June 30, 2007

Touch Screen in a Table Is the Latest Wrinkle in Computers

Having just tried its hand at developing a digital music player, Microsoft is working on something new: digital furniture.

The company plans to unveil a computing device called Microsoft Surface, featuring a 30-inch screen embedded in an acrylic tabletop. The device’s electronic guts are hidden in the low-slung table’s thick pedestal.

At first glance, Surface is reminiscent of an old-fashioned arcade game table around which patrons played Pac-Man. But there is no joystick here, and no mouse or keyboard either. The device is controlled by touching the tabletop display.

Microsoft says this touch screen will allow people to “interact with digital content the same way they have interacted with everyday items such as photos, paintbrushes and music their entire life: with hands, with gestures and by putting real-world objects on the surface.”

For example, when a digital camera with Wi-Fi capabilities is placed on the display, the table recognizes the camera and, at a touch of the screen, downloads its photos and video clips. The digital pictures can be sorted and sized by “handling” them as if they were physical prints.

The device uses cameras under the display to detect touches, and unlike traditional touch screens it can handle multiple touches at the same time, said Jeff Gattis, the director of product management for Surface.

Similarly, Surface can read bar codes and identification tags embedded in objects like hotel chain membership cards.

Microsoft hopes this technology will someday be common in homes, but its first uses will be commercial. By the end of this year, Surface will appear in hotels, restaurants, retail stores and public entertainment sites, where it will serve as an information kiosk and handle things like basic customer service. Steven A. Ballmer, Microsoft’s chief executive, was scheduled to unveil the product today at The Wall Street Journal’s “D: All Things Digital” conference in Carlsbad, Calif.

“With Surface, we are creating more intuitive ways for people to interact with technology,” Mr. Ballmer said in a statement. “We see this as a multibillion-dollar category, and we envision a time when surface computing technologies will be pervasive, from tabletops and counters to the hallway mirror.”

June 21, 2007

Yahoo ! to expand mobile Internet

Yahoo Inc. said that it would introduce later this week a faster, enhanced version of its Internet services for U.S. mobile phone users, while expanding into key markets in Asia, Canada and Europe.
"We believe more people are going to access the Internet on their mobile devices in 10 years time than on the PC, so we have really been concentrating on this area," said Geraldine Wilson, the European head of Yahoo's Connected Life unit.
Since January, a test version of Yahoo Go 2.0 has been free to download in the United States. It will now be offered in local languages in 13 countries, including France, Germany, Spain, India, Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore.
Yahoo Go 2.0 will be available on "tens of millions of phones" both in Europe and Asia by the end of this year, said Marco Boerries, senior vice president of the company's mobile business, officially known as Yahoo Connected Life.
At a global telecommunications industry conference in Singapore on Wednesday, Yahoo will announce deals with operators in six Asian countries who have agreed to feature Yahoo mobile search, dubbed OneSearch, on mobile phones. These deals cover nearly 100 million subscribers, Boerries said.
"In Europe and Asia we are getting very, very nice traction through carrier relationships," he said. Yahoo is talking to U.S. operators but has yet to reach deals to put Go on phones.
The enhanced version lets users download Yahoo Mail, organize e-mail into folders or read file attachments. Users can search the Web on their phones for locally relevant answers or zoom in on maps with current local U.S. traffic conditions. They can check numbers in their Yahoo Address Book.
Company officials said the service would produce better search results, such as giving details of the nearest cinema, movie times and the latest reviews when a film is searched.

June 2, 2007

YouTube to Offer EMI Music Clips

YouTube, the Google video-sharing site, has agreed to a deal with the EMI Group to give YouTube users broad access to music videos by EMI artists. The companies said Thursday that YouTube users would be allowed not only to watch and play authorized videos and recordings from EMI artists like Coldplay, Norah Jones and David Bowie, but also to incorporate elements of the videos in their own “user-generated content.” No financial terms were disclosed. “With this deal, all four of the world’s major music companies are now official YouTube partners,” said Chad Hurley, chief executive and a founder of YouTube. Last year, the Warner Music Group, the Universal Music Group and Sony BMG Entertainment each signed content deals with YouTube. Google’s shares fell 0.1 percent, to $497.91, in regular trading. EMI shares were little changed, down 0.09 percent, to 275 pence.