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Cool Zune Art: Zune Originals: Interview with Chris Stephenson

Now this is very cool… this on Cool Hunting: Zune Originals: Interview with Chris Stephenson

Zune‘s next move takes their support of emerging artists and literally puts it on their sleeve. Zune Originals is a collection of 27 original works by 18 international artists designed to be engraved onto the back of the device. (Click images for detail.) On the Zune Originals site, launching tomorrow (13 November 2007), visitors will be able to customize their Zune by size, color, illustration and with up to four optional lines of text—all free of charge, at least for the time being.”

PINKZUNE.jpg

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Windows Home Server launches with new HP hardware

Courtesy of On10.net…

Windows Home Server now available!

Windows Home Server now available!

“Today the Home Server team announced HP’s Windows Home Server is available for pre-order (Amazon, CompUSA) and will be shipping before the holidays. I stopped by Charlie Kindel’s office to get a look at the HP and talk about Home Server. You can get a feel for just how small the HP Home Server is and some of the nice features it includes like screwless drive replacement.
You can get a glimpse of the “hockey puck” Home Server prototype and see the Home Server Charlie built himself, which uses a 5-drive chasis that fits into 3 x 5.25″ bay slots – here is where to find one of those.”

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Of interest: Local news and blogs provide details on new Zunes

Of interest today as I’m home sick (cough-sneeze)… King 5 news reports (from the AP) on the new, redesigned Zunes… a family still with FM radio and wireless sharing, but with a larger hard disc and (finally) with flash-memory…



“Microsoft Corp. took the wraps off its second-generation digital music players Tuesday, showing three new Zunes that bring the software maker’s offering more in line with Apple’s market-leading iPod.”


… and this report on betanews


“Although the news won’t officially hit until midnight tonight, further details of the Zune players have leaked ahead of Microsoft’s secret Tuesday night event for press and bloggers.

“Sources have confirmed to BetaNews, as well as additional information from Zune news site Zunerama indicates that there will be two new Zunes, including a new 80GB HDD-based model along with 4GB and 8GB flash based versions.”


… and this on tgdaily.com… an excerpted FCC filing on 4 GB and 8 GB Flash Zune configurations…



“The sketch published indicates that the new player will be substantially more compact than the hard drive-based Zune, but it will keep the general layout of the device consisting of a main navigation area in the shape of a scroll-wheel as well as dedicated play, pause and back buttons.”


Last, this from Mary Jo Foley with a link to What’s on tap for tonight’s Zune launch 



“As with Searchification, Microsoft has invited reporters and bloggers to an event which they aren’t allowed to write publicly about until after midnight (EST) on October 3, sources say. At the October 2 invitation-only Zune launch, Chairman Bill Gates and Corporate Vice President of Design and Development J Allard are slated to take the wraps off the Version 2 Zune devices, according to sources claiming familiarity with Microsoft’s plans.

“Besides the new Zunes (“Scorpio” hard-drive and “Draco” flash-based units), Microsoft is expected to unveil a new beta community site for Zunes, an enhanced method of discovering new music and a line of Microsoft-developed accessories (perhaps an FM transmitter and dock?). A new online Zune store, which is more tightly integrated with the Xbox Live Marketplace, also might be part of this evening’s rollout, sources said.”


Update:  Gizmodo reports that “Microsoft’s just confirmed with us the November 13 release date of the new Zunes—previously stated by Amazon. Whether or not the firmware for the old Zune is coming on 11/13 is still unconfirmed.”

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Geeks rescue consumer victims of “software rage”

This evening on CBS 60 Minutes, Steve Kroft updated his report from earlier this year and gives the Geek Squad their fifteen minutes of fame.  Kroft covered the challenges and increasing complexities computers, networking devices and the myriad of consumer electronics that contain computer chips… everything from personal computers to mobile phones and all-in-one remote controls, or as Steve said, “anything that needs to be programmed, requires technical support, and can crash, die, or merely freeze.”

“We are becoming slaves to our own technology – addicted to and dependent upon all sorts of beeping, flashing gadgetry that is supposed to make our lives easier.

“But it has become so complicated to set up, program and fix, that most of us don’t know how to do it, giving rise to a multi-billion dollar service industry populated by the very people who used to be shunned in the high school cafeteria: geeks, like Robert Stephens.

My favourite part was the snips of interviews and sound bytes from one of the folks I read regularly, tech columnist David Pogue.

“Part of the problem, when it comes to computers at least, is that there are so many cooks for what you are using. Microsoft made the operating system, some company in Taiwan made the equipment, you’re running software from a company in California, and now you’re installing the driver for a digital camera from a fourth company. You know, what are the odds that all of these are going to work flawlessly together for all 400 million people who have PCs? Zip,” Pogue says.

