Aug 22

Stocky replied that typically companies sell the underlying proprietary platform and then try to get developers to build on top of that (he didn’t specifically mention them, but he’s obviously referring to MS and Adobe). However, he said, Google’s mission is to build on top of the open web platform. Stocky said that Google not only aims to build on the open Web platform, but actively improve it.

MacManus asked Stocky about Adobe’s and Microsoft’s efforts to blend the web with the desktop through Rich Internet Applications. Stock’s response is highly intriguing:

commentary

I like this new Google. It’s a company that has the potential to win in a very different way from how Microsoft won the desktop wars: Through open, rather than through closed. Yes, proprietary software will play an active role, but not the only role, as in Microsoft’s empire. The times seem to be a’changin’.

I like that. Google wants to make the web a first-class application citizen, and is committed to investing the resources to make this happen. To get there, it needs to engage developers and, in turn, the open-source communities of which they increasingly take part.

ReadWriteWeb’s Richard MacManus had the chance to talk with Google’s Tom Stocky, a director of Product Management, about its increased emphasis on developers. The result is an interesting look into the mind of Google as it pertains to developers.

Aug 22

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Aug 21

Flickr’s The Commons project is an example of how the site’s users can bring useful context to information from a single source, in this case the Library of Congress.

(Credit:
Daniel Terdiman/CNET News.com)

SAN FRANCISCO–In return for the huge amount of work Flickr users do to tag photos on the popular photo-sharing site, they should get the benefit of the algorithms the service uses to bring meaning to the data.

That’s how at least some at Flickr feel, according to Kakul Srivastava, the service’s director of product management said in her talk, “The next generation of tagging: Searching and discovering a better user experience,” at the Web 2.0 Expo here Thursday.

The idea behind that theory is that as Flickr users proactively add tags to countless millions of photos stored on the site, the service is able to draw some very specific conclusions about the behavior of those users and the things that are happening around them.

This graph shows how, over time, Flickr users have continued to add a tremendous number of tags to the photos on the service, a rate that continues to grow.

(Credit:
Daniel Terdiman/CNET News.com)

And no wonder: The sheer amount of tags users have added over the four years the service has been operating is breathtaking: according to Srivastava, if you took the average text size of all the tags added to Flickr photos and laid them out, it would line the floors of 14 Wal-Marts.

“It’s an incredible amount of content to parse, to reveal, and to take the meaning of,” Srivastava said.

Unfortunately, I would have to say that the talk didn’t deliver on its title: Srivastava didn’t share anything particularly new with the audience, discussing mainly things that were probably already well-understood by most in the room.

Still, it was an interesting presentation, particularly because Srivastava talked about some of the ways that Flickr has evolved over the years, and what it’s possible to learn based on how it’s grown.

One of the most notable changes has been what she termed the increasing sophistication in the way Flickr users tag photos.

At first, she suggested, people were mainly tagging photos to add context about themselves. Then, gradually, they added context about other people, and then found ways to express shared experiences through their tags.

The best example of that–though more complex than what most people get involved in–is Flickr’s The Commons project.

Within the first hour after the Library of Congress photos went up, Flickr users had added 150 tags to them. Within 24 hours, users added 11,000 tags.

(Credit:
Daniel Terdiman/CNET News.com)

This is a project that launched in January with the U.S. Library of Congress as a pilot partner. The idea was that the Library of Congress provided a large collection of archival photos for the Flickr community to add tags to for additional context.

The reach of the Flickr community was immediately obvious, she suggested. The project launched with no tags, and within an hour, users had added 150 tags. Within three hours, the number was 767 and by the end of 24 hours, fully 11,000 tags.

Beyond that, Flickr users were able to add all kinds of contextual comments to the photos. Srivastava pointed to one such photo, a picture of a stream of dock workers leaving work at the end of the day, which had several user comments appended to it.

One of them was quite striking. The user noticed that all the African Americans in the photo were on one side of the stream, while the whites were on the other.

“Looks like ‘quittin’ time’ was a segregated as the rest of life,” the user commented.

Where the Flickr user community’s participation in The Commons project is useful is in bringing personal context to images that previously had none.

(Credit:
Daniel Terdiman/CNET News.com)

For Srivastava, that kind of comment is deeply important because it adds significant cultural meaning to a photo that otherwise was just another in a large collection.

Another notable emergent behavior on Flickr, she said, is the ability to determine when some sort of newsworthy event is going on, simply because of the use of a tag.

