Sunday, September 20, 2009

Oprah dragged Software Patent Case

Rata Penuh
Oprah Winfrey (wikipedia)

Famous host, Oprah Winfrey, dragging the software patent infringement cases. Oprah's company, Harpo Productions, a breach of software copyright books online.

Is Iilionis Computer Research (ICR) Harpo Productions, claiming the software violates patents. Harpo is a patent violation of ICR in Oprah's Book Club site.

Allegations were also dragged the big companies Sony Corporation of America and Sony Electronics. Sony claimed misuse of patents through Sony Bookreader.

ICR admitted holding the patent to improve 'touch and feel' on the internet. Patents were mentioned included 'means and how to view and review quotes from a digital book for review before purchase, but the reader can not get to see the whole book before you buy'.

Quoted from theregister, Friday (9/1/2009), in this case Oprah Winfrey did not personally set as defendants. ICR claim damages for the amount that is not mentioned.

ICR is to acquire patents from a man named Scott Harris. The inventor was a lawyer who had issued from work.

Harris issued because tekait in the Google lawsuit over infringement of patents similar to that now used for suing Harpo and Sony. Yet, when it, Google is a client company where Harris worked.

In the case against Google, ICR also ultimately be the ones to sue. Google and the ICR to peace in the outer court and the lawsuit dropped.

Friday, September 18, 2009

Greet Windows 7, AMD releases quad-core Cheap

AMD


As part of the desktop platform in mainstream classes, AMD today introduced the Quad-Core their first cheap, less valuable than U.S. $ 100.

With the balance of power of AMD Athlon II X4 quad-core processors, and AMD 785G chipset featured ATI Radeon HD 4200, AMD seemed to welcome the arrival of Windows 7, the HD spec the computer graphics.

When juxtaposed with the processors 'neighbors' that class, but valuable competitive, AMD Athlon processor 620 II X4 more likely to be superior in terms of multi-tasking, in addition to the price that much cheaper.

AMD products in mainstream classes are also designed to be more effective in working with HD graphics. For example ATI Stream Technology, which allows hardware acceleration which makes the conversion rate increased HD video formats.

AMD's products were welcomed with open arms by HP, as topnotch IT companies in the world.

"Our goal is to produce a superior computer performance, and maximize the value of these computers to our customers," said John Cook, Vice President of Marketing, the global PC business, HP, as quoted from Techpowerup, Friday (18/9/2009) .

"Quad-Core Processors AMD's latest offering perfect balance between performance and price. It makes HP provides leading-class PCs for our customers," he added.

This is also in line with the words of Mike Ybarra, as general manager of Microsoft's Windows Product Management.

"Designed for the needs of consumers, Windows 7 will be added to the Windows user experience. With the introduction of Mainstream Desktop Platform AMD and in combination with Windows 7, it will increasingly deliver digital entertainment more attractive," he said.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

British citizens Hide 90 Million Mobile Old

What do British people if the cell is no longer used? Stored, donated or recycled?


oldphone

As a precaution, it was the British people would rather save a cell phone at home. Just in case the point here is that if only their new phone later stolen, lost or damaged, then they can continue using his old phone.

From the survey conducted, as many as 52% of respondents admitted doing the above. While those who do actively recycle cell phone number much less the 22% only, while 21% of the respondents chose to give relatives or friends.

The trend toward the purchase of British citizens are also not known phone depending on the age of mobile phones. Although the average age is 7 years old phone, they usually upgrade the phone every one or two years.

This survey shows that the behavior of people on their mobile phones tend to opportunistic and often fickle.

Seeing the results of a survey that was held, now the result is much more than 90 million phones obsolete 'stranded' all over the UK. Therefore, they are encouraged to recycle their communication devices on behalf of the environment.

Tammy Arya general manager of a recycling company, The Recycling Factory, Boston said "It is important to encourage the public to start recycling their cell phones to donate to the environment,"

Better Place software tallies electric cars' charge

Better Place founder Shai Agassi is ready to show off that he's applying his software industry experience to improve electric vehicles.

At the Frankfurt Auto Show on Tuesday, the electric car service company will show off in-car software designed to ensure that electric car drivers have enough charge to keep driving.

Code-named AutOS, Better Place's software alerts drivers to a car battery's charge status and points them to battery charging spots and swapping stations in the company's network.

In conjunction with the launch, partner Renault is also expected to debut a concept car called Fluence ZE, a five-seat all-electric passenger car that will be able to operate at Better Place's battery-swapping stations. The two companies have committed to producing 100,000 of the sedans, which have a 100-mile-driving range, for Better Place customers in both Israel and Denmark by 2016.

Better Place's answer to range anxiety: software that keeps you informed about charging options.

(Credit: Better Place)

One of the biggest challenges to introducing plug-in electric vehicles to consumers is "range anxiety," or the fear of not being able to replenish a car battery.

Better Place's solution to the shorter range that battery electric cars offer is to build a network of charge spots at people's homes, offices, and public places. In addition, the company has developed automated battery swapping stations, where a driver rolls up to a spot and a machine slips in a fresh battery.

The business model mimics the cell phone business where consumers purchase a plan that covers a certain number of miles for a monthly fee, which also includes free access to charge spots and swapping stations. Better Place owns the batteries, rather than the car owner.

The software, too, is a key piece of easing range anxiety because it will inform consumers of their fueling options, said Sidney Goodman, the vice president of auto alliances at Better Place.

"It's an energy-management system for ensuring that you never get stuck basically," he explained. "We relieve you from having to start guessing and dealing with that."

Goodman said that the software "learns" from a person's driving habits. For example, the system can tell a driver that there's a battery swapping spot nearby. If the driver ignores the alert, it will adjust and offer other options, such as other charge spot or swapping spots, and tell drivers how they can go with the current charge.

The more information that a person provides, such as a trip's destination and starting point, the more accurate the information and driver profile is, Goodman said. "Based on how your react, the software will adjust," he said.

Built using Windows Embedded and running Intel Atom processors, the software taps into the existing diagnostic messaging system in cars.

Utilities, too
Behind the scenes is another portion of the overall AutOS system designed to ensure that Better Place can operate the network without causing crippling spikes in electricity demand.

The arrival of hundreds of thousands or millions of plug-in electric vehicles onto the grid complicates life for utilities and grid operators. If vehicle charging en masse causes big spikes in demand, utilities will need to add additional capacity by building more power plants.

