Friday, November 30, 2012

One-A-Day Gift Guide: Peace Of Mind

There is nothing more boring and awful and NECESSARY than backing up your computer. This fixes that.



Backing up your computer has come a long way over the last few years, as least in terms of not making you want to kill yourself quite as painfully — hello Time Machine — but it's still suuuuuuper annoying and lame. And I know your relatives don't do it because you don't do it and if you don't do it clearly nobody else does it. Which is fine until the first time your computer or hard drive dies and you don't have a backup, effectively erasing your entire life because anything that's not on your computer basically never happened. Teeth are gnashed, clothes are torn and you are so very S O R R Y. You buy a backup drive and promise it'll never happen again, until it does happen again because you keep forgetting to plug it into your computer.


Here's the wonderful thing about this "cloud" everybody keeps talking about: You don't have to plug your computer into a hard drive to back it up anymore. CrashPlan+ lets you back up an entire computer — and any hard drive that's attached to it — on the internet. A one-year gift subscription runs $50, less than the cost of Netflix or Amazon Prime for a year.


It's super easy. CrashPlan just runs in the background and automatically backs up the computer daily as new stuff gets added to it. If the worst of all possible fates befalls the computer, it's no big deal. Everything's on CrashPlan's servers, waiting to be downloaded. Or, if that's too annoying, CrashPlan will ship a hard drive out loaded up with all your data. It'll be like nothing terrible ever happened in the history of the world. (To your computer.)


A fair warning: This is a long play gift. If you give this to somebody, inevitably they'll be like, "This is the most boring gift anybody has ever given me, do you not like me or something, 'cause why??????" Then their computer will die. It might take months, or even a couple of years. CrashPlan will save them. Then they'll hug you very, very hard, maybe even the kind of hug that includes a mini-massage, because you gave them the best present ever.


New Dating Site Matches Singles By Facebook "Likes"

It's called Canoodle and finds dates for you based on “Likes” you have in common.



Via: Cupid


One of the most nerve-wracking aspects of online dating is writing a profile — you're so consumed with anxiety and the need to be witty that it can be hard to even remember "five things you can't live without." The new dating site Canoodle hopes to ease the burden by matching people up according to things they've "liked" on Facebook.


"You've got your icebreakers there right away," says Sean Wood, communications director of Cupid, the UK-based online-dating company that launched Canoodle on Thursday. "Without having written anything about yourself, you've told a lot." Canoodle is still in beta, but Cupid has 60 million users across the US, UK, Western Europe, and Australia, and some are already using the new service.


When users login through Facebook, Canoodle looks at what they've liked and helps them find people who like the same things. Wood notes that searching for people who share your interests isn't especially easy on Facebook, and says Canoodle solves that problem, helping users meet like-minded dates or just potential friends.


Of course, not everyone's Facebook likes accurately describe their personality — if you're an indiscriminate liker, or a parsimonious one, Canoodle may not be for you. And if you're a pushover, someone who just likes the things your friends aggressively suggest that you like, then Canoodle may get a more accurate picture of your friends than of you. The site does ask users to fill out a more traditional written profile as well, perhaps to get around these issues.



Via: Cupid


The site also lets users search by geographical vicinity — and with its mobile apps coming soon, likely in December, it will become one of several location-based services hoping to replicate the success of gay men's dating app Grindr. But bringing location-based dating to straight users — especially women — has been a tough sell, perhaps because women are leery of meeting men they don't know who just happen to be in the neighborhood.


Wood says Canoodle circumvents this problem by providing ways to get to know each other before meeting up, by comparing interests and messaging each other via the website or smartphone app. "Grindr is more of an instant thing — 'who's going to meet me tonight?' Ours isn't like that. You can build up a rapport with someone, talk about your interests."


Canoodle also lets users pick a pseudonymous username — even if they connect through their Facebook accounts, the real names attached to those accounts are obscured until they're ready to share them.


Focusing on dating rather than hooking up may make the locational aspect of Canoodle more palatable to some. But the service is entering an increasingly crowded field. At least three Facebook-based dating services have launched this year. One of these, AreYouInterested, also lets users compare interests.


None of these has yet achieved the dominance of OkCupid or Match. But using a giant existing social network rather than making daters create new profiles continues to make intuitive sense. Wood says people spend so much time on Facebook now that getting them to leave it, even for dating, is a challenge: "when you try to distract people from what they're doing at any time in life, it's difficult to do. But if it's an integral part of what they're doing, it all stitches together nicely." It's not clear if using likes will be what stitches Facebook and dating together, but whoever does that successfully stands to make a lot of money.




View Entire List ›


Facebook rolls out optional automatic photo uploads from iOS and Android devices

Facebook Android login screen (stock)

Facebook has added another feature to its mobile apps that borrows from its social network competitors today: automatic photo uploads. The company is calling it "Photo Sync," and if it sounds familar that's because the feature has been in limited testing in August. Just like when we first heard about it, Photo Sync works on the iOS and Android app, and will automatically upload every photo you take to a private "Synced From Phone" album, from which you can choose which to share and which to delete. The feature is very similar to Google+'s instant photo uploads, and users will be limited to 2GB of cloud storage.


Battery life and mobile data usage are clearly concerns with such a feature, but Facebook has thankfully decided to include an...


Continue reading…


Thursday, November 29, 2012

Atari Teenage Riot: The Inside Story Of Pong And The Video Game Industry's Big Bang

On Nov. 29, 1972, a crude table-tennis arcade game in a garish orange cabinet was delivered to bars and pizza parlors around California, and a multi-billion-dollar industry was born. Here's how that happened, direct from the freaks and geeks who invented a culture and paved the way for today's tech moguls.