For example, she pointed out that traditionally, “Popemobile” wasn’t a very common tag. But all of a sudden, she said, it was being used by a lot of people in the Washington, D.C., area, and by virtue of that, it was possible to see that something was going on around the Pope’s recent visit to the United States.

In the end, Srivastava’s talk didn’t break new ground, but it did illustrate the ways that Flickr sees its users explaining the world around them through the use of tags. The concept itself may not be news, but tying it together and thinking about the many ways tagging on a site as popular as Flickr adds meaning is a worthy exercise.

Aug 21

Who else but Google?
Before siding with opponents or supporters of the agreement, try stepping back to look at the big picture. Chu asserts that scanning is neither rocket science nor expensive. But is it that true when viewed at the scale of all books published?

The book-search lawsuits challenged whether such use was permissible. But by the time the proposed settlement arrived, though, Google got much more for its $125 million.

“The settlement creates a fundamental change in the digital world by consolidating power in the hands of one company,” Harvard professor and author Robert Darnton concluded in a New York Review of Books opinion.

Why doesn’t Google just scrap it?
Google Book Search isn’t just another Google project. It’s a link from Google’s current Internet-based view of humanity’s collective knowledge to the broad and deep information contained in the world’s books. If the company succeeds in its ambition, the world’s books will emerge from dusty library stacks to be reborn on the Web, and Google already has a 7-million book start.

“Under the actual law, it is Google’s burden and not yours to ask you for permission and then fairly negotiate terms of contract acceptable to you personally, not jam some monstrosity down your throat,” said Lynn Chu, a literary agent with Writers’ Reps who also called the proposed settlement a “ripoff for authors” in a Wall Street Journal opinion piece.

“Our data show really conclusively a direct correlation between the more pages people view and the likelihood people click ‘buy the book,’” Stricker said, referring to present arrangements with in-copyright, in-print books, for which Google Book Search offers purchasing links.

Google Book Search can show the content of books as well as links of places to buy it and advertisements.

“We’ve always said that the perfect ‘I’m feeling lucky’ experience is when we get that answer right for you every single time. Maybe it comes from a Web page, maybe from a video, sometimes from a book,” spokesman Gabriel Stricker said. “Our ability to have the most comprehensive search engine improves our ability to deliver on core search, which is the core of our business and one that’s proven itself to be really profitable.”

Google has patented technology for scanning books.

“The best way of doing this is not through the court creating a private monopoly through a commercial actor, it’s crafting legislation through Congress,” Brantley said. That idea is within the realm of possibility: orphaned-works legislation made significant headway through Congress before faltering last year.

And Mike Boni, attorney for the author’s subclass, points out that participating in the Book Rights Registry or Google Book Search doesn’t preclude an author from other licensing moves. In fact, thinks the registry could help other online book efforts.

The music industry, whose CD-based music was unencrypted, still has yet to come to full terms with the digital era. Those with video content tentatively embracing online distribution, but also are struggling with the forces of the Internet. Google Book Search, in contrast, could help an analog publishing industry move to the digital era more gracefully, even possibly with some money to be made.

The Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard estimates this latter category accounts for 70 percent of Google Book Search books, and it’s a key factor for so-called orphan works–books or other materials whose authors can’t be located. The settlement would grant Google rights to use those works, but competitors–Microsoft, Amazon, or the Internet Archive are all real possibilities–without their own handy class-action settlement would be have to try to seek such permission in advance from each rightsholder or risk copyright infringement litigation.

Randal Picker, a University of Chicago Law School professor who’s scrutinized the books project, believes that the rights that Google alone gets through the class-action suit are pertinent.

Another organization that raised objections is the Internet Archive, which operates the Wayback Machine to catalog snapshots of the Web in earlier days and offers out-of-copyright books online.

Google, the company best equipped and most motivated to digitize the world’s books, wants to offer the world an online Library of Alexandria. The decisions of the Justice Department, authors, book publishers, a federal judge, and Google itself likely will determine whether the company actually does.

When Google began its project, it showed only short “snippets” of text from books it had scanned, just as it does today with excerpts from Web sites it shows in search results. The company argues that such snippets may be shown under the “fair use” provision of copyright law that use of copyrighted information under some circumstances without licensing it first.

