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Saturday, 16 November 2013

With the help of eBay founder and billionaire Pierre Omidyar, Glenn Greenwald, the journalist who broke the NSA story this summer, is putting together what he hopes is a newsgathering dream team. Greenwald gears up for some "adversarial journalism." One of the profession's main missions, he's said, is to "provide a truly adversarial check on those in power." Here, he testifies on surveillance in front of an investigative committee of the Brazilian senate. (Credit: EVARISTO SA/AFP/Getty Images) Glenn Greenwald -- the journalist who got the scoop on the NSA's mass surveillance programs courtesy of whistle-blower Edward Snowden -- has been busily assembling the team for the new online publication he's co-creating with $250 million in backing from eBay founder Pierre Omidyar. And a series of tweeted announcements by Greenwald over the last few days gives a glimpse of how the closely watched venture's editorial focus is shaping up. In an ironic, Snowdenesque twist, news of the venture leaked to BuzzFeed last month, generating a flurry of discussion in media and Internet circles. The New York Times featured a public sparring match between Greenwald and Bill Keller, a Pulitzer Prize winner and former executive editor of the paper. That's because, as Keller put it in his intro, "the disruptive power of the Internet raises...profound questions about what journalism is becoming, about its essential character and values." Keller and others are uneasy over Greenwald's outsider status -- he began his career as an attorney and moved into journalism by way of blogging -- and his "activist" approach to the news, which, they say, could undermine the quality of his reporting. They're also worried about more Fox Newses. "I believe the need for impartial journalism is greater than it has ever been," Keller wrote, "because we live now in a world of affinity-based media, where citizens can and do construct echo chambers of their own beliefs. It is altogether too easy to feel 'informed' without ever encountering information that challenges our prejudices." Greenwald, for his part, accuses some in what he calls the "establishment press" of failing to stand up to the powers that be, and he's questioned Keller's ostensibly impartial approach. The mainstream media's "toxic habits...reward dishonesty on the part of political and corporate officials who know they can rely on 'objective' reporters to amplify their falsehoods without challenge (i.e., reporting is reduced to 'X says Y' rather than 'X says Y and that's false')," he wrote in the exchange with Keller. The mainstream media's "toxic habits" can "reward dishonesty on the part of political and corporate officials," Greenwald has said. He's also said his practice of letting readers know his stance at the outset is actually more honest than the pose assumed by traditional media -- of an objectivity that's in fact impossible to achieve. And he's said that "ultimately, the only real metric of journalism that should matter is accuracy and reliability." Greenwald's venture with Omidyar -- and fellow founders Laura Poitras, the Academy Award-nominated documentary-film maker Snowden initially contacted, and Jeremy Scahill, an investigative reporter for The Nation and author of the New York Times bestseller "Dirty Wars" -- gives Greenwald and the others a handsomely funded chance to demonstrate the validity of these ideas. Greenwald has been recruiting for the venture -- temporarily called NewCo -- and his selections make it clear that he intends for this new publication to walk his talk. Here are the new members we know about so far. It will be interesting to see how this all plays out. Eric Bates Bates was executive editor at Rolling Stone for a decade, and before that he was investigative editor at Mother Jones magazine. At Rolling Stone, he worked with writers Matt Taibbi and Michael Hastings. Bates had a hand in Taibbi's lauded exposés of Wall Street and in Hastings' profile of US Army general Stanley McChrystal, then commander of all US and NATO forces in Afghanistan. The Hastings piece led to McChrystal's resignation. Bates' work has won seven National Magazine Awards and has been a finalist another seven times. Here's a video from 2010 of Bates discussing Hastings' piece "The Runaway General": Ryan Devereaux An independent journalist in New York, Devereaux has written about the NYPD's stop-and-frisk policy, the US prison system, the victims of US drone strikes, and other topics for Greenwald's alma mater, The Guardian, as well as Rolling Stone and The Nation. Micah Lee Lee is leaving his position as staff technologist at the Electronic Frontier Foundation to sign on with Greenwald, Poitras, Omidyar and Co. Lee's areas of expertise include cryptography, privacy, and Internet freedoms. At EFF he maintained HTTPS Everywhere, an extension for the Firefox and Chrome browsers that encrypts users' communications with many major Web sites. Murtaza Hussain Hussain has written about foreign policy and civil liberties for The Guardian, Salon, Al Jazeera English, and AlterNet. Andrew Jerell Jones Jones is a freelance writer in Brooklyn whose work has appeared in Ebony, The Raw Story, and Talking Points Memo. He's also appeared on HuffPost Live. He'll be covering sports for the Greenwald-Omidyar venture, but as he puts it in a recent post on The Daily Kos, "I'm going to at least be doing sports there, but since culture, race, and class issues can be complicated for those in this country that didn't grow up in an American ghetto or hood like me, then I'll provide some perspective on that as well if need be." Here's a HuffPost Live segment about athletes and politics that features Jones (he jumps in at 0:3:16): Greenwald announced two other NewCo initiates late last month. They are: Dan Froomkin Froomkin has been the senior Washington correspondent for The Huffington Post. Prior to that, he wrote the popular "White House Watch" column for the online version of The Washington Post. When he was let go by the Post, Greenwald wrote a column about the firing, celebrating Froomkin's desire to serve the public rather than a given political party. "One of the rarest commodities in the establishment media," Greenwald wrote, "is someone who was a vehement critic of George Bush and who now, applying their principles consistently, has become a regular critic of Barack Obama." Froomkin said at the time, "I think that the future success of our business depends on journalists enthusiastically pursuing accountability and calling it like they see it. That's what I tried to do every day." Froomkin was also deputy editor of the Nieman Watchdog blog for the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard. Liliana SeguraSegura has been an associate editor at The Nation. She's written about the penal system and the death penalty for that publication, as well as various issues, including health care, reproductive rights, and the military, for AlterNet. She's on the board of the Campaign to End the Death Penalty. Here she is in a 2010 video talking about surveillance: Greenwald, by the way, started out with a blog called Unclaimed Territory, which was later picked up by Salon. From there he went to the UK's Guardian. He's also written several books, including the New York Times bestseller "A Tragic Legacy," about the George W. Bush presidency.