[ INSERT 1 ] [ INSERT 3 ] [ INSERT 2 ] Today, Rooster T. Feathers Comedy Club at 157 West El Camino Real in Sunnyvale, California — slap-bang in the middle of Silicon Valley — faces out to a Chinese restaurant and taqueria across a three-lane road. It’s squeezed between a Goodyear garage and a check-cashing place; on the corner is the California Paint Company. Drive down Route 82, head onto Sunnyvale Saratoga Road, and three or so miles down the street you’re at the Apple campus in Cupertino. In the fall of 1972, Rooster T. Feathers was Andy Capp’s Tavern. “Just a dive bar, nothing special,” says the club’s manager, Beth Schumann. But this dive bar would soon become the video game industry's Plymouth Rock, Mount Sinai, and Cheers, all rolled into one.


This was where Pong — a rudimentary Ping-Pong game featuring two dashes for paddles and a white dot as a ball — became a phenomenon. But its creation was practically an accident, a stroke of luck borne out of failure. The video game industry didn’t really exist, and what its pioneers did “was very seat-of-the-pants stuff,” says Darran Jones, editor of Retro Gamer magazine. “People were making things up as they went along.”


The frontage in 1972 was much the same as it is in 2012 — though Schumann says the building has had a couple of paint jobs since. Inside was a little different: Drinkers walking into Andy Capp's that summer of '72 were presented with beer on tap, pinball machines, a purple-glowing jukebox playing vinyl 45s, and an arcade machine — the world’s first commercially available one — called Computer Space, which let players take the helm of a tiny pixelated rocket ship and try to shoot flying saucers out of the sky. But the game was a tough sell.

[ INSERT 8 ]

“I think for that stage in the life of a coin-op game, it was too difficult,” says its co-creator Nolan Bushnell, 69, pausing between sentences at his home in Los Angeles to take swigs of a drink to ease his hoarse throat. Still, the game racked up $3 million in sales from a couple thousand units. “I wasn’t disappointed with Computer Space’s performance. The idea of doing $3 million in sales was kind of cool.” But a better, more user-friendly game could make more, he thought, if customers kept returning to play.


That better game would be Pong, which was deceptively simple to pick up, but infuriatingly difficult to master (not least because a developmental hiccup meant that your paddle couldn’t defend all your territory in the original coin-operated version). Today it is considered one of the biggest arcade games in the world, responsible for the success of the video game industry, valued at $78.5 billion this year. Pong took video games out of windowless computer labs full of buttoned-up coders and brought it to the masses, and with it, Bushnell's nascent company, Atari.


It would've been hard to imagine then, but games today are bigger than the global film industry, which had a 60-year head start. Pong is the reason that Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 can make more than three times as much in its first five days on sale as The Avengers can in its first five days in theaters. But while today’s blockbuster games are largely created by hundred-strong teams at bankrolled developers, the men who created and crafted Pong embodied the bootstrap start-up culture that typifies the most exciting edges of today’s tech landscape. They were knocked back by old men in drab suits who said games weren’t going to be big business. But games were going to be big business, even those started in unassuming surroundings. And nothing was going to stop them.


“Nolan Bushnell's personality established an important paradigm for Silicon Valley entrepreneurs: willful, daring, imaginative, hypercompetitive,” says Henry Lowood, curator of the history of science and technology collection and media collection at Stanford. “It's difficult to imagine Steve Jobs without Bushnell before him.”


But before these culture-defining pioneers could establish a paradigm, they had to first be very bored.


[ INSERT 4 ]


In 1969, Bushnell and Ted Dabney, now 75, set up a company, at the time called Syzygy, named for the phenomenon in which the earth, sun, and moon fall in line during an eclipse, to create Computer Space, with $500 placed in Dabney’s bank account. They had met one year earlier, thrown together in a small shared office at Ampex, one of the biggest engineering firms at the time, based in Redwood City, California.


Space in the office was tight, especially when Bushnell, who had reached 6 feet 4 inches by the seventh grade, stretched out his legs. In 1969, Ampex created and maintained the Videofile system, which recorded files and photos to a magnetic videotape system long before the advent of commercial computer hard drives (to this day, Britain’s New Scotland Yard still uses the Videofile system to store perpetrators’ fingerprints).


Bushnell made $12,000 a year as a research design engineer and enjoyed the job, but had long nurtured the idea of a video game arcade — a dream first fostered working summers at the Lagoon, an amusement park north of Salt Lake City. The park, according to a mention in the Beach Boys’ 1965 album filler, “Salt Lake City,” was “full of all kinds of girls/and rides, and we'll be flyin’ there soon, now.” (The lyrics were more likely Mike Love’s doing than Brian Wilson’s). But full of arcade machines it was not — at least yet. “There was pinball, knocking down bottles to win a stuffed animal, things like that,” Bushnell says dismissively. “I knew at the age of 22 that if there was a video game there, it’d earn a lot of money.”


There were such things as video games, but in a form totally unrecognizable today. Bored computer engineers and military polymaths used spare computer time and processing power to code rudimentary games, but they were purely for their own entertainment. To get near them you needed privileged access to a computer lab at a high-ranking university — or the gumption to worm your way into one.


Bushnell spent most of 1964 and 1965 in the lab at the University of Utah, playing a program called Spacewar!, an intergalactic battle game written by MIT student Steve Russell in 1962. I ask Bushnell if he encountered the game through a school computer club. “Not at all,” he says. “It was a fraternity brother and myself sneaking into the lab late at night.” Spacewar! stuck with Bushnell: With a few tweaks, and placed inside a coin-operated arcade cabinet, it became Computer Space.


In spite of the cramped Ampex office, Bushnell and Dabney became close when Bushnell asked Dabney to learn the Japanese board game Go so he would have a playing partner. “We’d only play at lunch,” Bushnell says — the idea of goofing off during the day was anathema to him. The duo graduated from a cheap and flimsy board to one handcrafted from a $6 offcut.


