Aug 24

To be sure, this sort of thing may not be especially important if we’re talking about things like servers–although these too interact with long-term undercurrents such as massively multi-core programming  that are largely removed from day-to-day concerns but which are immensely important in the long view. In the case of Open Source, however much it has blended into the mainstream of software, is still also very part and parcel of the history and motivations behind it.

 

One of the reasons I attend O’Reilly’s Open Source Conference (OSCON) is that, more so than others I go to, it gets into the intellectual and–dare I say–philosophical underpinnings of things as well as the things themselves.

Much of that background, the continuing areas of conflict that are part and parcel of it, hints at how Open Source may evolve, and some of the opportunities (and challenges) of bringing Open Source into domains other than code were on display at the Participate 08 panel discussion yesterday. The complexities of the many interweaving threads are neatly captured in these whiteboards drawn by Collective Next during the panel.

But for our purposes here I’m going to focus on one specific thread. I’ll be following up with further discussion of other points.

As open data, creative writing and media, and code merge, we’re going to increasingly need to reconcile the issues that matter most to the communities who own the copyrights to their respective bodies of work.

This is a potentially huge disconnect between the data/science world and the code world. This is especially so because attribution clauses are not a part of most Open Source licenses for deliberate reason. The problem is that attributions “stack”–that is, they acquire threads of contributors that may go back years. Thus, to have a legal requirement to preserve some list of all that historical accretion of intellectual property would get enormously unwieldy to implement in a practical way.

One of the panelists was John Wilbanks, who run the Science Commons project (within Creative Commons). He had some interesting perspectives on the concerns of scientists, as opposed to programmers. For example, in the Open Source code world, as it has evolved, attribution (at least formal attribution) isn’t a component of most licenses. But, in the academic community, it’s all about attribution. As he described it: “the motivation is to be associated with the publication of an idea… to own a fact.”

Academics deal with this sort of thing all the time. However, it’s handled within the context of social norms and customs and violations are dealt with largely by corresponding social censures rather than legal ones. Attribution is serious business in academia–but it’s not implemented through formal legal strictures that require literature searches for previously unknown Russian papers of 30 years past. (Of course, there are often bruised egos and perceived slights all the time–welcome to the world–but these are issues mostly resolved within a community rather than in a court of law.

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As a side issue, John also noted that, in the sciences, he does not recommend that work be limited to non-commercial use or to prohibit derivative (i.e. transformed) use of the work. He said that such restrictions have a very chilling effect on integration and federation. I’ve written previously about the Non-Commercial clause of some Creative Commons licenses in the context of photographs. Increasingly strictures against commercial use, an area that Open Source code licenses have largely stayed away from to their betterment, seem to be something that appear reasonable and fair but, in fact, have far more cons than pros.

Aug 24

Via Gizmodo

The Crave blog discussed the upcoming Blackberry Storm launching soon on Verizon and just a few hours later a leaked version of the launch video is up on YouTube.

The Storm looks like a decent challenger to the consumer-y
iPhone with all the nice Blackberry features. I’m still not convinced on the whole touchscreen thing, but it’s nice to see the iPhone have some competition and RIM get a sense of design.

Aug 24

Despite the recent pairing between Yahoo and Google, signs indicate that Microsoft is after the Sunnyvale-based Yahoo for its search capabilities. That doesn’t come as a huge surprise since that was the essence of the last round of talks before the deal was completely yanked off the table. And if we’re likening this courtship to teenage love, I suppose that makes Carl Icahn the too-cool-for-school senior who’s waiting to see how and when he can benefit most when the dust finally settles.

Like two teenagers trying to figure out if they like each other, Yahoo and Microsoft are back at it again, trying to determine if a relationship can work. In Wednesday’s edition of the Daily Debrief, I spoke with CNET News.com’s Ina Fried about this latest round of talks and who is more desperate for the partnership.

Aug 24

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No, the most important news is who funded this round. Index Ventures.

