Posted by: kurtsh | February 6, 2006

INFO: Making money on your MSN Spaces blog

Want to know, in a nutshell, how to make some cash on your MSN Spaces Blog?  It’s weird.  No one’s written about this topic much and it’s such a huge part of the new MSN Spaces 10.5.
 
Making Money through MSN Spaces’ "Sponsored Advertising" module and Kanoodle.com
If you are a Kanoodle Bright Ads registrant, than you can deliver contextual advertising directly within you blog without doing anything other than adding the "Sponsored Advertising" module to your MSN Space and pointing it to your Kanoodle account.  If you are NOT registered with Kanoodle, simply adding the "Sponsored Advertising" module to your MSN Space will get you started.  The module itself will enable you to register with Kanoodle and get you on your way.
  1. Make sure that you’ve signed into your MSN Space and are in Edit mode. 
  2. Click the Customize tab.
  3. Click "Modules"
  4. Add the "Sponsored Advertisements" module.  It may require you to scroll through the different modules drop down box.
  5. Follow the instructions in the module box that appears on your MSN Space layout.
 
Making Money through MSN Spaces’ "Book Lists" module and Amazon.com’s Affiliate Program: 
If you are an Amazon Associate, you can link your MSN Spaces book list to your Amazon Associate ID and earn money for purchases that come from your list.  If you are NOT an Amazon Associate, you may sign up and receive your Amazon Associate ID by going here: http://www.amazon.com/gp/browse.html/002-9271857-5617646?%5Fencoding=UTF8&node=3435371 
  1. Make sure that you have signed into your space and are in edit mode (One of the two views available to the author of a space in MSN Spaces. Edit mode allows you to customize your space and post new content to it.) .
  2. Make sure you have created a book list.
  3. Click the Settings tab.
  4. On the Space Settings tab, scroll down to Amazon Associates.
  5. In the Amazon Associates box, type your Amazon Associate ID.
    Note:  If you don’t have a book list on your space, you will not be able to enter your Amazon Associate ID on the Space Settings page.
  6. Click Save.
 
Posted by: kurtsh | February 6, 2006

NEWS: KROQ 106.7FM & CBS Radio stream using Windows Media

Today, CBS Radio is streaming it’s biggest radio properties – including the Nation’s #1 Rock format radio station, KROQ 106.7FM – over the Internet using Microsoft Windows Media audio.
This nearly brought a tear to my eye on Friday but I couldn’t write about it until today.  I have a personal connection to this move of CBS radio to stream its radio stations over the Internet using our technology.  Many of you may not know that Windows Media is one of my personal ‘favorite’/’pet’ products from Microsoft.  There’s simply no better technology out there for getting multimedia communicated over TCP/IP data connections.
 

Here’s my story about how CBS Radio was introduced to Windows Media.  I’ve gone through this story and removed all the names which were originally in the text because I decided that some folks might not want to have their names put on the Internet:

 
———–
 
MICROSOFT & CBS RADIO MEET
About 6 years ago, I met with then KROQ Engineering Manager, (now CBS Radio’s VP of West Coast Engineering) through my friend Blake Handler to talk about streaming technology and how it could benefit KROQ to get its audio feed and its advertising to more people… and why Microsoft Windows Media was the way to do it.  While there we also met with the Programming Manager and the General Manager of the station. 
 
I won’t bore you with the details but the result was that they weren’t convinced that this was a good thing for the station.  The GM was only concerned about ‘things that would draw in more listeners’ to the FM feed to affect the station’s Arbitron ratings.  The Programming Manager said something about having to renegotiate all their talent’s contracts (the radio jockeys) since the contracts didn’t cover "Internet streaming" as a usage policy.  I was also told that Mel Karmazin (CEO of Viacom, the parent compnay of CBS Radio) had a problem with the prospect that New York could hear Los Angeles’ radio feed over the Internet and that their own properties might potentially compete against each other.  There was also some concern over whether or not KROQ would have to pay a fee for their broadcasting of music/songs over the Internet, which would be a complete dealbreaker being that KROQ runs on a shoestring budget.
 
