Saturday, April 5, 2008

(Forget Vista) Windows 7 may come in 2009


Bill Gates: Windows 7 may come 'in the next year'

MIAMI--Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates on Friday indicated that Windows 7, the next major version of Windows, could come within the next year, far ahead of the development schedule previously indicated by the software maker.

In response to a question about Windows Vista, Gates, speaking before the Inter-American Development Bank here, said: "Sometime in the next year or so we will have a new version." Referring to Windows 7, the code name for the next full release of Windows client software, Gates said: "I'm super-enthused about what it will do in lots of ways."

Most of Gates' speech was devoted to topics closer to home for the crowd, such as how Latin America can be more competitive.

Windows 7 and its intended feature list have been the topic of speculation since Microsoft discussed some details of the new software last summer.

At that time, Microsoft said little except that Windows 7 will ship in consumer and business versions, and in 32-bit and 64-bit versions. The company also confirmed that it is considering a subscription model to complement Windows, but did not provide specifics or a time frame.

Less than 24 hours ago, a Microsoft representative told CNET News.com that the company expects to ship the successor to Vista roughly three years from Vista's January 2007 debut.

Unclear is whether Gates was referring to early testing of Windows 7 coming within the year, as opposed to a widespread release or debut. An early test geared toward developers would be conceivable. The company has repeatedly said that it will accelerate the development of new Windows versions, largely as a response to Vista's roughly five year gestation period.

Microsoft on Thursday declined to extend a lifeline for Windows XP, saying that only a limited number of specialized machines will be sold with the operating system after June.

The company said it will continue to allow Windows XP Home edition to be sold for a class of computers it calls "ultra-low-cost PCs."

Vista, the current version of Windows, has sold well, according to Microsoft. But the operating system's debut was marred by repeated delays and shifting feature lists. Last week, Microsoft stepped up efforts to drive adoption of Vista by businesses.

CNet News.

Friday, April 4, 2008

Penguins can fly!!



This is just an April Fool's video by BBC.

And here's how they made the video.

Needed: a new revolution for the current soaring of price of rice

Dear students,

From now on, I'm going to choose some good articles occasionally for you to read. These are usually quality articles which have in-depth analyses of current issues. They will all be labelled as "A+". "A+" articles are articles of more difficult in nature. It is not a good idea for you to browse through them quickly. You need to be serious in reading them. I will use "A+" articles for future discussion or writing purposes.

Regards,
Mr. Fu

Needed: a new revolution for the current soaring of price of rice



THE soaring price of rice and dwindling stockpiles of Asia's basic food are causing anxiety across the region. In particular the Philippines, a big, hungry country which cannot grow enough to feed itself, could be in trouble. The front pages of Manila's newspapers scream about a “rice crisis”, as politicians float drastic solutions, such as forcing the country's 100 leading firms to take up rice farming. Farmers in Thailand, the world's largest rice exporter, are delighted with the price surge, although some were said this week to be organising patrols to protect their crops.

The president of the Philippines, Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, last month pleaded with Vietnam, the second-largest exporter, to guarantee supplies. The two countries signed an agreement on March 26th, apparently to do just that. But the various escape clauses that Vietnam secured suggest it was more of a face-saving measure than a firm pledge. Vietnam and India, another big rice exporter, have recently announced export restrictions to try to curb soaring food prices at home. This will make it tough for poor, rice-importing countries, in Africa as well as Asia, to secure supplies.

Until a few years ago, rising harvests satisfied the growth in rice demand caused by population growth and Asia's success in cutting poverty. But recent wobbles in output have reversed a long-term trend of falling prices. They have also left global stockpiles at their lowest since the 1970s.

Political consequences may follow. Mrs Arroyo came to office in a “people-power” revolt in 2001 and her grip on office is tenuous. Hunger could be the excuse the opposition needs to bring Filipinos to the streets. So Mrs Arroyo is straining to be seen doing something about food: posing for photos at grain warehouses and pledging to crack down on the fiddling of subsidised rice supplies.

