Sunday, December 27, 2009

Something in the sky on New Year's Eve happens once in a blue moon



THERE will be a blue moon on Thursday as New Year's Eve revellers welcome in 2010 - the first time since 1990 that a blue moon has coincided with New Year's Eve.


A blue moon - the second full moon in a calendar month - occurs only every 2½ years on average. This month, full moons occur on December 2 and December 31.
An astronomer, David Reneke, from Australasian Science magazine, said it was rare for the event to land on New Year's Eve, and it would not happen again until 2028.

''While everyone's celebrating they should also take a moment and look up into the night sky,'' Mr Reneke said.

But the moon will not turn blue - if anything, Mr Reneke said it could turn red when viewed from cities because of the filter effect of smoke from fireworks.

''It's not impossible that the fireworks will change the colour of the moon,'' he said.
He said the best way to view the blue moon was to get away from the city lights.
The phrase ''blue moon'' has become a metaphor for a rare event. The earliest English record of the expression dates back to a 1528 pamphlet which, in criticising the English clergy, read: ''If they say the moon is blue, we must believe that it is true.'' An alternative interpretation of the phrase suggests that it originates from the other old English meaning of ''belewe'' - which can mean the colour or a ''betrayer''.
Clergy identifies the Lent moon when calculating the dates for Easter. It is also thought that historically when the moon's timing was too early, they named the earlier moon as a ''betrayer moon'' or belewe moon.
However, Mr Reneke said the eruption of Krakatoa in 1883 spilled so much dust into the atmosphere that for almost two years afterwards the moon took on a bluish hue.




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Thursday, December 17, 2009

Bing for iPhone Shows Microsoft Getting Smart About Search

The fact that Microsoft's Bing search engine is now an Apple iPhone app might be a sign of new friendship between Microsoft and Apple. But more than likely, it means Microsoft is getting savvy about where and when to place Bing. The iPhone is one of the most visible of mobile platforms, the App Store is exploding in popularity, and Microsoft is in need of new ways to pump up Bing's profile.
If it's true that the enemy of one's enemy is one's friend, Microsoft and Apple might have new reason to be cozying up: they're bolth at odds with Google.

At least one analyst sees it that way, anyway.

"Google is a different animal than it was two or three years ago when it was simply providing a set of services for Apple and the iPhone and now is competing with Apple in the mobile space," said Michael Gartenberg, a vice president at Interpret, in an interview with Yahoo NewsFactor. "I think it was wise of Apple to approve this application and wise of Microsoft to get this application out there and to use this as an opportunity to show some differentiation from the type of things Google offers."

The Microsoft Bing app for iPhone includes voice search technology that allows users to speak directions, an address, or searchable location like a restaurant into their iPhone. The Bing app is also useful for suggesting different types of directions -- walking or driving -- as well as providing zoom-out function for one-hand phone use and "clickable hotspots" such as images and movies.

The Bing app is available for free -- it already exists for BlackBerry and Windows Mobile phones -- and will go head to head with the Google Mobile App, which is Google's established iPhone landing spot. While it would be naive to think a Bing app for iPhone signals something greater in the thawing of Apple-Microsoft relations, rest assured this won't be the last time the two titans find common ground against a common enemy: Google.


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Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Sweden's TeliaSonera Blazes 4G Trail

Sweden's TeliaSonera has implemented 4G mobile networking in Stockholm, Sweden and Oslo, Norway. The LTE deployment is ahead of the projected schedule and makes TeliaSonera the first in the world to implement commercially-available 4G wireless.
The initial rollout is only accessible via a Samsung USB dongle, but 4G-capable handsets are expected to become available in 2010. The 4G technology is theoretically capable of data speeds up to 100Mbps. TeliaSonera is advertising the service at speeds ranging from 20Mbps to 80Mbps.

Even on the low end of the TeliaSonera 4G service offerings, the advertised speed is nearly seven times faster than AT&T's 3G network, which has been determined to be the fastest 3G available in the United States. The 80Mbps service is a blazing 22 times faster than the AT&T 3G speeds.

Right now, that blazing speed is all the 4G network has to offer, though. Aside from being significantly faster than existing wireless networks, there is nothing compelling about 4G or LTE. As 4G becomes more mainstream and begins to replace 3G networks around the world, you can expect new applications designed specifically to capitalize on the increased bandwidth.

In the United States, the attention is still focused on 3G bragging rights. Verizon has an entire marketing campaign built around illustrating that it has five times the 3G network coverage as AT&T. Those ads led to legal wrangling between Verizon and AT&T. No sooner was that litigation settled, than Verizon turned around and picked a fight with Sprint over its claim to have the most reliable 3G.

I am not suggesting, though, that U.S. wireless providers aren't also planning for the future of wireless networking. AT&T is reportedly working on doubling 3G speeds, while also developing plans for rolling out 4G. Sprint and Verizon are currently pilot testing 4G networking. Verizon is expected to introduce LTE access in certain markets in 2010.

With the exponential increase in data bandwidth demands resulting from the increase in smartphone usage and users downloading more email, more text messages, surfing the Web, and watching YouTube videos- 4G can't come fast enough.

The advent of unified communications, and the convergence of social networking with traditional forms of communication have blurred the line between computing and mobile handsets. Business professionals armed with advanced smartphones will be able to access network resources, stream presentations, and participate in video conferences from their mobile devices--assuming the wireless bandwidth can meet the capacity necessary for such data-intense tasks.


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Just What the World Needs: Google Introduces Goo.gl URL Shortener

Maybe it started as a joke, "What the world needs is another URL shortening service!" said as though we didn't have enough already. Then, someone at Google heard the joke, took it seriously, committed $$$, and out popped Goo.gl.
Yes, another URL shortener, just what the world needs! Put another way: What won't Google do to a) put its name on something and b) gather more information about users?

For now, Goo.gl works only with Google applications, where it shortens URLs for Google's Feedburner and from the Google browser toolbar. The service cannot be accessed directly by users from a browser.

Entering the goo.gl address calls up the following:

"Google URL Shortener at goo.gl is a service that takes long URLs and squeezes them into fewer characters to make a link that is easier to share, tweet, or email to friends."

Actually, whether the service really is at goo.gl is hard to say, since there is no public user interface--all we see is a Web page that also states the Mom-and-Apple-Pie goals for the service:

"Stability, ensuring that the service has very good uptime; security, protecting users from malware and phishing pages; and speed, fast resolution of short URLs."

