These days Xiaomi, this hyped-up China phone maker, held the first on the net sales with the new Xiaomi Mi3 Smartphone along with the smart MITV, and the two devices had sold outs in merely over 60 seconds or so.

Your Badge, Please: Why 2014 Will See A War Over Professional Identity



ReadWritePredict is a look ahead at the technology trends and companies that will shape the coming year.



Pour your coffee, sit down, and log in: It’s the routine of hundreds of millions of knowledge workers.


As businesses add a crazy quilt of online services to the tools we use, those logins keep piling up. Information-technology managers—when they don't just throw up their hands—have long dreamed of a nirvana called single-sign-on, where one login rules all. And increasingly, those login credentials will live up in the cloud, managed by some Web giant.


Three companies are on a collision course, jostling for control of the keys to our professional identity. They are Google, Microsoft, and LinkedIn.


The Google Way


Google Apps is the primary way Google insinuates itself into a business. For $5 per user per month, Google offers email, storage, collaborative documents, and more. All of that comes with a Google Account—the key to other Google services, as well as apps that have integrated with Google. (Google recently eliminated some roadblocks to using Google Apps as a login.)



Sundar Pichai oversees Google Apps and Android—a potent combination. Sundar Pichai oversees Google Apps and Android—a potent combination.



The tradeoff with going Google is that some of Google’s initiatives—for example, pushing Google+, its don't-call-it-a-social-network thing that lets you connect and share with friends online—may clash with the sensibilities of corporations.


Yet the integration of Google accounts with Android apps may appeal to those looking to mobilize their workforces. And the price is hard to argue with. The missing piece here is for Google to find a way to make company-specific versions of Google+ that are private and secure for internal information sharing and video chat—and to deal with the frustrations experienced by users who have both personal and corporate Google accounts.


Microsoft’s Cloud Is Rising


While Google may have a head start in Web-based productivity apps, Microsoft is not resting on its big workplace franchise in Exchange email and Office apps. In fact, it may have found a clever, little-noticed way to bring Office users into a vast online directory.



Microsoft’s Satya Nadella has a clear cloud vision. Microsoft’s Satya Nadella has a clear cloud vision.



In the 1990s, Microsoft ventured into the dangerous waters of creating a universal Web login when it unveiled Hailstorm, later known as Passport. After a torrent of brickbats from privacy and antitrust activists, Microsoft retreated—but Passport quietly lived on, eventually becoming the Microsoft Account, the service people use to log in to Windows today.


There's a little-known enterprise version of the Microsoft Account called Windows Azure Active Directory. It is a version of the directory tools Microsoft has long offered to businesses—but up in the cloud, in one big database of employee logins. If you use Office 365, you have an Azure Active Directory account.


At a press event in October, Microsoft’s cloud chief, Satya Nadella, one of the internal candidates to become the company’s next CEO, unveiled a vision for how Microsoft could bring together its powerful desktop-software franchise and its budding cloud services.


"Every time someone signs up for Office 365, they've populated Azure Active Directory,” Nadella noted. Microsoft is also encouraging It managers to sync their old-school “on-premises” directory servers with Azure, adding to the accounts Microsoft tracks.


Nadella mused about the "notion of having an enterprise directory that's fully programmable and accessible through interfaces” to software developers. In other words, that Microsoft login might not just be the tools to your work email and Office apps online—it might become the way you access hundreds of third-party apps, especially on devices running Windows 8 or Windows Phone.


Don't count out Yammer, either. While the online-collaboration tool has mostly been quiet as a subsidiary of Microsoft, which acquired it last year, it had been preparing a big push to lure app developers to use its accounts as logins. Microsoft could revive that strategy, either independently or as an arm of the Azure push.


LinkedIn’s New Connections


If you’re still thinking of LinkedIn as a place to hunt for jobs, catch up: The professional network has been refashioning itself as the hub of its users' daily work lives.