Posted on 09:48 by Unknown

With the help of eBay founder and billionaire Pierre Omidyar, Glenn Greenwald, the journalist who broke the NSA story this summer, is putting together what he hopes is a newsgathering dream team.




Greenwald gears up for some "adversarial journalism." One of the profession's main missions, he's said, is to "provide a truly adversarial check on those in power." Here, he testifies on surveillance in front of an investigative committee of the Brazilian senate.


(Credit: EVARISTO SA/AFP/Getty Images)

Glenn Greenwald -- the journalist who got the scoop on the NSA's mass surveillance programs courtesy of whistle-blower Edward Snowden -- has been busily assembling the team for the new online publication he's co-creating with $250 million in backing from eBay founder Pierre Omidyar.


And a series of tweeted announcements by Greenwald over the last few days gives a glimpse of how the closely watched venture's editorial focus is shaping up.


In an ironic, Snowdenesque twist, news of the venture leaked to BuzzFeed last month, generating a flurry of discussion in media and Internet circles.


The New York Times featured a public sparring match between Greenwald and Bill Keller, a Pulitzer Prize winner and former executive editor of the paper. That's because, as Keller put it in his intro, "the disruptive power of the Internet raises...profound questions about what journalism is becoming, about its essential character and values."


Keller and others are uneasy over Greenwald's outsider status -- he began his career as an attorney and moved into journalism by way of blogging -- and his "activist" approach to the news, which, they say, could undermine the quality of his reporting. They're also worried about more Fox Newses.


"I believe the need for impartial journalism is greater than it has ever been," Keller wrote, "because we live now in a world of affinity-based media, where citizens can and do construct echo chambers of their own beliefs. It is altogether too easy to feel 'informed' without ever encountering information that challenges our prejudices."


Greenwald, for his part, accuses some in what he calls the "establishment press" of failing to stand up to the powers that be, and he's questioned Keller's ostensibly impartial approach. The mainstream media's "toxic habits...reward dishonesty on the part of political and corporate officials who know they can rely on 'objective' reporters to amplify their falsehoods without challenge (i.e., reporting is reduced to 'X says Y' rather than 'X says Y and that's false')," he wrote in the exchange with Keller.