The Google Official Blog post that announced the service Monday afternoon offers a tad more detail.

"People share a lot of links online," wrote Googlers Muthu Muthusrinivasan, Ben D'Angelo, and Devin Mullins. "This is particularly true as microblogging services such as Twitter have grown in popularity.

"If you're not familiar with them, URL shorteners basically squeeze a long URL into fewer characters to make it easier to share with others. With character limits in tweets, status updates and other modes of short form publishing, a shorter URL leaves more room to say what's on your mind - and that's why people use them."

The Google URL Shortener immediately competes with services including TinyURL, Bit.ly, and a host of others. Each generates a unique shortened URL, such as http://bit.ly/5jTKbh when I submitted http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2009/12/making-urls-shorter-for-google-toolbar.html (the address for the Google blog post) to the bit.ly service for shortening.

When the user clicks on the shortened URL, the shortening server must resolve the URL, match it to the original and longer URL, and then redirect the browser to that site.

I am not aware of any huge problems with the existing shortening services, but letting Google handle URL shortening for some of its customers' needs probably makes sense.

(Google recently got into the public DNS business as well, another necessary Internet service).

So, while the world doesn't need a new URL shortener, we may someday be happy Google started offering one as the need for such services continues to grow. If nothing else, the goo.gl URLs will be a constant reminder of the company gives us goodies.

BTW--If you are wondering about the domain name: GL is the country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for Greenland, that patch of glaciers (and a little soil) up past Canada on the way to Iceland, which is less icy and more green than Greenland. (The .ly in Bit.ly is the ccTLD for Libya).


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Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Google’s real-time search now live in the U.K.

Google’s newly announced real-time search is now not just limited to the Trends page. It’s now live across searches on Google.co.uk. (I just tried it with “Ethan Beard”, who is director of the Facebook Developer Network and is speaking on stage at Le Web right now.) The search giant announced the new feature on Monday — it pulls in public data from Twitter, MySpace and Facebook and uses it to surface content that’s been recently published and shared.

Basically, when users search for something, the most recent news articles and posts on sites like Twitter will be immediately into your results, and those results will be updated immediately as new articles and tweets appear.

•If you do a search for “Obama,” you can see the latest news articles and tweets, and as you look at the page, more updates are added as they are published.
•Google has already added time filters to its different search options, so you can just see results from the past day or hour. Now it’s adding an option called “latest,” highlighting these real-time results, as well as an “update” view showing each addition to the search results as it’s published.
•These real-time results will be available on Android phones and iPhones as well.
Google says it developed “dozens of new technologies” to make this happen, such as a language model that can recognize which updates contain new information, and which are just “weather buoys” automatically repeating information posted by others.



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Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Dubai—A Lesson In Why Transparency Matters

NEW YORK —Dubai's troubles offer a warning of the perils of investing in places where leaders--whether of governments or companies--have limited accountability.

In fact, it raises questions about other investment destinations: China, for example.

One reason why markets continue to be jittery over last week's news of a standstill on property conglomerate Dubai World's debt is the lack of transparency surrounding it. That's a direct function of a closed political system that is not conducive to foreign investment.

The announcement of the restructuring has been handled abysmally. Even with Dubai World divulging long-awaited details Monday, information has been spotty and contradictory. It's still not clear which creditors will be hit, and there are still big questions over how much of a guarantee oil-rich sister emirate Abu Dhabi is willing to give to back up Dubai's debt.

Investors have been left to speculate over political motives. One theory holds that Abu Dhabi ruler Sheik Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan is withholding his support--despite the financial risks of not doing so--because he's angered by his Dubai counterpart's close ties to Iran. Alternatively, others say that the naturally more conservative Abu Dhabi is simply reluctant to stoke moral hazard by bailing out Dubai's risky property investments.

Either way, because they can't divine what's going on in either of these two billionaire monarchs' heads is the essence of investors' problems. In an information vacuum, many have imagined the worst and have felt compelled to sell their Dubai debt positions, which in turn creates problems for banks with exposures there and, by extension, for global stock and credit markets.

This all stems from the overarching political system in place.

In the absence of democratic institutions, the UAE's sheikhs are not required to explain themselves. And as the majority owners of many of the biggest companies, they face no checks and balances from minority shareholders. Meanwhile, contract law is fraught with the uncertainty of a legal system that's low on judicial independence.

This is why investors are nervous. It's not the lack of money. After all, Abu Dhabi, with a sovereign wealth fund worth anywhere from $300 billion to $900 billion, has plenty of that.

The bigger lesson in all this is that investors need to be doubly careful of investing in countries with closed political systems.

With the spectacular failure of U.S. financial markets last year, it has become fashionable to laud the top-down central planning of countries like China, which was able to more quickly put its giant fiscal stimulus to work this year.

But if and when China faces a crisis, investors will have a more difficult time interpreting the actions of government officials and of the managers of its state-run corporations than they would in more openly governed countries.

To be sure, the Chinese Communist Party functions with more consensus than monarchy like Dubai. And for now, China's capital controls make it nearly impossible for foreigners to make portfolio investments there.

Nonetheless, direct foreign investment in China is soaring, as is broader exposure to its boom via assets in neighboring countries. If nothing else, Dubai's crisis is a reminder that those investments carry political risks that are absent from more transparent markets.


By MICHAEL CASEY

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Tuesday, November 24, 2009

LindedIn Opens APIs,Clearing way for new APPs

LinkedIn announced today the release of its APIs and the launch of its "LinkedIn Platform," which will enable developers to integrate LinkedIn into their business applications and websites.

The announcement comes on the heels of partnerships with Microsoft, IBM and RIM's BlackBerry, via which LinkedIn will integrate with Outlook and Lotus Notes. A LinkedIn mobile application will soon be available for the BlackBerry.

With this move, LinkedIn joins the list of social media platforms, such as Google Wave, Facebook (which released its APIs in April) and Salesforce.com's just-announced Chatter Collaboration tool, all vying to be at the center of your everyday social media experience.

LinkedIn has tradionally been cast as the conservative choice among social networking apps, so it may develop a different kind of application ecosystem than Facebook's quizzes and games, for example.

LinkedIn has also announced that an interface redesign is pending, though mum's the word on timing.

Beginning today, developers can register at developer.linkedin.com to receive a unique key that allows access to discussion boards, sample code, provisioning code and more, says Adam Nash, VP of search and platform at LinkedIn.

