Office 2010 Coming May 12. iPad Available April 3.
Mar 6th
A couple of product launch news items for you…

Microsoft Office 2010 Available May 12
Business users will be able to get Office 2010 and SharePoint Server 2010: May 12. Consumers will have to wait until June to buy the product online and at retail, Microsoft officials said on March 5, via a post to the Microsoft Office 2010 Engineering blog. Microsoft also began offering users who are purchasing Office 2007 a free upgrade to Office 2010, as of today, March 5.

iPad Available April 3
Apple officially set the release date early Friday, after months of speculation about when the device would become available to the public.
Wi-Fi models will be available in the U.S. on April 3 and models with Wi-Fi and 3G will be available in late April.
Customers can pre-order any iPad, for a starting price of $499, from Apple’s online store beginning March 12, and an iBooks application for the iPad will be available as a free download on April 3, according to a company statement.
iTunes Passes the Ten Billion Mark
Feb 28th

This past week iTunes reached a significant milestone: over ten billion songs downloaded. Started in 2003, this amazing amount of downloads pays tribute to not only a significant amount of revenue, but also to Apple’s extremely powerful presence in the music industry.
All-time-most-downloaded song? The hip hop group Black Eyed Peas take top honors with “I Gotta Feeling”. Their “Boom Boom Pow” is the third.
Most songs in the top 25 most downloaded? Lady Gaga with three singles: “Poker Face,” “Just Dance,” and “Bad Romance.”
Other artists in the top 10 include Jason Mraz, Flo Rida, Taylor Swift, Leona Lewis, and Ke$ha.
Who won iTunes’ contest to be the 10 Billionth person to download? Louie Sulcer of Woodstock, Ga. Sulcer purchased Johnny Cash’s “Guess Things Happen That Way,” and as a reward for downloading the 10 billionth song from iTunes, was given an iTunes gift certificate worth $10,000.
Just as significantly, iPhone apps are making their mark. Last week they passed the 3 billion mark. Pretty amazing given their relatively young existence.
Why You Should Start a Company in Chicago…
Feb 21st

Go Chicago! Here’s an excerpt from a series fastcompany.com is running on entrepreneurial friendly cities across the country…
Chicago may lack the crackling energy of other startup hotspots like Seattle, Austin, Boston or Boulder, and its reputation for back-office, white-collar companies such as the former Andersen Consulting firm doesn’t help much. But Chicago is where many Internet mainstays were launched, from the jobs site CareerBuilder and travel service Orbitz to RSS technology innovators Feedburner (bought by Google in 2007) and the online audience measurement outfit comScore. One hot startup right now is the coupon site Groupon.
Health-care companies also have realized great potential in the area, led by Abbott Laboratories. And lest one forget, it was at nearby University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign where Marc Andreessen developed Mosaic, the Web browser that paved the way for the commercial Web. So there’s that.
These days Chicago’s startup culture is aimed at the steady and sure. As Matt McCall, a partner at New World Ventures and managing director at DFJ Portage, notes, Chicago is home to many of the largest companies in the country, including Accenture, Boeing, Integrys Energy, MillerCoors, McDonald’s, ACNielsen, Trans Union, and Fortune Brands. The list is long and comprehensive. For startups, it means a rich source of customers for products that fill a need or enhance their businesses.
McCall spoke with FastCompany.com about what makes Chicago’s startup scene so strong.
What makes Chicago a great place for startups?
Chicago has a mixture of a lot of very interesting things. I’ll start with the first, which is the customers are here. There are more Fortune 500s in this region than anywhere else in the U.S. And I’ve noticed this when I’m sitting in board meetings in San Francisco or New York or here. If you ever look at the sales pipeline, the Midwest is almost inevitably always the largest sales region because it’s a diverse economy and those companies tend to take care of their own here. So if you have a leading technology here, in almost every single situation, the top customers for those companies were all Midwest corporations. That’s the first thing I’d say.
The second is you’ve got more federal research dollars flowing into the universities here than any other region in the U.S. So if you just look at the federal funding–and this is just for Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, those three alone receive over $2 billion a year in U.S. federal funding. And it depends on the year, but they’re number three, four and five in the U.S. in research funding.
And the third is the connectivity, which is if you’ll look at a lot of successful companies in the valley, almost inevitably a huge percentage of them either went to school or grew up in the Midwest. And that’s ranging from [Oracle CEO] Larry Ellison growing up on the south side of Chicago to the YouTube guys.
So number four is you now have critical mass of what we call family trees where you’ve got entrepreneurs that are fourth generation entrepreneurs. They’re on their fourth business. As a result, they played at the big leagues. They’ve got a mafia of people that they can pull in to the companies. So when you go to recruit teams in certain spaces, you have the talent. Now, where are those spaces? I’ve always said we try to focus on areas where we are able to produce the number one or number two player in the U.S. or world out of our region and those areas would be interactive marketing, B2C, e-commerce, B2B, Internet enabled B2B, some enterprise software, medical devices and a host of other areas, everything from Archipelago to Think or Swim, OptionsXpress. You’ve got all kinds of talent, from writing the software platforms to actually creating exchanges.
Microsoft Outlook Gets LinkedIn Connector
Feb 18th

