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difenbaker
12-25-2006, 07:23 PM
Batteries, Wii, spam: you must remember 2006
Kate Bulkley, Mike Cross, Keith Stuart, Bobbie Johnson and Charles Arthur, Thursday December 21, 2006. The Guardian

Fires and delays held up Sony, rivals dissed the iPod, sex.com was sold for $1m and everyone got their 15 minutes on YouTube

Bill Gates, Microsoft's chief software architect and co-founder, will leave the company after 30 years in 2008 to concentrate on giving away his billions. Ray Ozzie will take the software reins.

Windows Vista, after five years inside Microsoft, will leave the Redmond HQ for the public domain in 2007, to rake in billions for the company.

Though Blu-ray and HD-DVD have grabbed headlines in their battle to succeed DVD, nobody yet knows which one to buy.

Including a Blu-ray drive in every Sony PlayStation 3 will lose the company about $100 per machine, at least initially.

Manufacturing delays to the Blu-ray drive delayed the PS3's European debut, which should now be in the spring.

First Dell, then Apple, then IBM, Toshiba, Panasonic, Fujitsu and Lenovo recalled Sony-made laptop batteries. In all, 9.6m were recalled, costing Sony $429m (£219m).

Sony recalled none of its laptop batteries.

Nintendo makes a profit on every Wii it sells, heading for 4m as you read this.

Apple changed all its machines over to Intel chips , with only minor hassles (such as hackers running Windows on the machines, and trying to run OS X on Dell systems).

Apple released a program that let people run Windows on its machines.

Everyone has 15 seconds of fame on YouTube. From the angry Hong Kong "bus uncle" to Geriatric1927, anyone can be a star. Even fakes are welcome - ask Lonelygirl15, aka New Zealand actress Jessica Rose.

Startups can be pretty lucrative. Delicious sold to Yahoo, and YouTube, after just 18 months of existence, to Google for $1.65bn - theoretically, earning $20m a week.

Google is trying to do too many things, says chief executive Eric Schmidt. First for the chop was Google Answers. Why? Google wouldn't say.

WikipediaM isn't as bad as its critics say. In a much-disputed study last December, the science journal Nature rated its accuracy as comparable with Encyclopedia Britannica. Britannica rebutted this at length in March.

Wikipedia is getting more bureaucratic. A growing number of articles are "locked" against changes, and more require that you create a login before editing them.

Getting an article - such as a biography of yourself - removed from Wikipedia is very difficult. The more you complain, the more worthy you must be of inclusion.

Some domain names are still valuable. sex.com sold for $12million last January; last week vodka.com changed hands for a reported $3m.

Some domain names are pretty much worthless. To add to the tumbleweed of .info, .museum and .aero, Icann created new .eu and .mobi domains.

Spam has reached unprecedented levels, after a promising dip at the start of the year, due to "image spam" which defeats most filters.

Spam can be beaten, or at least managed, if ISPs adopt "authenticated SMTP" and demand that others do too.

MTV thinks anything you upload onto their sites is theirs in perpetuity, regardless of what you might decide to do with that (your) content.

BitTorrent's new mantra is that it is protecting content in the p2p space - an idea that was heretofore an oxymoron. But the movie studios seem to believe it.

Rob Glaser, the chief executive of Real Networks, thinks that iPod owners steal music: "About half the music on iPods is music obtained illegitimately either from an illegal peer-to-peer networks or from ripping friends' CDs, which is illegal."

Universal Music's chief executive Doug Morris thinks iPod owners steal music. "These [digital music] devices are just repositories for stolen music, and they [makers] all know it," he told Billboard. "So it's time to get paid for it."

All iPods come with a sticker saying "Don't steal music". Steve Jobs told Apple's designers to include it.

Originally, any iPod could have transferred music to any computer; Steve Jobs vetoed this, making it "pair" only with one.

Government is e-enabled. On average, 97% of your council's services are available electronically. Don't know how they managed it with meals on wheels.

Electronic conveyancing will be a reality for home buyers in 2009. Possibly more a reality than home buying, if you live in London. (uk)

A quarter of all taxpayers filed their returns electronically and the system didn't crash. (uk)

more here:
http://technology.guardian.co.uk/weekly/story/0,,1976146,00.html


cheers!

difenbaker
12-25-2006, 07:30 PM
mmm... what about you guys? What tech-related event or thing makes you remember 2006?

for myself, I remember 2006 coz it's the year that I bought then returned a total of 5 nokia N's.... against only 1 s60 back in 2005. :D

cheers!

stephanie
12-26-2006, 05:46 AM
For me, it was this year when I bought a new 31" TV. :)

carcomptoy
12-26-2006, 06:44 PM
For me it was the most fun year yet...senior year high school, graduation, graduation money, Hawaii, carefree summer, and first semester at college.

2006 was definitely awesome!

oneclick
12-27-2006, 01:26 AM
This was the year that I gave my digicam to my girl... then bought a new one a week later. :)

Jose_R.A.M
12-27-2006, 06:40 AM
Tech related event to remember 2006:

hmmm....some git nicking my phone and me having a picture of him (with digicam) 30 seconds before he did it.

I think YouTube is one of the bigger things. Google aquiring it....millions and millions of people watching/uploading to it. YouTube being Time Magazine's "Person" of the Year. A new age community/media/connection.

carcomptoy
12-27-2006, 05:15 PM
lol technically, it's us being Person of the Year :p

Jose_R.A.M
12-27-2006, 05:29 PM
lol technically, it's us being Person of the Year :p

oh yeah:p I just recalled one article with a computer screen and a big YOU in a youtube style site.

What was it again? Anyone who created media on the net? or something like that anyways. Well YT is probably the biggest new influencial port of media of 2006 and probably will be in 2007.

As well as getting your face seen by the whole globe, there's a whole "new world" with it's own community of musicians/artists/ even their own "celebrities" etc etc connecting so many different people that would other wise never see each other.

carcomptoy
12-27-2006, 05:41 PM
Yeah I know it was basically YouTube...I was just being pedantic :p

It was a big YouTube screen with a poorly reflective paper to represent "you"...I'm looking at it right now :o:p

Jose_R.A.M
12-27-2006, 05:45 PM
Yeah I know it was basically YouTube...I was just being pedantic :p

It was a big YouTube screen with a poorly reflective paper to represent "you"...I'm looking at it right now :o:p

damn right it is :p

Another article also mentions Wiki and MySpace.

Those two are probably the only other contender for globally popular user created media. Forums are generally for that specific genre.

MySpace sucks btw. :p kidding.

carcomptoy
12-27-2006, 05:57 PM
It does, but it's a necessary evil so I can contact my friends back home fromm college.

I like Facebook a lot more. Anyway...

lonney
01-07-2007, 04:53 AM
The most important thing to me was failed in 2006