Buzz Out Loud Podcast

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January 5, 2009 12:31 PM PST

Buzz Out Loud 884: Hormonal beef

by Jason Howell
  • 5 comments
In today's episode, Natali offers her hormones to help out Steve Jobs, but she doesn't do it on the actual show, so we have to tell you about it now. The actual news is that the mystery behind Steve's absence from the Steve-note has been revealed: a hormonal imbalance that's causing massive weight loss. Also, Viacom goes wingnut crazy. Hear all about it!
Listen now: Download today's podcast

EPISODE 884

Health concerns force Apple’s Jobs from Macworld
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-10130981-37.html

http://news.cnet.com/8301-10787_3-10130961-60.html

Rumor: Unibody 17-inch MacBook Pro in the works
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-10130784-37.html
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20090105-ars-at-macworld-09-rumor-roundup-and-live-keynote-plans.html

iPhone 3G unlocker released on schedule
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/01/03/yellowsn0w_beta/

In dispute, Viacom threatens to pull shows “on TV and online”
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20090102-in-dispute-viacom-threatens-to-pull-shows-on-tv-and-online.html

RIAA dumps evidence-gathering firm
http://news.cnet.com/8301-1023_3-10130785-93.html

PS2 crushes Wii, Xbox in gaming minutes
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13846_3-10130635-62.html

Forrester study: Got game? Not in a recession
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13772_3-10131039-52.html

Windows 7 build 7,000 already outperforming Vista and XP in “real-world” tasks
http://www.engadget.com/2009/01/03/windows-7-build-7000-already-outperforming-vista-and-xp-in-real/

Zune ‘bug’ fixed, says Microsoft
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7807797.stm
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09%2F01%2F04%2F2034248

Amazon Video On Demand coming to Roku Player
http://news.cnet.com/8301-1023_3-10131174-93.html

Blockbuster launching set-top box for the holidays
http://newteevee.com/2008/11/08/blockbuster-launching-set-top-box-for-the-holidays/

LG adds direct Internet link to a line of HDTVs
http://news.cnet.com/LG-adds-direct-Internet-link-to-a-line-of-HDTVs/2100-1041_3-6248641.html
http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/01/05/1646257

VOICEMAIL
Matt from New Hampshire: CSM!

Anon: Full mailbox

Mike from Tacoma: Windows 7 release date — FIRM

Jeff from SLC: land-lines do have 911

E-MAIL
Dear BOLers,
I missed you guys. I missed so much that I went to the BuzzOutLoud wikia and downloaded (randomly) some episodes from the past three years of BOLing. I got to hear the first voicemail from Shalin, the time when dr. Karl was just a med student and a lot of great stuff: Tom saying that would license for free his voice for TomTom’s GPS, Molly confusing hermetically for hydrogenation sealed and Veronica talking “Brazil for the win” were the best ones I’ve hear

And when I downloaded the best of 2006 episode, I noticed it was too short. And the same happened with the best of 2007 and 2008 episodes. So I figure a way to not let this happen again this year: a page on the wikia! http://buzzoutloud.wikia.com/wiki/Best_of_2009

Now the listeners will have a chance to put in their favorite buzzing moments of 2009 and help Jason to edit a longer (or even two!) Best of 2009 episode.

Hope you like it and, as always, love the show and keep up the good work!

Rafa

**********

I just had to be the first
To write into BOL while flying at 36000 ft…:-) Flying to CES of course!
I am writing this from a Virgin America flight over Sycamore, OH…
Look forward to seeing you guys at the cloud talk!

Reid, the ISP Infrastructure Guy

**********

Hey Buzz crew,
I just wanted to make Tom feel just a little bit better about his predictions for last year. Specifically, the whole simultaneous broadcast on TV and the Internet thing. In the U.K. at least the BBC started doing just that in the last month (so still 2008) or so on BBC iPlayer. I think it started in early December or something.

Anyway hope you guys had a nice vacation.

Listener since late 2005, first e-mail

Greig the math student :)

P.S Too shy to say “well actually” yet loi

**********

Ever since I switched to over the air digital television, my life has been a TV horror film.
90 percent of the time the signal is so poor it cuts in and out every minute or two. If I am lucky enough to get a good signal I can’t move. Every time I or my roommate walks through the house, the signal cuts out. The resolution may be better, but of course it is, that's what happens when you shrink the picture. My screen now has a three-inch black border for most programs. It sucks! I was much happier with a little fuzzy picture and good audio, than a screen refresh rate of 1/minute and no audio, or almost worse when every actor suddenly becomes a gou’uld (not sure why that happens).