Concerns about the settlement and its complexity led the judge to extend the opt-out deadline by four months to September 4, giving rightsholders more time to considering whether they really wanted to join the settlement agreement and giving Google more time to conduct its worldwide campaign to try to inform as many authors as possible of the proposed settlement–an important activity since the company must convince the court it fulfilled its obligations to inform members of the class of their involvement in the suit.

Authors might be afraid to give some content away for free online that they’re accustomed to charging for, but showing more can help sales, Google said, basing its judgment on data from book-search results involving content from the more than 10,000 publishers and authors that participate in the current program that can be used to show specified portions of a book.

“The agreement as structured in a way to encourage competition. It’s nonexclusive,” Google’s Stricker said. “The charter of Book Rights Registry explicitly says the registry will be able to work with other third parties to represent rightsholders who come forward.”

“It’s not beyond the realm of possibility to digitize every book ever been printed. That’s a boldness the national libraries had not imagined was in the realm of reach. We all owe Google credit for saying, ‘Go for it.’ That is a huge benefit to global society–to digitize the information that humans over hundreds of years have garnered into these things we call books. That has benefited everyone,” Brantley said. “What doesn’t benefit us that…Google alone will be able to provide access to that information in ways that cause us deep concern for privacy, pricing, and innovation.”

“What I think the judge needs to think about is whether we think the Authors’ Guild would on its own grant a similar license to competitors to Google. If answer is no, and there is good reason to think they would say no, this license will by its terms create monopoly power,” Picker said. “There is a chance this is the only orphan-works license that will created. No one else like the Internet Archive would be in a position to compete with Google with respect to the orphan works.”

“If the settlement were approved, it would be really difficult for the Internet Archive to work with the same group of books–those with no known rightsholders,” said Peter Brantley, an Internet Archive director. If it tried to offering orphaned works online, “we could be faced with significant claims of infringement out of the blue.”

The settlement, if approved, could neatly cut a Gordian knot of copyright entanglements though setting Google back $125 million. That’s because it would enable Google not only to display books that are out of copyright and those that are in print by cooperating publishers, as it does today, but also those from the vast collection of in-copyright brooks that are out of print–even when those holding rights to those books didn’t specifically agree to Google’s plan.

“Google’s mission is to organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful,” the company tells us. And conveniently, the company has found a way to make money presenting that information: sell ads next to search results based on the search terms people type in. To foster business growth and to meet rising expectations, Google must collect more data on its servers and improve the algorithm that selects search results from that data.

Then, too, think of the consequences of Google controlling the content of the world’s books. Do you want the act of browsing the library to leave fingerprints in a server log, to become a transaction whose details can be revealed through a subpoena? Google has the best search engine, the most complete online maps, the most popular video site, and it wants to house your e-mail, spreadsheets, blogs, photos, and health data. Do you want Google to keep the keys to the world’s library as well?

Monopoly power?
The Justice Department’s scrutiny is a new wrinkle for the settlement. It’s lost on no one that the Justice Department torpedoed a Google-Yahoo search-ad partnership last year by threatening a lawsuit. But Google argues Google Book Search isn’t anticompetitive.

(Credit:
U.S. PTO)

Google, seeing lemons in the form of the Authors Guild’s a class-action lawsuit, ended up with lemonade in the settlement. Class-action settlements apply to a class of potential plaintiffs, and in the case of Google Book Search, those with rights to books must opt out of the settlement if they don’t want to be a party to it. That means essentially that Google would be permitted to show content from in-copyright, out-of-print books and sell online copies of those books even without an explicit agreement with the books’ rightsholders.

The physical incarnation of books have a solidity that the fleeting, impermanent Internet can’t match, but making books available online gives them new life by exposing them to people who might not have found them otherwise–even if they happened to be near a library that held that book and saw its title in a card catalog. Google has the most powerful engine today to help people discover exactly what’s in those books, and it has the servers, storage, and network capacity to deliver that information to the world. It even has increasingly sophisticated translation technology that could bulldoze literary language barriers, and digitization could make countless books more easily available to blind people.

Google keeps 37 percent of revenue from online book sales, advertising, and subscriptions; the not-for-profit registry would take a portion of the remainder for operating costs and distribute the rest to the rights holders. Although Google has an algorithm to set pricing for book downloads, rights holders can set prices through the registry if they want to override Google’s decision.

Access to these orphan works is the first thing Google could get beyond its original book-search project. The second is the ability to show more material than just snippets, which means that Google users get much more useful search results and that much more of a scanned book might be shown online.

