[Steve Ballmer of Microsoft, April 2007:]
There’s no chance that the iPhone is going to get any significant market share. No chance. It’s a $500 subsidized item. They may make a lot of money. But if you actually take a look at the 1.3 billion phones that get sold, I’d prefer to have our software in 60% or 70% or 80% of them, than I would to have 2% or 3%, which is what Apple might get.
[Today, let's see where Windows Mobile is at:]
The OS numbers are interesting: Symbian at 63%, RIM at 16%, iPhone OS at 13%, and Windows Mobile at 11%. But it’s the year-over-year growth where you can see who has actual momentum: Symbian is down 12% and Windows Mobile is down 3%; RIM is up 82% and iPhone OS is up a staggering 328%.
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[Quote:]
Yesterday, EFF filed petitions (1, 2) with the Copyright Office seeking DMCA exemptions for three categories of activities that do not violate copyright laws, but that are still jeopardized by the DMCA’s ban on bypassing technical protection measures used to control access to copyrighted works (i.e, DRM). The three exemptions are for:
- Noncommercial video creators (like YouTubers and vidders) who rip DVDs in order to use clips for fair use remixes;
- Cell phone owners who want to unlock their phones to use them on cellular networks of their choosing;
- Cell phone owners who want to “jailbreak” their phones in order to use applications of their choosing (e.g., iPhone owners who want apps from sources other than the iTunes App Store).
The exemption for remix video creators is necessary to protect fair use in a digital world where visual literacy (what Larry Lessig calls RW culture) is increasingly important. Today, if you rip a DVD, the MPAA takes the position that you’ve broken the law, even if you are making a video that comments on the latent racism in Disney films or the sexualized violence in 300. This is what free speech looks like in the 21st century, and a DMCA exemption is necessary if we want to avoid driving millions of amateur creators into the copyright underground.
The cell phone exemptions (unlocking and jailbreaking) are necessary to protect your “freedom to tinker” with products you own. Cellular carriers lock their phones not to protect their copyrights, but rather to discourage customers from switching carriers. This is not only anti-competitive, but puts millions of used cell phones into landfills each year. More recently, cell phone makers have started locking phones to a single source for applications — which is why more than 350,000 iPhone owners have “jailbroken” their iPhones in order to get the apps they want, instead of just the ones Apple is willing to let them have.
[Quote:]
Among the Bush administration’s final environmental legacies will be a decision to exempt perchlorate, a known neurotoxin found at unsafe levels in the drinking water of millions of Americans, from federal regulation.
The ruling, proposed by the Environmental Protection Agency in October, was supposed to be formalized on Monday. That deadline passed, but the agency expects to announce its decision by the year’s end, before president-elect Barack Obama takes office. It could take years to reverse.

[Quote:]
Is Ileana Ros-Lehtinen a little paranoid?
Maybe.
On Wednesday, the Republican congresswoman got a call from President-elect Barack Obama, didn’t believe it was him, and hung up on him. Twice.
According to Ros-Lehtinen’s flack Alex Cruz, the congresswoman received the call on her cell phone from a Chicago-based number and an aide informed her that Obama wanted to speak to her. When Obama introduced himself, Ros-Lehtinen cut him off and said, “I’m sorry but I think this is a joke from one of the South Florida radio stations known for these pranks.” Then she hung up.
[Quote:]
The European Court of Human Rights has ruled that it is illegal for the government to retain DNA profiles and fingerprints belonging to two men never convicted of any crime.
The landmark decision could mean the more than 570,000 DNA profiles in the National DNA Database belonging to innocent individuals will have to be deleted. Police in England, Wales and Northern Ireland currently have powers to take DNA and fingerprints from everyone they arrest.
The case was heard by the 17 judges of the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg. They unanimously found that UK DNA and fingerprint retention policies infringe individuals’ rights to privacy.
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Loving the new layout
Re: Steve Ballmer – I doubt he will learn from this.
Nice page design — great photo.