The mainstream media's "toxic habits" can "reward dishonesty on the part of political and corporate officials," Greenwald has said.


He's also said his practice of letting readers know his stance at the outset is actually more honest than the pose assumed by traditional media -- of an objectivity that's in fact impossible to achieve. And he's said that "ultimately, the only real metric of journalism that should matter is accuracy and reliability."


Greenwald's venture with Omidyar -- and fellow founders Laura Poitras, the Academy Award-nominated documentary-film maker Snowden initially contacted, and Jeremy Scahill, an investigative reporter for The Nation and author of the New York Times bestseller "Dirty Wars" -- gives Greenwald and the others a handsomely funded chance to demonstrate the validity of these ideas.


Greenwald has been recruiting for the venture -- temporarily called NewCo -- and his selections make it clear that he intends for this new publication to walk his talk.


Here are the new members we know about so far. It will be interesting to see how this all plays out.


Eric Bates

Bates was executive editor at Rolling Stone for a decade, and before that he was investigative editor at Mother Jones magazine. At Rolling Stone, he worked with writers Matt Taibbi and Michael Hastings. Bates had a hand in Taibbi's lauded exposés of Wall Street and in Hastings' profile of US Army general Stanley McChrystal, then commander of all US and NATO forces in Afghanistan. The Hastings piece led to McChrystal's resignation. Bates' work has won seven National Magazine Awards and has been a finalist another seven times. Here's a video from 2010 of Bates discussing Hastings' piece "The Runaway General":


Ryan Devereaux

An independent journalist in New York, Devereaux has written about the NYPD's stop-and-frisk policy, the US prison system, the victims of US drone strikes, and other topics for Greenwald's alma mater, The Guardian, as well as Rolling Stone and The Nation.


Micah Lee

Lee is leaving his position as staff technologist at the Electronic Frontier Foundation to sign on with Greenwald, Poitras, Omidyar and Co. Lee's areas of expertise include cryptography, privacy, and Internet freedoms. At EFF he maintained HTTPS Everywhere, an extension for the Firefox and Chrome browsers that encrypts users' communications with many major Web sites.


Murtaza Hussain

Hussain has written about foreign policy and civil liberties for The Guardian, Salon, Al Jazeera English, and AlterNet.


Andrew Jerell Jones

Jones is a freelance writer in Brooklyn whose work has appeared in Ebony, The Raw Story, and Talking Points Memo. He's also appeared on HuffPost Live. He'll be covering sports for the Greenwald-Omidyar venture, but as he puts it in a recent post on The Daily Kos, "I'm going to at least be doing sports there, but since culture, race, and class issues can be complicated for those in this country that didn't grow up in an American ghetto or hood like me, then I'll provide some perspective on that as well if need be." Here's a HuffPost Live segment about athletes and politics that features Jones (he jumps in at 0:3:16):


Greenwald announced two other NewCo initiates late last month. They are:


Dan Froomkin

Froomkin has been the senior Washington correspondent for The Huffington Post. Prior to that, he wrote the popular "White House Watch" column for the online version of The Washington Post. When he was let go by the Post, Greenwald wrote a column about the firing, celebrating Froomkin's desire to serve the public rather than a given political party. "One of the rarest commodities in the establishment media," Greenwald wrote, "is someone who was a vehement critic of George Bush and who now, applying their principles consistently, has become a regular critic of Barack Obama." Froomkin said at the time, "I think that the future success of our business depends on journalists enthusiastically pursuing accountability and calling it like they see it. That's what I tried to do every day." Froomkin was also deputy editor of the Nieman Watchdog blog for the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard.


Liliana Segura

Segura has been an associate editor at The Nation. She's written about the penal system and the death penalty for that publication, as well as various issues, including health care, reproductive rights, and the military, for AlterNet. She's on the board of the Campaign to End the Death Penalty. Here she is in a 2010 video talking about surveillance:


Greenwald, by the way, started out with a blog called Unclaimed Territory, which was later picked up by Salon. From there he went to the UK's Guardian. He's also written several books, including the New York Times bestseller "A Tragic Legacy," about the George W. Bush presidency.



