Aug 31

If his gambit succeeds, Yang will be feted as the second coming of Steve Jobs, reviving the glory of a one-time technology bellwether. If not, he’ll join Terry Semel and Tim Koogle on the roster of failed Yahoo CEOs.

Yang’s immediate task is to find a way to sell the Google deal to regulators. The agreement won’t officially kick in for another three and a half months because of antitrust sign-offs. Yahoo can probably persuade Washington to give the green light.

Of course, that goes with the territory. Yang never wanted to see Yahoo get swallowed by Microsoft. He wanted the opportunity to direct the turnaround, and now he’s got his wish. Is Yang equal to the challenge? Beats me. He’s super-smart and knows the company backwards and forwards. But he is not a charismatic leader and he turned in an uneven performance on the conference call announcing the Google deal. He tripped over words and sounded unsure as he spoke, leaving No. 2 Sue Decker to handle the hard questions. I wouldn’t read too much into appearances, but strong CEOs know how to put on a good show.

•  During the first year after implementation, Yahoo expects the deal to generate an estimated $250 million to $450 million in incremental operating cash flow.

Now it’s make-or-break time for Jerry Yang.

•  The agreement is nonexclusive. Yahoo can display paid search results from Google, other third parties, as well as its own Panama marketplace. (Here are more details on Yahoo’s search ad-pact with Google.)

Whether Carl Icahn and the investor class agree–we’ll know Friday morning when Wall Street opens up for business. Icahn could do nothing Thursday but count his losses as shares of Yahoo plummeted after the company announced the collapse of the Microsoft talks. If the Google deal fails to do much to revive the stock price, they’ll naturally call for Yang’s scalp.

(Credit:
Dan Farber/CNET News.com)

After all the “sturm und drang” revolving around a possible Microsoft deal, this much-rumored Google tie-up comes as a bit of an anticlimax. But at least Yahoo has chosen a direction, moving beyond the endless muddling of the last five months.

Steve Jobs: Been there, done that

Some will dismiss the deal as an acknowledgment that Yahoo wasted millions of dollars developing its Panama search advertising platform (not to mention the $1.6 billion it paid in 2003 to buy Overture Services). There’s some truth there but it may be too harsh a judgment. Besides, the Google arrangement may turn out to be a clever move if it fosters the two companies’ respective strength in search and display advertising.

Earlier Thursday, Yahoo announced that Microsoft was no longer interested in pursuing a deal. Into the breach steps Google CEO Eric Schmidt with a search advertising arrangement that could be worth as much as $800 million to Yahoo.

Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

Aug 30

That said, there’s a lot we still don’t know. There has been great speculation over what time the phone will go on sale. Last year, it was a coordinated release at 6 p.m. in each of the United States’ time zones. This year, however, given the time needed to activate the phone and the worldwide release, there’s speculation they’ll go on sale earlier in the day. Also unknown is how many iPhones have been manufactured and how many each customer will be able to purchase. Stay tuned!

In Friday’s edition of the Daily Debrief, CNET News.com’s Tom Krazit and I talk about the July 11 release of the
iPhone 3G. Apple has been notoriously tight-lipped about the details, but Tom says there are a few known factors. For one, every customer will have to sign a two-year contract with AT&T and will have to activate the phone upon purchase in the store. Secondly–and this comes as no surprise–the lines are going to be crazy!

Aug 30

But on the other hand, I can think of worthy causes in greater need of charity or free labor than Google. If we’re all going to be augmenting Google Maps with user-generated content, wouldn’t it be nice if we could do it through a more neutral mechanism that lets others benefit from the work, too? Geotagged entries in Wikipedia show on Google Maps, but not Google Maps alone, at least theoretically.

With the tool, people can using tracing tools to build maps in Cyprus, Iceland, Pakistan, and Vietnam, according to the Google LatLong blog. Also open for cartographic contributions are several Caribbean nations: Antigua and Barbuda, Bahamas, Barbados, Bermuda, British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, Grenada, Jamaica, Netherlands Antilles, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, and Trinidad and Tobago.

(Credit:
Google)

Overall, I think my first reaction will carry the day for me.

That’s because, fundamentally, Google Maps is a service not just consumed by many but also repackaged by many through the availability of the Google Maps API (application programming interface). So until the day Google flips its Don’t Be Evil switch to the “off” position, Google Maps is in effect a public utility, and many can benefit from contributions to the service.

Google Map Maker lets people add details to maps in some countries.