Indonesia's president, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, had hitherto been expected to sail to re-election next year. But costly food and rising poverty may endanger him. That Mr Yudhoyono made a show of completing a doctorate in agricultural economics during his 2004 election campaign only increases his potential for embarrassment. He has tinkered with, not abolished, Indonesia's absurd restrictions on rice imports. These, like the Philippines' rice import tariffs, were intended to protect poor rice farmers when prices were low, but they hurt poor rice eaters, a larger group.

This week a senior Indonesian official said the country had reached its goal of becoming self-sufficient in rice. Mr Yudhoyono later contradicted this, by saying Indonesia would need to continue importing Thai rice for now. Even if Indonesia attains self-sufficiency soon, it will be hard to maintain. The Philippines became self-sufficient in the 1980s, only to relapse into deficit, despite an expansion in its paddies.

Nature affects countries' ability to grow rice—but so does governance. An extreme case is Myanmar. Once it was the world's biggest rice exporter, and it still produces a small surplus. Yet many of its people go hungry, thanks to a crude, cruel regime.

Robert Zeigler of the International Rice Research Institute—a driver of Asia's “green revolution” in the 1960s—says governments are now paying for years of neglecting agricultural research and irrigation. They have lost prime land and water supplies in the rush to industrialise.

Simply reducing disparities in productivity, even between identical fields in a given district, could solve Asia's rice worries for decades to come. That would require, for instance, ensuring farmers can buy higher-quality seeds, which in turn would require more funding from governments for old-fashioned things such as cross-breeding existing strains of rice.

A report this week from the UN's economic commission for Asia said a boost in farm productivity could lift more than 200m Asians, a third of the region's poor, out of poverty. Asia's masters may need a new green revolution, if they want to avoid upheavals of a bloodier hue.

The Economist.

Thursday, April 3, 2008

David Beckham century gift - a golden ipod



Former England captain David Beckham will be dancing for joy after his team-mates clubbed together to buy him a special something to celebrate him reaching the elite 100-cap club for his country.

Beckham, 32, who reached his century during last week's friendly match with France in Paris, has been given an ipod by his colleagues.

As you can see it is not just your standard Apple product but rather a golden 32-gigabyte personalised version to mark the occasion.

Beckham, who made his England debut in September 1996 against Moldova, was picked for new coach Fabio Capello's second national squad, after missing the friendly with Swtizerland due to lack of match fitness.

The LA Galaxy midfielder started the France game in his preferred right-midfield position before being replaced by David Bentley just after the hour mark.

Beckham looks like to add to his 100 caps following Capello's post-match appraisal of his performance, and with just four men ahead of him there is a small possibility the Leytonstone-born footballer could surpass former goalkeeper Peter Shilton's record of 125 England appearances if he is able to continue playing until the 2010 World Cup in South Africa as he desires.

In the meantime he can enjoy listening to his wife's back catalogue on his £600 ipod - he certainly has enough storage space with 32 GB.

The Telegraph.

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Building reborn as gallery, pub and restaurants

Before restoration

After restoration

The verandah of The Pawn

The building containing the Woo Cheong Pawn Shop, one of the Wan Chai shophouses preserved by the Urban Renewal Authority six years ago, has finally passed stringent building regulations and will open to the public this week.

Its 9,701 square feet comprises four shophouses in Johnston Road. The ground floor of the four-storey building will be occupied by an art gallery, the authority said, while the three floors above will house a themed pub called The Pawn and restaurants operated by a private company.

The British-style pub is expected to open on Saturday. Its operator, Joseph Baclay, said hundreds of thousand of dollars had been spent decorating the shophouse. Customers would be able to sit on the large verandahs or the roof-garden to enjoy city views while being served food and drinks. Lifts and fire escapes had been added to meet regulations.

The shophouses, built in 1888, were restored by the authority at a cost of HK$15 million in 2005.