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  • A Korean publication says the next generation Galaxy flagship running Android KitKat could launch shy of the S4's first birthday. November 29, 2013 10:18 PM PST The Galaxy S4 and S3 could have a new sibling sooner than later. (Credit: Josh Miller/CNET) The latest round of rumors has the presumed successor to Samsung's Galaxy S4, a more powerful Galaxy S5, sporting unicorn-esque specs, perhaps some new flexible materials, and craziest of all: Launching as little as ten months after the Galaxy S4 was introduced. A Korean site reports that "industry sources" say production of the Galaxy S5 could begin in January with Samsung's next flagship phone shipping with Android KitKat and alongside a revamped Galaxy Gear 2 watch as early as February or March. That would be a few months ahead of many early-adopting Galaxy S4 owners' one-year anniversaries with their devices. While this sounds like wishful thinking on the part of some overzealous reporter and a who-knows-how-well-infomed supply chain source, it's also not a crazy plan for the likes of Samsung. The Korean monolith has the ability to make just about anything on a massive scale as quickly as it likes and likely has no qualms with cannibalizing sales of its zillions of other smartphone models, including the Galaxy S4. But more importantly, what kind of unicorn is Samsung's S5 team designing this time around? The same report claims the phone could be available in a plastic case or a more premium model with a metal body, and will come loaded with some serious digital beef -- a 64-bit processor, 3 GB of RAM, a 16 megapixel camera and a huge 4,000 mAh battery to power a 5-inch flexible display that could jam as many as 560 pixels into each inch of screen real estate. Samsung had no immediate response to a request for comment, but certainly many Galaxy S4 owners won't be as speechless when the flagship phone they proudly brought home this year is eclipsed in less than the time it takes us all to make a single trip around the sun. What do you think? Is it too soon for a new Samsung flagship or never soon enough? Let us know in the comments below or on Twitter @crave and @ericcmack.
    A Korean publication says the next generation Galaxy flagship running Android KitKat could launch shy of the S4's first birthday. Novem...
  • An ESPN survey suggests that while women do more shopping and browsing, it's the men who outspend the women during the holiday season. How many of this year's Black Friday fighters will be men? (Credit: RSVLTS/YouTube screenshot by Chris Matyszczyk/CNET) As you ready yourself for the Black Friday fisticuffs -- or, indeed, for the Thanksgiving thumping -- please be aware of who your biggest opponents might be. There is some sort of traditional thinking that women are the ones who love, need, and want to shop during the holiday season. However, a survey from ESPN Research and Analytics would like to shove that theory into the waste disposal. For, as AdAge reports, men spend 39 percent more during the holidays than do women. This study offers the startling claim that the difference between women and men is that the former are more likely to be shoppers while the latter are more likely to be buyers. Those with a hardened, worldly edge might wonder that this conclusion rather feeds into the needs of a sports network whose viewership is predominantly male. More Technically Incorrect New Surface ads, old story: iPad is a lump of coal Microsoft's latest Scroogled ad: Chromebook's 'a brick' Nokia: iPad will put women off So Apple does own beautiful and sexy New Nokia ad teaches how to assault iPhone, Galaxy owners But Patricia Betron, ESPN's senior VP, multimedia sales, told AdAge: "Retail has always been aimed at women and how women shop and behave, but men are the prime target if you're looking to grow the sector." The researchers believe that men are faster and more directed when they do their shopping. Their mindset is not that they wonder what's out there, but that they expect to make a purchase. Moreover, they'd prefer it if they could buy as much as possible in just one store. However, when they get a sniff of a gadget, their demeanor might alter a touch. Barbara Singer, ESPN's VP of advertiser insights and strategies, told AdAge that once the men are done with the purchases they need to make, they then go take an emotional shower in the electronics and clothing departments. This, of course, might worry those who will pour into stores on Thursday and Friday. In their minds, they may fear that their physical competition is getting ever tougher. They may not have put in enough training to wrest that $100 TV set out of a rival shopper's hairy, muscular hands.
