Wednesday, October 25, 2006
Vista and two new browsers
In the last week or so – there has been a lot of bit and bytes about
There has been some controversy though about the ability of Vista to check on its own authenticity – Yup,
It works like this – you buy the product, and then you have to activate the system using a product key within 30 days. So if you pay Microsoft a lot of money, jump through all the hoops - set by Microsoft - hope that the software giant has recognized its own product key - then you will be able to use what you’ve paid for.
If you don’t follow Microsoft instructions properly, prepare for reduced functionality mode:
No start menu, no desktop icons and the desktop background is changed to black. I believe that after a while more things start to go wrong until your machine is, for all practical purposes, useless.
While few people would quibble with the right of a software producer to protect its intellectual property – the whole process presupposes that consumers are thieves, and that you have to prove your innocence by submitting a product key to
(T) Let’s leave
FireFox 2 – was only officially launched this week and already it is shaking up the virtual firmament. Building on from the highly successful one point five version – Firefox two has improved on its tabbed browsing so that now when you open a new link, the default setting takes it to a new tab rather than a new window.
This is great because tabs are much easier to work with than windows, as anyone who has worked with Firefox will tell you. One new feature that I still need to factor in is the little cross on the top of each tab that allows you to close tabs individually. On the old system – you had to move your cursor over to the right hand side of the screen to close tabs one at a time.
It still is a little awkward, but I think it will be very practical when I am used to it.
The new Firefox also has a spell checker that could save you some embarrassment if you are doing your web mail or working the chatrooms. It also allows you to download spell checkers in many different languages – all free of charge.
The Firefox release came only days after Microsoft launched IE7 its first new browser in many years.
It took the giant some time to wake up to the Firefox threat, but since Microsoft enjoyed a 96% market share after obliterating Netscape way back in 2002, a little complacency is to be expected.
Internet Explorer is still dominant with around 85% of the world browser market, and it latest release with tabs certainly won’t do it any harm. But in the most recent version of browser wars, the initiative is now firmly with Firefox.
With that it’s time to end today’s’ version of Cybersurf – please join me again next Wednesday for more on the best of the web.
Wednesday, October 11, 2006
Google buys YouTube
How do you earn one point six five billion dollars in twenty one months? Now that I have your attention, let me welcome you to Cybersurf, your weekly update on what is happening on the internet.
I am your Cybershost, Steven Lang, this week telling you about two guys who probably made the quickest first billion in history.
In February last year, the two guys, both still in their twenties, Chad Hurley and Steven Chen took a number of videos at a dinner party and thought it would be nice to share the videos with their friends. But there was a problem; there was no easy way of sharing the videos.
Hurley and Chen drew up a plan; spoke to Sequoia investments for start up capital and soon YouTube dot com was born – It was not the first site to offer video sharing, in fact when it came on stream, Yahoo was the eight hundred pound gorilla in video sharing.
A year ago – Yahoo had 85 percent of the market – it has now dropped to less than six percent while YouTube is the market leader with forty six percent.
Google made a concerted effort to get a grip on the market, and did manage to grab a solid eleven percent, but they soon realized that YouTube was better so they bought it – for one point six five billion dollars.
Almost every big media and technology company has courted YouTube as they sought to tap into a new generation of consumers who are viewing 100 million short videos on the site every day.
It was exactly two months ago that YouTube was first mentioned on Cybersurf – as one of Time Magazine’s Top fifty coolest sites.
This week’s announcement sounds very much like the heady days of the dot com boom, when investment companies were forcing millions of dollars into the sweaty hands of Silicon Valley Geeks.
Does this mean Web two point zero is coming of age? The answer is probably yes! But not for us. The high price of broadband access is making sure that the majority of South Africans will not be able to share in the success of Web two point zero.
On a more constructive note… the World Food Program or WFP has released a free video game in seven languages – French, Hungarian, Chinese, Italian, Japanese, Polish and of course English. The game, which is targeted at children aged eight to thirteen, is available as a free download at www.food-force.com let’s hear that one time food hyphen force dot com.
Food force is a different type of video game – it is primarily educational, teaching children about the problem of hunger and the importance of humanitarian aid work.
The games are being released in the lead up to World Food Day next Monday, and so far almost five million downloads have made Food Force a big success story.
And so we come to the end of this week’s Cybersurf. I will put this script on the Cybersurf Blog which you can find at Cybersurf dot blogspot dot com – just in case you missed any of the addresses.
Please join me again next Wednesday for more on the best of the web.