I’m of two minds about this. On the one hand, it’s great that this kind of activity can be crowd-sourced (please excuse the jargon) so the community (please excuse the jargon again) can contribute to a project that reduces the amount of digitally uncharted terrain. Google has given us a way to help make a difference that, while small, could collectively become quite large.

Google Map Maker looks slick, but it would be slicker with better satellite imagery. Parts of Iceland, one of my favorite places on Earth, are too coarse for any tracing.

Google on Monday unveiled a new Web-based tool, Map Maker, that lets people add roads, lakes, businesses, and other features to unmapped regions of Google Maps.

Aug 26

When one company makes it big with a product in the tech industry, every other company in the market wants to try its luck in the same space. Because of that, we’ve seen countless iPod-wannabes like the
Zune, the iRiver Clix, and many more. None were able to vanquish the leader, and few were even able to make a dent. And yet, all these companies still try to make their iPod competitors work.

So why do I look forward to the day when the iPod is no longer the toast of the town and finally enters the retirement home? It’s simple: it means that the industry has grown, more innovative products are finally available, and we can get away from all the derivative garbage we’re seeing at every turn.

And therein lies the rub. How can we get out of this vicious cycle if neither the leader nor the others competing in the market want to change anything?

“It’s kind of like everyone has got one or two or three. You get to a point when they are on display everywhere, they get real cheap, and they are not selling as much.”

Check out Don’s Digital Home podcast, Twitter feed, and FriendFeed.

Here’s a clue: it’ll never happen if you do the same thing Apple does.

But it’s tough to make the argument that iPods will die when sales are up. According to the company’s latest quarterly filing, iPod revenue is up 7 percent since last year and unit sales have jumped 12 percent.

Apple has been successful in the PMP (portable media player) market because it provides a real end-to-end solution that easily eclipses the competition’s. Let’s face it–buying a device and getting it to work with third-party software isn’t easy and it’s not seamless. But buying an iPod and getting it to work with iTunes is quick and easy. It’s usability that attracted people in the beginning and it’s the iPod’s enormous popularity that attracts them now.

Nowhere is that more apparent than in the Apple Store itself. How many times must Jobs find his way to the stage only to show off an iPod with barely upgraded specs and a so-called fresh design that we’ve seen already? Granted, the iPod Touch is unique in its own right, but the iPod Nano and Shuffle have been the joke of the iPod world for years now. The design changes look more like Apple felt it needed to do something to get people to keep buying them, so they went from long and thin to short and fat and back to long and thin again. And don’t even get me started on the iPod Classic.

Of course, that doesn’t stop me from wanting the iPod to die off as soon as possible.

As Apple continues to sell millions of iPods, it realizes that it has no reason to change tactics and try something new. And as executives at other companies look at the state of the economy and their company’s own financial health, they think it’s better to offer a PMP that will appeal to a small percentage of the market than take a risk and try something new.

It’s not that I dislike iPods–I own three. Instead, I think the iPod is the main reason why innovation is at a standstill in the PMP market and why we’re not being satisfied nearly enough by the right devices.

The way I see it, nothing will change until Apple experiences a year of declining iPod sales. Once that happens, its competitors will panic and try to be the first to the market with something innovative and Apple will be forced to make serious changes to the iPod or come up with something new altogether. And once that happens, the market should start booming with innovation once again.

And I, for one, can’t wait until that happens.

But that popularity is attracting all kinds of bad things, too. How many times do we have to see another iPod clone before we finally say “enough is enough?” And how many times must we sit back and watch as Apple dominates the market without one real competitor to stop it?

Steve Wozniak said it best in his exclusive interview with the Daily Telegraph earlier this week: “The
iPod has sort of lived a long life at No. 1,” he said. “Things like, that if you look back to transistor radios and Walkmans, they kind of die out after awhile.

Finally, someone on the “inside” at Apple has made some sense about the iPod and its future. Although it may be difficult for Apple zealots and even CEO Steve Jobs to understand, the iPod is not going to be one of the most important devices forever, and if we consider the impact the Walkman had on the industry, the iPod should be moving to the execution chamber in the next 5 to 10 years.

Aug 26

(Credit:
Rafe Needleman / CNET)

Seero works best when the recording service is run on a PC that has a connection to a GPS device. We saw at the demo a small rig based on an OQO ultramobile PC, a Webcam, and a Bluetooth GPS receiver. That’s an expensive rig, unfortunately, so at the moment only the most devoted broadcasters are likely to create Seero videos and shows. Support for GPS-equipped mobile phones is forthcoming; look out Qik.