    An ESPN survey suggests that while women do more shopping and browsing, it's the men who outspend the women during the holiday season. H...
  • The e-commerce giant doesn't seem too worried about thousands of German factory workers threatening to strike during the busy holiday season. November 29, 2013 2:40 PM PST A worker loading orders in one of Amazon's factories. (Credit: Amazon) Hundreds of trade union workers in Amazon's German factories have staged a series of strikes over the last year demanding better wages and working conditions. They're now planning a major strike for the holiday season. However, Amazon executives don't see too much cause for concern. "Snowfall in Germany is the bigger problem in the Christmas business...That is what gives me worry lines," Amazon's head for Germany, Ralf Kleber, told Reuters in an interview Friday. Next to the US, Germany is Amazon's second-biggest market. According to Reuters, the company's nine German distribution centers employ 9,000 warehouse staff plus an additional 14,000 seasonal workers. Over the last year, Amazon's sales in Germany grew by nearly 21 percent to $8.7 billion, which is a third of the company's total international sales. With e-commerce becoming increasingly more popular and the holiday season being the busiest time of year, it would seem that striking workers might put a dent in Amazon's factory efficiency and delivery timeliness. But Kleber maintains the company's deliveries have been unaffected by the strikes. "We are talking about a minority who take part in actions brought on by the union," Kleber told Reuters. "Amazon is a fair employer. Many of our workers have been with us for more than 14 years. The majority of workers would say it is a good, well-paid job." Related stories Amazon now a prime source for U.S. Cellular prepaids Amazon toy sale rubs Nickelodeon in Netflix's face From Bordeaux to Warhol: Amazon goes high-brow Amazon: Who says Black Friday can't start early? Amazon said to be working on new high-res Kindle Paperwhite Trade union Verdi workers employed in Amazon's distribution centers in Leipzig and Bad Hersfeld are behind the series of strikes. They are asking the e-commerce giant to sign an agreement that would give them pay and working conditions similar to the company's German competitors. According to Reuters, this dispute between Amazon and its workers led to roughly 1,000 employees walking out from German distribution centers on Monday. Kleber said that Amazon pays its factory workers well and doesn't drive them too hard. He added that distribution center work can be demanding, but that's part of the industry. "We are a logistics company," Kleber said. "Trucks arrive, are unloaded. Goods are sorted, packed, and loaded into trucks again." CNET contacted Amazon for comment. We'll update the story when we get more information.
    The e-commerce giant doesn't seem too worried about thousands of German factory workers threatening to strike during the busy holiday se...
  • Xbox One is the loneliest number if you're trying to shoehorn its do-it-all TV proposition into a family room...unless you're willing to be part of the experiment. (Credit: Scott Stein/CNET) My Xbox One may not stay connected to my cable box very long. In a year's time, the Xbox One might be the ultimate TV-connected entertainment box on the planet. But at the moment, it's sitting awkwardly between my cable DVR and my TV -- where it's causing some tension among the TV viewers in my household. There are a lot of good ideas lurking within the potential of what Microsoft's newest Xbox can be. A smart home hub; an entertainment do-everything machine. But they're mixed with unfortunate downsides: and, at the moment, from what I can see, the Xbox One is a console best appreciated by those who want to absorb entertainment by themselves. As a system for sharing (with someone in the same room, not somewhere online), the PlayStation 4 and Wii U do a better job at being both innocuous and second-screen-friendly. That's partially because they're not trying as hard to do something new...but it's also because they're systems that keep TV and gaming