As is often the case with “news,” the most interesting story is in the subtext. As an example, DimDim, the open-source web conferencing company, just raised $6 million in a Series B round of financing. That’s great news for DimDim, but it’s not the most important news. (Though I’m sure DimDim employees will beg to differ. :-)

Getting money from Index says a lot about DimDim. It has a lot of experience investing in open source. Index doesn’t suffer open-source fools easily. DimDim just got a big vote of confidence…along with the cash.

For those who don’t follow the open-source world very closely, Index has funded some of the world’s best open-source companies, many funded by Danny Rimer, open-source rock star. Its portfolio is filled with MySQL, Zend, OpenX, and Pentaho, among others.

Aug 24

As people get less trusting (deservedly so) of email, the bad guys hope victims put more
faith in phone numbers.

This introduction to vishing is offered in the hope that being aware of it makes you less likely to fall for a vishing based scam.

In the old days, tracing a phone number to its true owner was no big deal. But now, according to Brian “the voice mail systems involved in these sorts of scams usually are run off of free or low-cost Internet-based phone networks that are difficult to trace and shut down.”

See a summary of all my Defensive Computing postings.

The story is likely to be that something bad has happened to your bank account, or is about to happen to it, and unless you call the phone number immediately you can kiss your money good-bye. The scammer hopes the story will scare you to the point that you don’t even consider the validity of the phone number.

The crucial point is that just because someone or something says that a phone number belongs to a bank or credit union doesn’t make it true.

A recent article by Brian Krebs at WashingtonPost.com, The Anatomy of a Vishing Scam, describes a particular scam in detail and offers an education by example. In the case Brian describes, the initial contact with the victim was by text messaging to a cellphone, but it could just as well have been via email or instant messaging.

Call your bank or credit union, but call the number in the phone book or on your statements. If it’s a scam, they should appreciate the heads up. They may not, but they should.

Vishing is short for voice phishing. Voice refers to the fact that the scam is perpetrated over the phone. Phishing is a scam designed to “criminally and fraudulently acquire sensitive information, such as usernames,
passwords and credit card details, by masquerading as a trustworthy entity…”
according to Wikipedia.

Aug 24

Those are some reliable sources, because the tiny laptops just kept coming this week. For example, we learned the OLPC XO laptop may switch from Linux to Windows XP. The Asus Eee PC 900, the 9-inch version of everyone’s favorite super cheap portable, got an official launch date (May 12) and an official price ($549). Little-known U.S. manufacturer 3K Computers launched the 7-inch Longitude 400. And PC World learned that this June’s Computex trade show in Taipei will reportedly see the debut of another version of the Asus Eee PC and a new ultralight laptop from Acer, both running on Intel’s Atom platform.

In reviews, we mostly dug the 13.3-inch Toshiba Satellite U405 and got a kick out of the 12.1-inch Asus Lamborghini VX3. We also thought the Gateway P-172X FX would make a good choice for gamers who fall just short of hardcore.

Finally, we honored Earth Day by measuring the power consumption of a number of desktops and laptops. The conclusion? Leaving your gaming system running idle at all hours could be costing you almost $200 per year. So shut down that computer before you head out to play this weekend, mmmkay?

As this week drew to a close I whipped out my trusty Magic 8 Ball and asked it: “Will there ever be an end to the little-laptop news?” And the Magic 8 Ball replied: “My sources say no.”

However, the week didn’t belong completely to the little guys: Toshiba released five new Satellite Pros; Averatec announced two semirugged systems, the Voya 4473 and Voya 6494; Acer debuted the Aspire 5920 laptop with WiMax support; and reports circulated with more details about the official release of Asus’ bamboo computers.

If you’re overwhelmed by all the low-cost laptop options, Engadget points to a comprehensive list of low-cost laptops, assembled by Liliputing.

Aug 24

Virtual Iron competes chiefly with virtualization powerhouse VMware. However, it looks like the company has its sights set more on the host of second-tier alternatives, including Citrix Systems’ XenSource, Microsoft’s forthcoming Hyper-V, and Parallels’ forthcoming Parallels Server.