"I carved the board out of an inch-and-a-half-thick board and put a Videofile logo on the other side so it could hang on the wall," Dabney recalls. When the two played, the board sat on top of a trash can, a coincidental foreshadowing of the future: The original Pong prototype in Andy Capp’s would sit squat on top of a barrel, people huddled around it.


Go was useful in another way as the two young men left Ampex to eventually launch their video game venture: When the local authorities told Bushnell and Dabney that a roofing contractor had already claimed the nerd-friendly sobriquet Sygyzy, they used a term from Go that was equivalent to chess’s “check” for their newly incorporated company: アタリ. Anglicized, that spells Atari.


After Bushnell and Dabney left Ampex, many of their colleagues thought they were crazy. “I felt kind of sorry for Nolan and Ted,” says engineer Al Alcorn, who would shortly join them. “They were quitting a good career at Ampex to go off and do this strange thing. That was the conventional wisdom: Where did these guys go wrong?”


[ INSERT 5 ]


Back in the early 1970s, arcade games didn't pay the bills, but servicing pinball machines — battered and bruised from being tilted and slammed by overzealous and over-served bar patrons — did. The potential was there for games to pay their way, though, and Bushnell saw it. Computer Space had been released in cooperation with Nutting Associates, a manufacturing company, in 1971. This time Bushnell wanted to go at it alone, without answering to someone else. So using the profits from Computer Space, he hired Alcorn as chief engineer for $1,000 a month (less than Alcorn was making at his previous job) and 10% of the company’s stock in May 1972.


Alcorn, a Berkeley grad, was pretty talented at computer science and electrical engineering. At the time, both disciplines involved working with relatively large, clunky machinery and required the patience of a saint as the machines calculated their commands and processed messages across room-sized components. Alcorn had been hired by Ampex through Berkeley’s work-study program in 1968 as an engineer and put educational theory into industrial practice.


“I’d been fixing televisions in a repair shop since junior high,” he explains to me at 10 a.m. on a Monday from his cluttered home office in Palo Alto, California. In fact, it paid his way through college, which he completed while working for Ampex, on and off, through to 1972. But he had no experience with game design, and he was taking a risk on Atari. “We were thinly funded,” Alcorn says — the venture capital firms such as Sequoia Capital that would eventually transform Silicon Valley were in their embryonic stages in the early '70s, not that bar games would have been considered a sound investment. “Banks wouldn’t talk to us. I did it because I was young, unmarried, and reckless — what the hell. I figured it’d cave in a year or two anyway and I’d go back to Ampex.”


"There was a race to the bank to make sure yours was the first paycheck that cleared,” says Steve Bristow, who turned down offers from big companies like IBM and General Electric to join Atari."


[ INSERT 9 ]Meanwhile, the first TV-based home console, the Magnavox Odyssey, designed by gaming-industry forefather Ralph Baer, was being released. The Odyssey was demonstrated in Burlingame, California, on May 24, 1972. “It turned out that Al started at Atari almost exactly the same day I went up to see the Magnavox game,” says Bushnell. Around the same time, Baer was at Tavern on the Green in Central Park, sitting amongst the 30 or so East Coast retailers to whom his employers were trying to sell his creation. Beaming with pride, Baer could barely sit still. “The entire Magnavox product line for 1972 was displayed there,” he explains. “That included the Odyssey game, which was the hit of the show.” One of the games on the Magnavox console was a version of tennis.


“I thought the game was kind of crappy,” Bushnell says. Yet people were lining up to play it, “and they were kind of having some fun. I thought, If they can have fun with this shite” — Bushnell breaks off into a hearty laugh — “if it can be turned into a real game, that’d be great.” On the drive back from the demonstration, “I got thinking of ways it could be improved.”


Bushnell believed that a game similar to the Magnavox Odyssey tennis title could aptly fulfill a contract with Bally Manufacturing Corporation, which paid Atari $4,000 a month for six months to develop an arcade racing game and a pinball machine. He had a plan: Dabney would handle the creation of the pinball machine for Bally; Alcorn would re-create the tennis game for arcades. All the while the three would regularly grab lunch at a Cupertino diner about a 15-minute drive away from their office at 2962 Scott Boulevard in Santa Clara. “The office was tiny,” Alcorn says, “about 1,000 or 2,000 square feet. We would go into our back room and play a pinball machine — the Bally Fireball — for inspiration.”


Alcorn completed a version of Ralph Baer’s tennis game for home consoles three months later. It saw two bats at either end of the screen hitting a ball from one to the other. Behind the TV screen was a series of around 75 transistor-transistor logic circuits (TTL ICs) that controlled the on-screen components: the two paddles, the ball, and the score counter above the play area. It didn’t need complicated instructions; in fact, the sole in-game instruction to the player was a wry one etched onto the faceplate of the arcade cabinet: “Avoid missing ball for high score.”


“Nolan didn't like the game at all,” Dabney says. “He wanted a driving game, but Al and I liked it so much, especially after Al added some sound. Nolan kept complaining, but we said, ‘No, this is a good game.’”


[ INSERT 11 ]Alcorn headed out to the local Walgreens, picked up a $75 black-and-white television set, hid the Hitachi logo inside a rudimentary orange casing, which housed the logic circuits and a coin box made from an upturned sawed-off plastic milk jug, and dragged it into the corner of Andy Capp's, next to the pinball machines, the jukebox, and the Computer Space machine. “There were seven or eight machines in the back of the bar,” Alcorn says. "Andy Capp’s was one of our favorite places because we knew the owner, and we trusted him. If something went wrong, we knew he’d call us.” It was September 1972.


The Atari designers and engineers decided to linger for a while. “It was really interesting,” Bushnell says. “You put it in place and stand back and watch people play it.” What they saw was encouraging, but not extraordinary. “We watched for a couple of hours, drank a couple of beers, then went home.” Bushnell was catching a flight to Chicago the next day, a portable version of Pong in an aluminum case under his arm.


