Archive for July 4th, 2007

Trendmill: Clothes Darling, Clothes!

Written by on Wednesday, July 4th, 2007 in Ajax News.

respectance.pngKeeping with this weeks evolving theme of niche social networking sites comes Trendmill, a social networking destination for lovers of clothes.

Trendmill allows users to upload images of their own clothes or clothes they wish they owned. Members are able to “tip people off” on what they think is hot, vote on other people’s clothes and collaboratively “give a general sense of what the next big trend in fashion is going to be”.
Trendmill also provides the usual features expected from a social networking site, including messaging, publishing articles (blogging) and connecting with friends (”entourage”).

TrendMill competes in the same space as StyleDiary, ShareYourLook and ShoutFit (see our December review of all 3). Unlike some competitors, TrendMill is strictly a social networking play and it shows through a stylish interface and a haute couture of user sites. Clothes may make the man but they won’t on many reading this, so it is a site that’s not for everyone. However if you take your Versace and YSL seriously, you will probably like Trendmill.
trendmill1.jpg

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/130628535/

Laws of Physics Apparently Being Rewritten Today

Written by on Wednesday, July 4th, 2007 in Ajax News.

No reason U.S. independence day should slow the news down in Europe. Look for the long awaited demo from London of Steorn’s new Orbo device today, which supposedly creates a steady stream of energy from magnetic fields:

Orbo produces free, clean and constant energy - that is our claim. By free we mean that the energy produced is done so without recourse to external source. By clean we mean that during operation the technology produces no emissions. By constant we mean that with the exception of mechanical failure the technology will continue to operate indefinitely.

The sum of these claims for our Orbo technology is a violation of the principle of conservation of energy, perhaps the most fundamental of scientific principles. The principle of the conservation of energy states that energy can neither be created or destroyed, it can only change form.

Because of the revolutionary nature of our claim, not only to the world of science but to the world in general, Steorn issued a challenge to the scientific community in August 2006 to test our technology and report their findings. The process of validation that has resulted from this challenge is currently underway, with results expected by the end of 2007.

The core technology is “based upon the principle of time variant magneto-mechanical interactions,” which of course is exactly how I would have approached the problem, too. Engadget has a picture of the device. A demo video is promised to be published momentarily. Keep an eye on this blog, which is basically tracking the company and the product.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/130566331/

Online music recommendation and sharing site Scouta has received a DMCA notice from IP enforcement group Web Sheriff, demanding that a White Stripes video hosted on YouTube and displayed on Scouta, be removed from Scouta due to copyright infringement. This despite the video being uploaded to YouTube by Warner Music, the White Stripes current record label according to Wikipedia.

The issue differs from a similar dispute covered at TechDirt. Where as the legality of the content on YouTube was in question in that case, in Scouta’s situation the video was legally uploaded to YouTube by the rights holder, with full rights given for the video to be embedded in 3rd party sites.

scouta.png

The stupidity of companies such as Web Sheriff apparently has no bounds with the DMCA notice sent to Scouta (pdf) failing to comply with the act.

Web Sheriff failed to demonstrate where the original content could be viewed as required in a DMCA notice; simply they couldn’t demonstrate the source of the original content to demonstrate infringement because Scouta was showing the original content as legally uploaded by the rights holder. The notice demands that Scouta “Remove [the] Infringed Title(s) from Infringing File Location” despite Scouta not hosting the file (YouTube does). The act is clear that such notices should only be sent to those hosting infringing files; if the content did infringe the act (and it clearly doesn’t), then YouTube should have received the notice.

The abuse of the DMCA by companies like Web Sheriff highlights the abject failure of the law. Startups such as Scouta and others should not have to be subjected to erroneous claims such as this one. There is an urgent need for America’s legislators to dump the DMCA into the realms of history where it rightly belongs.

