xbox slim 20100613 Xbox 360 Slim outed by Italian ad?

Of the rumored devices we've been looking forward to getting official at E3 this year, two of the biggest come from Microsoft -- both of which, sadly, seem to have escaped from their bag a little early. First is Kinect, the re-naming of "Project Natal," and now it's looking like the rumored Xbox 360 Slim has been leaked early as well. An Italian site, Console Tribe, ran an ad (embedded after the break) showing the above rather more angular looking console that's definitely an Xbox 360, but definitely not a current model. It mentions that this model is compatible with the Kinect and also invites you to "live today." We're not thinking this model was not supposed to go live until tomorrow, but seizing an extra day doesn't sound so bad for us.

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comscore comScore Says Bing And Yahoo Gained Market Share In May. Or Have They?

Audience measurement firm comScore has released its May 2010 U.S. Search Data report, and it shows continued market share gains for Yahoo and Microsoft.

Yahoo and Bing/MSN each added approximately 60 bps and 30 bps to 18.3% and 12.1%, respectively. Google is down, claims comScore, declining approximately 70 bps for the second consecutive month to 63.7%.

But that’s not the whole story, and investors need to caution when interpreting the data as presented by comScore, say analysts.

Gleacher & Company’s Broadpoint.AmTech puts it this way:

While these numbers are correct on an apples-to-apples basis (in the sense that certain types of searches – e.g. contextual shortcuts and slide-shows – are being counted consistently across properties), the trending data for which we think comScore is most useful shows a different picture.

J.P. Morgan has this to say about the reported numbers:

User interface changes continue to cloud the picture. Google, Yahoo! and MSN all made notable changes in April and May, according to comScore. As such, numbers may not be directly comparable to past months.

We think more months of data under the new methodology could clarify matters.

We’ve detailed how Yahoo has boosted its search market share with these ‘tricks’ last month.

When adjusted, backing out Yahoo and Bing/MSN’s use of contextual shortcuts and image slide-shows from both May and April, Broadpoint.AmTech estimates that Yahoo’s share actually declined roughly 30 bps month over month in May to 16.6%, while Microsoft Sites’ share was flat at approximately 10.8%.

Google, after a small data collection adjustment to the April data (namely a change in how Google handles searches with typos), appears to have gained roughly 30 bps of share in May to 66.4%, says Broadpoint.AmTech. However, Google’s domestic core search market share was 63.7% in May, down slightly from 64.4% in April, J.P. Morgan claims.

According to the reported data, total US core search volume increased 11.2% year over year in May, an acceleration from 5.3% growth in April, adds J.P. Morgan. However, adjusting for the impact of user interface changes, the firm estimates search volume was up roughly 7%.

comscore search comScore Says Bing And Yahoo Gained Market Share In May. Or Have They?

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 comScore Says Bing And Yahoo Gained Market Share In May. Or Have They?

 comScore Says Bing And Yahoo Gained Market Share In May. Or Have They?
 comScore Says Bing And Yahoo Gained Market Share In May. Or Have They?

 comScore Says Bing And Yahoo Gained Market Share In May. Or Have They?  comScore Says Bing And Yahoo Gained Market Share In May. Or Have They?  comScore Says Bing And Yahoo Gained Market Share In May. Or Have They?  comScore Says Bing And Yahoo Gained Market Share In May. Or Have They?  comScore Says Bing And Yahoo Gained Market Share In May. Or Have They?  comScore Says Bing And Yahoo Gained Market Share In May. Or Have They?

 comScore Says Bing And Yahoo Gained Market Share In May. Or Have They?

oexchange Open URL Sharing Protocol OExchange Gets Support From Google,...

OExchange, a simple specification for URL-based content sharing on the Web, was introduced today by a number of online service providers and social networks. The open link-sharing protocol has gained support from Google, Microsoft, LinkedIn, Digg, Instapaper, StumbleUpon, Clearspring Technologies and a handful more.

So what’s it all about?

OExchange essentially establishes a common way for services like Posterous and Google Buzz to receive content. The protocol defines how third-party tools, e.g. Clearspring’s bookmarking and sharing service AddThis, can dynamically discover and share content to these services, as well as how sharing tools can read and set a user’s sharing preferences.

A number of these services, like Google Buzz and Instapaper, have already implemented the protocol, which together with others such as OpenID and OAuth intends to making sharing content on the Web completely open. OExchange is licensed under the Open Web Foundation Agreement – you can get the specs here.

Chris Messina, Open Web Advocate at Google, has this to say about the new protocol:

“The key to increasing the amount and quality of sharing online is smoothing out the user interaction. By simplifying the underlying mechanism for cross-site sharing with OExchange, people can focus on what they’re sharing, rather than how.”

Do you agree that there’s a need for an open URL sharing protocol (which companies like Twitter and Facebook seem to doubt, since they’re not supporting it)?

2 Open URL Sharing Protocol OExchange Gets Support From Google,...

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 Open URL Sharing Protocol OExchange Gets Support From Google,...

 Open URL Sharing Protocol OExchange Gets Support From Google,...
 Open URL Sharing Protocol OExchange Gets Support From Google,...

 Open URL Sharing Protocol OExchange Gets Support From Google,...  Open URL Sharing Protocol OExchange Gets Support From Google,...  Open URL Sharing Protocol OExchange Gets Support From Google,...  Open URL Sharing Protocol OExchange Gets Support From Google,...  Open URL Sharing Protocol OExchange Gets Support From Google,...  Open URL Sharing Protocol OExchange Gets Support From Google,...

 Open URL Sharing Protocol OExchange Gets Support From Google,...