There were "conspiracy" ideas flying around the room from the non-Microsoft parties about how we or someone else could/would help KROQ ‘force things’ so that only LA listeners could hear LA-based KROQ, and San Francisco listeners could hear only SF-based Live105FM.  Management didn’t want advertising to cross geographical boundaries because "their contracts with advertisers didn’t account for nationwide advertising which was billed differently"… or something like that.
 
The meeting ended rather sadly.  While KROQ’s Engineering Manager was thinking about how to get the ‘best’ stream on the Internet, KROQ’s management basically didn’t recognize the value of streaming and put a ki-bosh on any initiative around the topic.
 
GLIMMER OF HOPE
As I was about to leave that meeting, the concept of potentially streaming ‘one-off’ events was left on the table.  It seems that the loophole in all of this was that they might be able to stream KROQ’s annual concert events – "Acoustic Christmas" and "Weenie Roast", however the implication was that it would have to be something that Microsoft ‘cowboy-ed up’ for.
 
I contacted the Windows Media group to see what we could do, and had one of our ‘money guys’ (folks with budgetary authority) talk to KROQ because I still believed that this was a worthwhile investment.  We committed to spending a fairly sizable amount of money to provide a stream for KROQ’s upcoming "Weenie Roast" event.  Sadly, KROQ’s Internet service provider was… well… incompetent at the time (they’ve since changed ISPs) and when the stream went live during the event, the link to connect to the stream didn’t appear until most of the event was over.  Since no one was ever actually able to really use our technology, it wasn’t the best money we’d ever spent.
 
KROQ’s management fortunately recognized that this was extremely uncool for us as sponsors.   They offered to give us first right of refusal to sponsor the next event they had – an event called Acoustic Christmas.  Which we did and the relationship continued.
 
To this day, even after 5 years I’ve been very pleased with the fact that KROQ streams their concert events as well as their music samples exclusively in Windows Media format even without our sponsorship, meaning that you must use our free Windows Media Player to listen to the content KROQ broadcasts.
 
ENTER… THE LIVE FEED
So here we are 5 years later and KROQ is finally getting ready to stream their FM station feed… and thankfully it’s still in Windows Media format.  Since then, the Engineering Manager for KROQ was promoted and became responsible for Engineering across the West Coast.  I don’t know who the management is at KROQ these days, but I suspect that it’s someone who is thinking a little more out-of-the-box with regard to media streaming than folks were 5 years ago.  Either that or the previous management has gotten a little more pragmatic about the value of streaming since then.  In either case, good for them.  And great for us as listeners.
 
I suspect that over the years, CBS Radio learned that:
a) Listeners listen to streams that they KNOW… streams that are local to them.
b) When contracts are renegotiated, it’s not hard to include Internet broadcasting in them.
c) Competitors are already streaming radio content and that this is something that is possible to do.
 
In any case, thank you CBS Radio and KROQ 106.7 for continuing to use Windows Media format for your broadcasts.  It means a lot to us… and to me especially.
Posted by: kurtsh | February 6, 2006

RELEASE: Microsoft Research’s “Group Bar”

GroupBar is lightweight desktop tool created by the Microsoft VIBE group that offers enhanced window management capabilities in a Windows taskbar-like setting. The basic concept is that through simple drag-and-drop operations on window tiles within the bar, users can create lightweight, transient grouping relationships that allow them to perform certain higher-level window layout functions on multiple windows at once. In addition, windows and groups in the GroupBar can be persisted in a "Snapshot" which attempts to remember the position and contents of each window in a way that allows the Snapshot to be recreated at a later time, even if the windows have been rearranged or closed.
 
GroupBar requires no installation – just download the executable (GroupBar.exe) and run it. (Put in in your start-up group to run it automatically on start-up.)   Note: creating Snapshots with the GroupBar produces .gss files in the same folder as GroupBar.exe, so save it in its own folder if you would like to avoid cluttering up other folders.   GroupBar requires no uninstallation either – simply delete GroupBar.exe and any Snapshot (.gss) files it has created, and it is gone.
 