A screen shot of how Better Place's energy-management software can be used with a mobile device.

(Credit: Better Place)

To prevent spikes, the charging rate of plug-in electric vehicle batteries can be adjusted, which is called smart charging. Topping off a battery overnight, for example, could be done over several hours and not impact the driver.

In Better Place's case, its back-end software was written to ensure that it will not exceed the amount of electricity it has contracted from utilities. In the first two countries it will operate--Israel and Denmark--it plans to make bulk power purchases from utilities and use its software to stay within its budgeted amount, Goodman said.

Energy management is expected to be an important component to a coming wave of plug-in electric vehicles built for everyday use. Nissan's battery-electric Leaf has software to monitor and manage battery charge. It has energy-saving features, such as allowing a consumer to turn on air conditioner with a mobile phone while a car is still plugged in to conserve battery power.

Better Place is in the process of building out the charging and battery-swapping infrastructure in Israel in Denmark which are projected to be operating in 2011 with early pilots this year and next, Goodman said.

Although the company has gotten a lot of attention for its novel business model, Better Place so far has only signed on Nissan-Renault as a partner willing to produce electric vehicles with switchable batteries. Some executives from other auto makers have said that the swapping system is not practical because battery sizes are not standardized.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Old Video Game auctioned USD 24 Million

A old video game machine auctioned via eBay. Of the two types on offer, one of whom has reached USD 24 million bid.


Computer Space (mywantlist)

High prices were achieved by a game called Computer Space. Because of Computer Space was recognized as the first commercial game in the world.

That's not enough, this game was developed by Nolan Bushnell, one of the legends in the game world and founded Atari. Bushnell makes this game in the 1970s based on Space War, which is one of the first game - but not commercial - in the world.

Game produced by Nutting Associates that resembles an arcade machine, but with the view that much simpler. As quoted from Technabob, Sunday (13/9/2009), gaming machines were auctioned on eBay by a user named MyWantList.

There are two versions of Computer Space was sold on eBay, the first is a yellow machine is first-generation Computer Space. Bid for this machine has reached USD 2500 (approximately USD 24 million) and continued to climb.

Mentioned that the yellow version of this engine can still be used to play. This machine also valuable because it is only 1800 units made in his time.

The second version is a green machine that has been offered in the range of USD 1500 (approximately USD 14 million). Two-person game has been slightly damaged and could not play, but still pulled out the sounds.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Pirate Bay buyer 'misled' investors, booted off exchange

A Swedish stock exchange has banned Global Gaming Factory X from offering its shares there after concluding the company "misled" investors about its ability to purchase The Pirate Bay.

AktieTorget, the Swedish stock market where shares of Global Gaming once traded, said a disciplinary group found it had "provided false information," displayed "a lack of accountability," and "seriously violated" the exchange's transparency principles.

A report issued by AktieTorget's disciplinary group called into question most of Global Gaming's public statements since June, when the software company and operator of Internet cafes first announced it would acquire The Pirate Bay, a popular BitTorrent search engine. The banishment by AktieTorget, which last month suspended trading in Global Gaming's shares, is without a doubt the most serious barrier yet to Global Gaming's acquisition of The Pirate Bay.

The story of Global Gaming's acquisition of The Pirate Bay now seems less about whether the company actually will ever take control and more about whether anyone involved will be accused of a crime.

Sweden's Economic Crimes Bureau has already launched an investigation into possible insider trading that involves a dramatic spike in Global Gaming's share price a week before the company announced it would acquire The Pirate Bay.

AktieTorget's investigation did nothing but raise even more questions.

In a report issued Wednesday by AktieTorget, a copy of which was posted to the exchange's Web site, the disciplinary group hammered Global Gaming and Hans Pandeya, the company's largest stakeholder and CEO. The group said it reviewed a list of Global Gaming's press releases to assess their accuracy.

Among some of the group's findings was that Global Gaming did not possess the money to buy The Pirate Bay when the company told the public it did; the company was never in the final stages of signing a content deal with the major entertainment company it boasted about in a press release; Pandeya could provide no proof that he received a bid to buy The Pirate Bay from unnamed Russian investors.

"I asked (Global Gaming CEO Hans Pandeya) 'You don't have the money (to acquire The Pirate Bay), do you?' He said 'Well, I do and I don't.' I told him 'That means you don't.'"--Wayne Rosso, former Grokster president and Global Gaming employee.

Also in the report, the disciplinary group noted how some of Global Gaming's and Pandeya's public statements were proceeded by increases in the company's stock price, presumably to demonstrate their effect on the market.

Pandeya has throughout denied any wrongdoing and on Wednesday continued to maintain the acquisition would get done. He blamed AktieTorget's investigators for some of Global Gamings problems.

"It will be difficult for Aktietorget to explain when we close the deal in two weeks since the funding is not supposed to be in place," Pandeya wrote to CNET News. "People will start asking questions about what has been going on. I don't think Peter G?nczi (vice president and head of market surveillance at Aktietorget) will then be as active as he has been with the press."

Pandeya has said that he will guarantee the purchase of The Pirate Bay with his own personal funds or secure a loan with his shares in Global Gaming. But Pandeya's personal financial troubles are now famous in Sweden. In recent weeks, photos of his car, boat, and motorcycle being hauled away by debt collectors have been splashed on front pages throughout the country.

As for his shares of Global Gaming, it is unclear whether they are worth anything since the stock is no longer trading anywhere.

Wayne Rosso, the former Grokster president worked for Global Gaming barely three weeks before he went public with concerns about the company's ability to fund an acquisition, recalled some of what raised his suspicions.

Rosso. who Pandeya hired to help him negotiate licensing deals with film and music companies, said the amount of money Pandeya cited he had at his disposal kept changing in conversations. Pandeya also kept promising to pay Rosso and his staff but the money never arrived ("The check was always in the mail," Rosso said). When Rosso flew to London to meet with Pandeya and entertainment companies, Pandeya was supposed to pay all of Rosso's expenses but Pandeya's credit card kept getting declined.

What really spooked Rosso, however, was Pandeya's insistence that he make public announcements.

"He kept pushing for press releases," Rosso said. "He would say, 'Can't we put out a press release that we're talking with this content owner,' or he'd say 'can't we announce we're going to do a deal with that content owner?' I told him we couldn't and then I asked him, 'You don't have the money, do you?' He said, 'Well, I do and I don't.' I told him, 'That means you don't.'"

