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To: TigerPaw who wrote (46180)1/10/2002 11:20:02 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 65232
 
How Microsoft plans to put the PC at the heart of your home

By David Coursey, AnchorDesk
January 8, 2002 9:00 PM PT

zdnet.com

LAS VEGAS--It's too early to tell how Microsoft will fare in its attempt to make personal computers the hub of a digital home, but I like what I've seen so far. Microsoft, which introduced a collection of new Windows XP "experiences" code-named Freestyle, and a new, wireless, tablet-like PC named Mira at the Consumer Electronics Show here, seems to be moving slowly, pushing consumers only as far as they appear ready to go.

This step-by-step approach, which we've already seen in Windows's support for audio and photography, takes things power users are already doing and makes them accessible to the masses. In some cases, it does this in a way that angers other companies, such as RealNetworks and Kodak, which see Microsoft as invading their turf. But as far as users like you and me are concerned, the overall effect is positive.

FREESTYLE BUILDS on the current digital photography, home video, and music features of Windows XP. It would, by way of example, make it possible for you to use your PC to record and play back TV shows, just as the new generation of digital video recorders does (see screenshot, below).

For its part, the Mira is a portable unit that would allow you to access your PC, your TV, or your game player from any place you please.

By adding support for such a remote control device and creating a new user interface intended for use with the remote and at a distance from the PC, Microsoft is extending the PC's reach from the desktop to the couch or easy chair across the room. Microsoft believes people would like to play their PC music, watch movies, or view photographs while sitting someplace other than in front of the keyboard.

Not everyone will want to do this, of course, and even those who do won't want to do it on all their machines. But Microsoft seems to be on a path toward making these features a universal part of the operating system, available on all XP boxes. I am expecting--and pushing Microsoft to offer--a collection of free XP updates that will make these features available to all users as quickly as possible.

WHILE THE NEW Freestyle feature for recording and playing back television programs may not be attractive to many users right now, it will be soon. I expect that, by next Christmas, most mid- to high-level consumer PCs will come equipped with a TV tuner (and remote control). Customers who want to upgrade would be able to buy add-ons for their current machines.

This video support puts Windows XP into direct competition with stand-alone devices from TiVo, Replay, Dish Networks, and even Microsoft's own UltimateTV. Perhaps tellingly, Microsoft has committed to offering its TV program guide free of charge. TiVo and UltimateTV customers have to pay for this information.

For the record, Microsoft is not expecting many XP home users to immediately connect their PCs to their music systems and TV sets, just because these new features appear. Real integration of the PC into the home entertainment environment will come later, perhaps as devices based on Microsoft's newly announced Windows CE.Net operating system begin to arrive this summer.

Or maybe not. We are inevitably headed to a time when the now-disparate components of your home entertainment complex--TVs, DVDs, DVRs, VCRs, stereos, PCs, game consoles--will start working together, somehow, some way. Microsoft sees Freestyle/Windows XP and Windows CE.Net as key components to making that happen. But that does not necessarily mean that you will embrace its vision.

MICROSOFT CLEARLY NEEDS to support other standards as the entertainment industry and other component makers decide what they'll do. So if Windows CE.Net doesn't conquer the world--and I am not expecting it will--the XP-based home computer must learn to talk to whatever devices are out there.

Of course, it is not a foregone conclusion that the PC will dominate the home environment in the way it already does the office world. And this Consumer Electronics Show has already seen the introduction of a potentially formidable competitor, the new Moxi device created by WebTV founder Steve Perlman.

Moxi's all-in-one approach, offering a variety of entertainment devices in a single package, would do most, if not all, of what Microsoft wants a PC to do. These approaches--Microsoft's and Moxi's, as well as a number of others I expect to see--don't have to be mutually exclusive.

So let me set some benchmarks for Microsoft in its efforts to move the PC to center stage in home entertainment:

Baby steps. Microsoft needs to move slowly and not get ahead of customers' ability to accept and implement change, or of PC hardware and peripheral makers' ability to provide devices that work with the new features.
Universality. The new features need to be available to any Windows device--and I mean any--that can support them. While all users won't use all features, and some won't use any, universal availability means people can easily teach their friends to use features they didn't even know they had.
Free. Freestyle and other XP enhancements need to be free. In fact, the add-ons need to be done in a way that adds nothing to the cost of a new PC. The key to getting people to adopt this new technology is to make it as painless as possible. It just needs to show up in their lives in usable form.
Playing well with others. Microsoft will not be able to force-feed Windows CE.Net (or anything else) to all the companies that need to build products that interface with the home PC of the future. Microsoft must be inclusive, but the consumer electronics industry needs to accept Microsoft's ownership of the PC platform and try to play along, too. And this means that Microsoft and companies that would use something instead of a PC to support next-generation home applications also need to learn to play together.
Christmas 2002. That's when Microsoft needs to make this happen. If Microsoft doesn't have Freestyle-enabled PCs (and add-ons for existing machines) widely available at popular prices in time for holiday shoppers, it will have failed an important test.