as largely separate entities. Let me explain. (Credit: Sarah Tew/CNET) Hooking up the Xbox One at home: a home-entertainment imposition It's a lot to ask my wife to accept on the only TV in my apartment: hi, do you mind if I run our cable box through this Xbox? It'll only take a few minutes. It won't inconvenience you much. "Family acceptance" is the rule I have to live by, having two kids and a small place. Others -- those enjoying a solo gaming and entertainment experience in massive man-caves -- might enjoy having the Xbox One as a fantasy-box, a connect-it-all big-kid toy. All I know right now is that my wife is asking, "why do we have to do this?" The short answer: because I'm writing an article, and wanted to experiment, and I work at CNET. But the long answer, well, that's hard. I try to explain the Xbox One's upsides, really, I do. I show her voice commands, how I can say "Xbox, watch ESPN" and it does it, and how all the channel listings are nicely laid out. All my wife sees is a big black box sitting between the cable box and the TV that she has to turn on. A universal remote like a Harmony could help knit this all together better, and maybe Harmony is what an Xbox One owner really needs (the remote, and the concept). Before, I could turn on the TV and cable with one Verizon-supplied and admittedly lousy remote. Now, I need to either say "Xbox, turn on," which doesn't always work, or find the Xbox One controller, which I need anyway to navigate the Xbox menus without yelling. And the cable remote, well, I need that, still, because the Xbox doesn't have its own remote -- unless you pair a phone or tablet with the SmartGlass app -- and that's my only way to access the cable box DVR. (Credit: Scott Stein/CNET) And even if you use the admittedly pretty cool SmartGlass app, you still need a phone or tablet nearby, ready and connected. Using voice commands on the Xbox One means talking loudly and repeatedly, using specific commands I didn't always remember specifically. Meanwhile, I have a nine-month old baby sleeping in one room and a five-year-old in the other. I'm getting elbowed to please keep quiet. I reach for the remote again. I'll cast aside the fact that she also said she noticed the TV signal looked different -- paler, more washed out. CNET didn't find an issue with the XBox One throughput, but -- whether it's a placebo effect or not -- I see a slight difference. The real problem here is that the Xbox One doesn't do anything magical with TV: its just allows pass-through, and split-screen app-viewing and gameplay. (Credit: Sarah Tew/CNET) I tried demonstrating the Xbox One's clean TV-listing interface, the ability to search for shows across streaming services, to pause live TV with a simple voice command. It didn't win over my harshest tech critic. And meanwhile, that massive new Kinect sat below our TV, staring at us. It doesn't whirr and move like the last Kinect, but it's ever-present. I haven't gotten many complaints about it yet, but maybe that's because I've had a Kinect under my TV for at least a year before that. (Credit: Scott Stein/CNET) Smart TV? Not really, not yet What can Xbox One do for my TV viewing, I ask again? Not all that much at all. I don't use "snap" split-screen much at all, even with a 59-inch TV. Audio from the TV channel and the Xbox game either gets mixed or can't be heard at all sometimes, and it gets too confusing. Also, the apps for that split-screen just aren't great. I tried watching the Jets-Ravens game with the NFL app snapped to the right, and expected -- or hoped for -- greatness. All I really got, mostly, as a score/stat rundown that matched what my phone could already give me...and was slower to update for some reason. I couldn't say "Xbox, show me passing stats," or "Xbox, replay third down," or "Xbox, show game schedule." I wanted the NFL app to be my virtual man-in-the-booth, feeding me relevant stats and interesting analysis as the game kept going on. It's just not that smart yet. If the Xbox One could eventually do that, great: but, split-screening just doesn't do all that much all that well right now. The Wii U has off-TV play, unlike the Xbox One. (Credit: Sarah Tew/CNET) Hey you, get off my TV Now, because we only have one TV, there's also a lot of screen-sharing. I watch my shows, she watches hers, the kids watch theirs -- or I play games, and we strike a balance. The Wii U and PlayStation 4 both have a brilliant second-screen