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Google Android: Mobile open source has finally arrived

Open source, despite its community roots, often doesn't become mainstream until corporations get involved. There are notable exceptions--Mozilla Firefox and the Apache Web server being just two--but often it is corporate self-interest that provides the mechanism to deliver the value of community-developed open source to a mainstream audience.

While the mobile market remains highly fragmented, therefore, I take it as a very encouraging sign that Google has thrown its considerable heft behind Android, its open-source mobile operating platform.

Sure, we've had mobile open-source companies for years. I was part of one of the first: Lineo, an embedded Linux vendor that distributed an optimized Linux distribution for PDAs like the Sharp Zaurus. More recently, Funambol has proved popular as a mobile application server, specializing in synchronization technology.

But just as Linux's big moment on the server came with IBM's $1 billion commitment to fund its development and marketing, so, too, will the mobile open-source market come into its own with Google Android.

Android has recently pulled ahead of Microsoft's Windows Mobile in the smartphone market, according to data from AdMob, hitting a global 5 percent market share (in terms of access to mobile ads, not units shipped), while continuing to grow 25 percent month over month.

While Microsoft dominates on the desktop, with even its not-yet-released Windows 7 beating Linux, according to W3C data, Linux, and increasingly Google's Android flavor of Linux, is making a big push on smartphones.

To fuel this, Google has been upping its commitment to developers, most recently with an upgrade to its Android Market, but also pushing its handsets into an ever-widening array of handset manufacturers and wireless carriers, most recently Sprint.

I've suggested that the only way to beat Apple's iPhone is with a big commitment of resources. Google appears to be doing this, but in an intelligent way: it is trying to attract a wide community of developers to share the burden of beating the iPhone.

InfoWorld's Neil McAllister thinks it's not working, but I'm more sanguine. So long as Google invests marketing and development resources to Android, the open-source operating platform has a good chance.

And, importantly, so long as Google remains committed to mobile, there's a very good opportunity for other mobile open-source players to draft on its momentum. An entire open-source industry has grown up in the shadow of IBM's original $1 billion commitment to Linux.

The same can happen in mobile, and this time it will be Google's turn to lead.

Monday, September 7, 2009

Where in the World do Viruses Come From?

The U.S. and Brazil continued their output of spam and viruses through August, although levels have dropped slightly since July, according to security vendor Network Box.

virus antivirus security

An analysis of Internet threats by Network Box in August 2009 shows that the volume of malware, which peaked in July (when volumes increased by 300 per cent), are down again at levels seen in June (around four viruses per customer, per hour). Spam is also down slightly, averaging around 90 spam e-mails per customer, per hour (from a peak of around 120 in May).

The U.S. continues to dominate as the main source of the world's viruses, producing 15.9 per cent of all viruses. It is followed closely by Brazil, which produces 14.5 per cent (similar levels to last month's 14.1 per cent).

Brazil continues to be the biggest source of spam, producing 11.6 per cent of all spam, followed by the US at 8.6 per cent and South Korea at 7.2 per cent.

South Korea remains the biggest source of intrusion attacks, at 17.3 per cent.

Phishing attacks also remain high, at 33 per cent of all viruses. This is down slightly from last month's 36.2 per cent, but still significantly higher than in June, when phishing attacks made up just five per cent of all viruses. (See also "Can You Trust Free Antivirus Software?")

Patches prevent infections

Meanwhile, Network Box lowered its global alert condition to Level 2, saying it has been the lowest in nine months. This means there are limited virus/worm activities, with no major unexploited vulnerabilities or threats.

Mark Webb-Johnson, CTO of Network Box, said: "The large number of recent vulnerabilities announced by both Microsoft and Apple led to a frenzy of malware activity spearheaded by an unprecedented large number of website defacements. What we're now seeing is that those who have already patched are protected and those that haven't are already infected -- so the number of new infections appears to have levelled off."

Simon Heron, Internet security analyst for Network Box, added: "Businesses and individuals still need to be alert to threats through the remainder of the summer, particularly phishing attacks. We've seen a huge increase in SQL injection attacks so it's important that anyone using Web-based applications or servers keeps their security up-to-date."

While threat landscape currently remains stable, Network Box said it will continue to closely monitor and re-evaluate the situation as necessary, especially with Microsoft's Patch Tuesday coming next week.

Saturday, September 5, 2009

WordPress blogs falling prey to worm!!

A worm is circulating that can post malware and spam to some WordPress blogs using outdated versions of the blogging software, according to a post by Matt Mullenweg, founding developer of WordPress.

The worm can be tough to catch, as Mullenweg explains: "it registers a user, uses a security bug (fixed earlier in the year) to allow evaluated code to be executed through the permalink structure, makes itself an admin, then uses JavaScript to hide itself when you look at users page, attempts to clean up after itself, then goes quiet so you never notice while it inserts hidden spam and malware into your old posts."

The vulnerability allowing the attack was discovered August 11, at which point WordPress encouraged users to upgrade to version 2.8.4. However, many people have yet to upgrade, and reports online indicate the worm is making dubious progress by the hour.

The worm does not affect the current version 2.8.4 and the one prior to it. And it only affects people who host their own WordPress blog. Blogs hosted on WordPress.com are unaffected.

Users can find upgrade links and instructions here. WordPress has also posted an FAQ for people who think their blog has been hacked.

Fennec's third alpha now ready for Windows Mobile

Fennec logo(Credit: F)

On Friday, Mozilla released Fennec Alpha 3 for Windows Mobile, the latest in Mozilla's effort to put its Firefox browser on a mobile phone. As with Fennec 1.0 beta 3 for the Maemo platform found on some Nokia Internet Tablets, Fennec for Windows Mobile makes changes to the mobile browser's theme, and its scrolling and panning performance.

In particular, it's using what's called a tile cache rendering system to hold onto the part of the screen that has already been rendered. As you scroll and pan around, it should take less time to refresh the screen, since Fennec won't be downloading the same content afresh. This is the same type of technology used in Google Maps.

In addition, Mozilla says it has increased Fennec's start-up time, though you'll need to reboot the Windows Mobile phone for the difference to take effect. Swiping along the edge of the directional pad on the HTC Touch Pro now controls zooming. In the meantime, Fennec now supports more screen resolutions for any other Windows Mobile phone, so it could potentially look better on your device.