Several developers helped test the platform, including developers from the poplular Twitter utility TweetDeck, which is announcing full support for the LinkedIn platform in its next version, according to Nash. These developers helped to provide feedback, which allowed the LinkedIn Platform to become "so easy to maneuver that developers will be able to get going in minutes," Nash says. Iain Dodsworth, founder and CIO of TweetDeck, says that his team was able to "request a key and actually write functioning code in less than 15 minutes."

Thousands of developer requests prompted LinkedIn to consider releasing its APIs, Nash says. Originally, requests to use LinkedIn APIs were evaluated on a case-by-case basis, where priority was given to "integrations that provide the most value to the greatest number of LinkedIn users," according to its former policy. The LinkedIn Platform now allows that access to everyone.

"I think what end users will be excited about is the idea that they'll be able to use LinkedIn everywhere," Nash says. "There will be that awareness, trust and value that is placed on LinkedIn when it's leveraged on all the apps people value."

Original story - www.cio.com/article/508549

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Monday, November 9, 2009

Worm attack bites at Apple iPhone

The first worm to infect the Apple iPhone has been discovered spreading "in the wild" in Australia.

The self-propagating program changes the phone's wallpaper to a picture of 80s singer Rick Astley with the message "ikee is never going to give you up".

The worm, known as ikee, only affects "jail-broken" phones, where a user has removed Apple's protection mechanisms to allow the phone to run any software.

Experts say the worm is not harmful but more malicious variants could follow.

"The creator of the worm has released full source code of the four existing variants of this worm," wrote Mikko Hypponen of security firm F-secure.

"This means that there will quickly be more variants, and they might have nastier payload than just changing your wallpaper."

The picture of Rick Astley is believed to be a nod to the internet phenomenon known as Rickrolling, where web users are tricked into clicking on what they believe is a relevant link, only to find that it actually takes the user to a video of the pop star's song "Never gonna give you up".

'Stupid people'

The worm has so far only been found circulating in Australia, where the hacker - Ashley Towns - who wrote the program lives.

The 21-year-old told Australia's ABC News Online that he created the virus to raise the issue of security.

It only exploits jail-broken phones that have SSH installed, a program that allows people to make changes to the phone's file system.

My prediction is that we may see more attacks like this in the future

Graham Cluley
The worm is able to infect phones if their owners have not changed the default password after installing SSH.

"What's clear is that if you have jail-broken your iPhone or iPod Touch, and installed SSH, then you must always change your root user password to something different than the default, 'alpine'," wrote Graham Cluley of security firm Sophos.

"In fact, it would be a good idea if you didn't use a dictionary word at all."

After a phone becomes infected it disables the SSH service, preventing reinfection.

The code contains numerous comments from Mr Towns about his motivation.
One comment reads: "People are stupid and this is to prove it."

"It's not that hard guys. But hey who cares its only your bank details at stake."

The worm can be removed by changing the phone's password and deleting some files.

Some estimates suggest that up to 10% of all iPhones and iPod Touch are jail-broken.

The practice allows a phone user to install software and applications that have not been approved by Apple.

"Phone users may rush into jail-breaking their iPhones in order to add functionality that Apple may have denied to them, but if they do so carelessly they may also risk their iPhone becoming the target of a hacker," said Mr Cluley.

"My prediction is that we may see more attacks like this in the future."


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Monday, November 2, 2009

Marin pioneering new 'smart' energy highway

Field-testing has begun in Marin County for one of the nation's first "smart grid" demonstration projects that ultimately could help modernize the nation's power grid.
It's the type of system touted by the Obama administration, which announced $3.4 billion in government grants last week designed to advance an overhaul of the country's power distribution network.

"We are deeply committed to this effort," Supervisor Charles McGlashan said Friday, when local and federal authorities gathered to celebrate the start of the test phase of the project.

Grids - the wires and other equipment that distribute electric power - can be made "smart" by adding various bits of information technology to them, such as sensors, digital meters and computers.

Smart grids can save consumers and suppliers of electricity money by managing the flow of power more efficiently. They are also considered an essential component for the use of renewable energy sources such as solar and wind power. That is because wind and solar power sources ebb and flow - sometimes the sun shines, sometimes it doesn't. Smart grids are needed to manage the variability of such power sources.

After securing a three-year, $1.6 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy in 2008, Infotility, a software company based in Boulder, Colo., began installing smart grid technology at the Marin County Civic Center and four other county facilities, three of which have large banks of solar panels on their roofs.

The data and information from this Marin County demonstration project will be stored in a smart grid information clearinghouse" and used by others across the country, said Dan Ton, who manages the smart grid research and development program for the U.S. Department of Energy.
The Marin Energy Authority, a joint powers authority formed in November to explore projects to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, is seeking a $31.4 million grant from the Department of Energy for a much larger demonstration project that would involve more than 5,000 Marin households. The authority, which consists of the county of Marin and eight other municipalities, has offered to provide about $60 million in matching funds.

Dawn Weisz, interim director of the Marin Energy Authority, said most of the $60 million would be raised through a program that would allow homeowners in Marin Energy Authority cities and towns to finance energy-efficiency improvements and rooftop solar installations over time. Similar programs have been initiated in Berkeley, Sonoma County and Palm Desert. Homeowners use the money they save on energy to pay for the installations with slightly higher property taxes.

Weisz said the authority expects to hear back from the Department of Energy regarding the grant request within the next three weeks.

The technology installed in the county buildings make it possible to monitor precisely how much electricity the buildings are using and how much electricity the solar panels are producing. That is important to know for anyone interested in selling the electricity they produce back to the grid.

Software is also being developed that will make it possible to turn power on and off in the Marin County buildings automatically.

Pacific Gas and Electric Co. has a program that pays the owners of commercial buildings who temporarily scale back their energy usage when asked, said Rich Barone, Infotility's director of business development. Barone said Infotility's software has an ability "to interpret an e-mail from PG&E, parse it and then be able to calculate a bid."

Over the next year, Infotility plans to create a means of storing some of the power being generated by the Marin County buildings, as well as some charging stations for electric vehicles, Barone said.

Eventually, smart grid technology holds the promise of making it possible for household consumers to program some of their appliances, such as washing machines and clothes dryers, to switch on when electricity rates are cheapest.


