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4/04/2008

700MHz auction: No Lease Demanded, Says Company

A public safety group has denied that it demanded lease payments from potential winning bidders for a piece of that spectrum.



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UK ISP Says No To Music Industry Pressure

siloko sends us to the BBC for the story of one ISP standing up to the music industry . (But note that this ISP is one of the ones said to have worked with Phorm on plans to track customers' surfing.) "The head of one of Britain's biggest internet providers has criticized the music industry for demanding that he act against pirates. Charles Dunstone of Carphone Warehouse, which runs the TalkTalk broadband service, is refusing. He said it is not his job to be an internet policeman."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



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Seesmic + Twhirl is a Vision of the Web's Future

Loic Le Meur's video chat service Seesmic is announcing tonight that it has acquired leading 3rd party Twitter client Twhirl. Seesmic is still in closed Alpha status right now - though we have invites if you'd like them: email marshall@readwriteweb.com with the word Seesmic in the subject line and we'll send you one.

How could the acquisition of an app that runs entirely on the Twitter API, by another service that isn't even publicly available yet be a big deal? Let us count the ways...

Seesmic gets Twhirl's fast growing userbase, cross platform desktop AIR envrionment and its very capable developer. Marco Kaiser, creator of Twhirl, gets a job, presumably cash and stock in Seesmic, plus access to Seesmic's high-profile funding and Loic Lemur's catchet. It could have been Snitter or it could have been Twitterrific, but Twhirl has the momentum among 3rd party Twitter clients and that's who moved first.

Twhirl even got on Fox News this week. They didn't spell its name right, but the point is that Twitter is creeping into the mainstream and Twhirl is the best way to use Twitter.

Here's Seesmic CEO Loic Le Meur talking about the deal, followed by our analysis of the technology implications.

Popout

XMPP

Seesmic runs on XMPP/Jabber, the protocol that provides the immediate communication and presence awareness of many Instant Messenging clients. You know how nice, smooth and in-touch IM is. Once any of your internet communication experiences goes on in that kind of environment - you don't ever want to go back again. At the very least, it's a game changing option to have along with asynchronous forms of communication.

Surprisingly, it's the video half of this deal that supports XMPP now, not the Twitter half.

We wrote in January about XMPP powering the future of online communication. Twitter supports XMPP messenging but only native IM clients like Google Talk seem to have integrated it so far. Seesmic plus Twhirl, powered by XMPP is going to be hot. Instant text and video communication and presence status.

Video + Microblogging = Rich User Experience

The video experience of Seesmic is hard to explain until you've tried it. It's a lot more than just "Twitter for video." (See our post "Seesmic Transcends Comparisons With Twitter") Those differences are going to soften now, though. A combined service will offer a continum of communication depending on your broadcasting comfort and time to consume inbound messages. Text is what the vast majority of people prefer to produce, but video is incredibly compelling to consume.

Lifestreaming

How long until even more services are rolled into this new dynamo? Seesmic already integrates outbound publishing with YouTube, Qik and Twitter. How long until the company rolls out lifestreaming capabilities ala FriendFeed, displaying recent user and aggregate-friend activity on any number of other services - then storming the Facebook Newsfeed as a packaged solution to the 3rd party RSS feed dilemma there? Probably not very long. FriendFeed is already inching towards the Newsfeed, literally, by getting into the Minifeed on Facebook. Every social network wants to act as the central location for user activity around the web, but it's far less trivial than just letting users plug in RSS feeds or usernames. Lifestreaming apps are making this a service, FriendFeed is the leader today, but somehow this functionality is a logical thing to come to Seesmic/Twhirl next.

Seesmic won't be able to work too closely with anything more than the recently launched FriendFeed API because that service, for all its nimbleness risks holding out for an unrealistically large acquisition more than it risks anything else.

There's no shortage of lifestreaming apps that the company could work with, though.

AIR - Cross Platform RIA

The best thing about Twhirl is that it's built in Adobe AIR. While Microsoft's Silverlight is coming on hard and fast, the AIR/Flex/Flash ecosystem is made for hotness and has the most momentum in the grassroots developer community.

AIR lets developers write in HTML, Javascript and Flash - but run it on the desktop - of a Windows, Mac or Linux computer. These are Rich Internet Applications - apps that sit on the desktop and function outside the browser, but that are tied to the web and leverage connectivity as well. Check out Redmonk's RIA Weekly Podcast if you want to get excited about RIAs on a regular basis.

The Future

The second multimedia communication service built on AIR that gets acquired is going to go for a much higher price than we can presume this first one did, especially if it comes into the deal with XMPP of its own. Throw in integration of the new UStream API for live streaming video and you've got the kind of platform that Skype could have become if it hadn't hit the swamp of mega-acquisition. Twhirl and Seesmic together have many of the traits that countless other companies are looking for, now.

Seesmic plus Twhirl is of course just two very forward-looking organizations in a large, diverse economy of innovation. Look at this deal though and you'll see a big part of the future of online communication technology, no matter who it is that makes it happen.



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Cat: LET ME IN!

Hilarious short


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Toshiba's New Light Bulbs Have a 12,000 Hour Life-Span [Lighting]

neoball-z-real-pride-bulbs.jpgToshiba's new Neoball-Z Real Pride bulbs are actually fluorescent lamps that ditch the hideous corkscrew shape in favor of a more traditional design. However, the big news is that their life span is rated at 12,000 hours. That's 1.2 times better than similar existing products and about 12 times better than an incandescent bulb. Power consumption has been rated at a money-saving 10 watts and it will be available in warm white, day white and daylight flavors starting on July 1st. No pricing information has been announced. [Tech On]




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Win! Win! Win! Tokyo Flash watches!!!

tokyo flash comp.jpg

Tokyo Flash watches are the ultimate in geek chic, perfectly blending style with the ability to completely baffle non-nerdlings. I've had one, and whilst it completely foxed me when I reached over mid-slumber to get the time, it came into its own as a conversation starter. And it helped my maths, as well...

Well, you lucky lot, we've got four to give away,



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Man receives texts from wife. Dead wife.

haunted-house-3drt-3.jpgFrank Jones is used to being molested by unfriendly spirits. A ghost that whipped back bedcovers, ransacked cupboards and left a lingering bad smell had already been exorcised from his house before he suffered the tragic deaths of his wife and son. But The Thing (which behaved like a particularly grumpy cat by the sound of things) was not quite as alarming as receiving text messages from no number containing words his wife, Sadie, "would say". Especially as she was buried with her phone...


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Smallest, slimmest, lickablist HD camcorder out there - the TG3E Handycam

CX27500_image_03.jpg I'm unconvinced that anyone's home videos need full 1080p high definition quality to them, but perhaps that's because I'm not filming the right things. Regardless of my sadly-non-HD-worthy life, I can't deny that this new camcorder from Sony sure is per-ty.


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Griffin's ugly-ass ClearBoost iPhone antenna booster hits the scene

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Griffin's antenna-stub sporting ClearBoost case for the iPhone just hit the streets, and opinions are already pouring in. The case involves the antenna, a bumper and a screen protector, and while the resulting combination is not much for loooks, iLounge found it to improve performance in certain situations. Apparently in very low coverage areas the ClearBoost isn't much help, but in wonky two or three bar situations ClearBoost added one or two bars. Sounds like a win to us, but you're going to have to have some serious need of signal to sacrifice iPhone aesthetics this totally.

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