Archive for June, 2010

PlanetEye to blend travel photos, trip planning

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

Related stories:
TravelMuse tells you where to go (on vacation)
Offbeat Guides: Build your own travel books
TripIt aggregates your travel info

Coming up soon will be integration with more data sources, such as OpenTable, StubHub, WaySpa, and Wine Spectator. And the Travel Packs may get smarter, and start to suggest items to you based on what you have already added to them and what you say about yourself in your profile. I’d wait until these new features are added, in mid-July, to rely on this product for planning trips.

See also: Dopplr, TripAdvisor, Tripbase, TravelMuse.

PlanetEye is good for scouting photos of a vacation destination, but less good at finding restaurants and attractions.

Update: After this story went live, PlanetEye spokespeople contacted me to say that the version of the site reviewed here is not the site they’ll be pushing out to the public. That site, scheduled to go live on July 10, will have the new, smarter Travel Pack feature that was pitched to me in a meeting. As I say at the end of the review, I recommend you hold off on trying the site until that new version is online.

The site uses Microsoft Maps, and does a nice job of displaying trip photos from other users. But I found it frustrating to use the map to look up attractions and restaurants. Each item (or collection of closely grouped items) on the map is represented by a dot, but there’s no way to know what the dots stand for without clicking on them, and even when you do, the information you want displays in a navigation bar, not on the map as you’d expect. It’s hard to correlate the navigation bar text with the map. This design sucks the fun out of exploring a destination, and, to me, defeats a primary purpose of the site.

With the cost of travel and fuel continuing to rise, I don’t understand why anyone would launch or even pitch a travel site right now, unless it was designed to help people make the most of in-town bus vacations (note to self…). But that opinion hasn’t slowed the steady stream of pitches I’ve been hearing for vacation-planning sites. The latest: PlanetEye, a service relying on some technology spun out of Microsoft.

If you want a more typical travel guide experience, though, PlanetEye does offer that. There are City Guides for popular destinations, with the usual lists of most popular tourist attractions. Many major cities also have Local Expert pages, which feature more personal guides. Items you find in either of these guides can be added to your Travel Packs.

The site has useful, but typical, city guides.

PlanetEye is a great site for viewing travel photos of the location you’re thinking of going to. It is also supposed to help you find the cool things to do once you’ve got a location for your trip narrowed down. Then you can save your finds into a “Travel Pack” that you can easily retrieve when it’s ready to embark on your voyage. You can also share your plans with the other people on your trip, so they can contribute to building your hit-list of things to do as well.

Intel tempts with preproduction solid-state drives

Monday, June 28th, 2010

David Perlmutter, executive vice president/general manager of the mobility group, commented at IDF Shanghai on the input/output, or I/O, issues related to hard drives.

Meanwhile, an Intel fellow describes his “addiction” to solid-state drives in a blog posted Wednesday.

Intel is expected to make an announcement about SSDs in the second quarter.

“CPUs, graphics, and media chips have improved significantly year after year, but I/O remained very limited in performance,” Perlmutter, said. I/O refers to the data transfer speed of the hard drive. Even with the fastest processor in the world, he said, an I/O bottleneck can put a crimp on performance.

Intel solid-state drives

(Note: I can second Grimsrud’s statements. I own a SSD MacBook Air. Once you use an SSD and realize that there is a world without hard drive bottlenecks, a hard-drive-based system seems very old.)

“Then the day came that my SSD was retrieved for data mining…and my original hard-disk was put back into my laptop. There’s no way to feel the pain quite as intensely as having to go back.”

(Credit:
Intel)

Knut Grimsrud, an Intel fellow who leads an R&D group responsible for developing new mainstream storage innovations, described in a blog the difference between using a hard drive and a solid-state drive.

“I played the part of Guinea Pig and had one of our pre-production solid-state drives installed in my IT laptop…I was unprepared for the powerful instant high it gave my system,” he said in his blog. There was a “dramatic difference in how my system responded,” he noted.

An Intel executive demonstrated upcoming solid-state drives at this week’s Intel Developer Forum in Shanghai, noting that the chipmaker is on track to deliver the drives later this year.

Features of upcoming Intel solid-state drives

Click here for more stories on IDF Shanghai.