Within a few days, Bill Gattis, who ran the bar, was on the phone to Atari. “The machine had stopped working; I was told to go fix it,” Alcorn explains. ”I stopped over on my way home from work, and much to my surprise, the coin box was overflowing, gushing with quarters.”


“It’s weird,” Gattis told Alcorn as he counted the impressive bounty. “I’ve got guys at my doorstep at 10 a.m. when the place opens. They’re not drunks. They come in, play the Pong game and don’t buy any beer.” Alcorn listened, and swapped out the milk jug for something a little bigger — a bread pan.


“Up until that point I was expecting to turn up to work one day and there’d be a padlock on the door,” Alcorn admits. “It was sheer luck that the simplest game you could think of was what the market wanted.” Today, people talk about "social" gaming, but Pong was truly social gaming. There were no personal computers — and certainly no Nintendo Wii Us, no Xboxes, and no FarmVille. To play meant leaving your house and going to a bar and actually interacting with people.


“You had to play against someone,” says semi-official Atari archivist Curt Vendel, whose online Atari History Museum has carefully salvaged machines, documents, and memories of the company. “It made for a great icebreaker at bars, for people to meet one another.”


But Baer, the inventor of the Odyssey, is to this day ambivalent about his competitor. “Mr. B. didn’t ‘invent’ anything,” Baer, now 90, told me via e-mail, “but he started a whole industry, the arcade video game industry. Give the man credit for that achievement. He just simply didn’t invent anything.”


[ INSERT 6 ]


Two thousand miles away in Chicago, Bushnell had just come out of a meeting where he tried to convince Bally to take Pong instead of the contracted racing game. They said no, and eventually canceled the contract. He called the Atari office to tell them about the outcome of the meeting and instead heard the incredible story of the overflowing milk jug: “On the trip back I realized it had probably been a good thing Bally said no.”


“I vividly remember a meeting at Andy Capp’s when Nolan had returned from Chicago,” Alcorn says. “He told me what had gone on there, and I told him about what Bill Gattis had said. He said we wanted to get into manufacturing, and Ted said, ‘Nah,’ and I said, ‘Nah, I don’t want to be a manufacturer.’ It was two against one. And Nolan won. Next thing you know, we’re a manufacturer.”


Except that they weren't, not technically. “It was really, really hectic,” recalls Dabney. “I used my own money to buy 50 TV sets from a distributor in San Francisco and called a manufacturer and said, 'I need 50 cabinets, but I don't know if I'm ever going to be able to pay you.’”


After they quickly cobbled together the first run of 12 arcade units, about 6 feet tall and in the same yellowy-orange color as the prototype’s casing, they placed them in locations around Southern California on Nov. 29, 1972. “We bought a flatbed truck to deliver the machines,” Alcorn says. "It was used, and wasn’t in the best shape, and Ted drove it down. We didn’t hear from him. We thought he’d stolen the truck and hightailed it to Mexico. It turns out the truck had flat tires and he’d been stranded.”


As Atari delivered those first arcade games to places they had previously visited to service pinball machines, patrons were still turning up to Andy Capp’s specifically to play Pong. They would wait in line outside the bar before it opened at 10 a.m. Now there were 12 other locations where they could play Pong. The game spread and grew.


From that first run of 12, Atari eventually ramped up production. Dabney used a saber saw to bust down a connecting wall that allowed the company to take over an adjacent office. When they took an order for 300 cabinets, even the newly enlarged building wasn't big enough — so they moved into an old roller rink. By March 1973, Atari had shipped out 8,000 cabinets that drew in drunks and their petty change. Dabney decided they should charge distributors $936 for each machine, a figure he arrived at with typical precision: “I looked out the window and saw the number 936 on a license plate.”


[ INSERT 10 ]It's difficult to overstate how big Pong became, and how quickly. Atari sold $3.2 million worth of cabinets by the end of 1974, two years after it first took its place in Andy Capp’s Tavern, and then produced Space Race and Tank (created by Bristow) to join its ranks. The company was profiled in breathless terms for porn rag Oui magazine’s September 1974 issue. (“If profitability were water,” writes Robert Wieder, who spent time at the company’s headquarters for the piece, “Atari could hold the Sixth Fleet.”) And in 1975, Al Alcorn asked a 20-year-old college dropout from San Francisco who had just returned from a sabbatical in India to design a new game called Breakout, which became one of Atari’s most enduring hits. That guy’s name was Steve Jobs, and he asked his fellow long-haired dropout pal from Hewlett-Packard, five years his senior, to come in and help him out. His name was Steve Wozniak.


The next year, Warner Communications, which merged with Time Inc. in 1990, bought Atari for $28 million, netting Bushnell $15 million. Dabney, however, was increasingly phased out of the proceedings. “I wasn't involved in running the company at all,” he says. “I was running the shop. Nolan realized he didn't need me anymore. But I really didn't care — money didn't mean that much to me; my belly was full. So I sold out to him.”


Around the same time, Sears Roebuck’s sporting goods buyer, Tom Quinn, came knocking, asking for a home-console version — and gave Atari money to double the production run when they decided the 75,000 units they could muster just weren't going to be enough.


Other developers, big and small, saw the runaway success of the game and brought out their own clones to take a slice of Pong's pie. Allied Leisure released around 20,000 cabinets of Paddle Battle in March 1973. Nutting Associates, the company Bushnell and Dabney had worked with to release Computer Space, ended up releasing Computer Space Ball, which was strikingly similar to Pong. There was Paddle-Ball from Williams Electronics, and Rally from For-Play. Midway Manufacturing, then a pinball machine company, dipped their toe into the waters of arcade games with Winner in 1973.


