Monday, March 14, 2011

Microsoft IE9 browser goes live

Microsoft has launched the finished version of its Internet Explorer 9 web browser.

The company said IE9's graphics handling, security and privacy features put it on an even footing with Firefox, Chrome, Safari and others.

The release comes as Microsoft's browser market share is being whittled down by a growing roster of rivals.

Competition is also coming from non-browser traffic generated by mobile phones and tablets.

Share statistics

Microsoft said one key feature in IE9 was tools to stop people being tracked as they move from site to site. This information is often gathered by commercial firms to tailor ads to the specific habits of web users.

In addition, said Microsoft, separate tools in IE9 keep an eye on downloads so they can spot when viruses and trojans try to sneak onto a computer.

IE9 also has hardware acceleration built in so it can call on the power of a PC's graphics card to display sites in more detail.

The launch comes at a critical time for Microsoft as, one survey suggests, its Internet Explorer browser is suffering a long-term decline.

While reliable figures on browser shares are tricky to compile, estimates from web analysis firm Net Applications suggest that IE has about a 56% share of the global market. The same study suggests Firefox has about 22%, Chrome 11% and Safari 6%.

<!-- Embedding the video player --> <!-- This is the embedded player component -->
<!-- embedding script -->
<!-- companion banner --> <!-- END - companion banner --><!-- caption -->

Microsoft's Leila Martine shows Rory Cellan-Jones the 'high graphic capabilities' of IE9

<!-- END - caption -->
<!-- end of the embedded player component --> <!-- Player embedded -->

In a separate study, figures gathered by security firm ZScaler suggest that up to 20% of web traffic is being generated by apps on smartphones and tablets and is not going through a browser.

Ovum analyst Richard Edwards said: "We believe the next battle ground for the browser wars will be fought not on the desktop, but on the smartphone and tablet."

"This is where Microsoft's existing browser offering still has a lot of catching up to do," he added.

Microsoft said the 40 million test, or beta, versions of IE9 that had been downloaded made it the most downloaded of all time. Already, it said 2% of Windows 7 users were running the latest version.

IE9 does not run on Windows XP and can only be used with Windows 7 and Vista.



Powered By WizardRSS.com | Full Text RSS Feeds | Amazon WordPress PluginHud 1

Twitter applications under threat

Soon the only way to get at Twitter might be through "official" software produced by the company itself.

The firm has angered many software developers by telling them to stop making "clients" that let users write, read and respond to Tweets.

The move is widely seen as an attempt by Twitter to take control of the service to boost ad revenues and improve commercialisation.

Developers responded quickly, with one calling the announcement "appalling".

In a blog post, Twitter's coding chief Ryan Sarver said that the service's rapid growth had sharpened demand for a "consistent" way to use it.

Mr Sarver, head of platform and API at Twitter, used the company's software development discussion board to outline its changing policy.

In it, he said, Twitter's growth in the last year from 48 million to 140 million Tweets per day had forced it to think about how users get at the service.

Before now, many people have spurned the official Twitter application or client in favour of alternatives such as TweetDeck, Seesmic, Echofon, HootSuite and others.

In the blog post, Mr Sarver posed the question of whether building Twitter clients was going to continue to be a good business to be in.

"The answer is no", he wrote.

"Get lost"

While existing makers of clients should continue to serve their users, Mr Sarver said others should stop creating software that replicated the official experience of Twitter.

Instead, he said, they should put their efforts into applications and programs that, for example, mine Twitter streams to help with brand management, or into novel services such as FourSquare which use the information in Tweets for other ends.

He indicated that life for existing client makers could get more difficult as Twitter steps up efforts to police third-party software. In the past month, Twitter cut off Ubermedia, which owns many Twitter clients, from its service for violating its terms of use.

Mr Sarver justified the policy change by saying that Twitter already had de facto control of the way people see the service as 90% of its users got at it through official applications.

He warned that the increasing number of clients was creating inconsistent ways to send and read Tweets that would inevitably lead to user confusion.

"We need to ensure users can interact with Twitter the same way everywhere," wrote Mr Sarver.

Response to the announcement was swift, with many developers challenging Mr Sarver's characterisation of the way Twitter is used and worrying about the monoculture it could encourage.

Commenting on the blog post, Eric Mill said all developers would be "walking on eggshells" as they constantly tried to avoid offending Twitter's demands on how the service should be used.

He said it was "chilling" for Twitter to declare that only certain kinds of innovation were welcome.

