New Portable Video/Audio Player

Joining the mix a bit on the late side, Creative is finally releasing a portable video player called the Zen Portable Media Center. The device supports hard-drives from 20 gigs on up (probably up to 60 gigs on release) and is designed specifically to work with Window’s Media Center computers — much to its detriment. While the device does play audio files in the WMA or MP3 formats, video is limited to Windows Media video. No DivX or other video formats are listed as supported, though this may be a ruse to imply (as Microsoft often does) that all video codecs are really Microsoft codecs if they play on a Microsoft player. Price on the device is expected to start around $400, probably for release in Q2.

If you’re wondering what that smell is, it’s the smell of the 800 pound gorilla sitting in the corner picking its butt, while scheming to get a jump on Apple’s iTunes by setting up the video equivalent. Microsoft is almost certainly setting up a system for users to download individual television shows as well as on-demand videos for playing once or multiple times on a single Microsoft device, either desktop, X-Box or one of these portable video players. I’d like to say that the proprietary approach isn’t going to work in this case because consumers are far too savvy to ever buy something so locked to one media format, but that’s only StreetTech consumers that are so savvy. Most of the rest of the world will either volunteer or be forced to dance with this gorilla, and then we’ll never get rid of him ….

Bluejacking Not Just Harmless Fun

There was a brief spike recently in the trend of Bluejacking, which really wasn’t “jacking” at all so much as spoofing people by sending harmless messages to Bluetooth enabled phones. But Bluejacking has given way to Bluesnarfing (?) — an actual hack of a Bluetooth enabled phone that can copy or edit a person’s address or organizer files in the phone. This hack could affect users of many phones, such as the Sony Ericsson ones in which Bluetooth is more popular, but only when the phone is in “discovery” mode, which is user-initiated. Nokia phones with Bluetooth may be more subject to hack though, since for some reason the security hole in those phones can be exploited even when the BT is in passive mode.

The folks who discovered this weakness in the BT authentication protocols have posted information, including a chart that deatails the vulnerability of particular phones.
via C|Net.

Buy An X-Box, Get Some Lovin’

Microsoft is trying to “engorge” sales of the X-Box in Japan by releasing a special edition clear-blue X-Box that comes with a sort of sex doll, called a dakimakura in Japanese. While there are no orfices to fill, the dakimakura, euphemistically called hugging pillows, are popular with young men obsessed with the characters from Dead or Alive: Xtreme Beach Volleyball. Kinda makes Janet Jackson’s stunt seem tame, doesn’t it? I wonder if Microsoft will be banned from advertising on T.V….

via Wired.

Is That a Camera Phone In Your Pocket?

Motorola has just announced the new v80 phone, which has a swing-around screen similar to the sexy though not terribly popular v70. The v80 has much better hardware, including an integrated 640×480 camera that can shoot in landscape mode when the screen is moved to 90 deg. But the best imrovement is the spring-loaded mechanism that automatically opens at the touch of a button, revealing the keypad in a smooth ballet of technology. You can imagine how this might be inconvenient or even embarrassing if the screen flipped open at the wrong time, though.

Happy release of this phone is Q2, price not yet known.

Cory’s New Novel Uploads (and Ships)

Street Tech pal Cory Doctorow’s new novel, Eastern Standard Tribe, starts shipping today. A free e-book version is also now available for download from his Web site He writes:

As with Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom, my first novel, I’ve made the whole text of the novel available as a free download in a variety of open, standards-defined formats, under the terms of a Creative Commons license — and I’ve written a short essay explaining why I’ve done it: in a nutshell, this worked really well for my first book, and I’d be crazy not to repeat the experiment with my second novel.

X-Box 2 Will Have Multiple Processors

According to DesignTechnica some specs have leaked out suggesting that there may be as many as four processors inside the replacement for the X-Box gaming platform expected next year. Another revalation is that the unit may not include a hard-drive — something that the current X-Box has but that has proven more useful to hardware hackers than for the gaming itself.