Apple to sell unlocked iPhone 4 in Canada


Unlocked? We want one too!
(Credit: James Martin/CNET)


All right, this really isn't fair. Though you've never liked it, iPhone users in the United States have accepted that your counterparts in other countries can use Apple's handset on multiple carriers and (better yet) get an unlocked device. When those countries are far away--say across an ocean--it's not so bad, but when you have to see it right next door then it's really tough to watch.
I speak, of course, of our Canadian friends who will join customers in the United Kingdom in having the opportunity to buy the iPhone 4 completely unlocked and contract-free. That's right, they'll be able to use it with any GSM carrier, whether they're north of the border or traveling abroad. Sure, there's the matter of using a micro-SIM card, but you can get creative with scissors and use a normal SIM.
Pricing for an unlocked iPhone 4 isn't avaialble just yet, but you can get an unlocked 8GB iPhone 3GS for $549 Canadian dollars (around $534). True, you can buy an iPhone without a contract in the United States, but that handset will come securely locked to AT&T.

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Kayak kills office productivity with travel search map


(Credit: Kayak)
Travel search site Kayak launched a new feature earlier this week called Kayak Explore, a visual search engine that starts with the basic question of, "I have X amount of money to spend. Where can I go?"
The map interface of Explore lets you select a price range, a time of year to travel (this year or next), whether you're looking for attractions like beaches or casinos, and whether you have a maximum flight time in mind. Then it'll display the lowest fare available for a pretty extensive range of destinations--but mostly just to major global cities served by airlines with U.S. connections that are accessible by major travel booking sites. Only nine cities in all of Africa are displayed, for example.
I'm not sure to what extent this will actually be used to make real travel plans, but at the very least it's probably a very good marketing tool for Kayak--especially on a Friday afternoon in the summer, this is exactly the sort of thing that cubicle dwellers dreaming of poolside margaritas will want to mess around with. Kayak has time and again proved savvy with gimmicks and oddball features, like a hidden search for the fictional flight made famous by TV series "Lost" right around the show's finale.
Kayak's big rival in travel search is Microsoft's Bing Travel, which was retooled from Farecast, an airfare prediction tool that Microsoft acquired in 2008. Kayak has reportedly taken issue with Bing Travel's design, arguing that it's too similar to its own.

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Better GPS graphs, browser in new Google Earth


Google Earth
Google Earth users can now see the elevation and speed they covered during a recent trip.
(Credit: Google)
Google made a few tweaks to Google Earth on Monday, adding new GPS details and a way for the Web-oriented company to feel better about developing for the desktop.
Google Earth 5.2 is ready for the public, Google announced Monday. It's not a major release like the Google Earth 5.0 release from last year, but the free download for WindowsMac, and Linux has a few interesting new features for the geographically obsessed.
Travelers were able to connect their GPS devices to Google Earth to view trip data with the 5.0 release, but they can now see altitude changes and the average speed of their trip in graphs accompanying the route. And if you've forgotten the experience already, you can generate a video of the route.
Perhaps more interesting is the addition of an embedded browser into the application. Switching between Google Earth and your regular browser isn't that difficult, but Google Earth users won't even have to leave the application now when clicking on a link within Google Earth.
Google's reason for being these days--other than Internet search--is to encourage the development of Web-based software and to lead by example. Some things you still can't quite do in the browser, hence sophisticated applications like Google Earth. But Google is likely to move more and more of the Google Earth features into the browser-based Google Maps application, as it started doing in April by adding a 3D earth view into Google Maps.

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Twitter whacked by hours-long problems



An example of a duplicate-tweet problem appearing on Twitter's Web site.
An example of a duplicate-tweet problem appearing on Twitter's Web site.



