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March 4, 2008 11:52 AM PST

Buzz Out Loud 673: Offline is the new online

Posted by Tom Merritt
Google Gears is the project that allows online apps to be used even when you don't have an Internet connection. Microsoft is apparently making noises about Silverlight being used offline as well. So apparently offline is really hip again. Good for it! Plus I get nailed with a pricing analogy, and we decide Alex is the new anonymous.

--Tom


Listen now: Download today's podcast

EPISODE 673

Sanity prevails: IE8 will default to standard-compliant mode
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/ 20080303-sanity-prevails-ie8-will-default-to-standard-compliant-mode.html
http://www.news.com/8301-13860_3-9884688-56.html

Survey: Warnings from ISPs could slash file-swapping by 70 percent
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/ 20080303-survey-warnings-from-isps-could-slash-file-swapping-by-70.html

Nokia to bring Microsoft Silverlight-powered experiences to millions of mobile users
http://www.nokia.com/A4136001?newsid=1197788

Official Google Mobile Blog: Shifting Google Gears to mobile
http://googlemobile.blogspot.com/2008/03/shifting-google-gears-to-mobile.html

What price, Scrabulous? Mergers, acquisitions, venture capital, hedge funds http://dealbook.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/03/04/ scrabulous-founders-look-to-score-big-report-says/?hp

Microsoft offers $100K to testers of Office Live workspace
http://www.nytimes.com/idg/IDG_002570DE00740E1800257402000312F0.html

Ranking corporate America on identity theft
http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/02/27/ranking-corporate-america-on-identity-theft/

Movie studios could be behind missing iTunes rentals
http://arstechnica.com/journals/apple.ars/2008/03/04/ movie-studios-could-be-behind-missing-itunes-rentals

Daylight Saving wastes energy, study says
http://online.wsj.com/public/article/ SB120406767043794825-UOLcfJA8×9Gw9ozbCz77MiLmtaE_20080327.html

Do coat hangers sound as good as Monster cables?
http://www.boingboing.net/2008/03/03/do-coat-hangers-soun.html

MySpace gets its own MTV show, but only in the U.K.
http://www.news.com/8301-13577_3-9884700-36.html

Cyber-goggles: Record and identify every object you see
http://hardware.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/03/03/2117250

VOICE MAIL

Alex Columbus
Why nobody’s got paid from Napster settlement.

Jared Omaha
How come I can’t record?

Alex? iPhone
Price cut.

E-MAIL

Where’s Stage 6?

Hey Buzz team,

I had to catch up on the episodes from Tuesday of last week up until Monday...of today. And was extremely sad that there was absolutely no mention on the shut down of the highly beloved Stage 6. It was really a boundary pushing Web site, which actually offered hi-def uploading, free of cost when no one else did. It was awesome, and the DivX player is the best video watchy thing, hands down.

I understand, that if with the death of Netscape and HD-DVD, maybe it was just too morbid to talk about it.

Ajay from Ontario.

Mind you, I might have just missed it, and sorry if I did.

*****************************

Vista cracked by Iraqis

Hey Buzz crew

On Episode 672 of Buzz Out Loud you were talking about the “new way” of activating Windows Vista. Just to make things clear, I did pay for my copy of Windows.

I’m around a lot of Iraqi Interpreters that the Marine Corps hires to work for us, and sometimes they ask me to fix their computers. One Iraqi I met showed me how he had activated and fully updated the copy of Vista on his computer, using the same method described by the Pantheon group.

I don’t know if they managed to get an early crack from them, or somehow they have set up their own “Crack Group” out here in the Middle East. But the computer I saw was cracked about a month before the Pantheon release.

I just wanted to ask what your thoughts are on this.

Thanks for the podcast
Dusty (Cpl Parra, Manuel) in Ramadi, Iraq

*********************************

Bootable flash key makes disk encryption attacks super-simple

Hey guys, this is Adam the Grad Student from Miami. Thought this was in interesting article about encryption, easier than air canisters. (Yay, first mail sent!)

http://www.engadget.com/2008/03/04/ bootable-flash-key-makes-disk-encryption-attacks-super-simple/

Adam the Grad Student

**********************************

Another U.S. government effort to unregister a domain name

Thought you might be interested in this.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/04/us/04bar.html?hp

“Steve Marshall is an English travel agent. He lives in Spain, and he sells trips to Europeans who want to go to sunny places, including Cuba. In October, about 80 of his Web sites stopped working, thanks to the United States government.”

Now the U.S. federal government is unregistering domain names — without a judicial say so. I’m outraged. But someone else’s feeling might depend on how they feel about the embargo.

thanks,
New England Kent

**********************************

OMG I’m using WiMAX!!

Hey JAMOTO

Longtime listener first time writer

I just moved to Denmark for work and my company was very nice to rent me an apartment. I get settled in and find a regular box with an Ethernet cable coming out of it. So i plug my PC and voila, I'm on the Web. However I realize there is no other cables plugged to the box! (Except for power.) I went online and looked for the ISP that provides the box.

So the box transforms the WiMAX signal to regular old Ethernet.

I feel sooo avant-garde

Buzz out loud j’ adore :-)

Love

Jean-Philippe

PS
The name of the company?
clearwire
http://www.clearwire.com or .dk for denmark

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 6 comments
by agsGeoff March 4, 2008 3:21 PM PST
Episode 672
In episode 672 you mentioned that Comcast are removing the analog signal from their lineup. I thought that they stay within the rules of the FCC purely by providing (selling) you a cable box that has analogue outputs that you connect to your old analog TV.
maybe I'm wrong. Personally, we have charter and their analog service is abismal anyway, I would rather all channels went digital, so long as I could still get them on my TiVo.
Reply to this comment
by Mojomichael March 4, 2008 3:39 PM PST
After that HTML e-mail service lost all that mail FOREVER (was it Yahoo!?), there may be a lot more resistance to storing valuable data like documents online.
Reply to this comment
by redwall_hp March 4, 2008 8:17 PM PST
On the RAM data theft: Why don't OSes just write zeros through the RAM on shutdown. Problem solved.
Reply to this comment
by STIMULi March 5, 2008 8:45 AM PST
ABOUT THE PHONE COMPANY ANALOGY...

I have worked for various phone companies for almost 30 years and if we hear something on the a line that we are testing it sounds just like and adult speaking with Charlie Brown. Whaaw Whaaaw Whaw Whaaawww ?

We never monitor or overhear anything. Even if we hear an extreme violation of the law we do not hear it.

When a wiretap is in place we still do not hear anything. It is passed on to the authority that requested the tap.

Oh the stories I could tell thought.. but can't!

Great show!!!

Food for thought:
http://www.networkworld.com/news/2006/021306-wiretap.html
Reply to this comment
by WisnaemeCNET March 5, 2008 9:41 AM PST
On this one you discuss the issue ot ISP filtering and the warnings they are likely to give to users abusing torrent services. My brother had one of these emails from Pipex. Pipex were sent a warning by BayTSP regarding one of their IP address' downloading a particular file (name provided) and warned then to send a cease message.

Anyway, just thought I would let you know.
Reply to this comment
by pyrillix March 5, 2008 10:53 AM PST
Love the live show on Ustream, but could we please have a chat too, without the chat I feel naked..
Reply to this comment
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Buzz Out Loud is CNET's "podcast of indeterminate length," featuring Tom, Molly and Jason's entertaining, sometimes caustic, and always skeptical take on technology news. This daily podcast features commentary, guests, and phone calls and e-mail from our listeners.

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