proposition to ease the pain, if you have the gear. Nintendo's console comes with a Game Pad that plays many games on a second screen very easily. The PS Vita, PS4, and remote play: works well, too. (Credit: Sally Nieman/CNET) On the PS4, if you have a PlayStation Vita, it's possible to connect to Remote Play to stream games in much the same way, and it works pretty impressively. This is second screen potential at its finest, because it frees up the TV for others -- while you're still playing a console game in your hands. The Xbox One has second screen capabilities via its SmartGlass phone and tablet app, but it's a different story altogether. SmartGlass is a huge help as a remote for video playback, and can be used in some games and video content, but it can't currently play games while someone else watches TV. I don't see why that can't happen in the future, but you'd need to figure out button controls, too. (Credit: Scott Stein/CNET) Another small problem happens when the Xbox One occasionally pings messages in the middle of a show someone else is watching, or someone's voice accidentally brings up a video-control menu or even changes the channel. Those moments are rare, but any additional annoyances add additional straw to the camel back of "why am I subjecting my family to this, again?" If everyone isn't quiet while watching on the Xbox, something odd is bound to happen sooner or later via an unexpected voice command. Hey you, get off my Xbox There's another problem with TV pass-through: suddenly, my wife's using my Xbox One all the time just to watch TV. Does that sound selfish? Well, it is, in a sense: I think of game consoles as personal devices. (Credit: Sarah Tew/CNET) I haven't made a user ID for my wife to log in as, and maybe that would help things. But she's getting inconvenienced by having to root around for the controller, and clicking on the "TV" icon, or not having the Kinect understand her voice. And sometimes she forgets to turn the Xbox One off, which is understandable -- it's one more box. And no, saying, "Xbox, turn off" isn't exactly intuitive yet to the average person, even if it's easy to do. I do love how the Xbox One seamlessly and impressively auto-identifies you and logs you into a particular profile, which could mean a "family-friendly" mode in the future for when my kid or wife uses the machine, but right now user accounts are useless to me. This isn't an Android tablet or an iCloud account. My family doesn't have different Xbox profiles, nor do they seem to care to. If I was visiting a friend, I could log in as myself, and that's great, but that doesn't do much for my home. Xbox and the man-cave: good if you're Ray Lewis Look at one of the latest Xbox One commercials, featuring smack-talking NFL legends. Ray Lewis looks like he's strapped into a heads-up display in a personal virtual bubble: TV, friends, gaming, all at his command. He's in his own media cave. How does someone else share that cave? The answer right now is you're not really meant to. The Xbox One seems best for one controller, one user, one online experience, one voice to command all its elements into place. It's personal technology spread across a big screen. (Credit: Sarah Tew/CNET) After the first day: tired acceptance Eventually, I wasn't asked to disconnect the Xbox One. Inertia had won the day. But I can't keep expecting my wife to keep hunting for the Xbox controller. This experiment, for now, is just an experiment. I'll switch back, because this current set-up just doesn't make any sense. HDMI-in on the Xbox One is like that extra port on a laptop you don't need now but you could in the future. Microsoft hopes the Xbox One will add more robust DVR control, and deeper cable access, down the road. How soon, or how easy that is to enable, I have no idea. But I'm tempted to just yank the cable box out of the Xbox One until that day arrives. I still think the Xbox One is the most advanced gaming console of this new generation, but to someone trying to sneak one into a living room, ironically, its "living room-friendly" elements make it the hardest to accept. And apologies to my wife, who's the unwitting subject of this article. Believe me, she likes new ideas and new technologies...when they make life better. And I don't think she's alone.
    Xbox One is the loneliest number if you're trying to shoehorn its do-it-all TV proposition into a family room...unless you're willin...