Right now, LinkedIn users post updates publicly. But LinkedIn CEO Jeff Weiner has been talking about how his employees have access to a special version of the site where they can share updates and collaborate internally—an unreleased competitor to Microsoft’s Yammer.



LinkedIn CEO Jeff Weiner sees your connections. LinkedIn CEO Jeff Weiner sees your connections.



In 2013, LinkedIn also rolled out a new contact-management feature and a host of mobile apps—including a controversial one, Intro, which essentially inserts LinkedIn as a middleman for your email, adding details about your correspondents to every message.


LinkedIn also owns Slideshare, a tool for sharing business presentations, and runs Pulse, a Web and mobile app that pulls together the news headlines your colleagues and peers are reading.


And for some time, though it's far less known than, say, Facebook's tools for logging into apps, it has offered a platform that lets developers log users in using their LinkedIn profiles.


Put it all together, and LinkedIn has many of the same things Microsoft and Google do: a professional identity that's portable on the Web, and tools for email, contacts, and collaboration around information.


LinkedIn has one key advantage over Microsoft and Google: It is organized around the modern way we work, where not everyone has the same ending to their email address. The network of contractors, vendors, and partners who swirl through our daily lives may not be in the same single-sign-on directory. But odds are they're on LinkedIn.


Battles Inside And Out


Microsoft and Google, of course, have been in open warfare for some time, and crow about stealing each other's customers. No surprise there. But it will be interesting to watch if Microsoft insists on keeping Windows Azure Active Directory on Windows Devices—or makes a play to get in the world of Android. That will likely be a test of whether Microsoft’s new Devices group, bolstered by the addition of Nokia’s handset business, has the upper hand—or if Nadella’s cloud army will be triumphant.


Google, too, has its internal battles to fight. Google Accounts are where Google+, Google Apps, and Android all intersect. Google CEO Larry Page has tried to cut down on internecine warfare by pushing out Andy Rubin as Android chief and installing Sundar Pichai, who now oversees Google Apps and Android. And Google+ chief Vic Gundotra has been persuasive in pushing his sharing tools as a “social layer" throughout Google. But making Google's services work smoothly inside and outside of corporations may require some serious architectural changes—and not all Googlers will be happy about it.


LinkedIn has the least to lose and the most upside here. And one of its virtues may be that it is neither Microsoft nor Google. Already, it has made a very interesting friend in Apple, which welcomed LinkedIn inside its Mac OS X operating system. Though we haven’t seen many examples of apps taking advantage of this, it's an interesting beachhead that few have taken notice of.


Others Waiting In The Wings


Could others make a play for this market?


Twitter is an obvious contender. It is popular as a login option, particularly with apps that let users generate or share content, like news readers. And many enterprise apps are integrated with Twitter. (Take, for example, the content-management system which published this story on the Web and on Twitter simultaneously.) For many users—particularly journalists, marketers, and celebrities—Twitter has also become their public-facing persona online.


Yet it’s hard to reconcile Twitter's town-square feel with the cloistered campuses of corporations. Twitter may end up always being a megaphone, not an intercom.


Salesforce, too, is worth watching. In 2012, the software maker launched Salesforce Identity, and it opened up the service to app developers a couple of months ago. It's less of a source of identity like a Google or Microsoft account, and more of a bridge to various online accounts, but it could grow to become something more.


What’s clear is that becoming the way people log in to work applications is increasingly valuable, as more and more of our tasks shift completely online. Those who check our IDs aren’t just gatekeepers: They hold the keys to hundreds of millions of users who could become customers for the next great enterprise app. As such, the war over professional identity matters to employees, managers, and app developers. It will be an epic contest.


Photo by Flickr user wonderferret






from ReadWrite http://readwrite.com/2013/12/20/professional-identity-2014-predictions

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PayPal Now Officially Owns Braintree




PayPal has completed its $800 million acquisition of Braintree, a payments provider known for its platform for mobile app developers and its Venmo service, which lets consumers send each other payments through an app.