Twitter warned users that a failed upgrade Monday night has left the site unusable for many.
The problem began past 8 p.m. PDT, the company said, and might last for hours. "Our infrastructure and operations engineers are currently working to resolve this. The site could be down until approximately 3 a.m. PDT," company spokeswoman Carolyn Penner said.
The Twitter status page blamed the problem on "the failed enhancement of a new approach to timeline caching."
Signs of problems included the infamous "failwhale" image indicating problems, another image signifying "Something is technically wrong," missing or late tweets, duplicate tweets, and a Web page that didn't work at times.
Twitter has generally fared better than its early days of popularity, when "failwhale" sightings were common. Although availability of the site and service have improved, though, the repercussions for outages today are higher: Twitter is more seriously used by companies for customer communications and marketing, more ordinary people use it in their own lives, and competitors such as Facebook and Google Buzz are more serious.


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Firefox 4 upgrade ideas start becoming reality




Mozilla released a new Firefox 4 prototype late Monday that builds in support forGoogle's WebM video technology and several other changes planned for the open-source Web browser's next major version.
With WebM, Google hopes to liberate Web video from patent-related royalty constraints of today's prevailing video compression technology, H.264. Mozilla and Google are working to make WebM's VP8 codec a standard part of the new specification for built-in video being added to the HTML5 Web page design technology.
But the situation is complicated: Apple prefers the H.264 codec and has built that codec into its Safari browser, and Microsoft is doing so with IE9, its upgrade to Internet Explorer now under development. Google's Chrome is supporting both H.264 and WebM, whose video codec is called VP8.
Lending a bit of weight to the Mozilla and Google camp is Opera Software, the fifth-ranked browser in terms of share of usage. On Monday, it released an Opera developer version that adds WebM support among various other HTML5 additions.
The browser market is feistier than it's been in more than a decade. Back in the 1990s, the competition came down to Netscape vs. Microsoft. This time around, Netscape's Navigator has morphed into Mozilla's Firefox, Apple has launched five versions of Safari, Opera has kept the pressure on the bigger players, Google has entered the market with Chrome, and, most recently, Microsoft has fired up IE development after a long period of quasi-dormancy.

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Speed, HTML5 gains in new Opera beta



Opera 10.60 beta's new menu button on top, and the stable version 10.53 below.
(Credit: Screenshot by Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)


The latest browser betas from Opera have been released, emphasizing speed improvements and better HTML5 compliance. Opera 10.60 for WindowsMac, and Linux gives fans of the alterna-browser a bucketload of HTML5-related improvements, along with the claim that the company has made the browser 50 percent faster than the previous version.
According to an Opera representative, Opera 10.60 beta 1 should be 50 percent faster than the current stable Opera, version 10.53, when tested on the Peacekeeper test. CNET tests revealed a strong improvement, but not that strong. An average of three cold runs for Opera 10.53 scored 5104, while Opera 10.60 beta 1 scored 6792.67. (On Peacekeeper, higher is better.) That's a 33 percent increase, which is still impressive.
On the SunSpider JavaScript test, which Opera did not test against, CNET tests showed version 10.53 completing three cold runs in an average of 398.13 milliseconds. Version 10.60 beta 1 finished in 375.13 ms, or 5.6 percent faster.
The beta also adds support for many nascent HTML5 features. These include support for the next-generation video and audio codec WebM, geolocation compatibility, Web Workers and App Cache.
Slight interface tweaks were also made in this beta. Search suggestions for several sites that have partnerships with Opera have been added, such as Wikipedia. Tabs get custom thumbnails, too. The full changelog for Opera 10.60 can be read here.

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Twitter at a crossroads once again