While Mozilla has no hard date set for completing Fennec 1.0 for Windows Mobile (which in all probability, could be called Firefox for Windows Mobile when it's done) it has set a target time for releasing Fennec on the Maemo platform in Q4, which brings us to before the end of December. This fits the timeline of Mozilla's open design competition for the company's Firefox for Mobile campaign, which will cut off voting on October 7, 2009.

Fennec Alpha 3 for Windows Mobile is ready to try for your Windows Mobile phone and can be downloaded from this CAB file. Remember that as an unstable alpha release, you may encounter bugs and other issues. For more details about what's new, you can find Mozilla's release notes here.

Friday, September 4, 2009

Gmail Turf + Chrome Grass themes = yuck

Google lets you use the Gmail's Turf theme with Chrome's Grass theme. Don't.

Google lets you use the Gmail's Turf theme with Chrome's Grass theme. Don't.

(Credit: Screenshot by Stephen Shankland/CNET)

Google is clearly proud of its environmental ethos and likes to show it off through its products, but there can be too much of a good thing.

Mostly in an attempt to gross people out, I tried adding the new Turf theme for Gmail while using the Grass theme for Chrome.

Nobody ever accused me of having much in the way of taste, but even I can tell it's pretty awful. The eyestrain alone is headache-inducing.

What's the worst combination you can think of? High Score on Legal Pad? And what happens when you add in operating system themes?

Restoration starts on one of oldest computers

Work began this week on restoring what will be the world's oldest working stored-program electronic computer.

Volunteers at the National Museum of Computing at Bletchley Park--about 50 miles northwest of London--will rebuild the Witch machine--a computer first used in 1951 for atomic research.

Witch, or the Wolverhampton Instrument for Teaching Computing from Harwell, was based on telephone exchange relays and 900 Dekatron gas-filled tubes, which could each hold a single digit in memory. Paper tape was used to both input data for and store the output of the machine.

The device is not the oldest electronic calculating device but is regarded as the first modern computer still capable of working.

The machine was built and used by the Atomic Energy Research Establishment in Harwell, Oxfordshire, and went on to be used as a teaching aid at a college in Wolverhampton until 1973.

The machine was developed to automate laborious mathematical calculations at the Harwell facility. Witch, also known as the Harwell computer, could solve algorithms at roughly the same speed as a single human mathematician using a mechanical calculator.

The Witch is regarded as the first modern computer still capable of working.

(Credit: Wolverhampton Express and Star)

The restoration work is expected to take a year, when Witch will then go on display at the National Museum of Computing, which already holds the world's first electronic computer, the Colossus Mark II.

Kevin Murrell, director and trustee of the museum, said its engineers are keen to start restoring the Witch machine.

"For most of them this will be the toughest project yet. It's the computing equivalent of the raising of the Mary Rose and they are up to challenge," he said in a statement.

The museum is asking members of the public and industry to sponsor the restoration of the Harwell computer by purchasing one of 25 shares at 4,500 pounds (about $7,300) each. Insight Software has become the first sponsor of the restoration project.

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Google adds details to Book Search privacy policy

Google has released additional details about the privacy policy it plans to use if its settlement over Google Book Search is approved.

(Credit: Screenshot by Tom Krazit/CNET)

Google has released a more detailed privacy policy for its Google Books product, a move demanded in recent weeks by several critics of its settlement with publishers and authors.

The company announced the new policy in a blog post late Thursday afternoon, saying it developed the policy following conversations with the U.S. Federal Trade Commission. Google had previously said it was unable to release a detailed policy because the Google Books product was incomplete due to the fact that the settlement allowing its Book Search project to display certain types of books has yet to be formally approved.

However, criticism of Google's lack of detailed information on the subject appears to have forced its hand. "To provide all users with a clear understanding of our practices, and in response to helpful comments about needing to be clearer about the Books product from the FTC and others, we wanted to highlight key provisions of the main Google Privacy Policy in the context of the Google Books service, as well as to describe privacy practices specific to the Google Books service," wrote Jane Horvath, general privacy counsel for Google, in a blog post.

A few highlights of the new policy, the full text of which can be found here:

• Google will not require book searchers to create a Google account if they are viewing pages of books online, browsing books through a university's institution subscription to the book service, or accessing the book service from a public terminal at a library.

• If you want to actually buy a book you'll need to have a Google account, but Google will let users remove records of books they have purchased from their accounts and said it will not pass along information about specific books that were purchased to credit card companies.

• Google plans to release a more detailed privacy policy containing specific language about the various services that will be available when, and if, the settlement is approved giving it the right to offer the service.

It's not clear whether these provisions will be enough to quiet those criticizing the settlement on privacy grounds, but it's a step in that direction. The proposed settlement will be debated at a court hearing in New York in October.

Helix Wind to acquire Venco for $3.9 million

Twister 300-T

(Credit:Venco)

Helix Wind has signed a definitive purchase agreement to acquire Venco Power, a Germany-based manufacturer of vertical axis small wind turbines, for $3.9 million in cash and common stock, the company announced Thursday.

With Venco comes greater access to the small wind residential market in Europe, along with three new products the company plans to add to its small wind product line, according to Helix Wind CEO Ian Gardner.

While all three models are for the small wind market, each has a distinctive look and different capacities. The Venco Twister 300-T produces power at wind speeds as low as 3.5 meters per second (7.8 mph); it starts rotating at 3.0 meters per second, and its claim to fame is that it's "virtually quiet." The Twister 1000-T makes the same noise and power claims as the 300-T, but has a different look and begins to start rotating at a wind speed of 1.5 meters per second. The Vertikon H50 will begin generating power at speeds as low as 2.5 meters per second.

Venco also has an online calculator (for Java applet-friendly browsers) for estimating how much power one can expect each particular turbine product to generate. Potential customers input average wind speeds for each month of the year at their location, and can change which turbine the figures are applied to.

"We're also excited to bring German engineering talent and technology to the quest for alternative energy," Gardner said in a statement.

The news follows Helix Wind's August announcement offering a unique financial fix for the initial cash outlay that residential customers and dealers face when getting into wind power.

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Rival browsers gain on Internet Explorer

Internet Explorer rivals generally gained market share in figures from July, shown at top, and August.

Internet Explorer rivals generally gained market share in figures from July, shown at top, and August.