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Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Use Your Own Number With Some Google Voice Features

Google Voice users can now use their existing phone numbers with the service, which will come as good news to people who don't want to give out a new number to all of their existing contacts. But there are some catches.

First off, this isn't quite the same as transferring a phone number from one carrier to another; your number still works with your cell phone or landline. Instead, Google Voice will intercept calls going to voicemail, thereby providing you with transcription, e-mail integration, and the other goodies that Voice users have come to rely upon. Secondly, if you want to use call screening, forwarding to any phone, or other features of the service, you'll still need to give out your new Google Voice-assigned number.

In either case, all Google Voice users can place outgoing calls, free to the US and Canada, and cheap elsewhere (but you'll still burn cell minutes if you use your handset).

You'll need an invite to get access to Google Voice, but invites have gone out to many existing subscribers, so ask your friends. If you want to use Google Voice voicemail, check Google's supported carriers to make sure that yours is included (all major providers are).

Google has published a help page with details on how this will work after you activate the feature. Sadly, iPhone users won't be able to use the handset's Visual Voicemail feature if they activate this service, but apparently, you can turn the feature on and off on the fly, in case you find you prefer your phone's integrated voice messaging.


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Thursday, October 22, 2009

China’s Economy Expands 8.9 Percent

BEIJING — As much of the world continues to claw its way out of recession, China enjoyed another stretch of robust expansion in the third quarter, growing 8.9 percent from the previous year, according to government figures released on Thursday.

The country’s faster growth was largely fueled by increased bank lending, generous government support for exports and a 4 trillion yuan, or $585 billion, stimulus package that is spurring a dizzying array of building projects.

According to the National Bureau of Statistics, the rate of expansion jumped from 7.9 in the second quarter, which would put the nation on target to reach the 8 percent target that Chinese economists say is required to maintain healthy employment and social stability.

The United States economy, by contrast, shrank by a revised 0.7 percent during the second quarter, although third-quarter figures, when released next week, are expected to show a 3.1 percent annual rate of expansion.

The indications of strong growth in China, the world’s fastest-growing major economy, exceeded the expectations of government ministers.

“Investment played an important and positive role in maintaining relatively fast growth and reversing the slowdown,” Li Xiaochao, a bureau spokesman, said in announcing the figures. He said domestic consumption contributed to about a third of the growth.

Separate economic reports showed that retail sales and industrial output rose markedly in September, helping to offset the slump in exports, a mainstay of the Chinese economy, that has continued unabated for 11 months.

Even as China celebrates its rosy fiscal health, government economists have expressed some concern that liberal lending by the state-controlled banking system, which has given out a record $1.27 trillion in new loans this year, could require some reining in. Some analysts have warned that too much of that money has ended up in the stocks and real estate, fueling a 73 percent rise in property values in the mainland this year.

Earlier this week, the State Council, China’s Cabinet, said it would place greater curbs on a number of industries, including steel, cement and glass production, essential ingredients for the ongoing construction boom that some experts say has become overheated.

By ANDREW JACOBS


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Thursday, October 15, 2009

Symbian and Android to Lead Mobile OS Market in 2012

Gartner released a slightly revised outlook for the 2012 mobile operating system market ahead of the upcoming Gartner ITExpo in Orlando next week. The new prediction still has Symbian as the top OS, followed by Android, but the next three spots have experience a little shake up since the initial report a week ago.

The prediction for the iPhone market share is pretty much the same, but changes to the estimate for Blackberry move it to third place while iPhone falls to fourth. A shift in confidence regarding the future of Windows Mobile dropped the operating system from fourth place to fifth- predicting a meager 9 percent share for Microsoft in 2012.

Nokia is the current leader in the smart phone market, holding 45 percent of the total market. The market for smart phone devices is a different metric than the market for mobile device operating systems, but the Symbian OS and Nokia devices are virtually synonymous.

Gartner's confidence in Nokia's continued market dominance is probably related, at least in part, to the strategic partnership Nokia formed with Microsoft to be able to deliver Office Mobile, as well as integration with other Microsoft technologies, on Symbian-based mobile devices. The alliance adds significant value to Nokia's mobile devices and makes Nokia a much stronger competitor against Blackberry.

The dark horse in this race seems to be Android. Google's open source mobile operating system has emerged as a tour de force. T-Mobile has expanded its Android portfolio with the Motorola Cliq and Samsung Behold II, and Android has expanded its sphere of influence to Sprint and Verizon as well. In addition, the recent release of the Android 1.6 SDK (a.k.a. ‘Donut') has led many developers to embrace the mobile OS platform.

The IPhone OS is predicted to take fourth place, behind Symbian, Android, and Blackberry. Apple's mobile device and accompanying operating system are wildly popular and very successful, however the proprietary, closed platform and exclusivity arrangement with AT&T limit its market potential. Analysts have suggested that Apple could double iPhone sales if it drops the AT&T exclusivity, but for now the fate of Apple and AT&T seem intertwined.

When Gartner first reported its 2012 prediction a week ago, Windows Mobile was in third place with an estimated 12.8 percent of the market. This week Gartner has Windows Mobile in fifth place with only 9 percent. The shift in confidence is a response to Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer publicly expressing disappointment in the Windows Mobile development team, and some of the initial reviews of the Windows Mobile 6.5 OS.

The report is simply an opinion. You can take the Gartner prognostications with a grain of salt except for two things: 1) Gartner does this for a living so it ought to be relatively accurate in predicting market trends, and 2) Gartner reports can become self-fulfilling prophecies in effect.

Device manufacturers and application developers may base development decisions on Gartner's predictions of which mobile OS's will have the most market share, making those platforms more widely available and providing a richer user experience. Decisions based on the Gartner predictions can have a domino effect which leads to the predictions being ultimately correct.

I am not Gartner, but I'll give you my two cents. By 2012 I believe that Android will surpass Symbian for the number one slot, and I believe that Windows Mobile will make a rebound and land in fourth, or maybe even third place. Check back with me in three years so we can compare notes.


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Acer Shares Rise After Company Replaces Dell as No. 2

Oct. 15 (Bloomberg) -- Acer Inc. climbed to a nine-year high in Taipei trading after it overtook Dell Inc. to take the second place in the global personal-computer market last quarter, according to market research firms IDC and Gartner Inc.

The company gained 1.2 percent to NT$82.70 on the Taiwan stock exchange as of 11:12 a.m., the highest level since Sept. 13, 2000, while the benchmark Taiex index added 0.6 percent.