Adam Green said that Twitter needed to recognise what externally developed clients added to the service.

"They give us raw materials, we add value to them. We all benefit," he wrote.

Duane Rolands summed up Mr Sarver's post by paraphrasing it as: "Thanks for getting so many people interested in Twitter. Now get lost."

"This is appalling," he wrote.



Powered By WizardRSS.com | Full Text RSS Feeds | Amazon WordPress PluginHud 1

ISPs offer clarity on net slowing

The UK's biggest broadband providers are to give clearer information about how they slow down users' connections to maintain their network performance.

BT, Virgin Media and Sky are among the companies that will publish details of their "traffic management" policies.

The firms say they want to help customers understand why they need to vary connection speeds.

Critics claim the practice will lead to a two-tier internet where some services pay for faster access to their sites.

The code of practice has been drawn up by the Broadband Stakeholder Group, which represents most of the UK's large internet service providers (ISPs).

Once it comes into effect, users will be able to view a breakdown of how and when their connection is restricted.

"There is a core of consumers who understand this stuff quite well, but it's not something that most people are aware of at this stage," said Anthony Walker, chief executive of the Broadband Stakeholder Group.

Mr Walker said that most companies already make information about their traffic management policies available, but the new guidelines meant that they would all use the same simple format - allowing customers to compare ISPs.

Members signing up to the code will have to give details about how much they reduce speeds, how long the reduction lasts and whether certain services are blocked, slowed down or prioritised.

Managed services

Most internet service providers (ISPs) vary the speed of broadband connections depending on the time of day or volume of traffic on their network.

Tasks that are not speed critical, like downloading files or sending emails, are delayed slightly to ensure that other services, such as streaming video, run smoothly.

Most analysts agree that some form of traffic management is necessary.

"Go and ask someone on an ISP that doesn't use traffic management," said Andrew Ferguson, editor of the independent website Thinkbroadband.com.

"When congestion kicks in on a Friday night, they are the people who can't go and play on their Xbox Live, they can't play PlayStation online, because latency [network delay] has gone through the roof.

Many ISPs have begun exploring the possibility of offering "managed services" - effectively giving an exemption from traffic management to website and online applications that are willing to pay for it.

The idea has been met with widespread opposition from proponents of net neutrality, who believe that all internet traffic should be treated equally.

"We recognize that there are certain types of traffic shaping that need to occur in order to maintain the integrity of the network," said Jeff Lynn from the Coalition for a Digital Economy (Coadec).

"But we see that as very different from developing business models in which a particular ISP takes money from 4 on Demand [for example] and makes it easier to download 4oD videos than it does BBC videos," said Mr Lynn.

Jim Killock, executive director of the Open Rights Group, said that transparency on its own was not enough: "We need meaningful guarantees that ISPs will not act to restrict competition.

"If competition and innovation on the net suffers, that will damage the whole UK economy."

Good or bad

The Broadband Stakeholder Group's code of practice includes provision for ISPs to explore managed services: "offering a guaranteed quality of service for specified content, services or applications."

However, that explicit mention of managed services does not constitute a declaration of intent, according to Mr Walker.

"This document doesn't take a view on whether that is a good thing or a bad thing. That is part of a wider policy debate," he told BBC News.

"If those services do start to emerge, it is really important that both consumers and policy makers are aware of it so that any policy or regulatory framework is based on clear evidence about what is happening in reality rather than just speculation or conjecture about what might happen."

The code will be piloted by BSkyB, BT, O2, TalkTalk, Three, Virgin Media and Vodafone during 2011, with a review of how it is working in the following year.

Campaigners for net neutrality suggest that ISPs are only adopting voluntary measures in the hope that they will stay the hand of legislators and regulators across the UK and Europe.

There is some evidence that may be working.

Market forces

The UK's telecoms watchdog, Ofcom, launched a consultation on the issue of traffic management in 2010. It has yet to publish any findings, although it welcomed new the code of conduct.

Last November, the culture minister Ed Vaizey said that ISPs should be able to explore the use of managed services as a way of financing the UK's growing internet infrastructure.

And European lawmakers also appear to be moving towards a more hands-off approach, opting to let the market decide.

The EU's Digital Agenda Commissioner Neelie Kroes recently suggested that mobile users who found themselves disconnected for using Skype should "vote with their feet" and change provider.



Powered By WizardRSS.com | Full Text RSS Feeds | Amazon WordPress PluginHud 1