Indeed, who else but Google has the capability to transport centuries of accumulated text into the digital future? Microsoft dropped its book-scanning project, and Amazon appears more interested in commercial transactions. The Internet Archive has hundreds of thousands of books available, but it doesn’t operate on Google’s scale, and the nonprofit group hasn’t pushed hard enough to try to break the copyright logjam the way Google has.

The complicated proposed settlement invoked the wrath of some authors concerned it would grant Google monopolistic power over online publishing, and the court extended the deadline for authors to choose whether to opt out of the settlement from May to September. Then the other shoe dropped this month: the Justice Department signaled serious antitrust scrutiny by issuing subpoena-like civil investigative demands, or CIDs, to check into the matter.

Nobody in recent years has accused Google of lacking ambition, but its Google Book Search project is certainly among the company’s top projects when it comes to chutzpah. That’s not just because of the technical and financial hurdles of scanning, indexing, and displaying online millions of books, it’s also because of the tangled intellectual property and legal concerns involved in the controversial project.

Nonetheless, even supporters have qualms.

After revealing the book-search project in 2003, Google drew copyright infringement lawsuits from the Authors Guild and the Association of American Publishers in 2005, but an October 2008 proposed settlement, now under review by Judge Denny Chin of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, has converted those groups from adversaries to allies.

“The project will be immensely good for society, and the proposed deal is a fair one for Google, for authors, and for publishers. The public interest demands, however, that the settlement be modified first,” said New York Law School’s James Grimmelman. “It creates two new entities–the Books Rights Registry Leviathan and the Google Book Search Behemoth–with dangerously concentrated power over the publishing industry. Left unchecked, they could trample on consumers in any number of ways.”

The beauty of Google’s approach is that it picks winners in search results based on the collective judgment of humans on the Internet rather than its own assessment of the content’s quality. Adding data from books to search opens up a new pool of data, potentially leading to relevant search results for more search queries.

Instead, Brantley would prefer to see the issue addressed through legislation that could define what a digital library, for example, had to do in trying to locate an author before being able to use an orphaned work. Such legislation also could set up a mechanism similar to the Book Rights Registry that could hold money in escrow for later distribution to rightsholders once they’re located.

Google has patented technology to scan books that can correct for the 3D shape of a page. It’s scanned millions of books already. It has technology to search those books fast and to show those books online. It has a functioning business model that can subsidize the expense, and a will to actually take on the monumental challenge.

But the idea of being a cog in the Google machine doesn’t sit well with some–including the fact that authors must figure out whether they want to participate in the settlement and the Book Rights Registry.

Settlement resistance
What’s not to like for authors? Google Book Search gives them a way to sell books that are out of print, which today for them make money only for used booksellers. And through other provisions, students and other researchers would get access to vast online libraries at institutions that pay for subscriptions, and the public would get a Google-funded computer with free access to the same in every U.S. library.

Though search is Google’s primary business, the company also stands to make money directly from book search. Under the proposed settlement, Google could share revenue with authors and publishers from sales of PDF copies of books, from fees from institutional subscriptions granting access to its online library, and from advertising.

“If anything, it’s a positive,” he said. “If over time the Book Rights Registry locates authors of out-of-print books, it winnows down to a small number the number of books that have been difficult to find. And it can assist competitors of Google to reach licensing arrangements,” by facilitating contact with authors. And Google putting books online well help locate the “parents” of orphan works. “As Google digitizes books, information about the books will become more and more known. It will be easier and easier to locate the rightsholders of these books,” he said.

(Credit:
Screenshot by Stephen Shankland/CNET)

AIG and General Motors apparently are too big to fail. But the way the opposition to Google Book Search is shaping up, it looks like some believe Google is too big to succeed.

How does the proposed settlement work?
It took months to hammer out the proposed settlement, which runs to 320 pages including 15 appendices. Among its key features is the establishment of a Book Rights Registry, run by authors and publishers to keep track of who owns rights to which books and to collect money from Google’s online sale of those books, either through individual use or through institutional subscriptions. For orphaned works, the registry would keep money from online sales for later distribution to rightsholders that turn up later.

Aug 20

Ultimately, as Tarus Balog (founder of OpenNMS) notes, open source is a matter of trust. Cittio has demonstrated that it knows little about open source and deserves precious little trust.

