Vayable Is A Marketplace For Unique Travel Experiences

Like an Airbnb for travel experiences, secondary market place Vayable launches today to offer travelers the opportunity to buy experiences in exotic locales all over the world, from Rome to Rio as the well worn cliche goes. Founders Jamie Wong and Samrat Jeyaprakash tell me that the key difference between Vayable and the other "Airbnb for experiences" Skyara is that Vayable is targeting travelers specifically, especially those who are tired of the relative banality of activity offerings from sites like Orbitz and Expedia.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/8aF01rTgIlU/

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Microsoft files antitrust complaint against Google in Europe, showdown imminent

Bill Gates and Paul AllenMicrosoft, citing Google's tyrannical 95% share of the European search market, has lodged a formal complaint with the European Commission. It's not like Microsoft is breaking any ground here -- the European Commission has been investigating Google's alleged violation of European competition law since November 2010 -- but there's no doubt that the addition of Microsoft's gravitas will affect the proceedings.

Microsoft's complaint reads like a sincere and plaintive cry for help against the Google Overlord. Microsoft lists no less than six damning reasons why Google's behavior is anti-competitive -- from Windows Phone 7's incompatibility with YouTube, to its nefarious handling of Google Books -- and finishes with a wide-eyed plea to the European Commission to please find Google guilty.

For those of you that have been following Microsoft's own antitrust troubles over the last decade, don't worry: MS is quick to point out the irony in the situation. "There of course will be some who will point out the irony in today's filing. Having spent more than a decade wearing the shoe on the other foot with the European Commission, the filing of a formal antitrust complaint is not something we take lightly. This is the first time Microsoft Corporation has ever taken this step. More so than most, we recognize the importance of ensuring that competition laws remain balanced and that technology innovation moves forward."

It sounds like Microsoft, having well and truly gone through the wringer, wants Google to be held similarly accountable. That's fair enough, right?

Microsoft files antitrust complaint against Google in Europe, showdown imminent originally appeared on Download Squad on Thu, 31 Mar 2011 05:50:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://downloadsquad.switched.com/2011/03/31/microsoft-files-antitrust-complaint-against-google-in-europe-sh/

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Amazon's Cloudy Communications Make Bad Situation Worse

The widespread failure of Amazon's Web Services on Thursday has given ammunition to those uneasy about the trend toward moving computing operations and data to the cloud, but it's unlikely to have a permanently chilling effect. "Outages happen," said tech analyst Al Hilwa. "The levels of services will improve over time as service providers learn. [Amazon] should certainly try to communicate better about it, however."


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The collapse of Amazon (Nasdaq: AMZN) Web Services' (AWS) Elastic Cloud Compute (EC2) left several large websites out of commission on Thursday.

Amazon reportedly attributed the problems to what it called "a networking event" that caused runaway re-mirroring of Elastic Block Storage volumes. The resulting cascade took down hundreds, possibly thousands, of websites, including Foursquare, Hootsuite, Quora and Reddit.

Other details were left foggy.

Although AWS has multiple regions and availability zones -- a system designed to prevent a single point of failure -- there was apparently an engineering flaw that allowed the mass outage to occur.

Most affected websites were up and running by Friday, but there was still a scattering of unresolved problems, according to news reports.

Amazon did not respond to the E-Commerce Times' request for comments by press time.

Cloudburst Bound to Come

Amazon's own infrastructure is designed to be bullet-proof, even during the holiday season, but the cloud technology the company has extended to its Web services customers is apparently not quite so robust.

"This is inevitable," technology project manager and Geek 2.0 blogger

Steven Savage told TechNewsWorld. "Cloud computing is still developing, and EC2 is used by a lot of companies. There would inevitably be some big, public outage -- indeed I expected some very public failure of the cloud to happen in the near future... . However, this outage is much, much larger than I'd expected and took longer to recover from."

While Amazon's failure may prompt skepticism regarding cloud computing, the trend toward the cloud won't slow down quickly. It's just too useful and too convenient.

"This outage is going to deliver a black eye to cloud computing but isn't going to change the existing trends because the trends are powerful -- speed, ease, and reduction of cost," said Savage. "People who work in IT are going to be battling for weeks or months to clear up misconceptions about this."

AWS performed poorly in terms of communications with its customers, observed Savage. "The general consensus I see is that their communications were too little, not fast enough, and not detailed enough. There also wasn't a sense of urgency. People don't seem happy -- and can you blame them? Amazon engaged better than some companies -- the infamous Playstation Network outage about a year or so ago comes to mind -- but not well enough."

AWS may need to further consider worst-case scenarios for its service, suggested Savage.