These manufacturers doubled down on their advantage: Not only could they piggyback on Pong's PR success, they did not have to take into account the cost of developing the game: They could simply lift its internal machinery wholesale. “They say imitation is the sincerest form of flattery,” Alcorn says, chuckling. Though he’s quick to add, “I’d rather have the money.”


[ INSERT 7 ]


Even with companies creating Pong-alikes, Atari thrived. Bushnell estimates that in the early ’70s, the official Atari cabinets made $40 per day — which meant that at the end of each week (and after the venue had taken their 50% cut), Steve Bristow, another Ampex alum who followed Bushnell, Dabney, and Alcorn to Atari, had to schlep five pounds of quarters to his car when he collected each machine's earnings. By the end of the collection route, Bristow could be carrying 30-pound bags over his shoulder.


“I’d go around collecting quarters and fixing games,” he explains. “Some of the locations were not in the primest areas. We couldn’t get a concealed-weapons permit, but I had worked a few years before as a roofer, so I had a roofing hatchet. I’d be walking down the streets at midnight, carrying bags of money. My wife would be carrying one bag in one hand, the hatchet in the other.” He pauses. “Nobody bothered us.”


In 1976, Atari took a monetary hit, settling a lawsuit out of court in Chicago with Magnavox. (Alcorn remembers the settlement being $300,000; Bushnell thinks Atari coughed up $500,000; Curt Vendel, who had seen documentation surrounding the suit, notes that $1.5 million in all was paid in installments up to 1983.) The suit concerned a patent held by Baer and Magnavox regarding interaction between machine-controlled and player-controlled elements on the screen, a basic foundation of design “that covered just about every game developed between 1971 and the mid-1980s,” Baer says. He was clear about the lineage of Atari’s product: He told the Computer History Museum in 2006 that “Pong is simply a knockoff of the Odyssey Ping-Pong game,” and that Bushnell “knew he was going to lose and decided to come under contract” with Magnavox as a licensee.


Yet Baer ultimately is sanguine about the similarities between his Magnavox game and Pong: “That’s the business,” he says. “Most inventions are based on some prior history. Al Alcorn knew absolutely nothing about the existence of the Odyssey game — he deserves the major credit for getting Atari started successfully.”


For his part, Bushnell remains certain that they would have won the case, but settling out of court was the less painful solution. “I always thought of things in a strategic sense,” he says. “They offered me such a cheap settlement that it was less than what it’d have cost me to fight it. And I liked the idea of them going out and hassling everyone else.” (Magnavox took other game companies to court and regularly won.) “With me paid up, it felt like a win-win, and it was really a ridiculous amount of money.”


Atari earned more than a billion dollars in 1981, and helped Warner revenues reach $3.2 billion. By this time, Bushnell was gone — a disagreement with management over the pricing of Atari’s 2600 home console was the final straw, but due to a contract clause stating that he’d get no money if he quit, he merely stopped doing any work until he was eventually fired, and then collected $100,000 a year for four years.


“Atari turned out to not be a very successful company,” Dabney says. “Nolan was actually a pretty rotten businessman, but once other people took hold of it, it took off.”


A video game industry crash was just around the corner, but Atari was riding high — and it was fuelled by two dashes and a dot. All told, 100,000 Pong machines were installed into pizza parlors, bars, and bowling alleys — though only a third of those were officially licensed games manufactured by Atari, according to estimates.


[ INSERT 13 ]

[ INSERT 12 ]And while the game is ubiquitous in culture low and high — Frank Black wrote a song about it, and the Museum of Modern Art in New York wants to add it to their collection next year — it ultimately means more than any pop reference can hold. “The main impact of Pong on contemporary culture is that it had an impact on contemporary culture,” says Stanford’s Henry Lowood. “Before this, connecting games and culture wasn't even a question on anyone’s mind.”


To celebrate the game’s 40th anniversary, Atari has licensed a commemorative title, Pong World, to zGames in Houston, winners of a $50,000 Pong Indie Developer Challenge. The game will be available in the app store — although playing on your iPad or iPhone isn't the same as a hulking, whirring, beeping arcade machine. Baer owns an iPad, but doesn’t have the time to play games, even if they “keep challenging me to waste some time.”


The games industry has come a long way from Nolan Bushnell, Ted Dabney, and Al Alcorn crammed into a tiny office in Santa Clara, California. “We worked any hours we could,” explains Alcorn. “We chipped in. It was a start-up company. You swept the floors and everything.” That homespun DIY approach lives on today in the development of tablet and mobile apps.


“Things seem to be coming full circle,” says Darran Jones. “Games are getting made with bigger and bigger budgets…but conversely you’ve got indie developers and Kickstarter,” both contributing to the huge number of games produced on a constant cycle each year for our delectation.


If you told the patrons of Andy Capp's Tavern back in 1972 that people would be playing games on phones, they'd have cut you off and put you in a taxi. But then again, before Nov. 29, 1972, they didn't really know they liked arcade games, either. Forty years and hundreds of billions of dollars on, look what happened to that idea.


“Anyone could play,” Alcorn says. “You didn’t have to know physics or space flight or anything. Pong was designed so you could participate in athletics while maintaining a firm grip on a can of beer. You could literally pick up a girl, drink a beer, and play a video game at the same time. It was wonderful.”

[ INSERT 14 ]




View Entire List ›


Amazon's Redshift Accelerates Data Warehouse As A Service

Amazon continues to play the role of disrupter in the data marketplace, announcing a new data warehousing service that could blow the doors off existing data warehousing vendors in terms of price. The question is, will lower prices be enough to change the game?


The announcement of the new Amazon Redshift service at yesterday's Amazon Web Service re:Invent conference was one of those "known unknowns" former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld used to go on about. We knew AWS would want to lead big with something in it's first-ever live conference being held in Las Vegas this week; we just didn't know what it would be. Now that the cat's out of the bag, many analysts seem pretty excited about the prospect. But Redshift also has some red flags.