Recently Microsoft announced they are going to make Outlook Social Connectors for LinkedIn, Facebook, and Myspace.
The LinkedIn Outlook Social Connector is now available for download: www.LinkedIn.com/outlook
Coming soon will be Facebook and Myspace which at this time are not available.
Confused About Google Voice?
Feb 18th
If you are like many, new products and features can be confusing. However, at the very same time it can improve your lifestyle immensely. Here are videos on the top 10 features Google Voice has to offer and also a brief introduction.
What Is Google Voice?
Google Voice Features:
Voicemail Transcription
One Number
Personalized Greetings
International Calling
SMS To Email
Share Voicemails
Block Callers
Screen Callers
Mobile App
Conference Calls
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Facebook Is The Top Spot To Spend Time
Feb 17th
According to new figures released yesterday by Nielsen, Facebook is the web’s top place to spend time. The average U.S. Internet user spends more time on Facebook than on Google, Yahoo, YouTube, Microsoft, Wikipedia, and Amazon combined.
Not only is it the top spot, the numbers are jumping upward from just six months ago. In June 2009, Nielsen estimated that the average U.S. user spent 4 hours and 39 minutes on Facebook per month. That’s about 9.3 minutes per day in a 30 day month. In August, that number rose to 5 hours and 46 minutes, or 11.5 minutes per day. In January 2010 however, the amount of time the average person spent on Facebook jumped to over 7 hours. Each American Facebook user spent an average of 421 minutes on Facebook per month, which amounts to over 14 minutes per day. Even if you lump together the time spent on Google (1:23), Yahoo (2:09), YouTube (1:02), Microsoft/Bing (1:35) Wikipedia (0:15), and Amazon (0:22), it still doesn’t beat Facebook. Maybe it’s YOU making this happen.

Samsung Wave Throws Another Mobile OS Into the Mix
Feb 16th
Samsung has a new smartphone out that’s fast, sleek-looking, and boasts an entirely new mobile OS developed by Samsung called “bada”.
The device, called Samsung Wave (S8500), features a 1GHz CPU, a 3.3-inch, 800×480 pixel AMOLED screen, a 5-megapixel camera, 2 or 8 GB of storage space (expandable via microSD memory cards) and a GPS. It supports Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 3.0 and 3G as well as MP3, WMV, DivX and XviD.
Initial reports are that the device is still somewhat buggy and prone to crashes. Hopefully Samsung will be able to iron out the bugs before the device hits the market. Haven’t we heard that name somewhere before??
The 2010 Winter Olympics Logo…What Do You Think?
Feb 14th
The 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics logo is certainly getting a lot of attention at the moment. It’s based on the Canadian Inuit inukshuk, a stone marker used for centuries by the Inuit to help guide them through the northern Arctic terrain. The inukshuk has also become a symbol of leadership, cooperation, friendship, and the human spirit. The contemporary Olympics logo design was chosen from 1,600 entries from Canada by an intenational panel of nine judges.
So what do you think? Like? Don’t like?
Declining MySpace Loses CEO
Feb 11th
First, the audience it stole from Friendster left for Facebook. Now, Owen Van Natta, the former Facebook executive Rupert Murdoch hired less than a year ago to reverse the site’s declining fortunes, has also left, MySpace announced late Wednesday night.
The bell has been tolling for MySpace for years, with users leaving the site pretty much as they found it: as a place to hear what a band sounds like and see what they look like in a matter of seconds, rather than as a place where they establish an online identity and communicate with friends.
After signing on last April, Van Natta wisely acknowledged this change in how people were using MySpace — as a media site rather than as a social network — by doubling down on the ad-supported MySpace Music service. However, the company was not able to fix problems with the service including poor integration with existing band pages, which left many users confused or uninterested in the service.
According to an Ad Age source, Van Natta bailed on MySpace because he was frustrated by the company’s “slow pace of change” and “entrenched culture.” A dearth of fast, competent, loyal software engineers in the Los Angeles area reportedly slowed things down even further. MySpace is headquartered in Beverly Hills, in southern California. Facebook, which evolves its design and feature set so often that some users can’t keep up with the changes, is located in the more technology-oriented Palo Alto, California.
VIA: wired.com
Check Out The Olympic Slopes Via Google Street View
Feb 10th
Marketing stunt or just plain fun? I’m guessing both played a part in this. Now you can check out Vancouver with Google Street View.