In its promo material, AWS insists that "availability zones are distinct locations that are engineered to be insulated from failures in other availability zones." That didn't hold true as the crash cascaded across zones.

"I can't speak on the exact arrangement of their technologies, but in my past experiences with data centers, frankly, people are not paranoid enough nor do they think worst-case scenario enough," said Savage. "Caution in design is not the proper approach -- assuming the worst is, because in an age of high-speed, high-technology everywhere, the worst will happen by the odds."

Amazon will need to learn from the crash to avoid future snafus, and sharing its knowledge could improve both its public image and cloud computing in general.

"Amazon needs to assess their technical and failover architecture and publicly communicate how they'll fix this and improve it," said Savage. "In fact, they could share their findings publicly as a sort of public service and gain additional credibility on it. The feedback alone will help them further."

This gives Amazon's competition the chance to capture some of its clients.

"Expect competitors to swoop on on EC2 users after this," predicted Savage. "Amazon just became spectacularly vulnerable. Amazon can't let this happen again. It's embarrassing and destroys confidence -- which is a major cornerstone of their strategy."

Hey, Crashes Happen

When your electricity goes out, you don't vow to quit using electricity. If the cloud goes down, you don't quit the cloud.

"It is certainly a sign of the times that cloud outages get more attention today than even electric outages," said Al Hilwa, program director for applications development software at IDC.

"Outages happen. They happen inside and outside the firewall," he told TechNewsWorld. "However, when you have big popular and centralized services, they are going to create mass disruption."

The Amazon crash isn't likely to put a dent in the move to the cloud, in Hilwa's view. These are the early days of cloud computing, and crash or no crash, our dependence on cloud computing is only going to increase.

"The levels of services will improve over time as service providers learn," he said. "[Amazon] should certainly try to communicate better about it, however. In these situations, usually every ounce of their energy is sucked into restoring services as quickly as possible."

Source: http://www.technewsworld.com/rsstory/72326.html

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Top 25 gadget gurus you should follow ? Oh hai Rene!

Top 25 gadget gurus you should follow -- Oh hai Rene!

Business Insider included our own managing editor, the illustrious Rene Ritchie on their Top 25 Tech And Gadget Gurus You Should Follow On Twitter.

Rene Ritchie is the French Canadian master of iPhone apps and news, editing and writing for TiPb.com, one of the most well known iOS blogs.

Follow Rene at @reneritchie

Others included on the list were David Pogue, Adam Dachis, Jim Dalrymple, Boris Veldhuijzen van Zanten, Ben Parr, Harry McCracken, Peter Rojas, Joshua Topolsky, Ryan Block, John Gruber, Whitson Gordon, WonderHowTo, How To Geek, xdadevelopers, Gregory Han, Zach Epstein, Matt Brian, Matt Buchanan, Charlie White, Jackie Cohen, Wesley Fenlon, Kevin Rose, Veronica Belmont, and Leo Laporte.

Woooooooooooot! Congrats Rene! (And thanks BI for this collage!)

[Business Insider, thanks @aaronthered!]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/AzkUye6aIVs/

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Dodge is a space-shooter in which you have no weapons

dodge
Space-shooters are usually a fairly fiery affair, with many types of guns, weapon upgrades, power-ups and more. Dodge does away with all of that, while keeping the very essence of a space shooter: Dark background, fast action, and stuff blowing up all over the place.

Your vector-looking spacecraft is the fastest thing on the screen, most of the time. And as the header implies, you have absolutely no weapons; you can't get any, either. All you have is agility and maneuverability.

Your opponents shoot heat-seeking missiles at you; the missiles lock on and start tracking you. The trick is to dodge the missiles while putting them in the path of one of your enemies, thus letting them have a taste of their own medicine.

There are three types of enemies, at least in the first few levels: "simple" spaceships which fire slow projectiles, "tanks" which seem to be more serious and take more hits to destroy, and "circles." The circles simply explode, spewing twenty or thirty very fast projectiles. This sounds dangerous, but is actually great once you learn to use them; they are very destructive for tanks, and can even blow up other circles.

The soundtrack is very techno, but it meshes very well with this type of game. Intense fun!