For those who enjoy the White Stripes: the video in question, Compliments of Warner Music and Google/ YouTube.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/130441975/

iphonemoney.jpg
After speculation earlier in the week that Apple had sold between 400-500,000 iPhones, the actual new sales figures for the iPhone are even wilder than earlier figures: Apple and AT&T moved 700,000 iPhones to the close of business Sunday.

According to MacNN, Apple is said to have sold out of iPhones in 95 of 164 stores and AT&T has nearly depleted its entire stock. The report quotes American Technology Research predicting that the iPhone would likely be AT&T’s fastest ever selling product and that the iPhone could rank among the fastest selling consumer electronics devices of all time.

Based on the cost of manufacturing an iPhone (see post July 2), Apple would have made a profit of between $200million and $266 million in 3 days (not including marketing costs), on sales somewhere between $350million and $420million, significantly more than earlier estimates of Apple having a $300million weekend.

Saying the iPhone has been successful at this point would be matter of stating the blatantly obvious.

Update: corrected reference to figures. The 700,000 figure may be another analyst figure according to a comment, although other places are reporting the 700,000 as the actual figure.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/130368151/

Second Life Copyright Infringement Claim Heads To Court

Written by on Wednesday, July 4th, 2007 in Ajax News.

secondlifeA case of alleged copyright infringement in Second Life is heading to court.

According to Reuters, Second Life entrepreneur Kevin Alderman, the owner of Eros LLC, a company that makes virtual sex beds, filed the “Eros LLC vs John Doe” lawsuit on Tuesday.

Second Life user Volkov Catteneo is alleged to have copied and distributed the “SexGen Bed”, an item that sells for L$12,000 ($45.11). The lawsuit seeks to force Linden Lab to disclose Catteneo’s real-world identity, as well as asking Catteneo for damages.

The case, the first of its kind for Second Life, will be interesting from a legal perspective. There is no legal precedent for the case, and as Stanford University’s Lauren Gelman said in a Four Corners report earlier this year, the concept of virtual property ownership is vexed:

“All of this is virtual bits and bytes, ones and zeros that are sitting on the servers at Second Life’s headquarters and the server farms they have around the world…how much can you own something that’s really under the control and domain of another party, this is really where the law is being tested to see how they’re going to figure that out.”

On the surface it also seems a little strange that Linden Lab has not already dealt with it; Second Life has strict rules in relation to copyright infringement and has previously acted in favor of in-world copyright owners.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/130352958/

Respectance: Social Networking With A Deadly Twist

Written by on Wednesday, July 4th, 2007 in Ajax News.

respectance.pngIt must be niche social networking week. Following my review yesterday of Bakespace, a social networking site for people who like cooking, another interesting site hit my inbox: Respectance.

Respectance is a social networking site for online tributes, or as the email sent to me so nicely put it: “MySpace for dead people”. Respectance provides a space for family and friends to honor their dead loved ones by creating online tributes. Whilst similar tribute profiles do appear on MySpace or Facebook, Respectance differs by being dedicated entirely to the dead.

Respectance’s creators wanted to develop a dedicated and appropriate outlet for individuals to heal and share memories of their loved ones, while finding others with similar experiences. The site has also attracted fans that have created tribute sites for dead celebrities; Kurt Cobain and Ernest Hemingway are two examples.

The site (respectfully) does not run advertising; instead the business model focuses on charging for premium services.

Respectance was founded by Tom Wilkinson and Kazaa co-founder Richard Derks. The company has offices in San Francisco and Krakow, Poland and took funding of $250,000 from Dutch VC firm Solid Ventures in June.

respectance1.jpg

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/130331732/

iPhone Web Development Tips and Official Documentation Released

As soon as the iPhone was in developers hands on Friday they were hacking around. This involved doing a “for (var key in document)” and the like to see what was available.

In an ideal world, Apple would have released a beautiful set of documentation for the community, but they were probably too busy getting the phone out of the door (maybe can’t blame them huh).