Now that the deal is done, expect PayPal to aggressively court developers to integrate its payments service in their apps. It recently acquired Stackmob, which provides backend services to developers, to make its offerings more appealing.






from ReadWrite http://readwrite.com/2013/12/19/paypal-braintree-acquisition-closed

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Mailbox Now Supports More Than Gmail




Today Mailbox, the email application that claims to make it easy to get to "Inbox Zero," introduced support for Yahoo Mail, iCloud, me.com and mac.com email accounts. According to the company, Mailbox gets more requests for Yahoo Mail and iCloud support than any other feature.


Before today's update, Mailbox only supported Gmail accounts.






from ReadWrite http://readwrite.com/2013/12/17/mailbox-yahoo-mail-icloud

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Facebook Now Testing Intrusive Autoplay Video Ads In Your Newsfeed




Facebook's autoplay video advertisements are rolling out this week on its website and mobile apps. When the company first introduced autoplay video in September, it was all but inevitable that Facebook would begin to sell video advertising.


And now it has.


Facebook is beginning with trailers for the movie Divergent . The company says it's a limited test, but it's almost certainly just a matter of time until Facebook opens up autoplay video to a variety of other advertisers.



You might have already noticed videos shared by friends or "verified" pages you follow already automatically playing in your newsfeed. Facebook's new video ads will work the same way. When you scroll up to an ad, it will begin to play without sound. If you click or tap on the ad, the video will play with sound. When it's done, it'll display a carousel of two additional videos from the same marketer, just in case you'd like to watch more ads.


Facebook says that for now, only a small number of people will start seeing ads in their timelines. There's no way to stop or prevent an autoplaying video, and Facebook suggests that you simply scroll past it if you don't want to watch it.


One major concern for mobile users was the additional data required to show autoplay advertisements. Facebook claims it pre-downloads video over Wi-Fi connections so they don't eat up your mobile data allocation.


Here's a Facebook video explaining its videos:











from ReadWrite http://readwrite.com/2013/12/17/facebook-autoplay-video-ads

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Dell's Business Model Shifts To The Cloud In Pact With Dropbox

In a move to make itself more relevant to companies hungry for drag-and-drop online storage, Dell announced new plans that will bring Dropbox to several of Dell’s products and services.


Dell’s expansion into cloud-based storage says a lot about its future strategy. Following its 2011 break with EMC as its storage provider, Dell quickly aligned itself with many cloud-based storage providers and application vendors.


This week, Dell Ventures—the company’s venture capital arm—announced a fresh round of $300 million to invest in strategic startups to help build out Dell’s data centers, storage and mobile products. The round follows $60 million that Dell invested last year for storage-specific companies to help it build out its data center business. Popular personal cloud startup Dropbox is expected to gain a portion of those funds.


The venture capital money follows Dell’s announcements last week that it’s salespeople will be offering Dropbox for Business to new and existing customers. Dell said it will also pre-install Dropbox’s online storage service (complete with Dell’s own brand of data protection software) on its consumer and business tablets.


Dropbox boasts that it is used by more than 4 million businesses and upwards of 1 billion files uploaded every 24 hours. That’s a small drop in the bucket compared to the 1 exabyte of data, analysts suggest are stored in the cloud. That’s a key market Dell is hoping to be a part of.


To get there, Dell will promote the use of Dropbox and provide its customers’ IT departments with software support to make sure Dropbox meets compliance and regulatory requirements. Dell also wants to avoid any data meltdowns like the ones Dropbox had earlier this year.


Dell’s other notable cloud storage partnerships include its 14-year run with Red Hat; OpenStack cloud and open source application infrastructure provider Mirantis and solid-state storage maker Skyera.


As more businesses move simple storage to cloud-based systems, providers like Dropbox are sure to be in high demand.


