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Meanwhile, on Global Nerdy…

Captain Jack Sparrow approaches a Windows Vista box.

Meanwhile, on Global Nerdy, the tech blog:

  • The latest “iPod killer:” mobile subscription music services. “I have my doubts. If subscription was such a winner, surely we’d see some pretty impressive numbers for the Windows Media-based subscription services that already exist, and target the much more mature digital audio player market? Yes, I know subscription has its fans, but the dollars don’t lie—people prefer iPods, downloads, and ripping.”
  • AOL screen name owners now have OpenIDs, too. “That’s 60MM or so newly-active OpenIDs in one fell swoop. Granted, most AOL and AIM users wouldn’t know what to do with their newly-minted OpenIDs, but it’s nice to see the infrastructure there for when the concept’s mature enough to start to take popular root.”
  • 200 Megabytes of RAM Ought to be Enough for Anybody. “Here’s something from Reddit that shoud make you snicker: it’s a thread from the comp.is.ms-windows.misc newsgroup from February 1997 in which the posters discuss whether or not computers will someday need gigabytes of RAM.”
  • Apple’s “Spring Forward” Update. “With the US Congress’ 2005 ruling that daylight savings time should start three weeks earlier and end one week later taking place this year, DST has become the new Y2K. Apple just pushed out a system update that includes adjustments for these changes.”
  • Joel on Software’s 7 Steps (plus a bonus one) to Remarkable Customer Service. “Joel Spolsky’s latest article on Joel on Software not only follows one of the “How to write headlines that get attention” rules that have been making the rounds at Techmeme these days, but it lists some lessons that he says he learned during the early days of Fog Creek Software, when he did tech support.”
  • Vista’s Dates Keep Talking About Their “Ex” — Mac OS X, That Is. “According to Iljitsch van Beijnum over at Infinite Loop, a large number of people writing reviews of Vista keep bringing up Mac OS X. Worse still, some of these review are rather akin to your date saying ‘You’re not as handsome/pretty/smart/cool/charming as my ex was’.”
  • Ballmer Blames BRIC Pirates for Vista’s Slow Sales. “Never mind all the reviews that tell readers not to upgrade to Vista unless it comes bundled with a new computer, all the write-ups that say that it’s only incrementally better than XP or the recommendations to go with the two-year-old Mac OS X 10.4 over the brand-new Vista. Vista’s slow sales, according to Steve Ballmer, are the fault of pirates in the “BRIC Countries” (Brazil, Russia, India and China, all of which are emerging markets for the high-tech sector).”
  • Trulia Announces Their API for Creating Real Estate Mashups. “According to the announcement in the Trulia blog, the practical upshot of having access to their API will mean that you can write applications to answer questions such as: “What was the average price of a 2-bedroom home in ZIP 94002 on the week of 11/27/2006?” (The answer is $809,533) or “Which neighborhood was the biggest winner/loser in Manhattan over the past 6 months in terms of search traffic?” (The biggest winner was the Flatiron District, the biggest loser was Battery Park City).”
  • Now You’ll Know Which Idiot is Filling Your Comments Section with Pointless, Puerile Drivel. “Pardon me if I don’t get too terribly excited about Om Malik’s news that Digg, the new Slashdot — and no, that’s not a compliment — is going to adopt the OpenID standard.”
  • “Windows Vista’s User Account Control is leading you to make a security choice based on a false sense of trust. Cancel or allow?” “If you’re already using Vista, you’ve probably run into at least one of those annoying “Cancel or Allow?” dialog boxes lampooned in the Mac ad above. Now it turns out that you can’t always trust them. The Symantec Security Response weblog has an article in which they say that in some cases, Vista’s UAC approach ‘becomes a chicken and egg situation when the user is making a decision based on a false sense of trust.'”

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