HP Spy Saga Continues

Last week, I complained about a low-level private investigator forced to plead guilty in the HP spy case. The state of California might let young Bryan Wagner off its Golden State hooks because the 29-year-old is already being punished (lightly it seems) by the feds.

Meanwhile, former chairwoman Patricia Dunn and three other alleged conspirators were offered what sounds like the deal of a lifetime. The feds will drop felony charges if they plead to a misdemeanor. So far, the defendants haven't taken the deal. As a longtime watcher of "Law & Order," I've got three words of advice: "Take the deal!"

Posted by Doug Barney on 01/22/2007 at 1:15 PM0 comments


Vista Just a Download Away

Microsoft doesn't want you to go all the way to the local Circuit City to get your Vista fix. Instead, you can sit in your chair with your bathrobe (or whatever else you care to wear) and just download the darn thing. Sounds like a decent idea. I just hope there is a darn good utility to make sure your machine can handle what is a pretty demanding OS, and an easy way to back out of the deal if your machine chokes on all that code.

Posted by Doug Barney on 01/22/2007 at 1:15 PM0 comments


There's a New Boss in PC Town

There have been a lot of PC leaders in the past. IBM made a run for the crown, and further back we had the likes of Kaypro, Osborne, Eagle and the very cool Vector Graphics microcomputers.

HP (with Compaq under its belt) is now the clear and decided leader, and its recently gained edge over Dell is growing quarter by quarter. HP now has 17 to 18 percent of the worldwide market while Dell has 14 to 15 percent.

I contributed to HP's success when I bought my daughter a new laptop late last year. It turns out that replacing the screen on her old Toshiba was almost as much as a new lapper. Whadda ya bid for a sweet Toshiba with a dead display?

Posted by Doug Barney on 01/22/2007 at 1:15 PM0 comments


Monitoring Your Thirst

Apparent wackjob Randall Flann has been making fluid-holding headgear for years. Gridiron fans can dispense beverages from a football, and hockey addicts can wear a big beer-filled puck on their heads. Computer aficionados aren't being left out. For $30, you can get a big plastic thing that looks like a monitor, fill it full of Jolt and drink your brains out!

By the way, Flann calls himself "Madman." Can someone who calls himself mad truly be mad? And of course, the question of the hour: Is Weird Al Yankovic actually weird? I say no, but you can disagree at [email protected].

Posted by Doug Barney on 01/17/2007 at 1:15 PM0 comments


Lucid8 a Triple Exchange Threat

Lucid8 is well-known for GOexchange, an e-mail maintenance and performance tool. The company also has backup for Exchange in the form of DigiVault.

Now, the company is getting into the e-mail discovery market with DigiScope. Lost a critical message? Need to recover a message thread to defend against a lawsuit or get a new employee up to speed? DigiScope can search, copy and move around Exchange e-mail that may be stored in any number of places.

The tool can also recover deleted mailboxes and folders, and even get back corrupted data.

Posted by Doug Barney on 01/17/2007 at 1:15 PM0 comments


IE7: Over 100 Million Served

A tenth of a billion people have already downloaded IE7, and it seems that complaints about the browser have calmed down considerably. I still haven't upgraded, and switch between the old IE and the new Firefox. I like Firefox's tabs, but still find scrolling through bookmarks clunky. Why should I upgrade to IE7? Let me know at [email protected].

Posted by Doug Barney on 01/17/2007 at 1:15 PM0 comments


A Real Vista Space Shot

This weekend, Microsoft started a contest with a pretty cool prize -- a trip into space! Clues were given in Las Vegas, and new ones will be released in other cities. According to the Robb Report (I can afford to buy the magazine, just not anything in it!), the Learjet-based spacecraft can reach 150,000 feet (at which point you can loosen but not undo your seatbelt), and cost a cool quarter-mil. The craft could beat Longhorn out the door, as flights could start as early as this fall.

I find it interesting that Microsoft didn't cut a deal with Paul Allen's SpaceShipOne. Allen's rocket can go more than twice as high as the one Microsoft hooked up with.

Posted by Doug Barney on 01/17/2007 at 1:15 PM0 comments


HP CEO Feelin' Fine, Low-Level Gumshoe Feeling Low

According to reports, Mark Hurd, the head of HP, was copied on a key memo discussing an investigation into reporters, employees and directors looking for leaks (Hurd neglected to read the memo and missed part of a key meeting on the subject, he says). Hurd is still running meetings, making the covers of business magazines and doin' fine.

Meanwhile a 29-year-old peon (let's call him Scooter Libby Jr.) from the PI firm with all the sneaky tactics, pled guilty to identity theft -- all for doing the bidding of HP execs.

Posted by Doug Barney on 01/16/2007 at 1:15 PM0 comments


Jobs Not Off the Hook Yet

When I suggested that Steve Jobs be let off the hook for possible financial improprieties, a bunch of you just about ripped my fool head off. You might get your wish to see Jobs in jeopardy. After being cleared by Apple (did they put Leslie Nielsen on this case?) the feds decided to check up on the charges themselves.

While some might view Apple as some kind of touchy-feely company, it is, after all, built to make money. In fact, its platform is more proprietary than Redmond's because it is completely tied to hardware (bring back the Mac clones!).

Posted by Doug Barney on 01/16/2007 at 1:15 PM0 comments


Dotster Found its Dots

As beer companies know, sex sells. Domain registrar Dotster agrees, and recently held a contest to find female spokesmodels. These women are no slouches. One is a former Miss Arizona (yes, this century!), another appeared on a Dunkin' Donuts commercial and a third actually speaks Spanish.

I've gotten numerous press releases about this and they all tell me to check out the Dots at http://www.dotsterdots.com. But this Internet company doesn't operate on Internet time, as the site is still just a placeholder. Maybe the company should take a course in Publicity 101 and have the Web site ready before they blast out a million press releases!

Posted by Doug Barney on 01/16/2007 at 1:15 PM0 comments


Laplink Eases End User Vista Moves

While Wise is aimed at IT, Laplink's new PCmover for Windows is designed to help end users migrate files, settings and applications to Vista. The new rev should be out Jan. 18.

Posted by Doug Barney on 01/15/2007 at 1:15 PM0 comments


New Mac Office Due

Macphiles, rejoice. You don't have to be stuck with Office 2003 or NeoOffice/J forever. Unfortunately, the new Mac suite will not use the ribbon interface. However, the new Mac Office will run on new Intel Macs and older PowerPC machines. Now, if we can just get a Linux port!

Posted by Doug Barney on 01/15/2007 at 1:15 PM0 comments


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