Redshift 101


Let's take a look and see what's under the Redshift hood.


Amazon.com CTO Werner Vogels lauds Amazon Redshift as "a fast and powerful, fully managed, petabyte-scale data warehouse service in the cloud."


Kinda buzzwordy, but the key terms in that statement are "petabyte-scale" - which means this service is going to be easy to grow into if your data needs ever get that insanely high - and "service in the cloud" - a statement that means this is a hosted service on AWS's public cloud infrastructure - with all of the risks and rewards that come with that situation.


Vogels gets a little more specific later in his blog:


"Redshift has a massively parallel processing (MPP) architecture, which enables it to distribute and parallelize queries across multiple low cost nodes. The nodes themselves are designed specifically for data warehousing workloads. They contain large amounts of locally attached storage on multiple spindles and are connected by a minimally oversubscribed 10 Gigabit Ethernet network. This configuration maximizes the amount of throughput between your storage and your CPUs while also ensuring that data transfer between nodes remains extremely fast."

The MPP architecture is very important, because it gives some insights into Redshift's origins. Redshift is a columnar-based relational database that seems to based on the open source PostgreSQL database - a hot commodity in the open source world that's been making inroads against the venerable MySQL database partly because PostgreSQL handles parallelism so well.


All the bits Vogel mentions about the oversubscribed network connections are critical, too, because if his claims are right, this means that Redshift will be fast. The architecture of this new service is also important, because it means that unlike Hadoop, where data just sits cheaply waiting to be batch processed, data stored in Redshift can be worked on fast - fast enough for even transactional work.


Latency will be one of only a few areas any competing vendor will be able to go after - because the competition certainly can't touch AWS on price.


Redshift's Pricing Shift


One of the big parts of the Redshift announcement message yesterday was very much about price: just buying on-demand data capacity costs $3,723 per terabyte (TB) annually, which sounds like a lot except when you know how much traditional on-site data warehousing solution can run. In his re:Invent keynote yesterday, senior vice president of AWS Andy Jassy claimed such solutions can run $19,000 to $25,000/TB a year. So right off the bat, if Redshift is indeed offering comparable service, customers will save 80-85% off their data warehousing bill.


But wait, there's more. If customers reserve three years of service, the price drops to a jaw-dropping $999/TB annual fee. That's a 95-96% reduction in potential costs for data storage.


In this case, disruptive may not have been hyperbole. It may have been an understatement.


Redshift's Potential Issues


On paper, this sounds pretty good, but there are some potential issues that should be raised. For one, this is a public cloud service, which means your data will be out past your corporate firewall and in some ways sitting outside of your control. If one of Amazon's data centers has a hiccup, you could be out of luck.


The public status also means you'd better have bandwidth costs, security and infrastructure figured out, because somehow your company is going to have to get its data out and back to that cloud in a timely and safe manner


One wildcard with this new Redshift service is how easily it will be to build apps or convert existing apps to work with it. Amazon's APIs are open, but only to the point that you can point your software to them. Once you invest in Amazon's APIs, it will be more painful to pull out to another cloud-based service should you decide to down the road.


If you have been keeping your data and applications local, shifting to Redshift could also mean shifting your applications to some other part of the AWS ecosystem as well, just to keep the latency times and bandwidth costs reasonable. In some ways, Redshift may be the AWS equivalent of putting the milk in the back of the grocery store.


If it is at all reasonable in its service, though, Redshift's pricing will definitely put pressure on the data warehousing vendors to lower their prices to compete - good news for anyone looking at data warehousing.


Image courtesy of Shutterstock.






Amazon's Redshift Accelerates Data Warehouse As A Service

Amazon continues to play the role of disrupter in the data marketplace, announcing a new data warehousing service that could blow the doors off existing data warehousing vendors in terms of price. The question is, will lower prices be enough to change the game?


The announcement of the new Amazon Redshift service at yesterday's Amazon Web Service re:Invent conference was one of those "known unknowns" former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld used to go on about. We knew AWS would want to lead big with something in it's first-ever live conference being held in Las Vegas this week; we just didn't know what it would be. Now that the cat's out of the bag, many analysts seem pretty excited about the prospect. But Redshift also has some red flags.


Redshift 101


Let's take a look and see what's under the Redshift hood.


Amazon.com CTO Werner Vogels lauds Amazon Redshift as "a fast and powerful, fully managed, petabyte-scale data warehouse service in the cloud."


Kinda buzzwordy, but the key terms in that statement are "petabyte-scale" - which means this service is going to be easy to grow into if your data needs ever get that insanely high - and "service in the cloud" - a statement that means this is a hosted service on AWS's public cloud infrastructure - with all of the risks and rewards that come with that situation.


Vogels gets a little more specific later in his blog:


"Redshift has a massively parallel processing (MPP) architecture, which enables it to distribute and parallelize queries across multiple low cost nodes. The nodes themselves are designed specifically for data warehousing workloads. They contain large amounts of locally attached storage on multiple spindles and are connected by a minimally oversubscribed 10 Gigabit Ethernet network. This configuration maximizes the amount of throughput between your storage and your CPUs while also ensuring that data transfer between nodes remains extremely fast."

The MPP architecture is very important, because it gives some insights into Redshift's origins. Redshift is a columnar-based relational database that seems to based on the open source PostgreSQL database - a hot commodity in the open source world that's been making inroads against the venerable MySQL database partly because PostgreSQL handles parallelism so well.


All the bits Vogel mentions about the oversubscribed network connections are critical, too, because if his claims are right, this means that Redshift will be fast. The architecture of this new service is also important, because it means that unlike Hadoop, where data just sits cheaply waiting to be batch processed, data stored in Redshift can be worked on fast - fast enough for even transactional work.