Photo courtesy of Flickr user mekuria getinet






from ReadWrite http://readwrite.com/2013/12/17/dell-dropbox-pact-perks-up-business-argument-for-online-storage

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Facebook Rolls Out Donate Button, And Keeps Your Payment Information




Today Facebook announced "Donate", a new feature that lets people give money directly through Facebook by clicking on a "Donate Now" button next to posts from nonprofit organizations. Facebook that 100 percent of your donation made through Facebook will go directly to the charity of your choice.


Of course, as Mike Isaac at AllThingsD points out, transactions will require a credit card, payment information that Facebook will keep on file and thus will have available to help tempt users into future non-charitable purchases. Assuming, of course, that users want to trust Facebook with their credit card information in the first place.






from ReadWrite http://readwrite.com/2013/12/16/facebook-donate-button

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Google Could Indeed Homebrew Its Server Chips—Just Not Soon

Rumors around the Googleplex suggest the search engine is considering making its own server chips. The news may have shaken but not stirred semiconductor legends Intel and AMD.


A Bloomberg report cites sources who suggest Google will ditch “Intel Inside” for its millions of data-center servers in favor of chip designs developed by ARM. Those low-power chips are most frequently used in smartphones, tablets and other mobile devices. ARM designs typically do not find their way into server processors.


Like other operators of massive data centers, Google is actively evaluating its opportunities to deploy ARM-based servers in lieu of the x86-based units now in place, to save upfront and ongoing costs. There are many silicon vendors actively pursuing the ARM-server opportunity, including Marvell, Calxeda and AMD.


So Google doesn't really need to design its own processors to get those benefits. It does already design its own server motherboards for Intel processors; since those are designed for specific tasks, the servers don't need a lot of the options featured on general-purpose boards.


The economics of chip design are very different. The upfront costs are way higher, and the production economies really favor higher volumes than a single company, even one with Google’s scale, can generate, says Nathan Brookwood, a research Fellow at semiconductor consulting firm, Insight 64.


“The only possible rationale for a company like Google to do its own [processors] would be if it had some proprietary algorithms that it wanted to implement in silicon, rather than in software,” Brookwood told ReadWrite. “Even so, the performance and/or power benefits would have to be very compelling to justify a move like the one currently rumored.”


In short, are there ARM servers in Google’s future? Most likely yes, admits Brookwood. Will Google design the chips in those servers? Most likely no.


Intel, AMD and Google did not make public statements supporting the Bloomberg report.


Photo courtesy of Flickr user Robbie1, CC 2.0






from ReadWrite http://readwrite.com/2013/12/13/google-arm-semiconductors

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Software May Be Eating The World, But Open Source Software Is Eating Itself

Software may be eating the world, as Marc Andreessen posits, but open-source software seems to be eating itself. And at a far faster clip. While the software world has grown used to products and their vendors dominating for long stretches (think: Microsoft in operating systems and Oracle in databases), the new world of open source is moving at an accelerated, Darwinian pace, leaving no project to rest on its laurels.


In this fast-changing open source world, how should enterprises decide where to invest?


Open Source Picks Up The Pace


Though Dirk Riehle's analysis of the total growth in open source projects is a few years old, if anything the trend he plots has accelerated:



Today much of the interesting code in technology’s most important markets—Big Data, cloud, mobile—is open source. With more activity focused on areas like Hadoop or OpenStack, we should expect the pace and volume of open code creation to increase.


Which may be good or bad.


No Rest For The Open Source Developer


Take, for example, the configuration management market. Redmonk’s Stephen O’Grady sifts a number of data sources that measure the popularity of Chef, Puppet, Ansible and Salt, the latter two being very new to the market, yet demonstrating considerable community enthusiasm and adoption.


This prompts O’Grady to speculate that “Where it once was reasonable to conclude that the configuration management space would evolve in similar fashion to the open source relational database market—i.e. with two dominant projects—that future is now in question.”


O’Grady goes on to suggest:


The most interesting conclusion to be taken from this brief look at a variety of community data sources, however, may well be the relevance of both Ansible and Salt. That these projects appear to have viable prospects in front of them speaks to the demand for solutions in the area, as well as the strong influence of personal preferences—e.g. the affinity for Salt amongst Python developers.