Virtual Iron also grown internationally, with 40 percent of revenue from outside North America, and has distributor deals with Avnet and Tech Data.

“Virtual Iron is the only competitor to VMware in the market that has the features to support the high-value use cases for virtualization such as dynamic workload management, fault tolerance, and disaster recovery,” said David Skok, a general partner at Matrix Partners.

Virtual Iron had “dramatic growth” over the last 12 months, and the new funding round was at a higher valuation, the company said. It didn’t release particulars, but did cite IDC statistics saying that spending on server virtualization is growing at 60 percent per year and that Virtual Iron is growing faster than the overall market.

Virtual Iron, a start-up aiming to commercialize the open-source Xen virtualization software, has raised $20 million.

The investment include Highland Capital Partners, Matrix Partners, Goldman Sachs, Intel Capital, and SAP Ventures, the Lowell, Mass.-based company said. Total funding for the company now has reached $65 million, the company said Monday.

Aug 24

Like Matthew before him, Jim’s keynote promises to spark some fireworks. Here’s the abstract I just received:

Jim Whitehurst is a quick study. Matthew Szulik delivered the opening keynote at the Open Source Business Conference 2007, while his successor, Jim Whitehurst, will be opening up OSBC 2008 (March 25-26, San Francisco).

Open Source and True Innovation

With Red Hat opening the conference and Microsoft’s Brad Smith giving the evening keynote (with many IT executives in between), it promises to be a killer show. Register now. If you want to try for a discount, ping me and I’ll see what I can do. InfoWorld runs the event but sometimes they let me hand out a limited number of discounts.

In his keynote at the Open Source Business Conference, Red Hat President and CEO, Jim Whitehurst, will share his observations from his time with customers and partners around the world who put open source into real business practice. Whitehurst will discuss the drivers of why companies are considering open source for the long-term and why it is strategic to business objectives.

Open Source is the driving force behind the true innovation that happens daily in the community. True open source innovation is what drives value. Hybrid open source strategies cause confusion and sub-par customer experiences.

It remains to be seen whether Jim will be able to convey his thoughts as passionately and eloquently as Matthew did, but after talking with him once before and after reading through a few interviews he has delivered, I suspect the answer is “Yes.”

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Aug 24

The DTV coupon program allows you to continue watching free over-the-air TV, without needing a new TV or a cable subscription.

In a separate report from TV Technology magazine, cable giant Comcast is said to be targeting the 6 to 8 million people in its geographic footprint who currently get their television signals over the air, and will begin a comprehensive marketing campaign related to the transition.

What do you think? Has your local cable company used the DTV transition as an excuse to raise fees or misinform customers about digital TV? Sound off in the comments section.

Merson also reports that another area provider, Time Warner Cable, has reduced the number of analog, unscrambled channels–the ones you can watch by plugging the cable directly into the TV, without the need for a cable box–available on its system from 74 to 13, keeping only the local broadcast stations such as ABC, CBS, PBS, etc. A TWC spokeswoman told Merson that even those broadcast stations will have to go digital in February 2009, “requiring all subscribers to pay $7.35 a month for cable box for each television in your home” according to the report.

In case you didn’t know, the upcoming DTV transition from analog to digital television shouldn’t affect cable subscribers at all. But that’s not stopping cable companies from using the increasingly well-publicized and misunderstood transition to encourage potential customers to cough up more money.

(Credit:
DTV2009.gov)

While the February 17, 2009 cut-off will cause just those TVs that receive programming via an over-the-air antenna to go blank, even the FCC anticipated the DTV transition’s impact on cable subscribers in its FAQ: “If a cable company makes the business decision to go all-digital (meaning it will stop offering any channels to its customers in analog), it must ensure that its analog customers can continue to watch their local broadcast stations. This may require customers with analog televisions to get a set-top box.” In other words, the DTV transition may affect cable subscribers after all, in the familiar form of increased fees.