Dodge is a space-shooter in which you have no weapons originally appeared on Download Squad on Tue, 01 Mar 2011 17:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://downloadsquad.switched.com/2011/03/01/dodge-is-a-space-shooter-in-which-you-have-no-weapons/

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(Founder Stories) The GroupMe Guys Reveal How To Land A Job At A Startup

All week long we've been running clips from the Founder Stories interview with the GroupMe Guys, co-founders Jared Hecht and Steve Martocci. In the video above, they answer some rapid fire questions about how to impress startups during an interview (give great product feedback), what do they look for in "social engineers," and what is the hardest part of running a startup (delegating and hiring). Host Chris Dixon mentions Paul Graham's essay on how founders should split up their time into a Maker schedule and a Manager schedule, and how in practice that turns out to be impossible. "Balancing the founder stuff on top of your actual responsibilities" is really tough, says Martocci.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/4eK7NV_9exc/

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As Greenpeace Knocks IT Sector For Bad Energy Habits, Google Buys More Wind Power

On Thursday, Greenpeace published a study on energy consumption and choices made by IT companies including Akamai, Amazon.com (Amazon Web Services), Apple, Facebook, Google, HP, IBM, Microsoft, Twitter, and Yahoo, entitled "How Dirty Is Your Data?". The study roundly criticizes the sector, especially Facebook, for using "dirty energy" ? power produced from hydrocarbon based sources, especially coal ? to meet growing IT demand. It also criticized companies for concealing details about their own, overall energy footprint and practices. Greenpeace specifically noted (excerpt from the environmental activists' own summary): Data centers, which house the explosion of virtual information, currently consume 1.5 to 2 percent of all global electricity and are growing at a rate of 12 percent each year; Companies in the sector, as a whole, do not release information on their energy use and its associated global warming emissions...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/YNn3eV8TfDI/

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Get free MLB.tv access during April with MLB.com At Bat app

If you're a baseball fanatic, the MLB At Bat app is a must-have. It's packed with live updates, scores, stats, news, and videos -- and right now there's another great reason to pick up At Bat. Pony up for At Bat and you'll get to enjoy MLB.tv free for the entire month of April.

The service streams games in HD to just about any connected device you can imagine, from iPhone to PS3, and even Roku boxes and LG Internet-ready televisions. The basic subscription will set you back $99 for the season, and a Premium sub is an extra $20 (and adds DVR functionality, multi-game PIP, and more).

MLB At Bat is available for Android and iOS and both apps run to $14.99 US.

Get free MLB.tv access during April with MLB.com At Bat app originally appeared on Download Squad on Mon, 04 Apr 2011 08:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://downloadsquad.switched.com/2011/04/04/get-free-mlb-tv-access-during-april-with-mlb-com-at-bat-app/

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Giving Nature Its Own Rights Might Avert Future Oil Disasters

Hundreds of lawsuits have flowed from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe, filed by citizens, states and the federal government. And someday, perhaps, the Gulf of Mexico?s ecosystems will also file suit.

Environmental philosophers and other people say that biological communities ? ecosystems, habitats, species and populations ? have a right to exist. They?re not just valuable because they?re someone?s property. Environmental lawyers say courts should recognize this right, and could allow people to represent nature as legal guardians or trustees.

Were nature?s rights recognized before the Deepwater Horizon wellhead blew, the destruction might have been avoided. In its aftermath, future disasters might at least be averted. If nothing else, pollution?s toll would be fully acknowledged in courts of law, not just public conscience.

?There is room in our legal system to expand the concept of guardianship,? said Patricia Siemen, executive director of the Center for Earth Jurisprudence. ?The inlets and the marshes, the beaches that are damaged, species of birds that are threatened ? each one may have its own guardian, with a right to speak for the interests of that being, and the legal authority to speak for that being.?

Legal recognition of ecological rights was originally proposed in 1972 by University of Southern California law professor Christopher Stone, who floated the idea as an academic exercise but became convinced of its justification. To Stone, arguments against the intrinsic rights of animals and ecosystems to exist were no more coherent than historical arguments against the rights of foreigners, children or women.

(Had Stone written a century earlier, he would have found a sympathetic ear in Charles Darwin, who in The Descent of Man wrote that humanity?s social impulses produced an ever-expanding circle of empathy. As mankind extended his regard ?to the lower animals, so would the standard of his morality rise higher and higher.?)

?The way our laws are constructed, anybody in the community can stand in the shoes of the river, so to speak.?

Stone?s landmark essay ?Should Trees Have Standing?? (.pdf), was derided by some scholars. ?Our brooks will babble in the courts / Seeking damages for torts,? chided one attorney. Others embraced it, including Supreme Court justice William O. Douglas. It became an environmental rallying point, and influenced legal activism in the decades to come.

In its modern form, natural rights are not usually framed in terms of individual creatures ? though laws against cruelty to animals implicitly acknowledge their rights ? but rather populations and ecosystems. In many ways, laws recognize those rights, too: The Endangered Species Act says that species have value. The Oil Pollution Act, which will guide the environmental assessment of Deepwater Horizon?s damage (.pdf) and ultimately determine what the U.S. government asks BP to pay for restoration, appoints various federal agencies as trustees of damaged Gulf habitats.