For live online news videos, this is a killer feature, especially if the viewer has the options of selecting from several cameras. And imagine it for sports–bicycle racing, golf, or sailing. (Remember Quokka? They could have used this.) Seero doesn’t just display location: it pulls up relevant location-based data and links in a separate window. The service also works well for travel videos, with links to nearby attractions showing up in the related information box as the video plays. (Potential partner: TurnHere.)

Seero officially launched its new livestreaming (and recording) video service at the New Tech Meetup on Wednesday. Like UStream, it lets you broadcast live from a Webcam or record shows for later playback. But it also records location and syncs it to video. That opens up some new capabilities for video producers and for advertisers.

This travel TV show works great on Seero.

Seero CTO Dan Rommel, and his geo-video recording rig.

The revenue model for Seero is under development, but location-based advertising is obviously the main opportunity for the service.

The technology desperately needs to be exportable to publishers’ own sites. There are limited branding and skinning capabilities in this first release; a full API is needed, so content producers can use the technology without having to shunt viewers to the Seero site itself.

Unfortunately, I don’t see Seero as a strong consumer play. Notwithstanding the leading-edge geocoding technology and the inviting site, the livestreaming market is crowded. And once geocoding hardware becomes pervasive, I bet that every livestreaming service will begin to record and display geo data. Seero may be able to sell a suite of geolocation and video technologies to professional video production sites, though. It’s not as sexy a play as a consumer video destination site, but the pro market might actually have some paying customers in it.

The Seero founders, all three of whom shared the stage during the New Tech pitch, say they’ve designed the service for event-based video, not for lifecasting. That’s good, since watching someone through a hat cam is weird enough; knowing exactly where they are at all times would be just creepy, and dangerous for the presenter.

Aug 24

Some examples of those antics: His portrayal of Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak as a baboon, Oracle CEO Larry Ellison as a pimp, Sun Microsystems CEO Jonathan Schwartz as a My Little Pony doll–”I did that before I knew he was (speaking at Web 2.0 directly) before me”–Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer as Uncle Fester and, perhaps best of all, his take on Microsoft’s shipping of Vista, which he had portrayed on the blog with a picture of an elephant defecating and the headline, “Vista drops tomorrow.”

“So,” he continued, “Oh God, I hope no one impugns my reputation. I’ll never get that job at BusinessWeek.”

“It’s like Webkinz for adults,” Fake Steve said of Facebook. “It’s the biggest waste of time ever invented.”

“I have no reputation,” he said.

So he said that he asked Forbes.com, the Web venue of his employer, Forbes magazine, if he could start a blog. They said no, he reported.

Fake Steve began his talk with a discussion about the issues related to surviving backlash from audience members at conferences. I was rather pleased to see that as his prop, he used an article I’d written earlier this month on the subject.

“If you’re the founder of something called the Social Media club, you’ve got a lot of balls talking to me about wasting my time,” said Fake Steve, adding that as he understood it, the club was for people to talk about what’s being talked about on Facebook.

Of course, as is his style, he lampooned the concepts in the story. He pointed out that in some ways, the article had focused on Web 2.0 Expo and so he said that based on the story, he had been fearing getting in front of 5,000 angry audience members ready to jump him if they didn’t like what he had to say.

Even better, Fake Steve said, was when he wrote to the editor offering to write the blog for Forbes.com.

And that, he seemed to say, is really the essence of Web 2.0.

He proceeded to explain how, over the course of the time that he’s been writing his Fake Steve Jobs blog, he has pretty much killed his reputation with some of his antics. The point? That it doesn’t really matter what people think of him or what he says.

(Credit:
Corinne Schulze/CNET News.com)

In a frenetic keynote address Friday morning at the Web 2.0 Expo here, Fake Steve–otherwise known as Forbes writer Dan Lyons–gave his unique take on the world of technology, the people who drive it, and the future of media.

“He wrote back, ‘Oh, Fake Steve, you’re a genius, we’d love to hire you,’” he said.

He also teased Social Media Club club founder Chris Heuer for comments he made to me for that story.

The best part of that, he said, was when Forbes’ editor put out a bounty to uncover his identity.

So, rather than carry on the subterfuge, he told Forbes that he was, in fact, Fake Steve Jobs, and thus began his official relationship as Fake Steve with his own employer.