“So, what do you do?” Kroft asks.

“You get unhappy. You develop software rage,” Pogue says.

Pogue is right: how many times have you gotten to your wit’s end after trying everything outlined in the manual. Often, you’re lucky if you find a cryptic (or poorly translated) electronic read-me file or esoteric web page reference, as some companies don’t even include a real manual with their products these days. 

In an article by By Paula Rooney, the author notes that a major problem around our launch of Windows Vista was (and some will say “is still”) a lack of software drivers for third party hardware components and peripherals…

“Tons of vendors haven’t done Vista drivers and that’s left a big hole in support. I can understand when it comes to printers and scanners, but when we’re talking about hard drives, chipset controllers and video cards, things that run the PC, it’s surprising,” he said. “It’s not just peripherals but primary component manufacturers aren’t ready, and that unusual compared to the previous releases [of Windows].”

Rooney calls out that in the feedback gathered by CRN, the top three problems facing Windows Vista early adopters — and I’ll suggest, often users of any OS — are:

    1. Lack of available drivers from ISVs causing application conflicts;
    2. Lack of available drivers for existing and new peripherals and hardware components;
    3. Buggy drivers

Drivers, drivers, drivers. 

A good article is this one, “The hunt for drivers” on the Windows Help and How-to site, and the use of Windows Update to locate and install the latest updates for your software and hardware.  In Vista, Windows Update is integrated into the OS, and found that (according to the site) “more than 31,000 updated drivers were ready when Windows Vista was completed” which is almost three times what was available when Windows XP was launched.

“In many cases, you don’t even need Windows Update to install new devices. Often when you plug in a new device or install a new add-on card in your computer, Windows Vista will detect the hardware and automatically install the correct driver in less than a minute. A notification lets you know when installation begins and when it’s complete. You don’t have to do anything.”

Sometimes, that’s true, as I found when I connected my HP scanner to my Windows Vista

Tags: customer support, Windows Vista, drivers.

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Your questions: how does the AT&T 8525 PPC phone compare to the Apple iPhone?

A quick post as I run off to lunch… a question I received yesterday from a friend as I was doing mail on my 8525… 

“What’s the difference between the AT&T 8525 [aka HTC Wizard] and the new iPhone?”

Let’s point the wayback machine to June, 2007, and Tom Yager’s Infoworld blog posting, as AT&T positioned the 8525 Pocket PC phone at a low promo price and apparently as a alternative to the Apple iPhone

“Mobile buyers brought to AT&T’s site by iPhone’s pre-launch excitement will be greeted with a number of iPhone alternatives, but AT&T has pushed one to the front of the pack. AT&T chopped $300 off the $599 list price of its newest top-end 3G device, the 8525 Windows Mobile 5 Pocket PC, just in time for iPhone’s launch.

“I find AT&T’s re-pricing particularly interesting since the 8525 is the very handset I chose to pit against iPhone. The 8525 is a business handset with consumer features, while iPhone is a consumer handset with business features. They both converge, yet they end up in very different places.

“I’ve been carrying an 8525 for about a month in preparation for the shoot-out and as part of my real-life road warrior mobile device testing regimen. I’ll hold my opinions for the review, but I will say that the 8525 is dear at its $599 list price, appropriately priced at AT&T’s standard $449 2-year subsidized price, and is worth checking out in person at $299.

“The 8525’s killer feature will be its Windows Mobile 6 upgrade, which AT&T promises for the third quarter of this year. Expect it to be downloadable, but not necessarily free. If the 8525 had shown with Windows Mobile 6 in time for iPhone’s launch, the landscape might look quite different.”

Mr. Yager provides a side-by-side feature comparison of the two phones as “part of a work in progress for [his] InfoWorld Test Center shoot-out among iPhone, T-Mobile BlackBerry 8800 and the AT&T 8525.” 

As you may recall, at home we made the move to the then Cingular 8525 with Windows Mobile 5, when we found the price even lower than the pricing this summer…

“The clincher on this deal? Over the holiday shopping weekend last week, Cingular offered a “Buy One Get One Free” deal and the phones were essentially half price: not only was Cingular’s family plan comparable to what I had on T-Mobile, their pricing on devices was better. (The lowest tier of Internet access is a couple of dollars more a month than T-Mobile’s WAP access, but affordable.)”

Depending on the timing and your local AT&T dealer, your mileage may vary.

Also of interest: Russell Shaw’s blog post today on “So who is this $100,000 mystery buyer for iPhone unlocking software?”

Tags: AT&T, Apple iPhone, Windows Mobile, Cingular 8525.