Categories
Uncategorized

Ever wonder how MacGyver would fix something? Check out LifeHacker’s collection

Just in time for the long weekend… LifeHacker’s collection of cool MacGyver Tips


Categories
Uncategorized

Bill and Steve (Jobs) together at D5: will we see an Apple TV Ad brought to life?

In case you missed the news, eWeek’s Joe Wilcox asked “What Would You Ask Bill and Steve?” referring to next week’s Wall Street Journal All Things Digital – D5 Conference May 29-31 in Southern California, “where Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates and Apple CEO Steve Jobs together will answer questions on the same stage. Will it be showdown or hoedown?”


The two founders will be together on May 30; Microsoft’s own Steve (Ballmer, that is) will present at D5 in a seperate segment. See the official press release for more.


I noted that CBS President Les Moonves and director George Lucas will speak at the D5 conference, but where’s ABC’s Robert Iger? Or Anne Sweeney, president of the Disney-ABC Television Group? As I noted previously, Ms. Sweeney and one of the forces behind ABC’s move to provide free, ad-supported ABC shows via the Internet?


For more info, visit http://d.wsj.com and http://allthingsd.com.


And Fred Gibbons writes in his post “The Mythic Wars of Competition Between Bill and Steve” about IBM’s introduction of the personal computer in 1981, comparing these two founders to “the equivalent of “Star Wars,” with Bill as Darth Vader and Steve as “the Force,” but some people thought of Steve as the quirky Yoda.”


Funny, I’ve never thought of Steve as Yoda. Han Solo, maybe… but not Yoda.

Categories
Uncategorized

Of interest: Congress considers new Internet taxes this year

CNET News reports today that Internet taxes could arrive by this fall in the US if the discussions in Congress are successful.



“State and local governments this week resumed a push to lobby Congress for far-reaching changes on two different fronts: gaining the ability to impose sales taxes on Net shopping, and being able to levy new monthly taxes on DSL and other connections. One senator is even predicting taxes on e-mail.


“At the moment, states and municipalities are frequently barred by federal law from collecting both access and sales taxes. But they’re hoping that their new lobbying effort, coordinated by groups including the National Governors Association, will pay off by permitting them to collect billions of dollars in new revenue by next year.


“If that doesn’t happen, other taxes may zoom upward instead, warned Sen. Michael Enzi, a Wyoming Republican, at a Senate hearing on Wednesday. “Are we implicitly blessing a situation where states are forced to raise other taxes, such as income or property taxes, to offset the growing loss of sales tax revenue?” Enzi said. “I want to avoid that.”


Really? Which taxes will go up if this is not passed? In Washington state this year, there is a significant state tax surplus projected at $2.2 billion, being used to increase “school funding, health care, environmental protection and higher education.”



It leaves $724 million unspent, part of it in a hard-to-tap “rainy day” account that lawmakers are asking voters to create this fall. The fund, essentially a forced savings account of 1 percent per year, was the only aspect of the budget that drew support from minority Republicans on Tuesday. GOP lawmakers believe Democrats overspent and set the state up for a deficit in a few years.


Since the late 90’s this has been a hot topic.



“State and local governments, which are already losing $3-4 billion in sales tax revenues a year from their inability to tax most mail-order sales, would lose billions more. Numerous studies project $300 billion-$500 billion in combined consumer and business purchases over the Internet by 2002.”


As reported in the Washington Post in mid 2005, at stake are “billions of dollars a year in revenue that currently go uncollected.” In 2004, according to the Post, “the National Governors Association and the National Conference of State Legislatures estimated that state and local governments lost $15.5 billion to $16.1 billion in 2003 from untaxed Internet sales.”



“The states supporting the online sales tax effort believe a successful run of their voluntary program may encourage Congress to pass legislation to overturn a 1992 Supreme Court ruling. In that decision, the justices said mail-order merchants, and, by extension, online retailers, did not need to collect taxes for sales into states where they did not have a physical presence, such as a store or shipping center. The high court reasoned that subjecting out of state merchants to such a myriad of disparate tax laws would place an undue burden on interstate commerce.”


For one side of the argument, see this blog post from the Progress & Freedom Foundation, a public policy think tank. On the flip side, visit the site of the Streamlined Sales Tax Project, established to “assist states as they administer a simpler and more uniform sales and use tax system,” and includes 21 states on its governing board (at two levels of membership).


Whether you agree or disagree with the change to net taxes, what can you do?


Write to your state and federal government officials and let them know: in the States, you can find more information on contacting your senators and representatives in DC by going to http://www.usa.gov/Agencies/Federal/Legislative.shtml. The EFF also maintains a website to help you contact US policymakers: http://www.eff.org/congress/.

Categories
Uncategorized

IPTV, Media Centre, VOD rumours… oh my

Long Zheng reports in his blog earlier this week that “a trademark application in Australia… looks to be for a video-on-demand service from Microsoft yet to be identified has been made available publically.”


Ars Technica picked up on Zheng’s report noting that “the trademark description also mentions downloadable video content, as well as the ability to transmit photos, video, and music over their broadband connections.”


Sounds familiar. 😉


Ars also picks up on Zheng’s reference to Joost, in that “Media Center already has the ability to record shows, view pictures, and listen to music, so adding on-demand TV or movie programming would be a natural extension of the software’s abilities. A Joost-like service could also be incorporated into the Xbox’s video offerings, rounding out the console as a full-on media center.”


Perhaps a new chapter in Xbox Live video services? Sounds interesting.


[Added later… Fortune reports “Joost just received $45 million in funding in a recent round of venture capital funding. In another sign that Joost is becoming the go-to web video site for the media establishment, the site just inked a deal with the big-time talent and literary agency CAA.”]

Categories
Uncategorized

The great US digital television migration starts on February 17, 2009

Do you have a TV antenna connection that plugs directly in to your TV or Media Center PC? If so, think about how you will prepare for a transition that is finally coming in the industry: on February 17, 2009, the US will make the transition to digital television, as analog TV channels will be cut off. See the article Will Box Shortage Mar DTV Transition?



“Digital-to-analog convertors that would keep old sets going are supposed to be available by January 1, 2008. But David Rehr, president of the National Association of Broadcasters, says the supply of set-top boxes may not meet the need.”


So if you are what is framed as an “over-the-air” television viewer (aka OTA), then you should be aware of the change. But if you’re one of the majority of US households that receives television programming from cable or satellite, then your analogue TV receiver won’t be impacted. Cable and satellite provide set top box convertors. And OTA HD programming is not impacted, so if you’ve hooked up a new HD TV receiver to an antenna, you won’t be impacted.


Other interesting TV facts from Nielsen Media



  • There are an average of 111.4 million TV homes in the United States for the 2006-07 TV season.

  • 98% of American households own a TV, and over 76% of American households own 2 or more TV’s (82% of U.S homes have more than one television set at home)

  • The average U.S. TV home has 2.5 people and 2.8 television sets

  • 28% of U.S. TV homes have digital cable

  • 64% of homes have wired cable hook-ups (down from 68% in 2000) and 23% have satellite or specialized antenna systems to receive television signals