Intel currently offers small-capacity chip-level (what are called Thin Small Outline Packages or TSOPs) technology that provides end-product sizes ranging up to 16GB. But this modest line of products will get a big boost in the second quarter when Intel offers 1.8- and 2.5-inch SSDs ranging from 80GB to 160GB in capacity. Intel’s SSDs will compete with Samsung, for example, which is slated to bring out a 128GB SSD in the third quarter.

(Credit:
Intel) SSDs, if you don’t already know, are based on flash memory chip technology and have no moving parts. Hard-disk drives, in contrast, use read-write heads that hover over spinning platters to access and record data. With no moving parts, SSDs avoid both the risk of mechanical failure and the mechanical delays of hard drives. Therefore, SSDs are generally faster and more reliable. The catch is the cost: SSDs are currently much more expensive than hard drives.

Young entrepreneurs bond on the beach

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

What can also take awhile, for that matter, is convincing the notoriously look-at-me young digerati to turn everything off. But for the Summit Series, they complied without protest. Given the dire financial climate, they knew that the vicious gossip-blog culture could make this all look really bad.

PUERTO MORELOS, Mexico–They kept their Twitter feeds quiet and their
iPhone cameras dormant. Most of them didn’t want their names to be used.

The coastal resort that hosted the Summit Series event last weekend.

Getting down to business
But business was inescapable, and that was the point. During the day, many of the Summit Series’ pale 20-something men shuffled about in swim trunks by the pool, a BlackBerry in one hand and a pina colada in the other, and a copy of the latest bestselling business-productivity book under their arms–like Malcolm Gladwell’s The Outliers, a just-released title about what makes some people wildly successful while others pass by unnoticed. The more outgoing ones hopped from beach chair to beach chair, making introductions. A few of the dreamier, ideas-oriented types scribbled away in Moleskine or Muji notebooks as they looked out over the beach. One young publishing entrepreneur shared his favorite beach drink recipe with some new friends: blended ice, bananas, and rum. Then they talked ad strategies.

“The way young people do business today is much more relationship-driven than it used to be.” –Elliot Bisnow, Summit Series organizer

The sponsorships were important, too, Bisnow added. They’d turned down plenty of requests, he said, before settling on office giant Staples, real estate firm Jones Lang LaSalle, the wealth management division of Goldman Sachs, and investment firm Charles River Ventures. At the previous Summit Series event in Park City, Bisnow told me, 6 of the 19 attendees had ended up doing business with sponsor Jones Lang LaSalle.

“This is, in my opinion, one of the best sponsorships in the world,” he added, and said that the dates for the next Summit Series event were already on the calendar. They’d be back in Park City, with 250 attendees and a flagship sponsorship by men’s magazine GQ. Bisnow, whose broad-shouldered build and neatly trimmed haircut give off a vibe of bold, frat-president confidence, expressed no concern about financial issues getting in the way.

There was more than a little bit of paranoia in the air as the guests arrived at last weekend’s Summit Series event, formally the Young World Leaders Summit–not the most modest of names. It was a gathering of about five dozen under-35 entrepreneurs and executives at a beachfront luxury resort outside the glitzy vacation city of Cancun. Among those present at the retreat, which was fully paid for by sponsors, were a handful of executives from Facebook and other Silicon Valley start-ups, media and publishing entrepreneurs, young venture capitalists, edgy youth marketers, and jet-setting global issues advocates. As for an itinerary, there were snorkeling lessons, ample pool- and beachside chill time, and plenty of parties.

“Yeah,” Bisnow admitted, nodding and taking a bite of food. “That might be cool next time.”

“The way young people do business today is much more relationship-driven than it used to be,” said Bisnow, an energetic 23-year-old who was a nationally ranked tennis player before dropping out of college to start his company, a D.C.-area newsletter start-up called Bisnow on Business. “I think it’s so valuable to be able to create friendships in special places, not in a stodgy boardroom.” It’s not quite a novelty: that’s what golf courses, Ivy League alumni clubs, and Elks lodges have done for years.

“Dozens of deals have been done this weekend. People have sold companies,” Bisnow boasted, smiling broadly. He declined to say which ones, but I could confirm at least one small deal: that one of the new-media CEOs in attendance had offered ad inventory to another guest’s nonprofit organization.