Latency will be one of only a few areas any competing vendor will be able to go after - because the competition certainly can't touch AWS on price.


Redshift's Pricing Shift


One of the big parts of the Redshift announcement message yesterday was very much about price: just buying on-demand data capacity costs $3,723 per terabyte (TB) annually, which sounds like a lot except when you know how much traditional on-site data warehousing solution can run. In his re:Invent keynote yesterday, senior vice president of AWS Andy Jassy claimed such solutions can run $19,000 to $25,000/TB a year. So right off the bat, if Redshift is indeed offering comparable service, customers will save 80-85% off their data warehousing bill.


But wait, there's more. If customers reserve three years of service, the price drops to a jaw-dropping $999/TB annual fee. That's a 95-96% reduction in potential costs for data storage.


In this case, disruptive may not have been hyperbole. It may have been an understatement.


Redshift's Potential Issues


On paper, this sounds pretty good, but there are some potential issues that should be raised. For one, this is a public cloud service, which means your data will be out past your corporate firewall and in some ways sitting outside of your control. If one of Amazon's data centers has a hiccup, you could be out of luck.


The public status also means you'd better have bandwidth costs, security and infrastructure figured out, because somehow your company is going to have to get its data out and back to that cloud in a timely and safe manner


One wildcard with this new Redshift service is how easily it will be to build apps or convert existing apps to work with it. Amazon's APIs are open, but only to the point that you can point your software to them. Once you invest in Amazon's APIs, it will be more painful to pull out to another cloud-based service should you decide to down the road.


If you have been keeping your data and applications local, shifting to Redshift could also mean shifting your applications to some other part of the AWS ecosystem as well, just to keep the latency times and bandwidth costs reasonable. In some ways, Redshift may be the AWS equivalent of putting the milk in the back of the grocery store.


If it is at all reasonable in its service, though, Redshift's pricing will definitely put pressure on the data warehousing vendors to lower their prices to compete - good news for anyone looking at data warehousing.


Image courtesy of Shutterstock.






PayPal And The Evolution Of The Digital Wallet [Sponsored Video]


ReadWrite's Michael Singer explains how online payment services are evolving to include mobile wallets that give you unprecedented flexibility when shopping at major retailers and small businesses. Get a walk through on using your mobile phone and PIN - or an associated PayPal card - to pay quickly and conveniently without having to share your financial information with retailers. Plus, learn how to get the deals and discounts you want automatically applied to your account.


It might be time to leave your wallet - and your cash - at home.








Tuesday, November 27, 2012

The Anti-Spotify Music App

The music app you should be using.



The catalog for Rdio isn't as vast or deep as Spotify's. It's missing some stuff I want to listen to, like Maserati's new album. But it's my preferred subscription music service — true for most of the other tech writers I hang out with as well — because the product and experience is vastly better than Spotify's, and it's the social music service, integrating what your friends are listening to in a way that feels totally organic. And those are things I care about even more than a few missing cuts. Today there's a new version of Rdio for iPhone and Android, a complete redesign that's faster and cleaner still — making it even more antithetical to Spotify's overwhelming approach to app design and experience.


By "clean," I don't just mean the new Rdio app is uncluttered — its predominant color palette is so white that it almost sparkles, and the crisp fonts have little weight or heft to them. The sensation is a little bit like peppermint chewing gum. The app's architecture should feel familiar to anybody's who's used other iOS apps though, since it uses the near-ubiquitous sliding panel interface seen in Facebook's app and others to reduce the interface for most of the app's higher-level functions down to a single side panel. I'd say it's a design choice that's beginning to feel a little too conventional for iOS apps, perhaps, except that it does make navigation incredibly quick and direct, particularly for accessing playlists, syncing and going to offline mode, which were previously buried under a series of menus in Rdio.


There aren't really many new features, which is mostly fine, except that I think the service still badly needs a private listening mode so anyone can listen to any music, no matter how terrible, without shame. It's an odd omission, in a sense, since otherwise Rdio gets social better than anybody else in the space. And privacy — the right kind of privacy — is a huge part of social.


As glorious as the redesign may be though, one wonders how long Rdio can survive in the business, as one of the smaller fishes in the toxic sea that is the music industry. Other, lesser music services have already fallen. Rdio doesn't really talk about how many users it has, but AppData estimates just 140,000 monthly active users connected to Facebook, while it estimates that Spotify has over 24 million. A Topsy search of Twitters shows just 22,000 tweets about Rdio in the last month, compared to over a million for Spotify, which had around 15 million active users as of August. Rdio's also paying artists to bring in new subscribers, a seemingly strange practice in an environment where Pandora loses money on tens of millions of dollars in revenue and Spotify's losses mount to $60 million on revenues of nearly a quarter billion dollars in 2011, precisely because of how much streaming services pay record labels and artists. So it doesn't look very good for Rdio. I hope it lives, and this new app is precisely one of the reasons why. But increasingly I think the only way that might happen is if Microsoft follows through on vague rumors that's in talks to buy the service (which, Microsoft bought Skype, and Rdio is founded by some of the same dudes, so it wouldn't be crazy). In the meantime, while the going's still good, you can give it a whirl here.


Nebula weather station recreates clouds and other conditions inside your house

Nebula 12

Though it's still a mere concept, the Nebula 12 weather station could one day make the thermometer in your home look hopelessly dated. The networked lamp changes its output to reflect current weather conditions in realtime. If it's sunny, for example, you'll see a bright yellow light. But it's when weather turns ugly that the Nebula is most impressive; on overcast or cloudy days, the machine utilizes liquid nitrogen, warm water, and high-powered vacuum suction to instantly create clouds inside your house. Weather simulation ends there though, so don't expect any rain drops.


The Nebula pulls in forecast data for up to 48 hours from MetOff, though its creators say users would ultimately be able to choose their own trusted weather source....