 
 
Posted by: kurtsh | February 6, 2006

FIX: “Acquiring IP address…” message on WinXP SP2

Do you have a network icon in your System Tray?  Have you ever seen a bunch of "dots" going blip blip blip in this network icon with this message appearing when you hover your mouse over it?
"Acquiring network IP address…"
It’s annoying as hell.  Most of the time, you do have an IP address allocated to your workstation and you can verify this by doing an IPCONFIG.EXE but the system doesn’t seem to recognize this.
 
I believe this is the fix for this problem.  It’s a well known issue and I’m not sure why this hasn’t been communicated better but the fix is a downloadable patch that doesn’t appear as either a critical patch or a recommended patch.  Strangely, it’s a completely UNLISTED patch.
 
 
Posted by: kurtsh | February 5, 2006

COMMENTARY: The ‘Blackberry workaround’

It would appear that several people have written about the purported Blackberry workaround that RIM has planned in order to circumvent the restrictions placed on them by NTP’s patents on messaging push/forwarding technology.

Now for the record, I know only what I’ve read on the Internet, but this is my take on what they’re allegedly doing in a nutshell and what the implications may be… in my opinion:

THE BLACKBERRY WORKAROUND:

  1. Current Blackberry devices will be switched over to a ‘workaround mode’ at RIM’s NOC where a Blackberry device receives pushed "links" to email messages whose ‘body’ content are still stored remotely.  These "links" themselves have the ‘subject’ and relevant To: and Cc: information in them to allow people to understand the email context.  When clicked, the link pulls down the email body on-demand which takes 1-2 seconds.
  2. This purportedly gets around the legal troubles RIM has had because allegedly the NTP patents cover one-way email messaging transmission only according to web sites I’ve read.  They do not cover two-way on-demand pulls of email based on "header" delivery, which in it of themselves are not qualified as "emails", thus RIM never actually pushes an email to the device.  The end user ‘pulls’ the email on-demand when they want to read it.

The upside of all of this is that no Blackberry ROM changes or Blackberry Enterprise Server changes are required.  All changes are done at the RIM Network Operations Center.

There are however problems with all of this:

THE WORKAROUND’S DOWNSIDES:

  • Customers will find that they lose productivity by finding themselves reading email slower, and it’ll be annoyingly apparent to every user.  The opening of these links result in a 1-2 second delay as the content is pulled down over GPRS networks.  This pause will probably make users ‘less productive’ in rapidly clearing SPAM and mails they don’t care about.  And let’s not kid ourselves… clearing our Inbox through our mobile devices is supposed to be a quick process.  Anyone that’s done this knows what I’m talking about.
  • Customers will lose productivity by no longer having offline usage.  Since the devices rely on having cellular access to pull down the body of email messages, if you aren’t in range of the network, you can’t read email.  People that work in buildings… people that take the train… people that work part of the day in areas uncovered by their cellular network… they’re all going to discover that their devices are paper weights during these time periods because they don’t actually have email on them… just the headers and links to the body content.

WHY WINDOWS MOBILE?

Windows Mobile devices, like the Palm Treo 700w, the Samsung i730, and the Verizon/Sprint XV6700, all have great keyboards, small form factors, and rich interfaces with always-up-to-date email available on them through a Pocket version of Outlook.  But what sets Windows Mobile apart is the manner in which mail is delivered:

  • For older Windows Mobile 2003 devices, Windows Mobile phones receive specially encoded/encrypted SMS text messages through the carrier network from the Exchange Server at your company.  These text messages act as ‘wake-up’ calls to your phone to initiate a pull of new email from the server.  This includes both the header as well as the body and it’s attachments.  The benefit of this is that the Exchange Server is extremely scalable and can handle 10,000 users or more while the device allows for offline email reading while delivering email nearly immediately.  Additionally, no service charges outside of cellular data network charges are required, meaning customers don’t pay RIM for anything.  The one drawback is that each phone must purchase a plan with text messaging however many networks provide this service for free or at a low cost.
  • For newer Windows Mobile 5.0 devices, Windows Mobile phone establish a persistent HTTP connection between the Exchange Server and itself.  The Exchange Server sends a ‘ping’ to the device to notify it that there is new mail available.  Upon notification, the phone wakes up and pulls down any new email – headers, body, and attachments.  The benefit of this is that new devices no longer need SMS text messaging services in their phone plans, they receive email almost immediately, and they also have offline usage of email on their devices.  And again, no service charges outside of cellular data network charges are required. 