Beyond that it was mostly an unstructured gathering–and considering many of the entrepreneurs had never gone to college, this was probably the closest they’d come to Spring Break in Cancun. That said, the Summit Series’ five-to-one male-to-female ratio probably put the kibosh on most legitimate debauchery–other guests at the quiet resort must have thought it was some kind of fraternity reunion or bachelor party.

There were a few organized activities. On one day, the young creators of socially conscious shoe brand Toms, which gives away one pair of shoes to a child in a developing country for each pair it sells, took Summit Series attendees on a road trip to donate shoes in a nearby village. Another featured a cave-diving outing. There was also a presentation from business guru and Twitter heavy-hitter Timothy Ferriss, author of The 4-Hour Work Week–”Some people really get misled by the title,” Ferriss told me as we all walked to a nightclub in nearby Playa del Carmen one night.

But still, no amount of money talk or margaritas could drown the presence of the ongoing economic crisis. One of the CEOs at the Summit Series, who runs a public company, was worried about the perception that he was at a beachfront retreat while his company’s stock–like so many others’–had lost 30 percent of its value. Another left abruptly on day two of the four-day retreat, reportedly due to a “business emergency” involving funding that was in danger of falling through. And by Saturday afternoon, two or three of the investor-dependent dot-com founders, one of whom complained that the event had been too “cliquey,” were vocally itching to get back to their fledgling companies.

The other suggestion: More women, please.

“We want to create the Allen & Co. retreat for young people,” Summit Series organizer Elliot Bisnow said in an interview overlooking the Caribbean Sea, referring to the annual gathering of tech and media moguls in Sun Valley, Idaho. Bisnow had previously put together the inaugural Summit Series event in Park City, Utah, last spring, with 19 young entrepreneurs meeting for a ski weekend. He said it was so successful that he and fellow organizers Ryan Begelman and Ben Hindman decided to expand it for the Mexico edition. “It took us awhile to figure out the messaging, but we want to create an environment for the top young people in the world to get together in a fun place and talk ideas, business, challenges.”

(Credit:
Caroline McCarthy/CNET News)

And indeed, a brief flurry of nerves surfaced during Thursday night’s dinner reception when one prank-minded marketer in attendance decided to float a rumor that a poolside photograph from the Summit Series had surfaced on gossip blog Gawker. Due to the international locale, most people there had spotty or extremely expensive mobile data access, and nobody wanted to admit to being paranoid enough to run back to his room and check the Web. Luckily, before too long, the prankster had admitted to his joke, and after that, the only thing close to mass hysteria arose when some people realized they couldn’t always access Wi-Fi from their rooms.

Some said they came for the networking, and the promise of meeting interesting new people with whom they might not otherwise cross paths–or even cut a deal or two. Others said they honestly just needed a few days to get away from the business world and get a much-needed refresher during difficult times. The offer of four expense-free, breezy days in coastal Mexico was too good to pass up. (Disclosure: I paid for my accommodations.)

Over breakfast on Sunday, shortly before vans started to arrive to take the Summit Series-goers to the Cancun airport for their flights back to New York, D.C., San Francisco, and elsewhere, co-organizer Hindman, who founded an offbeat walking-tour company, said to Bisnow that some get-to-know-you activities would’ve been good. The Valley guys didn’t spend enough time meeting the eco-entrepreneurs, for example.

But why did they risk it in the first place? After the American International Group spa resort scandal and, closer to home, last month’s blogospheric revulsion at a YouTube video of young dot-commers dancing poolside at a mansion in Cyprus as the markets crashed, scrutiny of executive excess is at an all-time high. And the young folks at the Summit Series event aren’t stupid: they knew what investors, partners, and shareholders would think if they should, gasp, be outed having a good time.

I wondered if maybe some of them had wanted more structure, a more concrete networking plan that would make them less nervous about skipping town for a few days. “I don’t like structure,” Bisnow told me with a grin. “I’m young and eccentric and I want to hang out.”

So, in order to maintain a level of image control and to ensure that attendees were comfortable talking openly, the few reporters present were asked beforehand to agree to keep most of the goings-on off the record. Photographs were not permitted during the tequila-soaked evening hours.

A second presentation came from Scott Harrison, founder of Charity Water, a nonprofit bottled water company that donates all proceeds to the construction of clean water facilities in developing countries and uses Google Earth to prove it. Harrison’s graphic images and his tale of transformation from hard-partying club promoter to impassioned philanthropist left some of the younger Summit Series guests–particularly the ones still cushioned by Valley venture cash and a Web 2.0 bubble that has yet to fully pop–a bit shell-shocked. After the talk, they left the room and returned to the pool, looking sheepish but eager to order another round of margaritas.

