Saturday, 23 November 2013

The Silicon Valley of 'Betas': Bitcoins and no lines at Bi-Rite

Amazon's second original show drops the audience in the middle of the country's tech hub. Here's what the makers got right (hoodies, they're everywhere) and wrong (physical Bitcoins are not).
Amazon's second original series, comedy "Betas," follows four guys in Silicon Valley trying to turn their start-up into the next Facebook.
(Credit: Amazon)
"Betas," Amazon's second original series, may stretch the truth when it comes to Silicon Valley, but it was dead serious about the wardrobe.
"The hoodie work on this show is spot on," said Joe Dinicol, who plays the leader of a band of tech-star wannabes in "Betas."
The show, which debuted Friday on Amazon Instant Video, turns to another industry town after Amazon's first series, "Alpha House," dove into Washington D.C. With "Betas," Amazon put the spotlight on a city closer to home. Seattle-based Amazon was always mindful of getting Silicon Valley and the tech world right, said Evan Endicott, one of the creators and writers of the show.
 Read: How Amazon Studios went from grassroots idealist to Hollywood threat
"I kept trying to get Jeff Bezos in an episode," he said. (Spoiler: He did not succeed.)
Unfortunately for Amazon, the characters aren't members of Prime, the two-day shipping service that includes premium streaming video -- which "Betas" watchers will need to see more than the the first three episodes. When one of the main characters, Hobbes, makes an impulse purchase online, he has to to wait four to five business days to receive his robotic vagina.
Josh Stoddard, who created "Betas" with Endicott, said replicating Silicon Valley and entertaining the masses was a tricky tightrope. "We wanted to get it right but we also wanted to entertain without alienating anyone," he said. "I like shows that drop you in the middle of a world you don't fully understand but have a certain amount of universals you can relate to."
On the whole, "Betas" recreates the aura of Silicon Valley, while taking liberties to crack a joke or smooth over a plot device that aren't likely to make anybody outside the Bay Area cringe. Hoodies are, indeed, ubiquitous, for example.
And lines like "I'm 35, that's like 95 in Valley years" harken back to comments made by a then-22-year-old Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg stressing the "importance of being young and technical...Young people are just smarter."
But some details may test insiders' suspension of disbelief:
  • You could get into a big venture capitalist's party by telling the man with the guest list that you're this guy:
  • Google co-founder and Chief Executive Larry Page
    (Credit: Google)
    Even if you look like this guy:
    Joe Dinicol plays Trey on Amazon's "Betas."
    (Credit: Screenshot by Joan E. Solsman/CNET)
  • One of your friends might make a bet with you in Bitcoins, and pull out a physical Bitcoin. (Physcial versions of the digital currency Bitcoin do exist. They sell for $9,999 on eBay.)
  • "I got a Bitcoin on Bollywood."
    (Credit: Screenshot by Joan E. Solsman/CNET)
  • Bi-Rite Creamery could conceivably not have a line stretched around the block.
  • A typical night at Bi-Rite Creamery.
To be fair to the "Betas" crew, the scene at Bi-rite at the start of the third episode visually alludes to a teeming mass trying to get into the ice-cream shop. A drug bust interrupts before we can see the full picture.
And some of the tech-land jokes land well: "Uber for weed: Doober." It's unfortunate that the characters didn't come up with a better name for their own start-up, a match-making social network that aims to connect people so perfectly they get off their devices and interact in real life. IRL would have been the perfect name. Instead, it's BRB.
Although, given the Valley's storied past of terrible start-up names, BRB may actually give the show another point of cred.
Ultimately, "Betas" success or failure won't hinge on Silicon Valley details. The setting is simply that, the stage that the creators chose to set loose their characters and tell jokes. The characters and the jokes are what will make the show succeed or fail.
I'd bet a Bitcoin on it, if I hadn't left them all at home.

Portable Bluetooth speaker stands tall

                                          $99.95 to $99.99


The good: The affordable JBL Flip is a compact portable Bluetooth speaker that is designed to be used horizontally or vertically. It sounds good and plays loudly for its size, has speakerphone capabilities, and ships with a neoprene carrying case.
The bad: The unit is powered by a generic, somewhat bulky AC adapter instead of USB, and the 5-hour battery life is only OK. It doesn't handle bass-heavy material incredibly well.
The bottom line: The JBL Flip's decent performance and attractive design make it a worthy Bluetooth speaker contender at $100.