Twitter acknowledged Tuesday that "from a site stability and service outage perspective, it's been Twitter's worst month since last October." It's a big embarrassment for a company that, over the past year or two, has managed to clean up its reputation for technical instability and that this spring one-upped critics by unveiling a business model that looks like it might actually work.
"Last Friday, we detailed on our engineering blog that this is going to be a rocky few weeks. We're working through tweaks to our system in order to provide greater stability at a time when we're facing record traffic," the post by Twitter representative Sean Garrett read. "As we go through this process, we have uncovered unexpected deeper issues and have even caused inadvertent downtime as a result of our attempts to make changes."
These "deeper issues" tap into something that's, well, even deeper than that. Twitter may soon be faced with a choice: become a long-lasting, crucial part of the Internet's fiber, or continue down a path toward corporate profitability that could seal its fate as more lucrative but less legendary.
In his blog post, Garrett insisted to concerned Twitter users that ultimately, these changes will make the service more stable. For its 190 million users, that's a small reassurance. Many of them weren't yet using the service in its much less reliable days and hence won't be quite as forgiving about how far it's come. But this is the smallest part of the issue at hand: Twitter probably won't fall victim to a Friendster-style exodus of fed-up members leaving for greener pastures. It's bigger and has achieved cultural resonance far more significant than Friendster had when it "lost out" to the likes of MySpace and Facebook. Meanwhile, Facebook's attempts to make members' "status messages" more public and more searchable has not curbed Twitter's growth.
The real problem--why Twitter's ability to stay afloat is still under question--is highlighted by its occurrence as two massive global news stories have taken root--the growing disaster following the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico, and on a less dire note, the quadrennial FIFA World Cup soccer tournament. When there are big headlines of international interest, it's understandable that more news junkies would gravitate toward Twitter more frequently, and more media outlets would want to harness it as an easy way to tap into conversational zeitgeist.
Short-form, rapid-fire digital communication, particularly in a form easily translated to rudimentary mobile devices, is here to stay, and Twitter will invariably be remembered as the company that birthed this phenomenon. But we've seen before that the company has been thrown into situations for which it was neither technologically nor logistically prepared. Last summer, when Twitter was such a key medium during the shaky aftermath of the Iranian presidential elections that the U.S. Department of State requested that the company postpone server maintenance, it became clear that Twitter was going to have to forsake some of its laid-back attitude and get into business mode.
Maybe I'm reading into the situation too much, but I think Twitter's at a crucial point once again. Instead of being on the cusp of deciding whether it wanted to be a quirky San Francisco social-media experiment or a global communications tool, right now Twitter seems to be at a point where its management team needs to decide whether it's a communications tool, or the communications tool. This quandary could get in the way of its plans to finally turn a profit: is Twitter going to be the company that makes money when Starbucks shows you "promoted tweets" if you complain about needing caffeine, or is it going to be truly universal, a technology as lasting and ubiquitous as e-mail?
If it chooses the latter, as Mathew Ingram at GigaOM noted on Tuesday evening following remarks from Web pioneer Dave Winer two months ago, this could mean that Twitter could distribute its technology globally and put the burden of access and stability on companies that would be accessing it to run their own consumer and enterprise services. "If it's as important a service as it seems to have become (or is becoming), should it be looked at as part of a larger infrastructure, the way Ethernet or TCP/IP was in the early days of the Internet, or like IMAP and POP for e-mail?" Ingram posited.
As Winer wrote, nobody in the history of the Web has really been able to have it both ways. The closest example he could pick out was Netscape's open-sourcing of Mozilla, "I don't think the founders (of Twitter) are such daring thinkers as (Netscape founder) Marc Andreessen was back then."
The catch here is that in the most simplistic sense, Twitter shouldn't need to counter its problems of instability by potentially forsaking some of its financial goals. There are only so many people on the planet, and its growth won't be exponential forever. With the right kind of infrastructure, yes, Twitter will be able to handle even the biggest sports tournament's worth of tweets.
Instead, it's the philosophy behind it that comes into question: whether it's logical or right for such a vital communication protocol (whether it's disseminating calls for help from earthquake victims or cries of frustration from soccer fans) to be controlled by only one company. Qualms about Facebook's security led to support for an open-source alternative that has since raised about $200,000 from members of the public. Granted, thehysteria over Facebook's privacy has calmed down in the wake of changes on behalf of the social network as well as the realization that this privacy "scandal" may not have affected the majority of its nearly 500 million members.
But the young developers behind Diaspora, the conceptual Facebook alternative, say that it's not just about a single privacy scandal, it's a belief that "the social graph" should not be owned by a single company. The same issue could apply to Twitter: should short-form global text communication be owned by corporation? Or, like e-mail and telephone technology, should it be an interoperable protocol that can be a worldwide product that might be trading in a short-term billion-dollar valuation, but could be getting a decades-long shelf life in the process?
Winer might have put it best back in April: "I'd like to see Twitter trust the universe."