The community has begun to document things:

Getting rid of the toolbar

You can scroll down a little, enough to get rid of the toolbar via:

JAVASCRIPT:

  1.  
  2. window.onload = function() {
  3.   setTimeout(function(){window.scrollTo(0, 1);}, 100);
  4. }
  5.  

but what about handling the rotation of the phone?

Updating the Layout when the user rotates

Joe Hewitt built a liquid layout that watches the the change from portrait to landscape mode.

JAVASCRIPT:

  1.  
  2. addEventListener(”load”, function()
  3. {
  4.     setTimeout(updateLayout, 0);
  5. }, false);
  6.  
  7. var currentWidth = 0;
  8.  
  9. function updateLayout()
  10. {
  11.     if (window.innerWidth != currentWidth)
  12.     {
  13.         currentWidth = window.innerWidth;
  14.  
  15.         var orient = currentWidth == 320 ? “profile” : “landscape”;
  16.         document.body.setAttribute(”orient”, orient);
  17.         setTimeout(function()
  18.         {
  19.             window.scrollTo(0, 1);
  20.         }, 100);           
  21.     }
  22. }
  23.  
  24. setInterval(updateLayout, 400);
  25.  

Notice that there isn’t a nice event for “hey I just changed mode”. Instead, we have to poll and check the current width.

meta viewport

There is also a lot of chat about the viewport tag, and people are experimenting with getting a nice outcome when jumping between the various modes. E.g.

HTML:

  1.  
  2. <meta name=”viewport” content=”width=480; initial-scale=0.6666; maximum-scale=1.0; minimum-scale=0.6666″ />
  3.  

View Source

To do a lot of testing, it would help to be able to do a view source on other cool iPhone applications. this work, based on Abe’s let’s you.

Drag and drop

Everyone has been a bit frustrated with the lack of events, but between Tahoma Toelkes and Joe Hewitt, we have a drag demo that works when you do a two-finger vertical dragging motion on the phone, but only for certain elements such as textareas.

Then comes the official docs

After all of this tinkering, we finally get the official docs from Apple. They are a little sparse, and don’t seem to have much new, but at least they are out there, and they are official.

It is here that you can learn:

  • How Apple thinks you should specify an iPhone only set of style (mixed reviews on how IE handles this). The iPhone ignores the handheld profile as it thinks of itself as a desktop browser instead.
    HTML:

    1.  
    2. <link media=”only screen and (max-device-width: 480px)” href=”iPhone.css” type=”text/css” rel=”stylesheet” />
    3.  
  • The various meta data for viewport:
    • width The default is 980. The range is [200, 10,000].
    • height The default is calculated based on the width and aspect ratio. The range is [223, 10,000].
    • initial-scale is the scale to render the page when it first loads. The default fits the page to the screen. The range is [minimum-scale, maximum-scale]. Keep in mind that the user can change the scale, either through the pinch gesture or by a double tap.
    • user-scalable determines whether or not the user can scale the page. The default is yes.
    • minimum-scale is the lower bound for scaling. The default is 0.25; the range is [>0, 10].
    • maximum-scale is the upper bound for scaling. The default is 1.6; the range is [>0, 10].
  • How to interact with the apps from JavaScript
    • Phone call: <a href=”tel:1-408-555-5555″>1-408-555-5555</a>
    • Mail: <a href=”mailto:frank@wwdcdemo.example.com”>John Frank</a>
    • Google Maps: <a href=”http://maps.google.com/maps?q=cupertino”>Cupertino</a>
  • How to embed a movie in a page (making sure to setup a preview image)
  • Making sure your text is readable
  • And much more.

The documentation states that Safari for iPhone is your good old Safari, however there seem to be a LOT of differences in practice, and it has been said that the codebase was forked some time ago.

More information on iPhone Development

I recommend hanging out on the iPhoneWebDev group, and we are excited to have Joe Hewitt himself speak at The Ajax Experience in a few weeks, all about his experience with the iPhone, and what he has learnt.

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/130327571/iphone-web-development-tips-and-official-documentation-released



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