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Week in review: Seismic shifts
November 3, 2006 -
Week in review: Browser battles
October 27, 2006 -
Week in review: Vista furor
October 20, 2006
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The Democratic victory capped a historic election year marked by heavy use of the Internet for activism, outreach and fundraising. More so than in the 2004 presidential campaign, politicians turned to the Internet to stay competitive through tactics like publishing their own blogs, hiring bloggers and soliciting online donations.
The Internet also played a less clear but still influential role by permitting former Rep. Mark Foley's lurid conversations about masturbation to be recorded--in transcripts that Democrats were able to invoke or reference in campaign advertisements designed to unseat Republican incumbents by painting them as Washington insiders or as corrupt.
Political bloggers also were some of the first to report election irregularities, especially those involving electronic voting machines. From Colorado to Florida, glitches blamed on human error or computer malfunctions yielded long lines and led some precincts to resort temporarily to paper ballots.
About 39 percent of voters were expected to cast their ballots on Tuesday using electronic voting machines. Another 49 percent of voters were expected to use optical-scan voting equipment, which uses computers to tabulate paper ballots in a manner similar to standardized tests.
A look at Web 2.0
Intel seems to be jumping into the software business with the announcement at the Web 2.0 conference in San Francisco that it has put together a collaboration software suite that it will offer to small and medium-size businesses via its resellers. Called SuiteTwo, the package will include software from Six Apart, Socialtext, NewsGator and SimpleFeed. These are small software companies that provide applications for blogs, RSS feeds, wikis and social networking.
All of these so-called Web 2.0 applications are more commonly associated with and used by consumers. But corporations are increasingly using blogs, wikis and social-networking applications.
To accelerate their use, Intel decided to assemble these applications into a single suite and to contract SpikeSource to integrate and support the offerings, said Lisa Lambert, the managing director of Intel Capital's software and solutions group.
With Microsoft's Vista and Office 2007 released to manufacturing, the software giant is preparing to adapt the products for the Web-dominated era, Chief Software Architect Ray Ozzie said at the Web 2.0 conference. Ozzie said the company overall is making a transition to designing software that takes advantage of the PC--as it has historically done--as well as online services.
"Now we are at an interesting juncture with Vista and Office (2007) done," Ozzie said.
Ozzie also described some of the product goals he envisions for the next editions of Windows and Office. Specifically, he said Office can be better adapted for Internet-connected mobile devices. And the next version of Windows should aid software developers in creating applications that run on machines with several processing "cores" on a chip.
Amazon.com CEO Jeff Bezos used his conference appearance to say he is convinced that his company's nascent hosted computing service will yield dividends for the retail giant, with time. Financial analysts have voiced some concern about the level of technology spending that Amazon is doing and whether its foray into hosted computing services is a distraction from its online commerce business.
Bezos was unapologetic about investing in Amazon Web Services--a collection of 10 hosted services that give software developers access to Amazon data and computing services, such as storage and processing power.
"Why we're doing this is because we're good at it and we think it can be a meaningful, financially attractive business one day," he said.
Also of note
Microsoft will pay Novell a net amount of $308 million to market and distribute its competitor's product...Wal-Mart Stores has started selling a Compaq laptop for $398 a few weeks ahead of Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving and one of the biggest shopping days of the year...Texas Instruments unfurled plans to produce a chip that will let consumers in emerging markets buy inexpensive video cell phones by 2008...Microsoft unveiled a downloadable browser application that brings the photorealism and maneuverability of gaming into its online mapping and local search service.
See more CNET content tagged:
Week in review, computer company, Net Neutrality, reader, Microsoft Windows Vista







- you can kill it, grill it & eat it today....
- by anton.vanwamelen November 11, 2006 7:18 AM PST
- as the hillbilly hellcats say it perfectly in their song roadkillcafe.
- Like this Reply to this comment
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(3 Comments)the hacker's hellhounds have their meal, but wil it be a feast for all or just a very meager one for some.....