 Meet The New Hotmail: Sleeker & Faster, With Some Powerful Weapons...

windowslivehotmail Meet The New Hotmail: Sleeker & Faster, With Some Powerful Weapons...Back in the days before Gmail, webmail on the Internet was really, really bad. Inboxes were limited to 10 or 20 megabytes, interfaces were slow and ugly, and the experience simply didn’t come close to matching what most desktop clients offered. This is how I remember Hotmail. I hated it. In fact, since signing up for Gmail in 2004, the only times I’ve checked out Microsoft’s webmail client were immediately after big launches, at which point I would reactivate my account, give it a quick run through, and promptly decide that it still wasn’t very good. So when I say that the new version of Hotmail that’s launching this summer has me excited, that’s saying something.

This morning, Microsoft showcased this new version of Hotmail to a room full of press at its offices in San Francisco. It’s fast, slick, and comes with a set of new features for managing large amounts of email that make it a much better rival to Gmail. Does it look like a revolution? Not really. But it does incorporate some very nice features — things that seem quite obvious once you seem them in action, but aren’t already available elsewhere. And more importantly, they’re features that regular people will actually use.

First, the stuff that Hotmail is really just playing catchup with. The first thing you’ll notice is that threaded conversations are now offered, and it looks like they’re the default (though you can turn them off). The search box now features auto complete. You can flag messages (I can’t believe this wasn’t available before). There’s better spam protection. Gmail users should stop yawning, because there’s plenty of other good stuff.

Perhaps the most important suite of features, at least to people who commonly experience inbox overload, are all the new filtering and message management tools the new Hotmail comes with. My favorite is called ‘Sweep’. If you’ve subscribed to a newsletter but decide you don’t want to filling up your inbox any more, you can hit activate this option to move every message you receive from that sender to a folder other than your mail inbox. Other webmail clients can do this too, but the flow for this looks easier than, say, making a filter in Gmail.

Another feature, called Hotmail Highlights, breaks out your messages according to where they’re coming from. One section shows you at a glance whether you’ve received any messages from people in your address book. Another shows you any messages you have from social networks like Facebook. On the left hand side of the screen, you’ll see a few options under the label “Quick View”. One of these is for photos — click it, and you’ll see all the messages in your inbox that have either image attachments or links to photo albums on sites like Flickr. There’s a similar option for Documents, as well as one that lets you immediately find shipping updates.

The other big features involve reading and composing messages. When you receive a message that has either photo attachments or links to an online photo album, Hotmail will use those photos to build a slick slideshow (it uses Silverlight). The service is even better for sending photos. Most email services aren’t great for sending photos, because they have a limit of 10-20 megabytes per message (and you also have to worry about whether the recipient’s service will allow for messages that large). Hotmail works around this by automatically uploading your images to Microsoft’s cloud storage service SkyDrive, which is free up to 25 GB. The resulting message looks great — Hotmail builds a photo album that should be visible in any mail client that supports rich formatting, and it doesn’t kill anyone’s inbox storage.

photomail 1 Meet The New Hotmail: Sleeker & Faster, With Some Powerful Weapons...

Finally there’s Hotmail’s integration with Microsoft’s online version of Office. When you receive a document in Hotmail, you have the option to view and edit it using the online versions of Office, and then save and send any changes back to the original sender. These online apps have strong integration with the desktop versions of Office 2010, but you don’t need the desktop apps in order to use the online versions for free. This is of course Microsoft’s answer to Google Docs, which is itself integrated into Gmail, and it looks well done (I expect document fidelity will be better for Microsoft, which may be a big sticking point).

owa edit Meet The New Hotmail: Sleeker & Faster, With Some Powerful Weapons...

I should point out that Yahoo Mail offers some of these features already (like the ability to break out messages that were sent by your contacts). And while Gmail doesn’t offer some of these features as part of its default set, you can reproduce some of them using filters. Hotmail doesn’t necessarily need to outdo its competitors in every respect — it’s still the largest email provider worldwide, with 360 million active accounts. But Gmail is growing fastest, and Microsoft is looking to curb that growth.  This new launch probably  isn’t going to spark any kind of mass migration away from Google’s services, it may well draw a few more former AOL users who are now looking for a new webmail provider.

Microsoft expects to ship the new Hotmail in mid-summer.

 Meet The New Hotmail: Sleeker & Faster, With Some Powerful Weapons...  Meet The New Hotmail: Sleeker & Faster, With Some Powerful Weapons...  Meet The New Hotmail: Sleeker & Faster, With Some Powerful Weapons...  Meet The New Hotmail: Sleeker & Faster, With Some Powerful Weapons...  Meet The New Hotmail: Sleeker & Faster, With Some Powerful Weapons...  Meet The New Hotmail: Sleeker & Faster, With Some Powerful Weapons...

 Meet The New Hotmail: Sleeker & Faster, With Some Powerful Weapons...
 Meet The New Hotmail: Sleeker & Faster, With Some Powerful Weapons...

 Meet The New Hotmail: Sleeker & Faster, With Some Powerful Weapons...  Meet The New Hotmail: Sleeker & Faster, With Some Powerful Weapons...  Meet The New Hotmail: Sleeker & Faster, With Some Powerful Weapons...  Meet The New Hotmail: Sleeker & Faster, With Some Powerful Weapons...  Meet The New Hotmail: Sleeker & Faster, With Some Powerful Weapons...  Meet The New Hotmail: Sleeker & Faster, With Some Powerful Weapons...

 Meet The New Hotmail: Sleeker & Faster, With Some Powerful Weapons...

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