(Credit: Net Applications)

After resetting its methodology to better account for global variations, Net Applications' browser usage statistics have resumed an earlier trend in which Internet Explorer's main rivals edged ahead.

Mozilla's Firefox had the most notable gain, from 22.5 percent to 23 percent, while Google's Chrome rose from 2.6 percent to 2.8 percent. Apple's Safari was flat at 4.1 percent, and IE dipped from 67.7 percent to 67 percent. Opera, in fifth place just before this week's release of Opera 10, was essentially flat at 2 percent.

The browser wars are back in full swing. Though IE remains dominant, rivals are racing to build in new features to make the Web a better foundation for applications--the vision Netscape had back in the first generation of browser wars of the 1990s. Only recently has Microsoft joined the HTML 5 discussion in earnest.

This time profitable powerhouses such as Google are pushing this Web applications facet of cloud computing, and even Microsoft is embracing the trend with an online version of Office en route. Using the browser and the Web to run applications has a lot more meat on its bones after a decade of work.

Microsoft is working to wean the world from IE 6, the version of the browser that shipped with Windows XP, and has made some progress, according to Net Applications' statistics.

Version 6 still rules the IE roost, but it's dropping in usage.

Version 6 still rules the IE roost, but it's dropping in usage.

(Credit: Net Applications)

IE 8 usage increased from 12.5 percent to 15.1 percent usage from July to August, while IE 6 dropped from 27.2 percent to 25.3 percent. IE 7 decreased from 23.1 percent to 21.1 percent.

Mozilla's newer version 3.5 of Firefox, released in June, also made gains from 4.5 percent to 8.9 percent. Firefox 3.0 dropped from 16.2 percent to 12.5 percent.

Using a modern browser is important when it comes to bringing the Web application technology to fruition. Older browsers lack support for advancements in page layout and graphics, HTML features such as built-in video, and perhaps most crucially, fast execution of Web-based JavaScript programs.

Gameloft hearts the App Store



Gameloft's successful GTA clone is being followed by the actual GTA.

Well, it turns out not everyone hates Apple's App Store. Gameloft, the ever-present publisher of mobile games worldwide, likes the iPhone and iPod Touch quite a bit. In a recent news release, Gameloft announced that, to date, they have sold more than 6 million games on the App Store, making it its biggest platform.

"Our core focus is digitally distributed games," said Sanette Chao, Director of Public Relations for Gameloft. "Apple is our number one customer and the IPhone OS is our number one platform. I think that alone speaks volumes to the importance of iPhone games to our overall strategy."

Amid concerns over Apple's restrictive handling of App Store certifications and the squeeze that other publishers might be feeling in a landscape of ever-decreasing game prices, this report might come as a breath of fresh air. Indeed, from a consumer standpoint, very little is wrong with the App Store--provided you simply don't want something that Apple isn't willing to provide. In the games department in particular, 10 dollars can buy you more than it can for nearly any other device in game console history. And with developers like Rockstar now getting in the Apple game with an upcoming App Store port of Grand Theft Auto: Chinatown Wars, clearly there's something in Apple's current economic model that's appealing to even the big guys.

That "something" might be seen as a huge built-in audience. With more than 40 million worldwide owners of the iPhone/iPod Touch platform, the consumer base is gigantic. Putting a title at $5 could lead to a larger profit than a $20 DS game, for instance, that might have limited distribution and availability. Gameloft has 35 games in the App Store at the moment, and while its current game best-sellers are UNO, GTA-clone Gangstar, and Madden rival NFL 2010, it also enjoys evergreen success with Asphalt and Real Soccer, said Chao. This is the advantage that any online store has over physical media--infinite shelf space and the chance for a long tail.

According to Gameloft, the formula for success lies in listening to user feedback, creating low-priced titles, and creating mass-appeal, intuitive games. "Our strategy from the onset has been twofold. First we deliver an aggressive line-up of high quality games and then we adapt in real time to consumer needs," said CEO Michel Guillemot in Gameloft's Tuesday announcement.

The App Store market was recently estimated at $2.5 billion a year, as compared with $60 million for the Android app market. It's no surprise, then, that Rockstar would get in on this action. Grand Theft Auto: Chinatown Wars on the Nintendo DS sold 680,000 copies worldwide, and at $35 retail, that amounts to $23.8 million. Assuming a $10 retail price on iTunes, Chinatown Wars would have to sell 2.38 million copies to equal the Nintendo DS performance--a large number, but completely achievable considering the large global base and adult-skewed audience of the iPhone and iPod Touch.

While many things may be askew with the App Store, it's good to remember that a lot of things are still going very well for it.

Intel, Microsoft Mind Meld for Windows 7

Microsoft and Intel came to town to discuss their partnership, which seemed a little weak a few years back, in the development of Windows 7.

It would be a bit of an understatement to say that Vista's development process was uneven. Just look at the results. For Windows 7, Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) engaged hardware partners, including Intel (NASDAQ: INTC), much sooner. Changes to the architecture, for instance, were made known as far as 18 months in advance, according to Michael Angiulo, general manager of Microsoft's planning and PC ecosystem group.

Angiulo said Microsoft worked with Intel on driver optimization for asynchronous loading during the boot process, so drivers loaded faster. In turn, Intel made its platform changes known to Microsoft much sooner.

"We've been working longer throughout the development cycle and have development programs all throughout Intel's platform and have been making decisions based on everyone's best results," Steve Smith, vice president and director of Intel's Digital Enterprise Group, told reporters at today's event.

The two firms emphasized their work on power management and allowing the hardware to get into a low power state, called a C6 power state, and stay there. Using an updated program called Trace, engineers could dig down into an application and into the hardware to determine what was waking the system up from low power states.

Among its many problems, Vista was pretty bad when it came to battery life. Intel and Microsoft found that it kept waking from its low power state and never truly stayed asleep very long. The two companies worked together on this electronic sleep apnea and were able to produce longer battery life.

How much is open to question. One demo station showed two identical laptops, and the one running Windows 7 saw a 20 percent battery life gain in DVD playback, according to Ruston Panabaker, principal program manager at Microsoft. However, he declined to state any figures when asked about other lower states and usages.

Windows 7 has a thread scheduler to optimize the use of hyperthreading. It intelligently recognizes which systems have hyperthreading and schedules for performance and thread management accordingly. It also recognizes hyperthreads and physical threads to make decisions, and will migrate threads to an available core at the appropriate time when necessary.