Lee Ho-yin, director of the University of Hong Kong's architectural conservation programme, said the revitalisation project would be more successful if the pawn shop had been invited to stay. The pawn shop moved to another street after the building was acquired by the authority.

Dr Lee, who studied the history of shophouses in Hong Kong, said the shophouses preserved by the authority were different from those found in Guangzhou.

"Shophouses built in Hong Kong have back lanes and larger verandahs," he said, and their style was influenced by British building regulations imposed to improve hygiene after the plague in 1894.

SCMP. Apr 1, 2008.

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

What's Smartone's HomePhone+?



SmarTone-Vodafone stirs the market with fixed-line package

SmarTone-Vodafone's promotion of its new fixed-line service heralds a shake-up in the mature Hong Kong telecommunications market.

The mobile business arm of Sun Hung Kai Properties last week introduced its Home Phone Plus plan for residential fixed-line users, offering a flat voice plan with value-added services including voice over internet protocol access for HK$118 a month.

A dedicated phone set would be provided for free if users committed to an 18-month contract, the company announced last week.

PCCW dominates the fixed-line segment with a market share of almost 70 per cent, serving more than one million homes. The balance is shared by Hutchison Telecom, Wharf T&T, Hong Kong Broadband Network and New World Telecom.

Residential fixed-line service penetration reached 95 per cent at the end of February, data from the Office of the Telecommunications Authority shows.

"Over 60 per cent of local families said that a phone is still a must at home," SmarTone chief executive Douglas Li said, citing a survey conducted by his company. "This is a family-shared phone and represents the location of the family. It is not affected by mobile substitution."

Mr Li said there was still plenty of room to lure users from competitors.

As a mobile operator, SmarTone-Vodafone can make use of the coverage provided by the 2G mobile network to deliver the service. The dedicated phone set is connected to the GSM mobile network, so that once a user switches on, an over-the-air network setting can be applied to fix the phone network signal at a customer's home. The network signal could be reset when a customer changed address, Mr Li said.

"We deploy a new auto network zoning technology with our new home phone service," he said. "This is a self-developed technology that helps guarantee the network coverage of the home phone."

However, an executive at a rival operator said SmarTone-Vodafone's mobile network might not perform well in some residential high-rises, and signals might be poor in some harbour locations.

SmarTone-Vodafone's tariff is set at a premium compared with plans of as low as HK$30 per month at some operators.

Mr Li said the company would compete on the quality of its offerings, rather than on price.

For calls using the internet, users can register their own internet phone account, such as that offered by Skype, on the Home Phone Plus account. Such calls can go through the home phone.

Meanwhile, PCCW is promoting its fixed-line product as a home multimedia hub. Its newly launched Eye service enables users to watch television programmes, learn languages and place bets on Mark Six through a broadband phone.

"Multimedia content is about personal preferences. With multimedia services, I believe the 3G mobile phone is much more suitable," Mr Li said

SCMP. Apr 1, 2008.

Monday, March 31, 2008

Adobe Launching Free Version of Photoshop Online



Adobe is taking a note from startups nipping at the edges of its core products, and has now launched a free version of its Photoshop picture editing software. Called Photoshop Express, the service is available directly through any browser though it will only work on Flash 9, so you may have to upgrade. Users have to register for the account, and get 2GB of free storage. Also, it also has ties to social networking sites like Facebook and other image-sharing sites, reports News.com (I am still waiting for the verification e-mail from the service to try it out).

Adobe intends to offer more premium features down the line, which include a printing service, more storage, support for audio and other media, and the ability to read additional image file types (the service works with .JPGs now.). It also plans to build an offline client, which will surely cut into its Photoshop revenues, but better to undercut itself than let others do. Some pics of the software are here.

This of course will be bad news for the likes of Picnik (a service we have used regularly here before) and others in the startup space.

Washington Post.

Sunday, March 30, 2008

An interview with "Dr. House"



Hugh Laurie hits America’s funny bone

THE British comedy actor Hugh Laurie is the unlikely star of a hit new show on American television. Critics have been raving about his “career-shifting” performance as a misanthropic doctor in the drama series House.