Imagine not having to write a check to RIM every year for simple mobile email support.  That’s Windows Mobile.

Posted by: kurtsh | February 5, 2006

WEB: Windows Mobile gets a new Web site!

Windows Mobile finally updated their web site.  It’s got a completely new look and feel to it however most importantly, the left side navigation bar’s been cleaned up and points to EVERYTHING that we have available in the web hierarchy.
Posted by: kurtsh | February 4, 2006

EVENT: TechEd 2006 Registration Begins!

TechEd 2006 Registration begins NOW!
 
Couple things to keep in mind:
1)  DISCOUNT:  You have until April 14th to register and get the early bird offer of $200 off.
2)  KEYNOTES:  Chief Technology Officer Ray Ozzie will be keynoting along side Corporate VP of Office Server, Kurt DelBene.  (Yes, you read that correctly:  "Office Server".  And if you haven’t heard about it yet, you better ask me sometime! <grin>)
3)  SELLING OUT:  This event always sells out by MAY.  No joke.  It will sell out by May of this year so be sure to register in advance… no, I will NOT be able to get you in after it’s sells out.
 
I repeat:  Internet Explorer 7.0 Beta 2 goes LIVE – Download it now!
 
Here’s a few of the exciting new features showcased in the beta that will be features that are in the final version of IE 7.0 including:
·         Dynamic new security and privacy protection features
·         A significantly enhanced end user experience
·         Major platform advances for Web and application developers
IE 7 Beta 2 Preview also includes the Windows RSS platform for Windows XP. By making the powerful RSS platform available for Windows XP, Microsoft is further empowering developers to easily create innovative, RSS-enabled solutions.  You’ll see teams throughout Microsoft and many third party ISVs delivering products in the coming months built on this platform.
 
 
P.S. For those of you running XP Pro 64-bit or Windows Server 2003, you’ll have a new IE7 to play with at the broad consumer beta in a few months.  And, of course, if you are self-hosting Windows Vista betas, you have the latest and greatest versions of IE 7 already.
Posted by: kurtsh | February 1, 2006

COMMENTARY: USB-powered Drink Cooler

So I received my USB-powered drink cooler in the mail the other day from CoolIt.  Microsoft is in the middle of moving offices so I’m having to do a lot of heavy lifting… and I thought the drink cooler would come in handy.
 
I was right.  This thing is cool – if you’ll pardon the pun.  It gets down to a good 40-45 degrees Fahrenheit.  The folks at http://www.thetechzone.com/?m=show&id=487 did an evaluation of the technology and I think they did a thorough job, but they were a little unfair about it’s effectiveness.  I suspect that if you have a metal cup or sorts, it would defintely be more effective in maintaining a cold drink but normal Diet Coke cans seem to work just fine.
 
 
Posted by: kurtsh | January 31, 2006

NEWS: HD DVD Interview with Microsoft

Granted, this might just be me, but I found this HD DVD Interview with Microsoft to be very interesting.  The author seems hell bent on trying to nail HD DVD as being a less-attractive technology than Blu-Ray by virtue of the fact that the first couple of HD-DVD players will not be 1080p capable. 

Meanwhile, the issue is somewhat unimportant since while the first 2 HD-DVD players coming out won’t be 1080p capable, there’s nothing preventing someone from releasing a 1080p capable player because all HD-DVD discs will be recorded in 1080p/24, just like BluRay discs.

The natural question will simply be:  If you don’t have 1080p-capable big screen TV, will you really care?  My guess is NO.

Meanwhile, HD-DVD players will be much less expensive than BluRay players AND:

  • All 1st generation HD DVD players will ship with iHD support, allowing much more flexible interactivity design than DVD.
  • All 1st generation HD DVD players will ship with features such as Picture-in-Picture, that content authors can take advantage of.
  • All 1st generation HD DVD players will ship with network connectivity.

http://www.audioholics.com/ces/CEStechnology/HDDVDCESinterview.php

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