Huge show of support for Ronaldo

Huge show of support for Ronaldo
MIGUEL SERRANO 11/23/2013
Real Madrid fans will prove their backing of Cristiano Ronaldo next Tuesday when no less than 40,000 masks with the face of the Portuguese star will be handed out in the Santiago Bernabéu as a symbol of the fans unconditional support for the player and his quest to win the Ballón d'Or.
The occasion will be the Champions League game against Galatasaray and the true faith shown by the fans will be organised by 'La Clásica' and 'Barajas' supporters clubs. The two clubs, led by their presidents Carlos Clara and Juanjo Blázquez, will take charge of setting up this curious but important campaign to tell the outside world that Cristiano should be named the best player in the world in 2013.
With qualification for the last sixteen already in the pocket, the match against Galatasaray will become a spectacular show of unity from the Bernabéu crowd behind the Portuguese player's bid to win the award that his performances merit. In addition, other local supporters clubs are to meet with the aim of creating a huge banner proclaiming the player's right to the prize that should cover the whole north side of the Santiago Bernabéu stadium during the match against the Turkish team.

Friday, 22 November 2013

Samsung owes Apple $290M more in damages, jury says

Jury rules that Samsung must pay additional damages for patent infringement. The amount is slightly less than what Apple had requested and brings the total award to about $930 million.
Apple vs. Samsung(Credit: CBS)
SAN JOSE, Calif. -- A jury on Thursday ruled that Samsung must pay Apple $290,456,793 in additional damages for patent infringement, slightly less than the $380 million Apple had requested.
That brings its total award to about $930 million. Samsung believed it owed Apple only $52 million more in damages.
"For Apple, this case has always been about more than patents and money," Apple said in a statement. "It has been about innovation and the hard work that goes into inventing products that people love. While it's impossible to put a price tag on those values, we are grateful to the jury for showing Samsung that copying has a cost."
Samsung, meanwhile, said it is "disappointed by today's decision, which is based in large part on a patent that the US Patent and Trademark Office has recently deemed invalid."
"While we move forward with our post-trial motions and appeals, we will continue to innovate with groundbreaking technologies and great products that are loved by our many customers all around the world," the Korean company said in a statement.
The jury of six women and two men reached the decision slightly before noon PT Thursday after deliberating since midday Tuesday. Wednesday, the jury requested more information about how to determine Apple's lost profits, but most other questions related to office supplies -- they needed calculators and highlighters -- and lunch -- they got pretty sick of the catered sourdough sandwiches.
Most jurors expressed some tech savviness, but one woman professed to having no cell phones in her home. Another, the forewoman, served as a combat medic before moving to the San Francisco Bay area and opening her own business. One man works as a therapist, while another is a pharmacist.
Jurors who spoke with the press following the verdict said they awarded Apple the entire amount it requested for royalties and its lost profits. They split the difference between what Samsung says its operating costs were and what Apple estimated them to be. That figure was key for determining how much profit Samsung made from its copycat devices.
However, the jurors also said Samsung didn't provide enough information to make its case.
"I wish Samsung could have come up with more evidence to support its case," forewoman Colleen Allen said outside the courthouse following the verdict. The 36-year-old from Aromas, Calif., works as a nurse in a community hospital. She formerly served as a combat medic in the US military.
A jury last year ruled that Samsung had infringed on five Apple patents related to the iPhone's design and functionality. A judge earlier this year vacated about more than $400 million of the original award and ordered a new jury to convene to recalculate the damages for patent infringement. Along with the newly awarded money, Samsung also is on the hook for about $600 million in damages from the first trial.
This time around, Apple asked for $380 million in additional damages. Samsung believed it owed Apple only $52 million. The two disagreed on the amount of royalties, lost Apple profits, and Samsung's profits. What the two agreed on was that Samsung sold 10.7 million infringing devices, generating $3.5 billion in revenue.
Duking it out in court
Samsung made two last attempts this week to halt the trial. Tuesday, it requested a mistrial following what it called racist comments made by an Apple attorney during closing arguments. Then Wednesday, it filed an emergency motion to stay after the US Patent and Trademark Office said an Apple patent important to the damages case might not be valid. Judge Lucy Koh denied the mistrial request but hasn't ruled on the motion to stay.