Laurie plays Dr Gregory House, a cranky hospital doctor lacking a bedside manner, with a flawless American accent. It is a far cry from his upper-class twit roles in Blackadder and Jeeves and Wooster, which helped to make his name in Britain.

“I’m enjoying the character,” Laurie said during a break from filming. “There is something appealingly adolescent about him. He is dramatic and intense at times but he can be very witty. I get the best of all possible worlds.”

If Americans knew Laurie at all, it was as the father of a talking mouse in Stuart Little, the children’s film. Bryan Singer, director of X-Men, the science fiction series, and who is an executive producer of the new show, had not heard of Laurie but was “floored” by his audition. He had no idea the actor was British.

“I was very lucky to sneak under the wire,” said Laurie, who was not sure what he was auditioning for from the two-page script. He assumed his tape would be thrown unwatched in the bin. “It actually worked to my advantage that he had never heard of me.”

The series began slowly last autumn but was propelled into the top 10 when Fox gave it a slot after American Idol, the ratings giant. The audience for House doubled overnight and has continued to grow weekly, reaching more than 18m viewers last week.

“This rarely happens in American television. It’s a bona fide hit. The word of mouth is really strong,” said Jeff Jensen of Entertainment Weekly.

“People love its blend of mystery and meticulous character study and have fallen head over heels for Hugh Laurie’s complicated doctor.”

House walks with a cane, is addicted to painkillers and has little time for patients, believing that they habitually lie to doctors. His prickly character is loosely based on Sherlock Holmes. In the show he obsessively ferrets out the truth about patients’ unusual medical conditions. He is equally brusque with his colleagues, whom he quizzes impertinently about their private lives.

In last week’s episode he uncovered the infidelity that led a woman who had never been to Africa to contract sleeping sickness. Among his memorable quips is: “Have you ever seen an infected, pierced scrotum?” George Clooney in ER was more obviously dishy and sympathetic to his patients, yet the dishevelled Laurie, 45, is showing unexpected signs of sex appeal.

“It’s a very amusing and perfectly absurd comparison. George Clooney is very easy on the eye, I’m the ogre on the set,” Laurie said modestly.

There are traces of sexual tension at the hospital, nevertheless.

“House has one aspect that drives women crazy,” said Jenson. “He’s so aloof. There is a young woman doctor who is becoming hopelessly enamoured of him because she is constantly seeking his approbation.”

The series also reveals the moody doctor to be an old boyfriend of his female hospital boss.

In real life Laurie’s wife, Jo Green, and their children have remained in London while he finishes filming. “I feel like I’m working on an oil rig right now,” he said. “I’m away from home a lot.”

After all the acclaim Fox has signed up for a second series. Television critics have hailed House as “one of TV’s great shows”, Laurie’s character as a “magnificent creation” and his performance as “grumpy, guarded and brilliant”.

The actor, who has suffered from depression in the past, now has to cope with the demands of success. “Making a new show every eight days is punishing. It’s the quantity that’s the problem. It’s like eating lobster. By the 70th plate you start to go off lobster,” he said.

“We’re doing in eight months what I did over four years with Stephen Fry in Jeeves and Wooster.”

Laurie remains close to his old circle of British friends such as Fry, whom he met at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. He was educated at Eton and Cambridge and one of his earliest girlfriends was Emma Thompson, the actress. Laurie’s British chums have been supportive of his American career. “Stephen has been very kind,” he said. “He’s seen one or two episodes and seems to approve but maybe they’re all sniggering up their sleeves.”

It remains to be seen whether British audiences will take to Laurie’s freshly minted American accent. “I think I will probably shock and disgust everybody. English people are naturally embarrassed by affectation,” he said. “If you are in France and your friend starts speaking French to the waiter it’s worse than watching a person go to the lavatory. The same may apply here.”

The Times.