Windows 7 will also support the AES encryption (define) instructions that will be in Westmere, the next iteration of Intel's Nehalem architecture. A benchmark showed how much of a difference in speed the AES can make. A benchmark with AES encryption turned off ran at 286 Mbps, while the AES-enabled benchmark ran at 3.25 Gbps per second.

Other features for Windows 7 include the Windows XP virtual mode, tools for parallelism to do development for multi-threading and DirectX 11 support. One new API in DirectX 11 is DirectCompute, which allows software developers to write code to offload certain tasks to the GPU.

Windows 7 is due to ship Oct. 22.

Intel is due to hold its annual Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco on Sept. 22, where a number of sessions dedicated to Windows 7 are scheduled, including a talk by systems internals expert Mark Russinovich.

Nokia unveils N97 Mini, plus Netbook pricing

Nokia unveils N97 Mini

Nokia, the world's largest maker of cell phones, on Wednesday announced new phones loaded with more music features and better integration with Facebook, as well as pricing for its upcoming Netbook.

Nokia N97 Mini

(Credit: Nokia )

The company announced the new phones and services at its Nokia World Conference in Stuttgart, Germany.

Tops on the list of new phones is the N97 Mini, a slightly smaller version of Nokia's existing flagship N97 smartphone. This new, smaller N97 has a shorter battery life than the earlier device and also less memory (8GB compared to 32GB), and a smaller touch-screen display. The device is expected to ship in October. Its list price at 450 euros, or about $639, is not much less than that of the full-fledged N97, which initially went on sale in the U.S. for $700.

The new N97 Mini also will have Nokia's Comes With Music service integrated. This service increases the cost of the device, but provides users with a free download music service. And the device will be the first Nokia phone to have tighter integration with the popular social networking site Facebook. Nokia has struck a deal with Facebook to let users update their location and status directly to the Website through a Nokia Ovi account.

Nokia plans to offer the Facebook integration on other phones as well.

The handset maker also announced two new music phones: the X6 and the X3. The X6, which has a touch screen and 32GB of built-in memory, will be Nokia's new flagship music phone. The company expects to ship the new phone in the fourth quarter for a list price of 450 euros, or $639. As with the N97, users will also get the Comes With Music service bundled into the phone.

Nokia X6

(Credit: Nokia )

Nokia is the world's leading cell phone maker with close to 40 percent worldwide market share. Recently it has been trying to diversify its business by offering its cell phone users online services, such as music downloads, games, and maps. The company created its Ovi service platform as a repository for all of these functions and hopes that one day all Nokia phone customers will use their Ovi accounts to access and manage their music, video, and photos.

But even though Nokia estimates that the global online market will reach 100 billion euros by 2010, the company must continue to feed its core device business with new phones. There's no question that Nokia is still the leader in the overall cell phone market. It has done especially well providing low-cost devices to the developing world, but it has been challenged to keep up with innovations in the smartphone category.

Even though Nokia is the No. 1 smartphone maker worldwide, it's losing market share to players such as Apple with the iPhone and Research In Motion with its BlackBerry. Nokia is particularly challenged in the U.S., where it is virtually non-existent and lacks key carrier relationships for its hottest devices.

Unfortunately, the new phones announced at the Nokia World are unlikely to slow its slide in the high end of the market. While the devices mark improvements for Nokia's overall product line, they are not revolutionary with respect to other products that they will compete with on the worldwide market.

Still, Nokia is not giving up. The phone maker announced last month a relationship with Microsoft to develop a version of Microsoft's Office software for Nokia handsets. And last week, it also announced its N900 smartphone, its first Linux-based phone, which is expected to compete more directly with the iPhone and a flood of Google Android phones due to hit the market later this year and early next year.

In yet another attempt to diversify, Nokia also plans to offer more sophisticated hardware, in the form of a mini-laptop or Netbook--last week it announced the new device, dubbed the Nokia Booklet 3G. At the event in Germany on Wednesday it announced that it will ship the mini laptop in the fourth quarter with a list price tag of 575 euros, or about $817.

What makes Nokia's Netbook different from others in the category is that the device will have GPS embedded to provide access to Nokia's Ovi Maps software and service.

Researchers seek funds to study cell phone safety

Researchers seek funds to study cell phone safety

Are cell phones safe? For years, studies have provided conflicting conclusions. Today, there is still no clear answer. But experts agree on one thing: more research is needed to find out the answer.

In an effort to raise awareness among consumers and to urge government leaders to allocate more funding for research, an international group of researchers is gathering in Washington, D.C. later this month to present study findings and to lobby government officials.

The issue has already gained the attention of at least one important congressional leader. On September 14, Sen. Arlen Specter, a Democrat from Pennsylvania and the former ranking minority leader for the Senate's Labor, Health and Human Services Appropriations Subcommittee, will chair a hearing questioning scientists involved in the latest research. Researchers are hopeful that Specter, who was instrumental in increasing funding for the National Institutes of Health from $12 billion to nearly $30 billion and has long championed funding for cancer research, will introduce legislation that specifically asks for more funding for research in this area. But so far Specter hasn't indicated one way or another if he will try to get money allocated specifically for cell phone health-related research.

"There is cause for concern," said Dr. Henry Lai, a professor of bioengineering at the University of Washington in Seattle, who has been studying the effects of cell phone radiation on humans since 1980. "But to prove that cell phones cause cancer or other health problems will take more work. At this point the biological research suggests that long term use can have some adverse health effects, with brain cancer being one of those effects."

The conference, which runs September 13 to 15, is being sponsored by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences; University of Pittsburgh; National Research Center for Women & Families; The International Commission for Electromagnetic Safety; The Flow Fund Circle, and the Environmental Health Trust.

Researchers from around the globe are expected to attend the event, including leading scientists from Western and Northern Europe, where cell phones have been used for much longer than they have in the U.S. Some of these researchers, including Devra Davis, professor of Public Health at the University of Pittsburgh and the primary organizer of the conference, are likely to testify at the Senate hearing.

Longtime debate
For years, researchers and scientists have debated whether radiation from radio frequencies used to wirelessly transmit phone calls could adversely affect the health of cell phone users. And as more people throughout the world use cell phones and make these devices an integral part of their lives, concerns have grown as to long-term public health issues.