This is a fairly complex topic, and it isn't at all clear how it will play out. I am certain that the PC will play a greater role in home entertainment and information, just as I am certain there will be a number of other devices and approaches trying to do the same thing.



To: TigerPaw who wrote (46180)1/10/2002 11:20:30 PM
From: inesa  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 65232
 
Of the largest distributors of print media, the NY Times is the most biased against conservative philosophy. They blame Bush for everything, even for the brutal methods the Russians use against the Chechens. To their writers and "reporters" everything wrong can be blamed on George W. Bush and his friends.

But with ENE, the Bush haters will shoot themselves in the feet. ENE's political troubles go far beyond the Bush adminstration.

Pittsburgh Tribune-Review | Sunday Dec. 9, 2001 | DC-based British journalist and political observer

WASHINGTON - "Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall, Humpty Dumpty had a great fall." --SNIP---
Enron had the best brains that money could buy, but gave the word "ethics" a whole new meaning. The cowboys of Dumpty Enron talked up a storm about ethics; but only a few at the top realized that "ethics" was an acronym for "Enron thinks how income can (be) stolen."
That's a stretch; but look at their 1994 sales team - Clinton, Gore and the late Ron Brown - a trio unlimited and uncontrolled in their cunning and greed.

In what seems to be eons ago, before Gov. Bill Clinton became president, the late, much loved and little lamented Ron Brown was Clinton's good friend and a power broker in the National Democratic Party. Ron Brown had a friend, a congressman from Houston, the late Mickey Leland, who died in 1989. Until his passing, Leland was a shining light in the Congressional Black Caucus and a dedicated socialist, who was one of the Institute for Policy Studies' delights.

From 1984, when Enron was conceived, Brown and Leland were there snapping up unconsidered trifles of money for use in their campaigns against the free market. Mickey was able to ease a lot of Enron's early problems through the Houston City Council by playing his "equal opportunity card." He had also become an African expert who initially took the Enron message to that continent, a chore that was taken on by Ron Brown, Clinton's secretary of commerce, before the latter met his untimely death in a highly controversial plane crash in Croatia. (Untimely, because had Secretary Brown lived, he would have faced multiple criminal indictments that could have precipitated an even earlier fall for Bill Clinton and his gang.)

Now we get to that old puzzle about chickens and eggs, and what came first! Ron Brown, Al Gore and Bill Clinton introduced Enron to market managers in Russia, China, Indonesia and India. In India, Enron quickly became involved in one of that country's most massive corruption investigations, contracts were canceled and Enron was out.

On the other hand, Enron introduced the Clinton team to Lippo Industries and thence to China's People's Liberation Army (a wonderful source of political cash), to John Huang, another good provider and to nameless, numberless Arabs who never arrived with empty pockets. If we look at a list of those attending coffee klatches at the White House, we can learn why a storm of doubtful deals enabled Enron to quickly control one-quarter of the world's electricity and natural gas. But, that wasn't enough. The ever-so-greedy Dumpty moved in to water deals in Massachusetts and Europe, paper mills in Canada, gas pipe lines throughout the world, fiber optics, television, mutual funds and information gathering. In turn, that led to risk analysis, a name that those clever Texans quickly changed to "reward realization!"

The rewards were good! Enron, with sales assistance from Tony Lake, then Clinton's national security adviser, persuaded the impoverished, war-torn country of Mozambique to sign a $770 million electric power contract. Mozambique signed because Tony's salesmanship was persuasive. If the Mozambicans didn't sign, he indicated that their congressionally approved $44 million U.S. aid payment would never be made.

And there was the Croatian caper. In the days when Franjo Tudjman was Croatia's dictator and pretending to be both a reformed communist and best friend of America in the Balkans, poor Franjo had a problem. He and some of his very best friends were wanted as war criminals by the Hague's International Court of Justice. Enron wanted a power contract with Croatia. Enron offered a deal to Tudjman. Sign up with us and we will use our gang in Washington to make sure you and your friends don't go to jail.

Tudjman signed. Enron made a heap of money. Nobody went to jail. Everyone was happy - until Tudjman died of cancer. Then the lid was off, his Croatian Democratic Union was defeated and the new boys in power in Zagreb could not believe how much of their budget went to pay the electricity bills from Enron.

Somebody - probably another Dr. Spock child eager to tell on his peers - prattled! Under quiet pressure from the Croats, another deal was made and a couple of guys were charged as war criminals. Electricity costs went down (but not to the consumers) and as a part of the deal nobody talked, except about the wonderful vacations that they were enjoying in the Caribbean.

This could be called a "cautionary tale." There are two cautions. The first: Beware of the Spock babies now that they are nearing retirement and losing whatever sense they had. The second: Investigators all, beware, as you look into the depths and shallows of Enron you may, if you are truly unlucky, find the truth. And, if you do, these truths won't make you free, just well informed.

"Dateline D.C." is written by a Washington, D.C.-based British journalist and political observer.