Meanwhile, of course, anybody with an analog TV can get a converter box for as little as $10 or $20 after coupon, and not have to subscribe to cable.

Take this report by HD Guru Gary Merson, who called NYC-area cable provider Cablevision posing as a regular customer and was told that “due to government regulation,” the company would no longer carry analog channels. As Gary points out, this is patently false–nothing in the government’s mandated transition prevents cable companies from continuing service as-is. They may, however, decide to force analog-only subscribers to get a digital subscription and the requisite box, which of course adds a monthly box rental fee and opens up the possibility of customers ordering lucrative Pay-Per-View and Video-On-Demand services.

Aug 24

I had a chance to visit one of the Gaia Hotels, which bills itself as a new eco-hotel chain, this weekend. The experience put those four contending areas in a bit of a new light, as the creator of the Gaia ecotel concept toured me around and shed some light on the decisions that went into them from the demand side. (Note: “ecotel”, “bit of a new light”, “shed some light”, “demand side”, all good cleantechisms).

Moving on to the food technology, the Gaia Anderson restaurant is not yet open, but is intended to be an organic and locally grown food (I assume that Napa will count as “local” for the wine, but I did not ask!).

Neal Dikeman is a founding partner at Jane Capital Partners LLC, a boutique merchant bank advising strategic investors and startups in cleantech. He is the founding CEO of Carbonflow, founding contributor of Cleantech Blog, a Contributing Editor to Alt Energy Stocks, Chairman of Cleantech.org, and a blogger for CNET’s Greentech blog.

And of course front and center in the lobby, there were Renewable Energy Credits (though not carbon credits) purchased from our friends at Renewable Choice Energy, to offset the power usage, and a monitoring system to show power and water usage, and solar production.

Carbon IT - With some sort of cap and trade a near certainty, the interest is picking up in one of the few areas in carbon that looks like a “venture bet”. I should know, I have one of these companies myself.

All in all, quite an eye opening one day “deep dive” into the demand side of the four top contenders for cleantech’s next big thing. (Pardon the expression deep dive, I’ve always found that term amusing, especially since cleantech VCs use it all the time now to describe the 6 conferences they went to and 12 business plans they read to become an expert in, say, solar, so I couldn’t resist.)

Food related technologies - High food prices and rising fertilizer costs, what can I say?

As always, the venture community is looking for its next big thing. The cleantech world is no exception. Despite the dearth of exits, so much capital has flowed into the cleantech sector that investors need new places to put it. So despite my promise to certain friends not to blog certain funding rumors in each category, the top 4 contenders are:

N-generation solar technologies - Everyone not in the first wave is looking to get in to the 4th wave. Not sure venture investors will fare better in the 3rd or 4th wave than they did in the second, but they are going to try.

No eco friendly building in this day and age would be complete without a solar panel on the roof. Gaia Napa’s solar system is apparently providing 10% of the electricity needs on site, while at the Gaia Anderson, the panels have not yet arrived. But perhaps the most telling for would-be solar barons, Wen Chang did not know or care whose technology powered the solar panels. Only that they arrived and worked.

After launching a LEED Gold Certified facility in Napa Valley a little under two years ago, Gaia opened a new one in Northern California, focused on outdoor recreational travelers, which they expect to achieve at least LEED Silver. I had lunch with Wen Chang, the creator behind Gaia, this Saturday. When it came to green building materials, I was frankly amazed how much impact the LEED program had on the design and materials selection, and how big a selling point LEED was to this concept. Everything from using photovoltaic panels and Solatube daylighting, to low flow shower heads, low water usage and local landscape selection, and chemical free gardening and stormwater management, all the way to the carpet made from recycled materials, CFLs in the night stand, and sustainable forest products. Talk about demand stimulus, after an extensive tour, I was ready to buy a green building materials company myself. Especially since the ecotel was booked solid!

Green building materials - I’m not sure it would be my thing, but investors across the board seem to think this area is ripe for a hit.

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