Acer’s market share has increased to 15.4 percent, compared with Dell’s 12.8 percent, according to Gartner. Hewlett-Packard Co., which took the lead from Dell in 2006, remains the world’s biggest PC maker. Acer’s shipments surged 25.6 percent last quarter, the fastest growth among the top PC makers, buoyed by sales of low-cost netbooks.

“Acer can now aim for the No. 1 position,” said Bamboo Lin, an analyst at Sinopac Securities Corp. “Even though it’s gaining market share, it’s not compromising on its margins, so this is good for the firm.”

The Taipei-based company said on Oct. 12 that it expects net income in the three months ended Sept. 30 to reach NT$3.45 billion ($107 million), exceeding the NT$3.23 billion median of 12 analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Acer’s operating income may reach a record NT$4.7 billion in the third quarter as consolidated sales rise to NT$167 billion, the highest ever, the computer maker said in an e-mailed statement.

Acer said it expects shipments to rise in the fourth quarter from the preceding three months, without giving estimates.

Dell has struggled to reach consumer laptop shoppers, the industry’s biggest source of growth, said Loren Loverde, an analyst for IDC. The company gets about 80 percent of its sales from business customers, she said.


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Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Wireless options heating up in Philadelphia

By Bob Fernandez

INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

Wireless competition is heating up in Philadelphia.

Clearwire Corp., which is partially owned by Sprint Nextel Corp. and cable giant Comcast Corp., flipped the switch two weeks ago on its 4G WiMAX service in Center City.

This next-generation service offers speeds similar to those of a cable modem for streaming Internet or video to cell phones and laptops on trains, buses, and cars, and in coffee shops.

Clearwire, in a "soft-launch mode," will likely blitz the region with advertising, marketing, and store openings in about a month, sources say. Other cities with the Clearwire WiMAX service include Baltimore, Las Vegas, Atlanta, and Portland, Ore. Besides Philadelphia, Clearwire expects to add Dallas, Chicago, and Seattle this year.

The Kirkland, Wash., company sells the service as Clear. A person in Philadelphia can order it now through Clearwire's Web site, company spokeswoman Susan Johnston said last week. Clearwire sells the service by the month or day. The day rate is $10 and monthly rates are $25 and $35, the company says.

Sprint will sell the same service as Sprint 4G, and Comcast has branded it as High-Speed 2go. Comcast did not say when it would begin selling 2go in the Philadelphia area, but previously the company said it would happen before the end of 2009. Comcast has invested $1 billion into Clearwire and considers the 2go product a core part of its evolving wireless strategy.

Verizon Wireless, one of the nation's largest wireless carriers, with 88 million subscribers, offers 3G and could have 4G service available in parts of the Philadelphia region in 2010, the company's executives say.

Verizon Wireless says it does not believe it is at a competitive disadvantage trailing the WiMAX product. "I know they have a cluster in Center City for WiMAX and the speeds are high, but it is a limited footprint" for the service, said Harry Martin, director of advanced technologies for Verizon Wireless in the Philadelphia area.

Verizon Wireless has announced that it will test its version of 4G in Boston and Seattle and then will begin offering the service in 25 to 30 markets in 2010. Verizon Wireless has not disclosed what those markets are. Executives note that Philadelphia ranks among Verizon Wireless' top wireless markets.

Verizon Wireless uses a competing 4G technology, called LTE, and the faster speeds would be overlaid on its current wireless network. Verizon Wireless says it has invested about $1.5 billion into the Philadelphia wireless network over many years.

Mario Turco, the local regional president for Verizon Wireless, said: "Our track record and our reputation with customers speak volumes."

This year, Verizon Wireless in Philadelphia is celebrating its 25th year. The division is based in Trevose, Bucks County, and employs 2,000. The division launched with basic phone service and in recent years has seen explosive growth in texting. Verizon Wireless says that Philadelphia-area residents send about 23 million text messages a day over its network. The messages are sent in Philadelphia, Bucks, Chester, Delaware, and Montgomery Counties in Pennsylvania, and Burlington, Camden, Gloucester, and Salem Counties in South Jersey.

Verizon Wireless is focusing on the customer experience and is not interested in exclusive deals, like the one that AT&T Inc. has with Apple Inc. for the iPhone. "We don't want to be labeled as a one-trick pony," Turco said. "The cell phone has become the consumer's third screen after the personal computer and the home television."
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Monday, October 12, 2009

Windows 7 boots fast enough for normal people

Opinion: Shock news reaches us from iolo Technologies claiming that Windows 7 takes ages to load. Our response: who gives a rat’s ass, especially as it doesn't...

A Los Angeles maker of software aimed at making PCs boot faster is in the news for warning that we must all fork out fifty bucks for its product because Windows 7 doesn’t boot fast enough. iolo Technologies reckons the new OS – due out in a couple of weeks – is 'even worse than Vista'.

'Even worse than Vista' has become the lazy writer’s marketingspeak for something less desirable than syphilis or about as good looking as a 55 Chevy after it’s been through a car crusher. With a dead antelope in the trunk.

Ladies and gentlemen of the jury. I put it to you that there are no occasions when the boot time of a PC is important in any way whatsoever. While geek hardware sites write endless articles in green crayon slating Windows’ slow boot and shutdown times when compared with other operating systems so exotic that no one uses them, in the real world, it simply doesn’t matter.

At all.

Are people using PCs onboard the Starship Enterprise to raise shields in the event of a Romulan Bird of Prey dropping out of warp off the starboard bow? No. And even if they did, wouldn’t their old Compaq Presario tactical computer already be up and running?

Is Norad hoping that the bad guys will have the courtesy to phone up before launching their nukes in order that the PCs deep in the hardened shelters of Cheyenne Mountain can be woken from their slumbers?

Nope.

Here’s what happens in the real world. You arrive at the office at 0930 and switch on your machine. Then you go to grab a coffee. Then you chew the fat with your colleagues for a bit. Then it’s time for another coffee. When you return to your desk at 1030, your machine is ready and waiting, even if it’s running OS/2.

Do you care – or even know – how long your machine takes to boot?



According to iolo, Windows 7 starts up to the point where the machine is usable 42 percent slower than Vista - one minute, 34 seconds compared with one minute, six seconds - on a new install. Although Windows 7 does appear to start faster than Vista, says the company – which sells stuff to make your PC boot faster, in case you’ve forgotten - it’s referring to the time it takes to get to the point where the computer is fully usable, with a low load on the processor.