To Fake Steve, that comment was well worth a bit of his wit.

At least, it seemed to be. With Fake Steve Jobs, the snark level always makes it a little difficult to tell what the real message is.

Right away, he said, he attracted a large audience–90,000 unique monthly viewers after six months–and a worldwide manhunt to figure out who he was.

Dan Lyons, aka Fake Steve Jobs, gave his unique view on Web 2.0 and other issues at the Web 2.0 Expo Friday morning.

Ultimately, though, he said that the best part of the experience of writing the blog has been that it has created what he called a “platform” for others to come and “perform” via the comments section.

“I just want to apologize in advance for the next 25 minutes, for the 25 minutes you’re never going to get back,” Fake Steve/Lyons said. “Please don’t Twitter attack me.”

“Time is our most valuable asset, and if it’s being wasted, we’re not going to take it,” Heuer had told me. “We want our time to be well-invested.”

Instead, he began his own blog, and began–with impersonating Steve Jobs as if he was really saying what he felt instead of being little more than a PR voice like many corporate bloggers–being Fake Steve Jobs.

He then continued with a history of how he came to start his blog. He explained that as he saw traditional media organizations getting their lunch eaten by bloggers, he wanted somehow to join the new generation of media players.

SAN FRANCISCO–If there’s one person in the world of Web 2.0 technology–or tech in general–who hasn’t yet been skewered by the infamous blogger Fake Steve Jobs, get ready: He’s coming for you.

He said there is one commenter, known as Fake Vladimir Putin, who appears nowhere else but in the Fake Steve Jobs blog comments section.

Aug 22

That’s a pretty interesting illustration of what user-generated content can sell for, at least in one context.

For the first time, iStockphoto has revealed how much money it pulled in by licensing large numbers of photos, videos, and other imagery for relatively small fees, and how much it paid out to the producers of that content.

Getty is in the process of going private in a $2.4 billion deal announced in February.

“One thing we’ve always had to keep close to our chest is our financials. Maybe it’s our Canadian background, but we’ve always found it a bit cheeky and rude to discuss money,” Livingstone said. “With the recent announcement that Getty Images is going to be a private company owned by management, employees, and Hellman & Friedman, you’ll see lots of numbers floating around about iStock’s financials.”

“We are now selling an image every 1.4 seconds through this industry-changing marketplace,” Livingstone said in the posting.

In a forum posting Tuesday, iStockphoto head honcho Bruce Livingstone said the Getty Images subsidiary had 2007 revenue of $71.9 million, and it paid $20.9 million to those who contributed the imagery it licenses.

Aug 22

We’re saying that our checks and balances are as deep and as light as possible in the operating system. Whereas maybe other people are saying, “You’re playing in our territory,” what we’re saying is, “Have as much territory as you like and we’ll make sure you’re not near the cliff edge”–rather than as soon you get through the front gate, you’re in my turf.

It’s increasingly relative; the only SMP (symmetric multiprocessing) that’s around right now is devices like the PC. It’s increasingly beneficial to see what that SMP is going to be like when we play there.

Do you have to make tradeoffs then, with reliability, security, a different experience across these devices?
I think that not so much trade-offs as just different architectural decisions. Things like platform security, we’ve implemented because that was part of the assurance that operators wanted to have that these mobile computers weren’t going to be used in a way that could be detrimental to their overall network security.

One of the things that Apple is bringing with it is the walled garden, the closed system. What is the role for application development on these devices?
We have a different view. This is about innovations, letting a thousand flowers bloom, letting people experiment, providing SDKs (software development kits) and easy to use APIs (application programming interfaces), and working with a variety of different languages. A vibrant developer network is very important to us and our licensees.

When you think about the Internet, I can see a whole generation–and maybe half of humanity–experiencing the Internet first through a mobile device.

How does your relationship with Nokia affect your dealings with other handset makers? (Nokia owns 47.9 percent of the company.)
It doesn’t. I mean, I guess you’d regard it as a proof point, the fact we can assist Nokia in making compelling devices and making compelling profits is a good thing to be able to put in front of others. But in terms of the business relationship and the ownership relationship, it’s kept very, very separate.

I think the prospects of everyone in the world having power, and having a PC delivered, and having broadband delivered just isn’t going to happen. It’s going to happen over these mobile devices.

It’s not surprising you’re seeing these legacy Internet and hardware brands coming into this mobile world and bringing their smarts with them.