We don’t actually know how Cittio is using OpenNMS, in part because Cittio is keeping the whole thing under wraps and has been very sneaky about it.
Regardless of #1, Cittio would have to be clever indeed to have found a way to bury GPL code in their proprietary product without giving a single line of code back to the OpenNMS project.
No matter #2, Cittio’s stripmining of the OpenNMS community is in poor form.
Irrespective of #3, Cittio apparently doesn’t let its customers know that it is shipping them GPL code. I bet those customers would like to know this and, as a lawyer, I’d strongly suggest that Cittio has a duty to inform its customers of this fact.

When you work your [butt] off to build something special such as OpenNMS, it’s hard to watch someone come and steal it and no one really give a damn. Even though when we add latency measurement support, a release later Cittio adds latency measurement support (Watchtower 2.4). We add SNMPv3 support, Cittio adds SNMPv3 support (version 3.1). Heck, we can only collect on one community string per IP, and so can Cittio. The list goes on.

Cittio is a parasite. Tarus wrote to me:

I’m aware of other companies - open source and otherwise - who scab off open source in this way. They claim to be open-source citizens but they are more like open-source traitors.

commentary

It reminds us of a few things:

There are a lot of allegations flying around relative to Cittio’s (allegedly improper) use of the OpenNMS code without contributing code back, in apparent violation of the GPL. The best post on the subject is this one, in my opinion.

I have no problem with commercial entities using open source without paying for it, but they should participate in the relevant communities from which they gather code. This means giving back code.

Do I think Cittio is stealing from the OpenNMS community? It’s still hard to determine if they are actually in non-compliance with the GPL. They may well have found a way to abide by the GPL’s letter. As for the spirit of the GPL, they have clearly trashed it.

Aug 19

commentary

Adebayor selfishly shot when he should have passed to the (admittedly obnoxious) Bendtner. That goal would have sealed the victory. There were also a number of chances that went begging as Hleb and Fabregas wrongfully chose to pass away several opportunities in or near the edge of the box that really should have been rifled at the net.

Taylor snaps Eduardo's leg

Such was the day. It happened in the third minute of the game and completely dampened Arsenal’s mood for the first half, when Birmingham put a ball in the net near the end of the half. After the half, however, the team came alive and Walcott drilled home his first two Premiership goals.

A very, very frustrating match. The game should have been Arsenal’s. As it stands, Eduardo is out for at least the rest of the season and Arsenal are looking like they’re chasing second place rather than commanding first place. Manchester United decimated Newcastle - Arsenal simply cannot give up such easy points and expect to hold off United.

Arsenal looked to be in cruise control to take home the win and maintain its five-point lead over Manchester United. But it wasn’t to be.

Even so, the game was won…until Clichy, normally so diligent, strolled for a ball that even a saunter would have collected. Birmingham collected the ball, Clichy panicked, and ended up tackling the Birmingham player in the box. No, it shouldn’t have been called a penalty - Clichy collected all of the ball and little of the player. But in such circumstances it’s not surprising the ref gave the penalty kick, which Birmingham scored.

Today was a very bad day. First, Martin Taylor decided to inflict the usual strategy against Arsenal: “kick them off the pitch.” He did so. Literally. Eduardo da Silva was stretchered off with his shin bone coming out of his socks (picture below). Disgraceful. Wenger’s right: Taylor should be banned from the game for life. As it stands, it looks bleak as to whether 25-year old Eduardo will ever be able to play again.

Aug 16

Argentina - Telefonica and America Movil
Chile - Telefonica and America Movil
Colombia - Telefonica and America Movil
Czech Republic - O2
Ecuador - Telefonica and America Movil
El Salvador - Telefonica and America Movil
Estonia - Eesti Mobii Telefon
Guatemala - Telefonica and America Movil
Honduras - America Movil
Hungary - T-Mobile
India - Bharti Airtel and Vodafone
Paraguay - America Movil
Philippines - GlobeTelecom
Peru - Telefonica and America Movil
Poland - Orange and Era
Romania - Orange
Uruguay - Telefonica and America Movil

iPhone 3G

August 22 releases

As Apple COO Tim Cook told us last month, the iPhone 3G will land in 20 more countries August 22. Several carriers made their formal announcements this week, including Telefonica and America Movil. Those rivals will overlap in eight Latin American countries. As of this writing we know 17 of the lucky 20 nations, which are listed below. Reuters is predicting that Singapore’s SingTel will also join the mix, but the carrier has yet to confirm that report. After August 22, an additional 28 countries are scheduled to get the
iPhone 3G before the end of the year. We’ll bring you that news as soon as we get it.