Actually, I’d argue that the most interesting conclusion is that no open-source project has guaranteed longevity. Puppet came out in 2005 and is still making headway against entrenched proprietary incumbents, yet now it has to fight off Chef (which came out four years later), Ansible (last two years) and Salt (last two years).


Yes, incumbents in any important market, proprietary or otherwise, will always have new market entrants nibbling at their heels. But in open source, the competition doesn’t wait for billion-dollar markets to form before it launches attacks. The rise of Salt and Ansible in a market already well-served by Chef and Puppet is a testament to this.


The Community Giveth, And The Community Taketh Away


You will find this same dynamic in content management (Drupal vs. Joomla vs. Alfresco vs. Wordpress vs. countless other CMSes), cloud (Eucalyptus vs. OpenStack vs. CloudStack vs. CloudFoundry vs. OpenShift vs. many others), web servers and databases, both relational and NoSQL.


The ranks of open-source databases swell with new entrants almost daily, as can be seen on the DB-Engines database tracking service. Perhaps most interesting is the open-source relational database market. Up until recently, MySQL dominated that market. Postgres was a viable runner up to MySQL, but it was a very distant second.


Today things are in motion. Or commotion. Largely due to Oracle’s alleged fumbling of the MySQL community, Postgres is on a tear, booming even with the hipster crowd that welcomed MySQL. But so is MariaDB. Though still a comparative gnat, leading Linux distributions like Red Hat’s Fedora and Ubuntu have embraced MariaDB, as has Google, replacing MySQL.


Perhaps, as O’Grady implies, this comes down to developer preferences. If developers rule, then little impedes them from switching to new projects that may fit their needs better, throwing a given market into disarray. If this is correct, it would explain why open source resists long term monopolies:


It’s hard to keep developers happy.


Building A Community-Friendly Business


What does this mean for enterprises that are looking to make long-term investments on a given open-source project? An easy, if unsatisfying, answer is that enterprises should contribute to the projects they care about, ensuring their sustainability as well as giving the enterprise the ability to support themselves should the project dwindle.


But most enterprises don’t want to have to code the winner themselves.


Instead they should look for popular projects that are good technical fits for their enterprise requirements and that have strong communities. Popularity can be fleeting if a project grows callous to its community. One of the primary reasons Linux has endured so long at the top of the operating system heap is that it has been so accommodating to community influence and requirements.


Unfortunately, there’s no One True Way to measure vitality in an open source community. Some successful projects, like OpenStack, lean on a strong foundation. Others, like Linux, depend upon a strong individual and her lieutenants.


But all successful open-source projects that maintain their lead innovate quickly, with regular releases every few months. While a fast-moving project may be more difficult for enterprises to support, it may also be a key indication that the project will remain relevant.


How else should enterprises hedge against the risk of obsolescence of an open-source project?


Lede image courtesy of Shutterstock .






from ReadWrite http://readwrite.com/2013/12/12/open-source-innovation

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Readers: Map Out The Future Of ReadWrite With Our Survey

We at ReadWrite are constantly searching for better ways to serve our audience, including covering the stories you would most like to see, in a way that resonates with you. So we're conducting a reader survey to learn more about our audience. Alongside your comments, your searches, and the articles you choose to read, this survey provides another set of valuable data for us to ingest.


Please take two minutes to answer a few questions, and help us create more of what you want.



If you have problems with the embedded survey, click here to take it.






from ReadWrite http://readwrite.com/2013/12/09/readwrite-reader-survey

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2M Passwords For Facebook, Twitter And Others Stolen In Massive Data Breach




Have a Google, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, or Yahoo account? If so, you might want to change your password, stat.


According to cybersecurity firm Trustwave, hackers using a nasty piece of work called the Pony Botnet Controller have stolen usernames and passwords for nearly two million accounts. The firm determined that a malicious keylogger installed on users’ computers was to blame.


