Category: Web Technology
November 22nd, 2009
A Chrome OS Video Tour
Fresh off the Interwebs, here’s a Tech Broiler video tour of the latest build of Chrome OS.
Also See: Chrome OS, Some Early Preview Videos
Have you tested the latest Chromium OS developer code yet? Talk Back and Let Me Know.
November 22nd, 2009
Roku becomes cloud-enabled with new Roku Channel Store and Developer SDK
The new Roku Channel Store, which is being rolled out to all Roku devices, will greatly expand the capabilities of the $99 set-top on-demand streaming device.
Late Sunday night, Roku announced that its players would now have a “Channel Store”, much like the “App Store” on other popular Internet-enabled devices such as the iPhone and Android-based phones.
Roku, Inc., maker of the popular and award-winning family of Roku players, announced today the Roku Channel Store and the first 10 free channels for Roku customers to enjoy on their TVs. From internet radio to video podcasts, professional web content to photo sharing and personal videos, the Roku Channel Store provides an open platform for delivering quality content to the TV. New channels now available for customers to add today to their Roku experience via the Roku Channel Store include: Pandora, Facebook Photos, Revision3, Mediafly, TWiT, blip.tv, Flickr, FrameChannel, Motionbox and MobileTribe. For the complete list of channels, specific channel descriptions and features please go to http://www.roku.com/roku-channel-store
These first 10 channels are just the beginning for Roku. Many other developers are working on Roku Channels now, and Roku expects additional developers to adopt the Roku platform over time. New channels will appear in the Roku Channel Store automatically as they become available.
The Roku Channel Store represents an opportunity for content owners and publishers to reach an already large and growing audience of Roku customers. By creating an open platform for delivery to the television over the Internet, Roku has leveled the playing field for content owners.
Roku had previously remote updated its players for Netflix HDTV 720p on-demand video as well as the ability to rent movies on demand from Amazon.com. With the introduction of its new “Channel Store” the Roku moves towards becoming more of a cloud-enabled content viewing device. Having the ability to stream music from Pandora or being able to view my Flickr stream on my HD set is pretty neat.
Also Read: At $99, Roku Rulez with Incredible Future Potential
All current Roku players, including the Roku SD, the Roku HD and Roku-HR are compatible with the Channel Store, which will be automatically available on all registered devices over the coming weeks. To create a channel for the Roku Channel Store, a developer creates an application using Roku’s free software developer kit. This SDK is available free upon request by emailing partners@roku.com
What applications would you like to see for Roku’s “Channel Store”? Twitter? Hulu? Full FaceBook stream updates? YouTube? Vimeo? Video Podcast feeds? Talk Back and Let Me Know.
November 22nd, 2009
Stupid DROID Tricks, Volume 1

Android 2.0 on the Verizon DROID Smartphone is indeed sophisticated, but for a new user can also be daunting or even overwhelming.
The Google Android 2.0 OS built into the Motorola/Verizon DROID is by far one of the most sophisticated smartphone UIs I have ever seen — and with that UI comes additional complexity which may confuse some users.
Also Read: My First Week with DROID
Since a lot of my friends and family tend to follow my lead on the gadgets and technology I use, I’ve had a few of them ping me on the DROID and how to get the most out of it. Here’s my first installment in what I think will be a series of Tips and Tricks posts related to Android.
Click on the “Read the rest of this entry” link below for more.
November 19th, 2009
Chrome OS: Some Early Preview Videos
Today Google released a number of early introduction/preview videos regarding their upcoming Chrome OS. (UPDATED: Demo from November 18 at Google Headquarters added)
While the software does not currently appear to be in an easily installable state, requiring developers to build their own Chrome OS environments for the time being, the OS does look quite promising and Google’s “Stateless” objective where all user data resides in the cloud reflects an extremely modern concept in OS design.
What is Chrome OS?:
Chrome OS Fast Boot:
Chrome OS Security:
User Interface Concept Video for Chrome OS:
Chromium OS and Open Source:
Live Chrome OS Demo from Google Headquarters
Do these videos provide encouragement or interest in Google’s stateless, cloud-based OS offering? Talk Back and Let Me know.
November 15th, 2009
My First Week With DROID