Sniffing keystrokes via laser and keyboard power

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

VANCOUVER, B.C.–Presenters at the CanSecWest security conference detailed on Thursday how they can sniff data by analyzing keystroke vibrations using a laser trained on a shiny laptop or through electrical signals coming from a PC connected to a PS/2 keyboard and plugged into a socket.

In the second attack method, the researchers were able to spy on the keystrokes of a computer which was using a PS/2 keyboard through a ground line from a power plug in an outlet 50 feet away.

In addition to being used to sniff a neighbor’s keystrokes in a nearby room, the attack could be used to sniff data from ATM machines that use PS/2 or similar keypads, Barsani said. The attack does not work against laptops or USB keyboards, he said.

The new attacks are easier and can be accomplished at lower cost, the researchers said.

(Credit:
Inverse Path)

Using equipment costing about $80, researchers from Inverse Path were able to point a laser on the reflective surface of a laptop between 50 feet and 100 feet away and determine what letters were typed.

“Information leaks to the electric grid,” said Barisani. “It can be detected on the power plug, including nearby ones sharing the same electric line” as the victim’s computer.

The researchers used a digital oscilloscope and analog-digital converter, as well as filtering technology to isolate the victim’s keystroke pulses from other noise on the power line.

And of course there is the big daddy of these types of remote sniffing attacks, TEMPEST, which allows someone with a lot of expensive equipment to sniff the electromagnetic radiation emanating from a video display.

Their initial test, which took about five days to prepare and perform, enabled them to record individual keystrokes but not continuous data such as words and sentences, though they expect to be able to do that within a few months, Barisani said.

The attacks are similar to other recent research that involves sniffing keystrokes through a wireless antenna.

The only real way to mitigate against this type of spying would be to change your typing position and mistype words, Barisani said.

Line-of-sight on the laptop is needed, but it works through a glass window, they said. Using an infrared laser would prevent a victim from knowing they were being spied on.

Chief Security Engineer Andrea Barisani and hardware hacker Daniele Bianco used a handmade laser microphone device and a photo diode to measure the vibrations, software for analyzing the spectrograms of frequencies from different keystrokes, as well as technology to apply the data to a dictionary to try to guess the words. They used a technique called dynamic time warping that’s typically used for speech recognition applications, to measure the similarity of signals.

This screenshot shows varying frequencies of keystrokes, with the arrow pointing to what a stroke on the space bar looks like on a spectrogram.

TinyURL finally adds vanity URLs

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

Not content to just sit around recovering from Independence Day shenanigans this past weekend, TinyURL released a much-needed feature to its URL-shortening service that others have had for ages: vanity URLs. This means the nonsensical shortened URLs it spits out from your 1,000 character-plus links can now be changed to whatever name you want after the forward slash–that is as long as it hasn’t been taken by someone else.

With the popularity of TinyURL and it’s automatic integration with services like Twitter, most of the good ones have already been snatched up, so if you’re looking to get a vanity mini URL from another similar service, your best bet is to go with one of the little guys. My CNET colleague Nicole Lee did a great roundup on some competitors back in March. Of the bunch, my favorite MooURL has always seemed to have the most open of any, but now that I’ve told you, the secret is out.

Now you can make TinyURL vanity URLs too.

Palin ordered to save e-mails

Friday, June 4th, 2010

The e-mails must be preserved until a lawsuit requesting that the e-mails be made public is resolved, Anchorage Superior Court Judge Craig Stowers said. The judge also said e-mails from private accounts belonging to Palin’s staff must be preserved.

Palin, the Republican vice presidential nominee, is no longer using private e-mail accounts for state business, Assistant Attorney General Mike Mitchell said.

(Credit:
Alaska governor's office)

Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin must save any e-mails she sent from private accounts regarding state business, an Anchorage judge ordered Friday.

Palin and her staff used about a dozen private e-mail accounts for state business, and a Yahoo account belonging to Palin was hacked earlier this year.

Sarah Palin

State officials should work with Yahoo and other e-mail service providers to preserve the e-mails, including those from accounts that have already been deleted, the judge ordered.