I’ve also noticed that the signal is the worst during peak viewing hours. You guys know if DTV has some type of shared bandwidth?

Long live analog!!!

Deeply saddened by digital
In Madison, WI

October 15, 2008 11:47 AM PDT

Buzz Out Loud 831: Marginalized whackjob fringe

by Molly Wood
  • 2 comments

Tom couldn't decide whether to go with the "marginalized whackjob" wall paint, or just get a marginalized whackjob fringe. Vote? In other news of the day, the McCain campaign discovers that the DMCA can be ANNOYING! Maybe they'll do something about it once they're back in politics-land! Also, EA says no one cares about DRM except an organized online cabal. We know how well that attitude worked out for the music industry.


Listen now: Download today's podcast

EPISODE 831

McCain campaign complains about takedown notice procedure
http://www.publicknowledge.org/node/1795
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20081014-mccainpalin-campaign-angry-over-bogus-dmca-takedowns.html
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-10066510-38.html

YouTube says: no special treatment
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-10066738-38.html

99.8% of gamers don’t care about DRM, says EA
http://games.slashdot.org/games/08/10/15/1525259.shtml

Worldwide PC market grew 15 percent in third quarter of 2008
http://www.gartner.com/it/page.jsp?id=777613

YouTube passes yahoo as #2 search engine
http://news.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/10/14/1645227

First look: Firefox 3.1 beta 1 officially released
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20081014-first-look-firefox-3-1-beta-1-officially-released.html

Software blocks car phone users
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7669533.stm

SanDisk releases $20 slotMusic Player, dozens of SD card albums
http://gizmodo.com/5063564/sandisk-releases-20-slotmusic-player-dozens-of-sd-card-albums

Amazon, EA, Microsoft, others win ‘Popular Mechanics’ Breakthrough Awards
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13772_3-10066453-52.html

Banjo used in rain surgery
http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/10/14/1945249

VOICEMAIL
Anonymous: Why with the MacBook Pro!? Why!?

E-MAIL

I’m still a day behind, so I just finished episode 830. Molly, you keep griping about this flash bug; I used to get it too, but no more. The solution is simple: Flashblock (http://flashblock.mozdev.org/). Flash items are not loaded, and are replaced with a little play button, allowing you to load selectively, so you never have enough flash things open to cause them all to break. It also ends up speeding up page load time, and you never have to see that annoying dancing person on the “mortgage rates” ad ever again.

Love the show!

-Anthony
Dallas, TX

**********

Totally disagree w/ your assessment. We have one Blu-ray player and several DVD players. Providing a DVD copy for the minivan, either of the kids’ rooms, and any of our computers is brilliant. I don’t want the kids handling the BD Disk b/c I’ve seen what they do to the DVD’s. Also, it allows my sister-in-law to borrow a movie, which she can’t whenever we only have it in Blu-ray.

Joe in WI

**********

Hi all of you,

I was checking out the new MacBook Pro on the American page of Apple
to see the specs and everything. http://www.apple.com/macbookpro/specs.html
Then I went the the Swiss page to check the price and… boom 30 minutes of
the battery life of the Mac Book vanished, only 4.5 hours. Then I went
back to the American site: 5 hours.
All the other specs are the same and everything except for the battery
life… strange

Pierre from Switzerland (Yes, I live nearby the CERN.)

P.S. could you send me a MacBook Pro from the USA with the 5 hours battery
life? ;-)

**********

Hola Buzz Brigade,

You guys have probably read that Sony has pushed out it’s latest firmware for the PS3. Some of the features include additional support for trophies and the ability to set a sleeper shutdown for the controllers (which is so freakin’ BOSS!). But the other “coolerer” feature that they didn’t mention during their original announcement is that Flash 9 was also included. Which mean now I can watch Hulu directly from the PS3 browser without having to use a third party app to stream it to my PS3 via XNLA. This is a great bonus.