Apple argued against the motion to stay, saying Samsung's strategy to delay "has crossed the bounds of reason." The company said that Samsung misstated the status of the '915 patent reexamination, and granting the motion would nullify the entire retrial and cause a huge waste of resources. It also would cause "extreme prejudice" against Apple's case and require a retrial of the retrial.
A retrial to determine the additional damages Samsung owes Apple kicked off last Tuesday with jury selection, followed by opening arguments Wednesday. Witnesses who took the stand included Phil Schiller, Apple's head of marketing; and several expert witnesses who calculated the total damages owed.
For most, the damages retrial was a case of "Groundhog Day." No new revelations emerged during the testimony, and most witnesses also took the stand during the last trial more than a year ago. Apple's witnesses argued Samsung's copycat devices hurt the company, while Samsung argued that people seek out its devices more for their differences than similarities to Apple gadgets.
Not at issue in this case was whether Samsung infringed Apple's patents. The judge instructed the jury that a previous jury already decided Samsung infringed, and that they shouldn't revisit that issue. The sole consideration in the retrial was money -- just how much Samsung owes Apple for infringing its patents.
Apple arrived at the $380 million amount based on lost profits of about $114 million, Samsung's profits of about $231 million, and reasonable royalties of approximately $35 million. Apple estimates it would have sold 360,000 devices if Samsung hadn't released infringing rivals.
Samsung, meanwhile, said Apple shouldn't receive any money for lost profits, $52.7 million for Samsung's profits, and royalties of only $28,452 because the patents have limitations.
Apple and Samsung made their final pitches to the jury in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California here on Tuesday. Apple attorneys Bill Lee and Harold McElhinny argued that Samsung's patent infringement significantly harmed the company. Apple made a big investment and took huge risks when building the first iPhone, they said. As a result, Apple should receive higher damages, the attorneys argued.
"Apple can never get back to where it should have been in 2010," Lee said.
Judge Lucy Koh presides over Apple's patent infringement case against Samsung last year.
(Credit: Vicki Behringer)
Samsung attorney Bill Price, meanwhile, argued that Apple's patents are limited and that no one sought out Samsung's devices because of Apple's patented technologies.
"Apple has tried to mischaracterize these patents so they are the iPhone," Price said. But "these patents are very narrow.. Apple doesn't own beautiful and sexy."
When closing arguments had ended, Price asked Koh to declare a mistrial because of what it called "racist" comments made by an Apple attorney. Koh declined to declare a mistrial but did instruct the jury not to consider race, location, or other factors when deliberating.
The Apple lawyer, Harold McElhinny, had warned jurors during his closing statement that the entire San Francisco Bay Area and US economy would suffer if Samsung wasn't adequately fined for its infringement. He compared the situation to US TV makers who went out of business because they didn't protect their intellectual property from foreign companies. Now, the majority of TV manufacturing takes place abroad, he said. Samsung, which is based in South Korea, is currently the world's biggest TV maker by a wide margin.
History of Apple v Samsung
Apple originally filed suit against Samsung in April 2011, accusing the Korean company of copying the look and feel of its products. Samsung countersued two months later over patent infringement and said it was at work on touch-screen phones with giant rectangular screens and rounded corners well before Apple showed up. The initial trial, which stretched more than three weeks in August 2012, wrapped both of those cases in one, somehow squeezing together the patent infringement issues, alongside antitrust claims, and even trade dress issues.
In August of last year, a nine-person jury sided with Apple on a majority of its patent infringement claims against Samsung. At that time, the jury awarded Apple $1.05 billion in damages, much less than the $2.75 billion sought by the Cupertino, Calif., electronics giant. Samsung, which asked for $421 million in its countersuit, didn't get anything.
However, Koh in March ordered a new trial to recalculate some of the damages in the case,striking $450.5 million off the original judgmentagainst Samsung.
The products in question include the Galaxy Prevail, Gem, Indulge, Infuse 4G, Galaxy SII AT&T, Captivate, Continuum, Droid Charge, Epic 4G, Exhibit 4G, Galaxy Tab, Nexus S 4G, Replenish, and Transform. The Prevail in particular racked up $57.9 million of the damages tally, which Koh said was a failure on the jury's part, since the device was found to infringe only on utility patents, and not on design patents.
Even with a verdict now reached for damages, the Apple versus Samsung saga continues. There are likely to be appeals galore, and another patent trial starts in March. The upcoming trial in 2014 deals with a newer set of devices from both companies, as well as different patents. The case has since grown to include a multitude of products including Samsung's Galaxy S3and Note 2, along with a counterclaim that targeted Apple's iPhone 5.

