production considering it only shipped 200,000 PlayBooks last quarter. Even with price cuts coming, I would think that number would be about the same or worse in the current quarter.