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YouTube adds cloud-based video editor


In a significant philosophical shift, Google has added a basic video-editing system to YouTube, giving a new creative aspect to the video-sharing site.
The YouTube editor isn't going to put Apple's Final Cut Pro or Adobe Systems' Premiere Pro out of business anytime soon, but the tool is useful. With it, you can trim videos and combine multiple videos into a single composite.
Google is arguably the biggest advocate of cloud computing, one variety of which shifts tasks that once were done on personal computers to Internet servers reached with a Web browser. With Google Docs, Google's acquisition of online photo editor Picnik, and now editing YouTube videos, it's clear Google's vision for cloud computing extends well beyond consuming content but to creating it as well.
The YouTube editor lets you combine multiple videos, trimming them as you go.
The YouTube editor lets you combine multiple videos, trimming them as you go.
(Credit: Screenshot by Stephen Shankland/CNET)
To use the video editor, drag the thumbnail views of your videos to the filmstrip at the bottom. Hovering your mouse pointer over a thumbnail at the bottom will produce a scissors icon; clicking on it will let you trim the beginning and end of a video.
You can preview a low-resolution version of the video, and once you're done, save it to your collection. Saving is fast, because the videos are already uploaded, but it can take some time for YouTube to process the result.
The new videos are added to your collection, with the usual options for titles, tags, sharing permission, and such.
Given that you already can link to a segment that's a specific length of time through a YouTube video, the big innovation here is a user interface for selecting and trimming videos.
Trimming videos is potentially a helpful option for videographers unhappy with boring and otherwise undesirable segments in videos. It's a pain to edit videos, but it's also a pain to predict when the choice moment will come when recording the school play.
I couldn't find a way to include others' video, which isn't a big surprise given the copyright issues. But other avenues for improvement are possible--perhaps slideshows of images created at Picasa, or image stabilization to reduce camera shake, or technology to improve video quality.

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Has AOL finally unloaded Bebo?




AOL CEO Tim Armstrong may finally have made good on his promise to figure out what to do with Bebo, the company's pricey digital albatross, by the end of the spring.
Mashable reported on Wednesday morning that Bebo had been sold; The Wall Street Journal followed up later in the day by saying that the deal is "close" but not complete and that the buyer is Criterion Capital Partners, a hedge fund based in Studio City, Calif. An AOL representative did not respond to a request for comment; a price isn't yet clear, but the Journal noted that Criterion's buys tend to be in the $3 million to $30 million range.
That's a big drop in valuation. AOL acquired Bebo for $850 million early in 2008, when the social network was still a hot commodity among teenagers in several European countries, and when it was still possible that having a social-media property in-house could help it gain international reach as well as potentially rival Facebook. Bebo had over 40 million members at the time and looked like it was poised to keep growing, but the deal is now considered to have been wildly overpriced and now short-sighted as Facebook continued to eat up more and more market share.
Not all executives even liked the Bebo deal in the first place, rumors indicated. A year later, continued management shakeups at AOL led to the hire of former Google sales executive Armstrong as CEO, and Armstrong immediately started repositioning the company as a next-generation publishing house, not a communications and access company. Two months ago, AOL sold its ICQ chat property to Russian investment firm Digital Sky Technologies.
Since his installation as CEO, in public appearances Armstrong has repeatedly admitted that the deal was botched and reminded critics that he wasn't yet at the company when it went through. In April, the company confirmed that if a buyer could not be found by the end of May the social network would be shut down.
Sources have indicated that AOL considered the possibility of shutting down Bebo to be a serious last resort: Shutting down the site would have been expensive, and could have resulted in even more unfortunate press for the company than a quick deal to get it off its hands.

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