In the U.S. alone, more than 270 million Americans or more than 87 percent of the U.S. population, now owns a cell phone, according to 2008 data compiled by the CTIA, the wireless industry's trade association.

Experts say the concern over cell phone use stems from a form of radiation that's produced when these wireless devices communicate with cell towers using radio frequency. High-frequency radiation, such as the kind that's used in X-rays, is known to cause cancer in high doses.

Cell phones emit much lower frequency radiation, but it's unknown whether these milder forms of RF can cause adverse biological changes to humans. But the fact that cell phones are often held close to the body either right alongside the head or in a pocket, has caused some concern among researchers who believe that radio frequency energy is being absorbed into the body and can cause damage to cells or even alter cell phone users' DNA. Even holding a phone 10 millimeters away from your head could decrease the exposure of RF radiation to the body by about 100 times, Davis said.

So far the research seems to be split in terms of the risk of this radiation exposure. An ongoing multinational initiative known as Interphone, has yielded mixed results so far. Meanwhile, some studies have found no correlation at all between cellphone use and brain tumors.

But a handful of studies that have looked at the long-term effects of using cell phones suggest that people who use a cell phone for at least an hour each day over a 10-year period are at an increased risk of developing brain tumors. This research also suggests that these tumors are more likely to be on the side of the head where the phone is most often used.

More recently, researchers have grown particularly concerned about the adverse effects that cell phone usage could have on children. Some Swedish research indicates that children are five times more likely to get brain cancer if they use mobile phones, but other research efforts have found results inconclusive.

The kid factor
One reason for concern is the fact that children who start using cell phones at a young age will inevitably be exposed for a longer period of time over their entire lifetime to cell phone radiation. But researchers are also concerned about the risk of cell phones with children, because children's nervous systems are not fully developed. Also their brains contain more fluid than brains of adults, which allows for deeper penetration of radiation. And finally, children's skulls are not as thick as those of adults.

"The reality is that the head of a child is different in terms of density of the bone and the amount of fluid in the brain than that of an adult," Davis said. "And we know that the more fluid there is an object, the more deeply the radio signal can penetrate."

Because cell phones have only really been used widely since about the 1990s, research on long-term health effects is limited. But research on the effects on children is even more scarce.

Still, there has been enough concern among public health officials in various parts of the world to warrant warnings.

For example, the Finnish Radiation and Nuclear Safety Authority (STUK), a government regulatory body located in the home country of Nokia, the largest cell phone maker in the world, is urging parents to restrict cell phone use for children, suggesting parents encourage kids to text rather than talk.

"Although research to date, has not demonstrated health effects from mobile phone's radiation, precaution is recommended for children as all of the effects are not known," the agency's Web site reads.

France has even proposed banning advertisements encouraging children younger than 12 to use cell phones. And it has also warned parents that children under six are particularly at risk. Legislation in France would also make it illegal to sell a mobile phone without earphones, and the government is looking into limiting the amount of radiation that a phone is allowed to emit.

FDA's stance
The Food and Drug Administration in the U.S. does not go as far as issuing a warning. But the agency recommends minimizing any potential risk by using hands-free devices and keeping cell-phone talk to a minimum.

The Federal Communications Commission in the U.S. also requires manufacturers to report the relative amount of RF absorbed into the head by any given cell phone. This number is known as the SAR, or specific absorption rate, and the agency publishes those figures for consumers to review. CNET has used this information to publish its cell phone radiation level chart.

But researchers such as Davis say more needs to be done.

"The big question to me is why has Finland, the land of Nokia, issued a warning?" she said. "Why has France issued the same warning? And why has Israel, which doesn't even have a Clean Air Act, issued a warning on a government Website about children using cell phones? And in the U.S. we have no such warnings."

The wireless industry itself has resisted warnings or restrictions for its products. And it often points to research indicating that there is no link between cancer or other harmful health effects and cell phone use.

"The peer-reviewed scientific evidence has overwhelmingly indicated that wireless devices do not pose a public health risk," the CTIA said in a statement. "In addition, there is no known mechanism for microwave energy within the limits established by the FCC to cause any adverse health effects. That is why the leading global heath organizations such as the American Cancer Society, National Cancer Institute, World Health Organization, and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration all have concurred that wireless devices are not a public health risk."

No government funding
While they have stopped short of issuing warnings, U.S. government agencies along with other governmental agencies such as the European Union, have said that more studies are needed to determine whether there are any health risks associated with cell phone usage.

But the big problem in the U.S. is that there is no government funding available for such research.

"There has been zero money available for research on the effects of cell phone radiation for about the last 10 years," Lai said. "So there has really been no independent research done in the U.S. for at least a decade. Research is being done in Europe or the Far East, such as in China or Japan or in Israel. Even Canada has made some money available for research."

Because there has been no money available in the U.S., Lai, who was a pioneer in studying the biological effects of cell phone radiation on humans, has turned his research attention toward studying medical applications for electro magnetic fields.

"Fifteen years ago, we were at the cutting edge of this research," he said. "But now in the U.S., we are not involved in the study of the epidemiology of cell phone use at all. We are like a Third World country."

This is likely what Sen. Specter, who is a cancer survivor himself and a champion for medical research funding, will try to rectify through the Senate hearings that will take place on Capitol Hill later this month.

Researchers, such as Davis and Lai, say their goal is not to demonize the cell phone industry or even suggest that the government ban the use of cell phones. But they believe that the public needs to be aware of the risks associated with using these devices and that more research is needed to identify these risks and to come up with ways to make them safer.

And while these researchers can't say definitively that cell phones pose a public health issue today, they fear that without careful study and modification, these devices could cause an epidemic of cancer and other health problems in the future, since it can take decades for cancer and other maladies to manifest.

"Cell phones are very useful," Lai said. "So I'm not saying we should throw them away. But we need to face the reality that there could be some adverse effects that come up in the next 10, 20 or 30 years. And we need to find ways to prevent or modify phones to make these devices less harmful. But to do that, we first need to understand how radiation affects us. And we need the money to conduct this research."

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Apple approves Vonage mobile VoIP app

iPhone(Credit: CNET Networks)

Vonage announced Tuesday that its mobile voice over Internet Protocol app has been approved for use by Apple on the iPhone and iPod Touch.

The Internet telephone service provider said it's conducting a beta test of the app and that general availability will be announced at a later date.