Amazon on Demand doesn’t appear to work but I’ll take one win where I can. Besides, the PSN video store is pretty freakin’ huge and keeps growing by hundreds of titles each week.

Just thought I’d let you know.

Love the show (except when Molly rants on the PS3–such a lame 360 fanboi :-P )

Tim

**********

Hey guys,
Just a “well actually.” The DisplayPort is actually a new industry standard. It’s not created by Apple. Dell started using it before Apple did, in fact. It’s supposed to be better in performance than DVI, not to mention plug in better than DVI ports.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Displayport

OK, fine, so maybe the “Mini DisplayPort” is a proprietary version of the normal DisplayPort.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mini_DisplayPort

They like to “improve” existing technology.

Oh, and you’ll probably know this by now, but the 9400M and the 9600M are not options. They’re BOTH found in the MacBook Pro. You get to switch between them to decide between battery life and performance.

Daniel from Singapore.

**********

FROM THE FORUMS — TOLLIE:
Here’s what I was hoping you’d amend/correct from your reporting yesterday: DisplayPort--not proprietary, VESA standard, will be Apple-wide, also backed by Dell, HP, Intel, et al… and Aluminum MacBooks have no firewire--Apple is bumping Firewire off the consumer line… Trackpad takes away a button, but you can now define TWO button regions (i.e. a right-click area). Hopefully not as dumb as the Mighty Mouse.

**********

Hey BOL crew, you said you wanted to try talking to the robots pretending to be humans online. Well actually, you can. http://elbot.com (press the red button)

I’m not sure if it’s exactly the same Elbot as in the test, because this has been on the Internet for quite a while.

Thanks for the great podcast ,
Keelin

February 26, 2008 11:36 AM PST

Buzz Out Loud 668: A filter three-fer

by Molly Wood
  • 2 comments
A three-fer means there were three stories about ISP filtering. Three. Which means filtering is turning into an epidemic, which isn't very cool--times three. In other news, Apple finally updates the MacBook Pro and Yahoo has decided "Buzz" is cool. But they don't mean our podcast.

--Molly


Listen now: Download today's podcast

EPISODE 668

YouTube returns to Pakistan: Everything's right on the Internet, for now
http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/02/26/everythings-right-in-the-internet-for-now/

How Pakistan knocked YouTube offline (and how to make sure it never happens again)
http://www.news.com/8301-10784_3-9878655-7.html

ICANN, Network Solutions sued for domain tasting
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/ 20080226-bad-flavor-icann-network-solutions-sued-for-domain-tasting.html

Apple updates MacBook, MacBook Pro lineups
http://www.news.com/8301-10784_3-9879198-7.html

Apple’s iTunes grows to No. 2 U.S. music retailer
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080226/media_nm/apple_itunes_dc

Internet service providers filter
http://www.australianit.news.com.au/story/0,24897,23274585-15306,00.html

What we’ll end up getting for net neutrality
http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2008/02/network-neutrality-how-the-fcc.html

Tennessee legislation would turn schools into copyright cops
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/ 20080225-tennessee-legislation-would-turn-schools-into-copyright-cops.html

eBay says sellers boycott had no effect on listings
http://www.mercurynews.com/business/ci_8365616

Yahoo launches Digg competitor
http://blog.wired.com/business/2008/02/yahoo-launches.html

Yahoo plays catch-up an all fronts: Buzz=Digg; Open Search=Google/Ask Search
http://www.paidcontent.org/entry/ 419-yahoo-plays-catch-up-on-all-fronts-buzzdigg-open-searchgoogle-ask-searc/
http://www.ysearchblog.com/archives/000523.html

Long odds lead Lessig to decide against run for Congress
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/ 20080225-long-odds-lead-lessig-to-decide-against-run-for-congress.html

Do gamers enjoy dying in first-person shooters?
http://games.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/02/25/1543236

Researchers develop self-cleaning clothes
http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/02/25/1641251

VOICE MAIL

Alex, Miami Beach
You ruined the Yahoo Live thing man.

E-MAIL

Tom! DNS isn’t the thing!

Tom, you made me hurt so much by repeating the idea that DNS caused it. Please apologize to the masses about talking so much about DNS!

The BGP router owned by PIE advertised the PI space of YouTube. PCCW didn’t use an IRR or SBGP to filter a route. Due to how CIDR [pronounced cider] works all IP traffic sent over Layer 3 [look at the OSI model] hit PIE.