EU criticizes Qatar over World Cup workers’ conditions

EU criticizes Qatar over World Cup workers’ conditions
The European Union parliament urged Qatar on Thursday to immediately stop any contractors from abusing the rights of migrant workers involved in building facilities for the 2022 World Cup.
"We cannot allow the 2022 World Cup to be built on slavery," said lawmaker Hannes Swoboda, head of the Socialist group in the parliament.
Thursday's resolution was the latest political pressure piled on Qatari authorities, and it came after FIFA President Sepp Blatter described the situation as "unacceptable."
The International Trade Union Confederation set off the growing furor two months ago when it claimed that — without changes in current labor conditions — at least 4,000 workers would die due to inhumane labor conditions.
In a 35-22 vote with 4 abstentions, the parliament insisted the alleged abuses should be fully investigated. It plans to send a fact-finding mission to Qatar next year.
FIFA immediately backed the EU call, saying it matched its own goal of ensuring that "the International Labour Organization's core labor standards are introduced quickly, consistently and on a sustained basis in Qatar."
Qatari organizers pledged earlier this week that companies building projects for the 2022 World Cup will be forced to guarantee welfare standards for workers.
Rights group Amnesty International has cataloged how some workers in the tiny Gulf nation are exposed to dangerous working conditions, poor living standards and the non-payment of wages.
Some EU legislators say FIFA should have taken action much earlier.
"FIFA must be reminded that it cannot continue to carry on with business-as-usual and brush the major human rights concerns in Qatar under the table," said Barbara Lochbihler, chairwoman of the European Parliament's committee on human rights
"FIFA must belatedly take concrete steps to ensure the preparations for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar do not lead to further human rights violations," she said.
Ten EU nations and three other European nations — Russia, Switzerland and Bosnia-Herzegovina — have qualified for the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, so the EU hopes to exert some leverage in Qatar

Does Facebook need a cemetery?

Your own Facebook memorial.
Does death disrupt your day?
By "your day," I of course mean your Facebook news feed, the place where all news happens and all feelings are expressed.
Some people feel that remembering those they loved doesn't quite harmonize with cat videos, political diatribes, and news of the latest boyfriend, job, or date.
So on Thursday they launched Sanctri, an app that gives bereaved Facebookers their own area for grief, sorrow, and remembrance.
Four million Facebook users will die this year. And Sanctri's co-founder, Jono Milner, believes: "When someone passes away, we don't know how to deal with it on Facebook."
Some might wonder why such tragedy needs to be dealt with on Facebook at all. But Milner told me: "Facebook is today's public forum. People used to pay tribute in the classifieds section of the newspapers -- now it's on Facebook. Many people want to come together to remember someone online -- especially given that we're such a mobile population these days."

Sprint dead last in Consumer Reports' phone service survey

Sprint innovation center
The Sprint innovation center in Burlingame, Calif.
(Credit: Lynn La/CNET)
Sprint is eating everyone's dust.
The nation's third-largest wireless carrier by subscriber base sank to the bottom of a survey conducted by Consumer Reports over cell phone service. Sprint scored "dismal marks" in value, voice, text messaging, and 4G reliability, according to Consumer Reports' survey released Thursday. Sprint ranked No. 2 behind Verizon Wireless a year ago.
It's the latest headache for a carrier that is going through a long and painful transformation of its network. Sprint is in the middle of upgrading its network to allow for better and faster service, but the transition has been rough on customers. As a result, many have left the carrier in the last few years.
"While the findings in the Consumer Reports' survey are disappointing, they're not necessarily surprising," said a Sprint representative. "We've asked customers during the past year to 'pardon our dust' as we build out and upgrade our network."
Sprint is hoping the rate of customer attrition will fade once the network improves. To drum up interest for its next-generation network, the company last month demonstrated Sprint Spark, its enhanced LTE network. The company said in areas where the coverage has improved, the customer satisfaction has moved up accordingly.
Verizon Wireless was once again the top-rated carrier, though Verizon recently conceded that it was facing pressures in big cities such as New York and San Francisco.
AT&T and T-Mobile scored "ho-hum" results, Consumer Reports said, but AT&T was the lone carrier to get a top rating for 4G reliability.
AT&T has been making a lot of noise about offering both the fastest and most reliable network in the nation, while T-Mobile has quickly built out its 4G LTE network to pair with its HSPA+ network.
As with previous years, smaller carriers ranked higher, with niche provider Consumer Cellular scoring best in cell phone satisfaction despite running on the same network as AT&T.
The survey also found that many customers are overpaying for their data, with 38 percent of users surveyed using half or less than half of their monthly allotment. While AT&T and Verizon have capped their data plans, Sprint and T-Mobile still offer unlimited data plans.