The Verizon/Motorola DROID is by far the most powerful and versatile smartphone I have yet encountered. My first week with the device was one of geeky joy, adapting to the learning curve of the Android OS as a former BlackBerry user, and understanding the device’s limitations and quirks that come with being an early adopter.
Updated 11/16/09: As many of you know, I became a Verizon Wireless customer on November 6, on the launch day of the Motorola DROID. I had extremely high expectations of the new Android 2.0-based smartphone given the many reviews/previews that had appeared on the Internet, and from extremely positive feedback from my colleagues that this indeed was the device that would fit my needs. I had gone without a smartphone device for just over a month, having terminated my BlackBerry AT&T contract and now was ready to try something new.
Click on the “Read the rest of this entry” link below for more.
November 10th, 2009
Cool New Google Maps Feature: New Jersey Wormholes!
In Google Maps, Try to drive to Whole Foods in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, and you’ll be teleported 11 miles to the west to IKEA in Paramus, New Jersey. AWESOME, right?
Last week, ZDNet iGeneration blogger Zack Whittaker wrote about Argleton, the English town in Google Maps that doesn’t exist. I thought that was pretty cool, but now I’ve found something even cooler — a rip in the Space/Time continuum in Google Maps. You know, like in Star Trek.
Click on the “Read the rest of this entry” link below for more.
November 9th, 2009
Please Feel Free to Send Me Your Therapist's Bill
The JibJab guys and OfficeMax are back with the “Elf Yourself” video e-Holiday cards, this time with new Hip-Hop, Disco and Country Music elf dances as well as the “Traditional”. Simply allow the site to authorize with your FaceBook account, choose a profile picture, and let the twisted JibJab folks do all the work.
Sorry, no Chanukah Gnomes.
November 8th, 2009
In Smartphone Wars, Darwinism Triumphs Over Intelligent Design

With the release of the Verizon Droid, the smartphone market now has two apex predators with advanced, feature rich mobile embedded operating systems. There’s no room for smaller or less evolved players, and survival of the fittest in the war of the handsets may very well mean industry and carrier consolidation.
At around 8PM Friday evening, I walked into the Route 4 Paramus, New Jersey Verizon corporate store and walked up to the counter and said two words: “DROID Me.”
The store was busy, but there were plenty of demo units and lots of staff around — a far cry from the iFAIL experience I had when I first attempted and failed to purchase my wife an iPhone 3G at AT&T’s Fort Lee, New Jersey store during its launch in early July of 2008.
Click on the “Read the rest of this entry” link below for more.
October 29th, 2009
My Top Scary Technology Trends

Yes, it’s that spooky time of year again, and our “fearless” editors have asked upon the ZDNet contributors to come up with “Scary Tech”, the technologies that are so frightening, they’ll make you evacuate from multiple “interfaces”.
Halloween. All Hallows Eve. Dia de los Muertos. Whatever you call it in your culture, Halloween is a day that for many people evokes images of ghouls, the undead, vampires, witches, werewolves, ghosts and goblins — creatures of fantasy that are meant to scare young children. Although I’ve often been emotionally compared to a child, none of these things frighten me.
However, there are some things, at least in the world of technology, that really do scare the living crap out of me. While there isn’t one particular item that makes me turn completely ice cold with fear this Halloween, there are a number of trends that definitely have been keeping me up at night lately.
Click on the “Read the rest of this entry” link below for more.
October 27th, 2009
Congratulations B&N, you've built my Kindroid. So now what?

The Barnes and Noble “Nook”, which was launched earlier this month, is the real-life version of the “Kindroid” I envisioned one year ago. So now that it has been built for real, what do we do with it?
A year ago, I posited that Amazon might do better with the Kindle platform if they abandoned their proprietary, locked down software platform on the device and embraced an Open Source platform, Google’s Android.
It never occurred to me that the Kindroid might actually become reality in the near future, and that the theoretical device would be introduced by Barnes & Noble, Amazon’s prime competition in the brick and mortar space. Still, I am impressed and somewhat vindicated that the Kindroid or a similar device that resembled my proposed configuration came into existence as the Nook.
Click on the “Read the rest of this entry” link below for more.
Jason Perlow is a technologist with over two decades of experience integrating large heterogeneous multi-vendor computing environments in Fortune 500 companies. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.
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