Basically the backbone providers tell each other who they have connected to them. Pakistan advertised that YouTube was directly connected to them to a backbone provider, and they picked it up, and sent it all over the Internet. Regarding the idea that hackers can have all access, these are some of the most secure routers on the Internet. These are also the most important routers, and they are run by geniuses! [Like me!] Recently we met [Last week actually] in San Jose to talk about how this could happen. This is a hot topic in the Network Operator [NANOG] community. But rest assured, the likeliness of a script kiddie having access to this is near nothing.

Our friends at ARS:
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/ 20080225-insecure-routing-redirects-youtube-to-pakistan.html

Sargun

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

IE8, IE7 and the Acid test

IE7 did NOT pass the Acid2 test. No version of IE has ever passed any of the Acid tests. That’s not how Microsoft rolls, and it’s STILL not how they roll. If you’ll peruse many of the stories about the IE8 beta, you’ll notice that IE8 will come with a “compatibility mode.” So it may pass the Acid2 or Acid3 test, but only if you start the browser in this bizarre “compatibility mode” (or presumably, you can switch to it on the fly--at least one would hope). But this is getting downright silly. Microsoft needs to cut off the people that are coding non-standards compliant sites and deal with the consequences. Granted, Netscape started this whole “browser specific tags” thing, but the time for that has passed. The Web needs to return to it’s original concept as a platform and browser agnostic delivery system.

Sam

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

Air hack used in a Brazilian robbery?

From listening to the Friday show I heard a story all of you talking about “Researchers crack FileVault, BitLocker with canned air hack”

Putting on my tin foil hat...

I think the air hack has been used in Brazil. Read the following: http://tinyurl.com/yqcfhx

This involves Petrobras and Halliburton? Do the hackers know something? Do the hackers want to go in the oil business? What do these fanatical, fascist, computer hackers want? Ugh!!!!

Taking tin foil hat off.

I thought that it was an interesting coincidence that this kind of robbery happened so close to the announcement of the canned air hack.

Take Care,
Vince

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

New company rules against downloading

Hi guys. I listen to Buzz at work, using iTunes as my podcast aggregator and player. My company has stated that as of Friday we can no longer have any nonapproved third party applications on our PCs, which includes iTunes. Is there a way to get my podcast another way? Does Media Player have a podcast aggregator I don’t know about? If not…why the #@%$ not Microshaft, what decade is this, where do people get 90 percent of their media? Sorry…anyway, or is there a Web 3.0 site that may arrogate for you. Bottom line, I need to get my Buzz on but need to do it without iTunes or any other downloadable service.

Dion in CT

February 5, 2008 11:09 AM PST

Buzz Out Loud 654: We care about the artists

by Tom Merritt
  • 2 comments
The RIAA does what it does for the artists. That's why it sues their fans. It's just trying to help out the artists. Like songwriters. Although songwriters make a little too much money. That's why the RIAA wants the Copyright Royalty Board to reduce the mechanical rate, so the artists get less money per song. Something isn't making sense to me here. But I'm sure I just don't understand the complexities of the music business. Meanwhile, the N-Gage is back. Woo-hoo!

--Tom


Listen now: Download today's podcast

EPISODE 654

TODAY'S LINKS:


TODAY'S VOICE MAIL:
Chris in Ontario
Your personal devices won't need a bunch of IP addresses.

Adam in Salt Lake City
HDTV evidence.

Josh
Rhapsody has MP3s.



TODAY'S E-MAIL:
IPv6 information
Tom & crew,

I just wanted to write in quickly about the coming changeover to IPv6. All recent Operating Systems support IPv6 natively, that is to say XP SP1 and forward, Vista, Apple OS X 10.4 & 10.5 and most flavors of Linux. With that said, the changeover shouldn't really be of any concern to consumers. Most carriers, my company included, plan to run both IPv6 and IPv4 in tandem for quite some time--worst case, the consumer may need to update the firmware on their router our but an new one. From the carrier perspective it isn't about simply updating the firmware on a $49 router; there's hundreds of hours of engineering and millions of dollars of equipment required to make the switch.

In any case, if you're interested, I happen to be fairly close with someone on the board of ARIN, the group that actually distributes IP addresses and determines policy. He may be an interesting interview for the show.