Sadly, I no longer have a machine running both Vista and Win7 to replicate the detailed and no doubt peer-reviewed scientific research done by iolo, but I can put a stopwatch on this 2.66GHz Core 2 Duo machine with 4GB of RAM running the 64 bit version of Windows 7 build 7600 (the RTM one).

Cold start to desktop takes 50 seconds and it’s another massive five seconds before CPU utilization drops to idle (< three percent). Just for the hell of it, I also measured the shutdown time – from clicking the power down icon on the desktop to the fans stopping took a shocking 16 seconds. Now I don’t know if I’m unique in this, but my procedure for shutting a machine down involves clicking shut down, turning out the light, walking out of the room and shutting the door. I suppose there are saddoes out there who sit and wait to make sure the machine really does switch itself off rather than staying up all night partying with its peripherals in a degenerate manner, but I’ve never met one. Presumably these people also lose sleep over whether the light in the refrigerator actually goes off when they close the door. iolo promises yet more shock revelations about Windows 7’s startup and shutdown times later today. Did we mention that iolo is a company that want you to buy products to make your machine boot faster? Here’s a handy tip – if you want your machine to boot faster, spend $49.95 on some extra RAM rather than on a box of boot-enhancing snake oil that can, apparently, 'boost Windows boot time by 800 percent'.

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Friday, October 2, 2009

New technologies may grab carbon right out of air

* New approach seen to combat climate-warming carbon

* Strategy would reduce atmospheric carbon concentration

* Companies investigating "air capture" method

WASHINGTON, Oct 1 (Reuters) - As the world wrestles with how to cut greenhouse gas emissions, new technologies are gearing up to grab climate-warming carbon right out of the air.

This is different from trapping carbon dioxide as it comes out of pollution sources like factories and power plants. This so-called air capture technology could be set up anywhere and suck carbon directly from the atmosphere.

The devices to do this are varied in appearance. Some look a bit like telescopes, others involve vast, thin wall-like structures to capture the carbon. But all aim for a net reduction in atmospheric carbon, instead of just slowing down the increase of greenhouse emissions.

Because air capture need not be near carbon-belching factories, it could help the world's poorest countries, which at this point cannot benefit from the global carbon market, in which companies in developed countries get credits for investing in carbon-limiting projects in poor countries.

Chemicals giant BASF (BASF.DE) and glass and ceramics firm Corning (GLW.N) are working with a team at Columbia University in New York on a company called Global Thermostat that is investigating this technology. Global Research Technologies in Tucson, Arizona, and David Keith at the University of Calgary in Alberta, Canada are also looking into it.

To Peter Eisenberger of Columbia University, a physicist and earth scientist who formerly worked for Exxon Mobil, air capture is a logical way to manage the amount of carbon in the atmosphere.

"You put crap into the atmosphere, you take it out," Eisenberger said in a telephone interview. So far, he said, humans have done little to "clean up our mess ... which of course is why (carbon) concentration in the atmosphere is increasing."

As global greenhouse gas emissions increase, carbon gets more concentrated in the atmosphere, the planet gets warmer overall and the most dangerous effects of climate change -- floods, droughts, rising seas -- get more likely.

Right now, there are about 390 carbon dioxide molecules in the atmosphere for every million molecules of air. Many environmental activists and experts, including former U.S. Vice President Al Gore and the head of the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, figure that to avoid the worst impacts of climate change, the number should not exceed 350 parts per million.

'WE PROCRASTINATED TOO LONG'

That kind of reduction could happen if air capture technology becomes widespread, said Columbia University economist Graciela Chichilnisky, who is working with Eisenberger, financier Edgar Bronfman, BASF and Corning.

Chichilnisky defines negative carbon as any technological process that decreases the net carbon concentration in the atmosphere. She said negative carbon technology, such as air capture, is essential "because we procrastinated too long -- carbon by physical properties remains in the atmosphere once emitted for ... at least 100 years."

Excess carbon has been entering the atmosphere due to the burning of fossil fuels and other causes. Even if new power plants and factories are carbon neutral -- not adding any carbon to the air -- existing plants continue to spew gigatons of the greenhouse gas into the atmosphere, she said.

An advantage of air capture of carbon is that it would let less-developed countries in Africa and Latin America get into the carbon market as set up under the Kyoto Protocol, Chichilnisky said.

The primary carbon market lets industrialized countries invest in U.N.-approved emissions-cutting projects in developing countries instead of more expensive emissions reductions at home.

Fast-developing countries like China and India have the advantage in this system. The more emissions they have to clean up, the more investment they can attract. But countries with low emissions, like many in Africa and Latin America, have little to sell on this market.

However, Chichilnisky said, if these less-developed countries got air capture technology, powered by renewable energy such as solar or wind, they could help bring about a net decrease in the concentration of atmospheric carbon.

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Thursday, October 1, 2009

Get Ready for Google's New Wave Act

Tomorrow could be a very big day for the internet. Years from now we might look back on it as a milestone for the web, social networking, marketing and communication in general. Heck, it could even define the beginning of Web 3.0 (Ugh, did I say Web 3.0? Never mind, we're gonna come up with a better name in an upcoming post.)

You see, Sept. 30 is the date Google starts sending out Wave invites to the general public. 100,000 to be exact.

If you aren't familiar with it, Google Wave is, in Google's words, "a product that helps users communicate and collaborate on the web. A Wave is equal parts conversation and document, where users can almost instantly communicate and work together with richly formatted text, photos, videos, maps and more. Google Wave is also a platform with a rich set of open APIs that allow developers to embed waves in other web services and to build extensions that work inside waves."



Will Google Wave redefine the web and how we interact digitally? So ... what's that mean?

In a nutshell, Google is attempting to integrate e-mail, instant messaging, media sharing, social networking, document creation, project management, entertainment and much more into shareable Waves. These Waves can be accessed in a variety of ways, via a reader, embedded in a website, from a mobile device, etc. And, of course, the Wave Platform is open source, fully extendable and customizable.

Goggle Wave is the definition of a disruptive technology. And, if it takes off, it has the potential to redefine the web and how we interact digitally. Does this spell the death of Twitter? What about blogging? Flickr? How about Facebook? Hard to say yet. But Google Wave could become the main way we interact with those services (and many others) going forward -- if it catches on.