One of the things our CTO is very clear about is that the multitasking capability on a phone is the most elegant thing on the planet. Because it has to deal with all this stuff going on, and then a call coming in, an SMS coming in, in the future, a video call coming in, maybe a location-based ping coming in from the side.

What do you think about the
iPhone? And what do you think of Apple’s participation in this market?
I think it validates what we’ve just been talking about, which is no fixed Internet brand–hardware, software, applications–can afford to ignore the mobile marketplace. Because ultimately the PC is going to be capped in terms of its marketplace.

What do you think of Intel’s interest in this market, with its Atom and Moorestown projects?
Maybe something that has gotten lost in the history is that we’ve cooperated and had projects with Intel. When I arrived (in 2005) we were talking putting Symbian on x86 architecture.

We have a supervisory board. Around our governance table, we have Nokia, Sony-Ericsson, Samsung, Ericsson, Siemens, Panasonic–they came together to create an agnostic independent operating system. And that composition has broadly held together for 10 years.

Nigel Clifford
Symbian CEO

The advantage we can offer is 200 million devices shipped, 77 million last year. There’s a platform for you to go and play with, and it’s with a savvy audience, a really lucrative audience who’s going to come and pay you if you can provide them a great application.

But aren’t you making little computers?
If you think back to the origins of Symbian, it came out of Psion, and those palmtops, the Psion 5 and Psion 3, were fully featured mini-computers. They had Word effects, Excel, equivalent data sheets, touch-screen QWERTY keyboard. What they didn’t have was telephony.

What we’re now seeing is the end of the subscriber land grab–the saturation–so I think in the U.S. we’re seeing some of the patterns in the rest of the world coming to bear. Where all of a sudden it becomes: how do I attract people from other people’s networks, and how do I attract people to use their handsets on these more lucrative data services, to offset any slowing of the subscriber acquisition.

Just before
CTIA 2008 kicks off, Symbian hosted the Smartphone Summit in Las Vegas to discuss many of these topics and the broader market at large. I sat down with Clifford for a few minutes during the show, and here’s a sampling of what we discussed.

Q&A For a man staring down Microsoft, Google, and Apple, Symbian’s Nigel Clifford doesn’t have the deer-in-the-headlights look as much as you might expect.

Still, Symbian is sitting on top of the market at a time when it appears destined for change. Apple’s entry into the market has galvanized the American consumer, who is barely aware of Symbian’s dominant presence in Europe and Asia. Google threatens to come at Symbian from underneath, hoping to unify mobile Linux and teasing carriers with the promise of mobile advertising revenue. Research In Motion shows signs it might be able to add consumers to its legion of CrackBerry addicts. And Microsoft is Microsoft; it hasn’t replicated its PC success in mobile phones but it continues to steadily improve Windows Mobile and is sitting on a load of cash.

Intel are certainly people that we talk to, but that (a Moorestown discussion) hasn’t happened.

We’ve had this notion of the mobile Internet for a long time, but now we’re hearing more and more about the full Internet, getting the real thing onto your phone. Given the constraints that you face with these phones, how will that play out over time?
In terms of the experience, it’s not inferior. If I’ve got the choice of booting up a laptop and going to the Internet or using the Internet that’s resident on my phone, I wouldn’t have any qualms about just reaching for my phone.

The intriguing thing to just think about is that there’s maybe 3 billion subscribers in the world at the moment, and there’s maybe 3 billion who are yet to have the privilege of having a mobile connection.

On the flip side, you’ve got Google and what they’re trying to do with Android.
The experience we’ve got of the developer world is there’s a curiosity market, which is “we’ll go and play and see how interesting it is.” But then there’s a hard-core, “we actually want to make money out of this.”

Why do you think you’ve gained such traction in Europe and around the world, and what do you have to do to get traction inside the U.S.?
For sure, the work with the top five handsets, including Nokia, has been important in creating attractive handsets that operators like to put on display, and put out at an attractive price because they know they’re going to get data services revenue out of that.

In your view, should smartphones be like computers?
I think it is a very different world. You’ve got the smartphone, a device which has no access to main power, constrained memory, constrained screen size, and so the necessity of doing things very elegantly is an imperative.

One of the secrets is that we have a really good shareholders’ agreement and a really good chairman who makes sure there’s no tipping of any decision based on who you are, whether you’re big or little, important or not important, shipping or not shipping.