Regards,
Matt in New Jersey

Fiber optic cable
OK,

Been listening for about two years (love the show!), and I just had to write in now, because the discussion on fiber optic roll-out by IT managers at Universities really boiled my buttons. We've already been there--back in the 1990s our wonderful government gave tax incentives to telecommunications companies to the tune of around 200 billion dollars to lay fiber optic cable throughout America. This was known as the "National Infrastructure Initiative", and the phone companies promised to wire 86 million homes with fiber optic by 2006. By 2004, only 38 million homes had been wired, and most of those was with DSL (considered "High Speed", but we all know it's truly not when we're moving towards a Video-on-demand Internet). More information can be found here.

Finally, zombies! I can't believe you haven't reported this yet, but scientists have observed a wasp that injects a venom into cockroaches, creating Zombie Cockroaches. The scary thing is that the scientists were able to duplicate the zombification, and could turn it on and off as well. I see massive turnouts in the next election of zombie humans voting for Mitt Romney.

Thanks,
Steven Blunt

Internet cables
Hello again,

Internet seems to be almost back to normal here, at least enough to listen to the BOL episodes I missed!

Regarding the UAE Internet prices, those prices mentioned were the prices issued by the greedy hotel. I noticed many hotels charging insane amounts of money for Internet access (20-30 euro a day in Germany) so I guess it is "normal" for hotel prices to be that high. Sigh.

The prices in UAE are relatively good. For 4Mbit DSL it costs 450AED, thats about 130$ monthly. Still expensive, but there are no competitors in terms of land lines.

Something similar here in Saudi Arabia, only one company (STC) handling the land lines as well as GSM. We noticed how their prices have dropped and services improved (in the GSM network anyway) when a second provider came in the market (Mobily). Now a third GSM network will enter this year (Zain) as well as a second land line telecom (one of the partners is Verizon apparently). So we hope to see improvements in the land lines as well.

Best regards,
Khaled A.

Super Smash Bros.
Hello Buzz town,

The reason that the Super Smash Brothers discs were not working is because the disc is a dual-layer disc.

http://wii.ign.com/articles/849/849072p1.html

"Nintendo has come to the conclusion that the problem has to do with dust and tobacco building up on Wii laser units. This affects Smash Bros. Brawl while leaving other titles unaffected because the new fighter uses a dual-layer DVD, which is apparently more sensitive to a dirty lens."

Love the show,
Brad in Ohio

Tukwilluh
Tuk will uh--a town near Seattle. Native American tribe from the Puget Sound area.

Not to be confused with the Nooksak or Chuckanut tribes which are located farther north. No really, those are the names of real tribes.

Robert Yee

Laying cable
Hi Tom, Rafe, and Jason,

On Episode 652, Tom and Rafe had a bit of an argument about tearing up roads to lay cable. Just wanted to let you know that utilities can lay cable underground without trenching (tearing up the ground) by using underground directional boring equipment. I don't know if this counts as a "well actually", but I really hope so.

Thanks for the show,

Jennifer

November 1, 2007 11:21 AM PDT

Episode 595: Has HD DVD won?

by Tom Merritt
  • 1 comment
Wal-Mart has gone crazy, selling a $98 Toshiba HD DVD player. We'll talk about whether this makes HD DVD the winner over Blu-ray. Also, the Zune 2 shows up in the wild, and privacy groups want a 'do not track' list.

--Tom


Listen now: Download today's podcast

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About Buzz Out Loud Podcast

Buzz Out Loud features Tom Merritt, producer Jason Howell, and a rotating roundtable of CNET's top tech experts reviewing the day's tech news. Each episode, five times a week, the crew analyzes, interprets, and argues about what all this technology means and what it's doing to us. Fans can join in the show by calling 1-800-616-2638, e-mailing at buzz@cnet.com, or commenting on the blog.


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Tom Merritt Tom Merritt appears on CNET TV, specializing in help and how-to and the ever popular Top 5 lists. He also co-hosts CNET's The Real Deal podcast. See profile
Jason Howell Jason Howell can often be found producing Buzz Out Loud from the audio studios at CNET, updating XML feeds from the comfort of his cubicle, and saying "uh-oh" from time to time. See profile
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