Wave opens up myriad opportunities for brands as well.

Say, for example, a marketer wanted to create a Wave to solicit user generated content -- photos/videos of a certain product in action, testimonials, ratings, etc. The architecture of a Wave makes it very easy for the user to drag and drop media and converse in the Wave. The brand can easily repurpose the content automatically, in real time, in blogs, destination websites, mobile/location based applications, etc. The history of the Wave is always available so the user can go back in time to see how the content and conversations develop. Heady stuff indeed.

Google's Gmail has more than 146 million uses worldwide. They could easily become Wave users overnight once Google opens the floodgates. (Sorry, bad pun.) Sound exciting? Scary? How will it affect your social media strategy?


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Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Win7Zilla Lets You Customize Windows 7...For Now, It's Free

Tweak Windows 7 in hundreds of ways with Win7Zilla, which is free until Windows 7's release.

Looking to tweak and customize just about any part of Windows 7? Win7Zilla will let you change an astonishing number of Windows 7 features. This program is free until Windows 7's release, which is scheduled for October 22, 2009. When Windows 7 is released, Win7Zilla will cost $16 after a 15-day free trial.

Win7Zilla lets you tweak Windows 7 to your heart's content, although undoing that tweaking can be problematic.>

The features you can tweak with Win7Zilla are grouped into six major categories: Taskbar and Task Menu; Desktop and Personalization; System and Security; Control Panel; Internet Explorer; and Windows Explorer. Each of those groups has up to several dozen individual customizations, which means the program has hundreds of tweaks. Especially useful is that unlike most tools for tweaking various versions of Windows, Win7Zilla displays graphically ahead of time what the effect of your tweak will be. Also useful is that before it makes changes, it offers to create a Restore Point, so you can easily restore your PC to its previous setup.


I did find some problems with the tweaking--for example, when I used the program to hide the volume icon in the System Tray, it worked fine, but there was then no setting to display the icon again. I couldn't undo the change. I found similar problems with other tweaks as well.

Win7zilla does more than just tweak Windows 7; it also displays system information, lets you change your Windows logon screen, remove startup programs, and more. The heart of it, though, is system tweaking. It does that very well, although the lack of a clear way to undo the changes you make--apart from having to use System Restore--is problematic.

All that is to the good. The question, though, is whether it is worth the $16 pricetag. If you're a dedicated tweaker who absolutely has to be able to customize every part of Windows 7, Win7Zilla might be worth your while. Otherwise, it's probably not worth spending the money.


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Facebook & Twitter users richer than MySpace users

They're more likely to live in the city too!

The research firm also revealed that Facebook and Twitter users are more likely to be based in the city.


"Nielsen's online data shows that about half of the US population visited a social networking website in the last year and that number grows every quarter," said Wils Corrigan, an associate vice president with Nielsen.

The survey, which studied the top seven social networking sites, showed that Facebook users generally have an "upscale profile".

Nielsen also said that people who are more affluent than the other two-thirds of the population are 25 percent more likely to use Facebook than those in the the lower third.

And conversely, those in the bottom third of the financial chart are 37 percent more likely to use MySpace than those in the top third.

Other recent studies have shown that as Facebook and Twitter grow in popularity , their user bases are growing older .

A July report released by iStrategyLabs shows that while the number of Facebook's US high school and college-age users declined over the past six months, its popularity among the 55-and-older crowd is booming.

In fact, the number of 55-and-older Facebook users showed staggering growth - 513.7 percent - in the last six months, the digital consulting firm said.

That means Facebook and Twitter, which both have shown phenomenal growth in the past year, apparently appeal to an older, wealthier demographic.

And with expectations mounting for Twitter executives to finally come out with a business plan by the end of the year , the demographics of the site's users will have to be factored into the equation

http://www.pcadvisor.co.uk

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Warner’s Music Returns to YouTube Following Nine Month Hiatus

Warner Music Group, which pulled its videos from YouTube in late 2008 following a disagreement over licensing rates, has inked a deal with Google to put its catalog back onto the YouTube video streaming site, Ad Age reported and Wired.com confirmed.


YouTube is already encoding a batch of videos from Warner, in preparation to relaunch them on YouTube. Warner’s music could also end up on Vevo, the YouTube-supported video service Universal Music Group and Sony Music plan to launch by the end of the year. For now, this deal only puts Warner’s videos back on YouTube, according to a source close to the situation, who also confirmed ongoing negotiations between Vevo and Warner.

Warner had been losing fans and views by keeping its music off of YouTube — something it said it had to do in response to YouTube’s slim payouts. Under terms of the “just-signed” deal, Warner will be responsible for selling advertising against its own videos, so it will decide how much to charge for ads and find ad buyers on its own, rather than settling for whatever Google decides on. In order to attract premium advertisers, Warner plans to create a separate channel within YouTube consisting only of “premium” content.

Warner’s return to YouTube will come as a big relief to artists such as Neil Young, who had complained about Warner silencing his videos. The reason for the label’s change of heart — in addition to its bet that it can make more from ads than YouTube paid out before — has to do with a shift in thinking about audio on the web. Music services that rely on video, such as YouTube, enable advertisers to display video ads in ways that don’t apply when a user is listening to the same music on an audio-only platform. (The music-streaming service Pandora recently launched a small video section, most likely for the same reason.)

For music fans, this represents a clear victory, in that we can once again watch and listen to Warner artist’s music on YouTube, for free, and apparently at a high quality to boot. However, it’s not yet clear whether we will also be able to embed Warner’s videos elsewhere on the internet as part of the deal. Warner might prefer to keep the videos in its channel, to increase their allure to advertisers by controlling what appears around the videos.

Even if the playcounts start right where they left off, as Warner’s videos reappear on the site, nothing will make up for Warner’s nine-month YouTube time-out. Still, it’s good to see that the label’s relationship with YouTube — once a major example of the failure of ad-supported, on-demand music — has been repaired, so videos by Warner’s artists are on their way to returning to the site.

http://www.wired.com

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More Rough Times Ahead for U.S. Economy, despite Recent Improvements

RISMEDIA, September 29, 2009—Despite recent signs of improvement, more rough times are ahead for the U.S. economy, according to several prominent experts in real estate and the economy who attended a recent forum at the Nixon Presidential Library.