Last week Apple confirmed that Vonage's request for app approval was being held up by technical issues with the Vonage software. An Apple spokesperson told CNET News at the time that Apple was working with the developer to resolve the issue but would not elaborate on the nature of the issue.

That delay came to light on the heels of federal regulators opening a probe on Apple's decision to keep the Google Voice application from the App Store. AT&T--Apple's iPhone partner--has denied playing a role in that decision.

Google Voice, which allows users to receive calls placed to a single telephone number in multiple places and make cheap international calls, was deemed unfit for App Store inclusion in July, after it was released for BlackBerry and Android smartphones.

Apple, however, has said the Google Voice app was never actually rejected.

Sold! eBay jettisons Skype in $2 billion deal

E-commerce giant eBay announced Tuesday that it is selling its Skype unit to an investor group that includes Marc Andreessen's new venture.

Under the deal, eBay will receive approximately $1.9 billion in cash and a note from the buyer in the principal amount of $125 million, for a total of $2.025 billion. The participants expect the deal to close in the fourth quarter.

The investor group, which will take a roughly 65 percent stake in Skype, is led by Silver Lake and includes Index Ventures, Andreessen Horowitz, and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board. The remaining 35 percent of the Internet telephony service will be retained by eBay.

The parties said the deal values Skype, which is likely to see an IPO in the coming months, at $2.75 billion.

The sale of Skype had been expected for some time. Word of Tuesday's impending sale to the private investor group was first reported late Monday in The New York Times.

The Andreessen Horowitz venture capital group was launched in July by Marc Andreessen, the founder of Netscape and co-founder of Opsware, and Ben Horowitz, also co-founder of Opsware.

With the sale, eBay acknowledged that things hadn't worked out as planned with Skype, which it acquired for $2.6 billion in 2005 with the plans to offer customers the ability to discuss their transactions in real time. Over the course of the four years since then, eBay found that its acquisition failed to provide what it sought.

"Skype is a strong standalone business, but it does not have synergies with our e-commerce and online payments businesses," eBay President and CEO John Donahoe said in a statement Tuesday. "As a separate company, we believe that Skype will have the focus required to compete effectively in online voice and video communications and accelerate its growth momentum."

Lead investment firm Silver Lake echoed the forward-looking sentiments.

"This transaction benefits...will allow Skype the opportunity to accelerate the growth of its business by harnessing the deep technological and company development expertise that resides within the investor group," Egon Durban, managing director at Silver Lake, said in a statement.

In 2007, eBay said it would take a $900 million so-called impairment writedown against the value of Skype, meaning that eBay had been forced to reassess the value of the Internet telephony company relative to its overall business. By recording a charge, the company essentially announced it had taken a loss on its original investment.

When eBay announced Donahoe as its new CEO in 2008, he indicated that the company would take a year to evaluate the future of its online phone and video-conferencing service.

In April, eBay announced plans to spin off Skype, with an IPO in the first half of next year.

Along the way, reports had surfaced that Skype founders Niklas Zennstrom and Janus Friis were interested in repurchasing the company.

Opera 10 browser is here

Opera 10 browser(Credit: Opera Software)

The Opera 10 browser is now ready to download for Windows, and Mac, and Linux, three months after the beta first emerged (hands-on Opera 10 beta review).

If you've been keeping up with the beta updates, the final build of the cross-platform browser shouldn't surprise you. Opera Turbo, the browser's much-publicized compression engine for slow-poke connections, remains a feature highlight. Opera claims that Opera Turbo runs the browser up to eight times faster on suffering connections than do competing browsers.

The refreshed user interface is also noteworthy. Joining the new default skin (changed from version 9.6), are changes to tab bar behavior. The conventional tabs double as thumbnail images. Double-click the thin gray bar below the tabs (indicated by dots) or click and drag to expand open tabs into preview windows that you can navigate by clicking among them.

Other enhancements include an expanded Speed Dial (a feature that has later been adopted and adapted in Google's Chrome browser) that shows more commonly visited Web pages than in previous Opera browsers. You're also able to customize it with a background picture. You'll see that spell check will be applicable to any text field (for 51 languages), and that Opera's incorporated e-mail client takes a page from Google's books by threading e-mail conversations.

Developers get access to a newer version of Opera Dragonfly, the publisher's online development tools, but everyone can benefit from the speedier rendering engine that, according to Opera, makes version 10 up to 40 percent faster than version 9.6--before switching on Turbo's compression.

Despite all the additions that Opera hopes will keep Opera 10 competitive, there are still two notable omissions for this final release. The first is Opera Unite, which uses your browser as a Web server for sharing your content with others. The second is the Carakan JavaScript engine that promises to process JavaScript about 2.5 times as fast as the engine used in Opera 10 alpha.

Western Digital shipping high-speed 2TB hard drive

After releasing relatively low-performance 2TB hard drives a few months ago, Western Digital announced Tuesday that it's now shipping high-performance versions of these top-capacity drives.

The WD RE4 drive


The new drives are the WD Caviar Black and the WD RE4. According to the company, the former is designed for desktops while the latter is suited for servers and network storage devices.

These two new hard drives are based on WD's 500GB-per-platter technology. They both combine 7200rpm spin speed, 64MB cache, dual-stage actuator technology, SATA 2 (3Gb/s) interface, and an integrated dual processor.

(Dual actuator technology is a head-positioning system with two actuators that improves positional accuracy over the data track. The primary actuator provides coarse displacement using conventional electromagnetic actuator principles. The secondary actuator uses piezoelectric motion to fine tune the head positioning to a higher degree of accuracy.)

Other features of the two drives include:

  • IntelliSeek, a technology that calculates optimum seek speeds to lower power consumption, noise, and vibration.
  • StableTrac, a mechanism that makes sure the motor shaft is secured at both ends to reduce system-induced vibration and stabilize platters for accurate tracking during read and write operations.
  • NoTouch, a ramp-load technology that keeps the recording head from ever touching the disk media to significantly reduce the wear and tear of the recording head and media as well as provide better drive protection in transit.

In addition, the WD RE4 2TB enterprise drive features 1.2 million hours mean time between failures (MTBF) and other power-saving, speed-enhancing, and fail-proofing technologies.

The WD Caviar Black 2TB (model WD2001FASS) drive is available now for $299. The WD RE4 2TB (model WD2003FYYS) drive is currently being qualified by OEMs. Both drives are covered by a five-year, limited warranty.