(Credit:
Corinne Schulze/CNET Networks)

Aug 16

CAMBRIDGE, Mass.–Everyone from politicians, investors, and consumers tout the potential of solar and wind technologies.

“We’re trying (but) it’s not easy to change things…You can’t cut off the present,” he said. “Deployment of energy innovations (in the oil and gas industry overall) is very hard because of entrenched interests.”

BP is perhaps the most high-profile oil and gas company to take alternative energy seriously.

BP researchers are exploring under-ice drilling in the Arctic, building more robust drilling platforms, more environmentally benign methods to extract oil from tar sands, and hydrogen production.

“The only way you’re going to get a shift off of this is through a price on carbon,” Koonin said. A carbon tax or cap-and-trade system would act the same way that a rise in gasoline prices has prompted many people to conserve, he said.

Carbon storage is a technology that could be an important option for reducing greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere, but it also faces a number of technical challenges, such as safe storage, Koonin said.

But even BP, a company that changed its tagline to “Beyond Petroleum,” sees renewable energy as a very small piece of the global energy picture–a situation that’s not likely to change in the coming decades, according to BP’s chief scientist, Steven Koonin.

“Beyond Petroleum was once an advertising slogan when I came in (in 2004). We’re trying to do something about it now,” he said.

He noted that Europe already has climate regulations in place, and the U.S. is likely to adopt its own. At the same time, he said “it was hard to imagine” the fast-growing economies of China and India having costly limits on carbon emissions.

BP is also researching energy storage for renewable energy and advanced photovoltaics, although Koonin predicted it would be decades before they would make a major impact on worldwide energy use.

He said that climate regulations that put a price on emitting carbon dioxide would incent energy companies to invest in low-carbon energy sources.

“Technically, there are lots of opportunities in conventional fossil fuels,” he said.

One of the most promising research paths is the intersection of biology and energy. BP, for example, is looking at how enzymes in cows and other ruminants can sequester carbon, he said.

“The question is whether it will be high enough…It needs to be high enough to hurt to get people to do something different,” Koonin said.

At the same time, BP is investing a billion dollars to establish a biofuels business and is pushing into wind power. It has also done a handful of tests in carbon capture and sequestration, where large amounts of carbon dioxide are stored underground.

But Koonin said that changing from BP’s core oil and gas exploration business is a slow process, given that demand for liquid fuels continues to go up.

Koonin spoke here on Monday to Massachusetts Institute of Technologies’ energy student fellows, part of a campuswide initiative to promote technology innovation in energy.

In his talk, Koonin listed a number of technologies that BP is exploring or funding research in, including biofuels, underground carbon storage, and various means of improved oil and gas exploration.

Aug 16

The partnership also allows for Yahoo to sell display ads on CNET properties and for CNET to sell ads alongside the content it provides on Yahoo sites.

CNET has also been in the news of late because the hedge fund Jana Partners is trying to take control of its board.

CNET Networks, News.com’s parent company, on Thursday announced a three-year strategic partnership with Yahoo under which CNET will be a third-party content provider of technology news and reviews.

The announcement was made as CNET reported its quarterly earnings, a net loss of $6.1 million, or 4 cents per share, compared with a net loss of $9.1 million, or 6 cents per share, in the year-ago period. Reuters said the per-share loss was in line with Wall Street estimates, but net revenue of $91.4 million fell short of analysts’ average expectation for $93.4 million.

“Working together, we have the ability to build more robust content environments and more comprehensive programs for our marketing partners,” CNET CEO Neil Ashe said in a press release.

Aug 16

If you’re on the show floor this week at Macworld, head over to booth No. 4810 in the West Hall of the Moscone Center and say hi to CNET’s cadre of Apple writers and editors. I’ll be there this afternoon from 4 p.m. until 4:03 p.m. closing time, so stop by if you’ve always wanted to say hello, or if you’ve been waiting for months to give me a piece of your mind.

Thanks for reading.

Please allow me to indulge in a little self-promotion on behalf of my employer, which issues me paychecks that keep me in beer and high-definition sports channels.

If you’re not in San Francisco, we’re hosting a live “Ask the Editors” event Thursday morning at 11 a.m. PST in the CNET Forums. Bookmark this page and come back tomorrow morning, when I’ll take as many questions as possible regarding Macworld 2008 and the MacBook Air, iTunes Movie Rentals, Time Capsule, and Randy Newman.

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