Researchers at Trustwave said this massive data breach has been going on for a month, but they only discovered and publicized their findings Tuesday, CNN reports. Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter told CNN that they've notified affected users and reset their passwords; Google declined to comment, and Yahoo didn't provide a response to CNN.






from ReadWrite http://readwrite.com/2013/12/04/passwords-hacked-stolen-pony-botnet

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Plugging Energy Management Into The Connected Home



This is a post in the ReadWriteHome series, which explores the implications of living in connected homes.



The ideal connected home can do something that, alas, many of us humans cannot: Turn off the lights behind us when we leave the room.


Mundane tasks such as turning off the TV and making sure we didn't leave the stove running when we leave the house are the sorts of things that drive a fair bit of consumer desire for the connected home. Some of this is to relieve stress, but there's also real money to be saved. Trim a few pennies in electricity consumption here and there, and it can add up to real savings when the monthly phone bill comes due.


Who Watches The Watchers?


There is good news and bad news when it comes to energy management in the connected home.


The good news first: There are many tools and devices out there that can give you real-time monitoring and control of energy use in your home. The bad news is, there are so many of these companies out there, it's hard to get a sense of who's going to be around for the duration in the Wild-West atmosphere of environmental technology.


It's not a problem to be ignored. In the course of researching this article, I discovered a number of promising devices and services, only to find later that the vendor had shut down or disappeared following an acquisition by a larger company.


That's a big problem for energy monitoring devices connected to cloud-based services, since you don't really want the device maker or the service provider vanishing without notice. So when choosing an energy monitoring tool, it's a good idea to do a little legwork and see who's been around a while and will have the endurance to keep going. There are no guarantees—companies get bought and sold all of the time—but continuity is not a bad feature to keep in mind.


Energy-monitoring systems come in three primary classifications: outlet monitors, whole-home monitors and fully integrated home automation systems.


Plug Into Outlet Monitoring


Power monitoring at the outlet level is a pretty straightforward affair: plug the monitor into the wall, then plug whatever electrical device you want to use into the monitor's outlet.



The Kill A Watt monitors at the outlet level. The Kill A Watt monitors at the outlet level.



In North America, one long-standing device in this category is the P3 Kill A Watt, which measures power consumption by the kilowatt-hour, from which you can then figure out the cost of use for the device.


Homeowners in the U.K. or E.U. can get similar monitoring service from the Wattson Classic device, which uses sensor clips to monitor energy usage for outlets.


Watching The Whole House


If you want something a little more comprehensive, there are a number of devices on the market that can monitor power use for an entire house or apartment.



The Ambient Energy Orb gives colorful signs when energy use is pricey. The Ambient Energy Orb gives colorful signs when energy use is pricey.



One of the prettier tools in this category is the Ambient Energy Orb, which features a real-time digital display of power use, mounted in a lighted ball that glows green when electricity use and pricing is low, and red when demand and pricing is high, prompting users to start turning off lights (or TVs, or computers).


Canadian vendor Power2Save has a whole line of wireless energy monitors that attach to your home's circuit breaker panel and deliver comprehensive consumption to North American users. Some of these devices, like the E2, can be monitored with a PC or Mac, or (as with the Home Hub) with an iPhone or Android app.


All-In-One Management


Monitoring is one thing: but fully integrated control systems are something else entirely. With some careful programming, you can manage devices on a hyper-efficient schedule or control them even when you're away from home.


Insteon has one such home-automation system, if you want to go that route. Though their systems have security and safety monitoring uses, Insteon has a strong focus on managing power and home devices.


Belkin's WeMo products are not quite as comprehensive in the feature department, but the systems are getting high marks from users for their ease of use.


All of these systems can deliver useful information to the consumer about their energy use. Not included, but still available to some power users: smart meters from the electric company that can handle the task of energy monitoring. Either way, home energy monitoring is coming, hopefully with savings to your wallet.


Lead image courtesy of Shutterstock






from ReadWrite http://readwrite.com/2013/12/02/connected-home-energy-management

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