In the U.S., there’s perhaps been a different avenue for operators in terms of revenue growth for the last five or six years which has been pure subscriber growth. So, the order of the day has been subscribers at the lowest possible acquisition cost, which means the cheapest possible phone.

Perhaps because, at the moment, those three juggernauts are staring up at Symbian. Clifford, CEO of the company since 2005, has a dominant share of the market for smartphone operating systems and a strong backer in Nokia, the world’s largest handset maker.

Aug 22

So, what’s it all mean? The nondenials from Panasonic and CableLabs make me think that the substance of the IP Democracy report is true: the initial wave of Tru2way TVs aren’t ready for prime time. But that’s to be expected from a new technology that hasn’t yet been released to the public (thus the whole point of certification testing–the bugs get extinguished before the products reach the public.)

Update: Subsequent to the publication of this story, Panasonic has released a more detailed statement on the status of its Tru2way TVs.

In an attempt to verify those dire–but anonymous–quotes, we contacted Panasonic and CableLabs for their responses. Panasonic gave us a quick “no comment,” but CableLabs provided a [somewhat] more detailed retort:

(Credit: CableLabs)

The Samsung certification was actually a 2005 product that–to my knowledge–has never been commercially released. The ADB products are set-top boxes and media centers that appear to be intended for cable companies to license to consumers. To me, the ADB products seem counterintuitive to the whole idea of the Tru2way model–I thought the idea here was for Tru2way to provide a framework that would allow for the release of TVs and DVRs that consumers could buy at Best Buy or Circuit City, and hook up as easily as a standard DVD player.

CableLabs’ Tru2way got a big boost last month when Sony signed on with a pledge to design and deliver TVs that incorporate the standard, bolstering an already impressive list of backers. The Web was flooded with optimistic reports of a post-cable box Valhalla where you could simply buy a Tru2way TV, screw in your coaxial cable, and have plug-and-play access to your 1,000-channel universe. Before those miracle TVs hit the market, however, they need to be certified by CableLabs–and there are rumors that the initial trials aren’t going well. According to IP Democracy, the initial certification tests for Panasonic Tru2way TVs were unsuccessful–to say the least. The post cites “folks close to Tru2way” as calling the Panasonic tests a “‘disaster of spectacular proportions’” that resulted in “‘dozens and dozens’ of bugs.”

A follow-up post on the IP Democracy post that purports to be from CableLabs says that the company is “confident in the technology and are on track to introduce this software platform and services at retail later this year in select markets.” While they may technically hit that milestone with products like the ADB boxes, I think the real test will be whether or not we can buy Tru2way TVs–from Panasonic, Samsung, Sony, or any other company. And at this point, I still wouldn’t be surprised if we don’t see those products until sometime in 2009. But I hope I’m wrong.

IP Democracy via Gizmolovers

Certification test results are not published by CableLabs. While we cannot address speculation made in the media about specific tests results, it is important to understand that it is common for devices to require multiple test runs before achieving CableLabs certification. Manufacturers generally account for such timing in their product plans. CableLabs conducts multiple test waves throughout the year in order to accommodate additional testing. Panasonic has entered an upcoming certification wave, which provides ample time for products to reach the marketplace to meet the company’s rollout schedule. Other tru2way products, including products from Samsung and ADB have already been Certified by CableLabs.

Aug 21

If you have a short memory or didn’t have time to catch up on Crave this week (editor’s note: for shame!), no worries, we’ve got you covered. Here’s a look back at the truly interesting, strange, and wonderfully silly gadgets we checked out.

(Credit:
Netflix)

• Dell was able to whip up a lot of press coverage–us included–this week with mere mention that it might enter the smartphone market and revisit its past life as a seller of MP3 players. But the guys in Round Rock, Texas, actually did release some real, live products this week, most notably the mini-desktop they’re calling the Dell Studio Hybrid.

• LG made good on its promise at CES to make a Blu-ray player that also streams Netflix Watch It Now videos. The guys at CNET Reviews got their hands on one of the first boxes.

• Someone has to be fairly passionate about the Olympics–and be desperate to show off their status with their cell phone–to be into this.

(Credit:
Heart Robot)

• CNET’s Molly Wood has a polite request for Steve Jobs & Co.

• A really, really, really old calculator.

• A robot that mimics human emotions. Creepy? Cute? You decide.

• The latest in stab-resistant clothing. Bulletproof vests are so last season.

See anything awesome we missed? Send it our way at crave at cnet dot com.

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