“You look at the numbers and everything points to the fact that we not only have bottomed, but things seem to be improving,” said Christopher Thornberg of Beacon Economics, citing increases in durable goods orders, exports and auto sales. He added, “When you think about the problems we’ve been through and what government has done, in many ways, they have, in fact, stabilized the economy. But you know what? They haven’t actually solved the underlying problems in the economy.” Thornberg cited real estate as a case in point. While home sales are up in some areas of the country, 6 to 7% of home mortgages nationally are 60 to 90 days delinquent. In California alone, 250,000 mortgages are 60 to 90 days late. And there’s more economic trouble on the horizon, he said, with rising unemployment and additional waves of foreclosures. “The second half of 2010 will be very weak,” he said, adding, “2011 will be very grim.”

Thornberg was one of several nationally known experts in real estate and the economy who shared their perspectives during a Sept. 11 forum and charity event for the Orange County affiliate of Susan G. Komen for the Cure, one of the world’s largest grassroots organizations dedicated to finding a cure for breast cancer.


Real estate analyst and investor Bruce Norris of The Norris Group in Riverside organized and moderated the event, which included experts from the California Building Industry Association, the National Association of Realtors, the Mortgage Bankers Association, RealtyTrac, The Appraisal Institute and the National Auctioneers Association.

While all of the panelists agreed that the economy will rebound in another two or three years, several pointed to tough economic conditions in the interim. John Young, vice president of the California Building Industry Association, said new housing starts are at their lowest levels since the early 1950s. He added that new home sales are often stymied by appraisals coming in lower than contracted home sale amounts. Meanwhile, foreclosures continue to mount. Rick Sharga, senior vice president of RealtyTrac, one of the leading online marketplaces for foreclosure properties, said the nation has had 43 consecutive months of foreclosures. “We’re dealing with foreclosure activity that is six times what it would be in a normal market,” he said. Sharga added that legal and legislative efforts aimed at helping consumers modify the terms of their loans “merely delay the inevitable.” After all, he said, modified loan terms are not going to help someone who loses their job. Sharga also sees another big wave of foreclosures hitting the market next year, which will reflect rising unemployment rates, which are expected to peak during the first quarter, as well as the resetting of adjustable rate mortgages to higher rates. The real estate market is also negatively affected by a “shadow inventory” of perhaps 400,000 to 500,000 homes, which have been taken back by banks, but haven’t been put back on the market for resale, Sharga said.

Home sales are also being frustrated by appraisals that underestimate true market value of properties being sold, said Joseph Magdziarz, vice president of The Appraisal Institute, the Chicago-based trade association that promotes the highest standards of professionalism and ethics in the appraisal business. Many problematic appraisals are coming from appraisal management companies that use unqualified appraisers who lack geographic competency in the markets where they are accepting assignments. Banks, for their part, won’t lend money on appraisals they can’t trust, Sharga said.

Despite these negative assessments, the panelists said there are many things that Congress, consumers and the real estate industry can do to facilitate our nation’s economic recovery. Magdziarz, for his part, said The Appraisal Institute has been trying to warn Congress for years to take action to better regulate the appraisal business. One pending bill, HR 1728, includes many of the Appraisal Institute’s recommendations, has passed the House and is currently in a Senate committee with bipartisan support. The Appraisal Institute has also alerted its 26,000 members that it will take aggressive enforcement action against any members who accept assignments they are not qualified for. “We cannot sit back and allow bad appraisals to prevent deals from going forward,” Magdziarz said, adding that investors should work only with appraisers that belong to professional appraisal associations. He also encouraged consumers and investors to report incidents of substandard or incomplete appraisal work to state authorities as well as to The Appraisal Institute. While Congress considers HR 1728 to improve appraisal industry, another pending bill, Senate Bill 1230, would nearly double home purchase tax credit to $15,000.

For his part, David Kittle, chairman of the Mortgage Bankers Association, said it is up to consumers, investors and the mortgage industry itself to weed out bad apples and not to count on Congress to solve the problem. “The people in Congress making laws don’t understand our business,” he said, adding, “When somebody’s doing something wrong, call them out and get them out of our business.” Pat Vredevoogd Combs, 2007 president of the National Association of Realtors, also recommended that Congress make tax credits available to all homebuyers and not just first-timers. Tommy Williams, 2008 president of the National Auctioneers Association, said professional auctioneers could also help market recovery by selling real estate at real market values. He added that auction participants already have their financing in place before they bid on properties.

Norris, for his part, recommended that Congress do several things to boost the real estate market. These include:

Increase the number of loans made available to well capitalized investors: Expand Fannie and Freddie loan programs from a maximum of 10 loans per investor to an unlimited number of loans for qualified investors.

Make the 203K FHA loan program available to investors: A 203K loan allows a property needing work to be purchased “as is,” but included in the loan amount is money for repairs. The loan funds both the purchase and rehab of the property. Investors need this loan now, but this loan is currently only available to owner occupants. FHA previously made this loan available to investors, but stopped the practice in 1996 when HUD ran out of lender owned, fixer uppers. Banks could solve the vacant house problem by giving investors back the 203K loan program.

Eliminate the 90-day waiting period before a repaired property can be sold to a buyer using an FHA loan: Investors who purchase fixer uppers can often completely repair the property in a matter of weeks. But the current law prohibits investors from reselling the property within 90 days. The assumption is that fraud must be taking place if a property is resold within 90 days. It’s ridiculous to assume that every investor who purchases a property, improves and resells it is committing fraud. All this policy does is increase investors’ costs of purchasing and rehabbing vacant homes.

Allow loans to be taken over by credit-qualified new buyers with no down payment. Through this process, which was successfully used in the 1980s, new buyers simply step in and take over the loan payments. The only stipulation is that the loan has to be made current at the close of escrow. The U.S. currently has about one million owners who will not be capable of keeping their homes without a huge discount on the principle balance. Many of these properties have fixed rates at very favorable rates. Allowing willing and capable buyers to come in and take over these loans would help contain the spread of foreclosures across the country.

Thornberg, for his part, said it’s not realistic to assume that our nation’s economic problems will be solved by increased regulation or by presidential action. The economy simply needs some time to heal itself, he said. But despite the near term trouble, Thornberg remains optimistic about the future. “I have tremendous faith in the U.S. economy rebounding again in the future,” he said. “And when we come out of this in two or three years, we’re going to have cheap housing and a weak dollar, which will be good for exports.”


http://rismedia.com