But there are important differences between the trusteeship sought by natural rights advocates and the trusteeship of the Oil Pollution Act. Under that law, only federal agencies can represent the Gulf of Mexico?s nature. Citizens and communities cannot. Meanwhile, the OPA?s trusteeship only kicks in after a disaster.

?Where natural rights would have the greatest influence in the context of oil and oil spills is before oil spills occur, when you?re trying to prevent damages from occurring,? said Kathryn Mengerink, director of the Environmental Law Institute?s Ocean Program.

A natural rights strategy for Gulf citizens can be found in statutes drafted by the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund, a nonprofit group that?s worked with dozens of Pennsylvania communities trying to restrict natural gas drilling and sewage sludge dumping. The statues explicitly grant towns and cities ? most notably, Pittsburgh ? legal standing to enforce the rights of ecosystems and natural communities.

?The way that environmental laws work now, is that unless you experience direct harm, you don?t have legal standing,? said Mari Margil, the CELDF?s associate director. ?The way our laws are constructed, anybody in the community can stand in the shoes of the river, so to speak.?

?Nothing in the text of Article III [of the U.S. Constitution] explicitly limits the ability to bring a claim in federal court to humans.?

Similar statutes wouldn?t have allowed Gulf communities to stop deep-water oil drilling ? indeed, many Gulf communities wouldn?t have wanted to stop it ? but the statutes would have given the public a chance to participate in drafting drilling regulations. BP might not have been given a free pass.

?The guardian for fish, for seagrass, for whatever might be granted, can be at the table where those regulations are drafted,? said Siemen. ?Obviously, it has to be someone with a conservation biology background, but they?d be there to give input.?

If Gulf communities became legal guardians for nature, they would also have recourse should the government?s estimate of Deepwater Horizon?s environmental damage prove low. This could happen if there?s political pressure to settle with BP, if the science becomes skewed by corporate or political pressures, or if some damages are simply overlooked.

The spill?s deep-sea effects in particular may be underestimated, with assessments focusing on wetlands, shallow-water fisheries and other ecosystems that are both commercially valuable and relatively easy to study, said Cynthia Sartou, executive director of the Gulf Restoration Network.

Under the Oil Protection Act, however, only state and federal government agencies can represent nature. People could hypothetically sue the federal government to do a better job, but it?s unlikely. ?You are very limited in your right to sue. You are very limited in your right to even comment on what they do,? said Sartou.

?In a system of natural rights, it wouldn?t simply be the federal government who has the opportunity to support those rights,? said Mengerink. ?It would be the public. If you don?t trust the government to do its job, this would be added support.?

Whether natural rights statutes will hold up in court remains to be seen. So far, judges have been inconsistent in their treatment of the idea, which has generally been advanced in connection to individual animals rather than ecosystems.

One promising sign came from the federal Ninth Circuit court?s 2004 decision in Cetacean Community v. Bush, in which the court had to decide whether ?the world?s cetaceans have standing to bring suit in their own name? in challenging the Navy?s use of whale-harming sonar. The court ultimately ruled against recognizing the cetaceans? standing, but wrote that ?nothing in the text of Article III [of the U.S. Constitution] explicitly limits the ability to bring a claim in federal court to humans.?

But Siemen warned that laws alone aren?t enough. ?For a natural rights movement to be successful, there has to be a huge shift in our consciousness,? she said. ?If we adopt more environmental laws, and there hasn?t been a shift in the value system of humans toward caring and protecting, then those laws won?t be enforced.?

Images: 1) Striped dolphins swimming through oiled water (NOAA). 2) Community of creatures around a ?cold seep? on the Gulf of Mexico seafloor (Derk Bergquist/Marine Resources Research Institute, South Carolina Department of Natural Resources).

See Also:

Source: http://feeds.wired.com/~r/wired/index/~3/QBuZq21YP1w/

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Leaked Android Music app images and hands-on review

Android Music player
This morning, an updated version of the stock Android Music app was leaked along with a new version of Android Market. The new Music app, which is labeled 'version 3', is similar to the leaked build from December, but it has received a ton of polish -- and indeed, it looks almost ready for prime time.

If you don't have Android 2.3 -- or don't want to root your phone to install the leaked Music app -- take a look through our gallery, and then read on for our initial hands-on impressions.

Continue reading Leaked Android Music app images and hands-on review

Leaked Android Music app images and hands-on review originally appeared on Download Squad on Tue, 05 Apr 2011 17:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://downloadsquad.switched.com/2011/04/05/leaked-android-music-app-hands-on/

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