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Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (548)
    • ▼  November (500)
      • A Korean publication says the next generation Gala...
      • Unexplained technical issues caused the rocket lau...
      • The tech giant and its court-appointed antitrust m...
      • Just in time for Black Friday, the low-cost siblin...
      • The e-commerce giant doesn't seem too worried abou...
      • Noticed an especially full photo feed on Thanksgiv...
      • The Galaxy Nexus, Nexus 4, and Nexus 5 can be forc...
      • For just one week, Google is offering shoppers cre...
      • The Southeast Asian nation is serving up harsh pen...
      • The sun-grazing comet spent Thanksgiving visiting ...
      • Black Friday offers now abound across the world. E...
      • In an unusual twist that goes against its traditio...
      • In an unusual twist that goes against its traditio...
      • Somehow, the early beginning to Black Friday shopp...
      • For online shopping, smartphones are good for brow...
      • Dive into four new books that use Legos to depict ...
      • The chip giant has been working on "perceptual com...
      • A Google Glass developer with a clear vision of wh...
      • Four new books showcase some of the most important...
      • James Howells' digital currency worth hardly nothi...
      • Looking for the ultimate Black Friday deal? Pump u...
      • The deals are coming in hot and heavy, so check ba...
      • Web giant's practice of combining user data from i...
      • A Ukrainian startup launches an online service tha...
      • Judge Lucy Koh finds that plaintiffs failed to pro...
      • Another enchanting doodle from the Google factory ...
      • Towering over the Forth and Clyde canal, The Kelpi...
      • The tech giant doesn't object to the variant of th...
      • A Ukrainian startup launches an online service tha...
      • The Spanish company's new Firefox OS phone will in...
      • Indulge your inner Hobbit with the "Journey throug...
      • Google doesn't object to the variant of the open-s...
      • YouTube looks set to introduce an ad-free subscrip...
      • New reports suggest Ford's Alan Mulally and Micros...
      • What better appetizer for your Thanksgiving feast ...
      • New reports suggest Ford's Alan Mulally and Micros...
      • Why is CNET's Roger Cheng so grateful for Samsung'...
      • One of the major holiday challenges is what to giv...
      • With a shortened shopping season, many big-box ret...
      • Next spring, Fabien Cousteau, grandson of the lege...
      • The biggest shopping day of the year is gearing up...
      • Three hand-picked Android apps can help you scope ...
      • With a shortened shopping season, many big box ret...
      • One of the major holiday challenges is what to giv...
      • The 16-foot-long model is powered by four small tu...
      • Budweiser UK launches a publicity campaign around ...
      • A Seattle restaurant, the latest to ban Google Gla...
      • Spectators won't believe their eyes when you make ...
      • Many hard drives come preformatted with special ut...
      • NASA releases a short movie showing comet ISON's a...
      • Discarded holiday wrapping paper can get pretty in...
      • We took a MINI to the Col de Turini to recreate Pa...
      • An ESPN survey suggests that while women do more s...
      • The increasingly popular currency was worth about ...
      • A UK study sees a first-ever drop in sexual activi...
      • The company has created a patent-pending technolog...
      • The number of affected customers was exceedingly s...
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      • Batch-made plastic eyes could be much cheaper than...
      • Apple is reportedly interested in improving its ma...
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      • The update to Nokia's popular budget smartphone ma...
      • Apple increased its orders of iPad Minis in Novemb...
      • Tablets, tablets, and more tablets, as stores slas...
      • Batch-made plastic eyes could be much cheaper than...
      • The targets' appetite for sexually explicit materi...
      • Apple has reportedly ramped up iPad Mini supply to...
      • Nokia says it's the "right tablet," touting the it...
      • An update to Nokia's popular budget smartphone mak...
      • Two new browsers have followed Firefox with suppor...
      • Muslim radicals' appetite for sexual explicit mate...
      • If Microsoft's outgoing chief executive had listen...
      • Edward Snowden's NSA leaks have caused Google, Yah...
      • Hewlett-Packard CEO Meg Whitman believes tablet-la...
      • Black versions of the Android compatible smartwatc...
      • This magnetic device lets you act like a creepy sp...
      • So what are the real deals this Black Friday? Chec...
      • Apple's tablet is, according to Microsoft, no good...
      • In-ear vs. on-ear, circumaural vs. supraaural, ope...
      • On Tuesday Google announced a new extension for Ch...
      • The NSA may have employed an old-school spy techni...
      • Fly the friendly skies with a hot-rod paper airpla...
      • The company's new C720P Chromebook, due out next m...
      • Xbox One is the loneliest number if you're trying ...
      • On today's show, we'll tell you about the battle b...
      • New Zealand design engineer Olaf Diegel has 3D-pri...
      • If you read the fine print on the Xbox One, nearly...
      • The new caching of preference settings in OS X Mav...
      • Whether you're running the kitchen on the big day ...
      • Keep your sanity in the kitchen this holiday seaso...
      • The Redmond, Wash., company's latest anti-Google a...
      • When you want to communicate a subtle sense of dre...
      • The platform is rolling out on Tuesday to those ru...
      • Boomf lets your feast on your artfully filtered In...
      • November 26, 2013 8:42 AM PST LG's Splendor is on...
      • The platform is rolling out on Tuesday to those ru...
      • San Antonio's BiblioTech, believed to be the first...
      • A leak on Twitter reveals what appears to be the t...
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