Continue reading…


Monday, November 26, 2012

Lost Images From Old Razr Phones On eBay

Kyle M. F. Williams bought 44 Razr phones on eBay in broken condition. This is what he found inside.


Text message from a phone sold as "broken" on eBay


Text message from a phone sold as "broken" on eBay


New York artist Kyle M. F. Williams had the idea of a covering a razor scooter in Razr phones as a piece of sculpture. On eBay, he found a lot of 44 Razr phones from a seller who appeared to be a electronics repair shop out of Texas being sold in "as-is" condition for only $89 total.


"I assumed they would all be broken, or wiped, but when I got them I found that half of them still had texts, sexts, pics, and vids. So I took a couple days and figured out how to dump all the content from the phones onto my computer," Williams told me. Using Amazon's print on demand publishing service, he is selling a paperback book out of the images, titled Razr .


Why would someone leave personal information on their phone? Williams suspects the owners weren't stupid, they were just unlucky. "Maybe all the Razrs I bought were the ones he couldn't fix and the original owners didn't care to erase 'em and scooped up a cool new Droid or something instead. Also, I bet nobody actually knew how to wipe these things. It takes like 10 steps to delete a photo in that shitty menu system. Who's gonna do that for every sexy image you have in 'My Pix & Flix'."


Photo of a small jar of marijuana


Photo of a small jar of marijuana


Sext message (I blacked out recipient's name, but Google reveals he's a Christian musician/motivational speaker)


Sext message (I blacked out recipient's name, but Google reveals he's a Christian musician/motivational speaker)




View Entire List ›


Paying It Forward - Online And Mobile Style [Sponsored Post]


While paying with cash or credit cards won't go out of fashion anytime soon, but they're getting some serious competition. Online payments and e-wallets are about to shape not only how, but where and when we buy things. Even more important, they will give consumers the power to choose the payment methods that work to their advantage.


Catching Up To The Future


Advanced payment systems are not a new concept. Science fiction writers like Arthur C. Clarke and Ray Bradbury predicted electronic commerce and futuristic payment systems long before they existed. Both men pointed to a time when people and machines come together, exposing the possibilities of individual identity within a larger ecosystem.


In 1974, Clarke predicted personal computers, the Internet and online banking. Bradbury's Guy Montag from "Fahrenheit 451" used an ATM years before they were invented.


Today, futurists today like Ray Kurzweil opine about the "Eternal E-Customer" offerint tantatlizing glimpses of how devices and people combine in symbiotic relationships. Take the world's current fascination with smartphones. The fact that we can check our bank balance, pay for groceries and give our kids their allowance all with one small device that we carry around with us all day, indicates the intense desire for a simple, portable and personal way to interact with our finances.


What's Possible Now


A variety of companies and industries have been working hard to transform online and mobile systems. The larger credit card issuers have recreated their services online, while companies like PayPal transcend the traditional approaches to online payment. Mobile device makers, telecom carriers and others are now weighing in, with the likes of Google Wallet, Apple Passbook, ISIS Mobile Commerce (a collaboration between AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile), and Visa's E-Wallet making the most noise.


As more providers enter the fray, the benefits to consumers become clearer, including electronic coupons, discounts and reduced fees. In the U.S. alone, the redemption value of “deal-a-day” offers – offers distributed via digital channels that typically expire within a few days – will reach $3.9 billion by 2015, according to a McKinsey research report. These coupons are partially a result of brand loyalty, according to Jip de Lange, a consultant at Innopay.


"We see payment methods that were originally offered online are now being offered in offline contexts as well, as the PoS [point of sale] terminal functions basically as Internet-enabled device," de Lange wrote in the Ecommerce Europe: Online Payments 2012 report. "This move not only secures growth potential for years to come, but also increases the relevance of these payment methods as they become part of consumers’ day-to-day routine."


Uneven Progress


Many governments are already moving toward supporting online payment systems. The U.S. Government's Pay.gov service lets citizens pay and be paid by the government using online accounts. People in Latin America, China, India and Africa are even more likely to incorporate mobile devices in their online payment transactions. Europeans trend toward using online accounts for shopping the Internet, with 58% having done so in 2011, Ecommerce Europe notes.


Not all online payment technologies will emerge at once, and not all will eventually succeeed. Researchers at Gartner estimate that Near Field Communications (NFC) is at least five years away from mass adoption. In the meantime, security concerns and the lack of immediate adoption is making many companies disillusioned with aspects of NFC as a payment method: Google is all in, while Apple and PayPal are not.


Perceptions of security and privacy remain key issues for all online and mobile payment systems. A recent study by Edgar, Dunn & Company and sponsored by MasterCard noted that the lingering negative public opinion associated with online payments is hindering broader adoption.



Even as the industry finds ways to address these issues, experts agree that the potential benefits are too great to ignore. So just about every company in the financial industry is doing what it can to explore the concept with early adopters and build products that will eventually appeal to everyone.


Toward A New Normal


A $5 bill in your pocket may not buy much these days, but it still comes in handy when you want to leave a tip or buy a bag of fruit at the farmer's market. The need for cash will be around for a long time, but over time it's likely to become the exception rather than the rule.


The ascendancy of mobile and online payments will be clear when we stop talking about "online payments" and "mobile payments" as something different or exotic, noted Innopay's de Lange in his report. It will just be another way to buy stuff:


"The world is becoming more and more ‘e.’ So the merger of online and offline is basically the disappearing of the first and the latter taking over. In a few years’ time, we will not be writing about e-payments or online payments because it will no longer be a meaningful category. We do still recognize channels and contexts and online payments will diversify to cater for all these channels and contexts."


As buyers and sellers become more and more comfortable with the online and mobile payments, the more likely they will reach for their digital wallets over their real ones. Without even noticing that they're doing anything noteworthy.