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The Internet Technology

Glide Effortless to Compete in File Sharing Market 160

Dotnaught writes "InformationWeek is running a story about a new consumer application suite called Glide Effortless that's slated to be released in mid-November. Think of it as iTunes, iPhoto, iMovie, iCal, Mail, document sharing, shopping, and a few other apps all in one seamless application hosted as a service on the Web that could be accessed by any browser on any computer. It allows file sharing without the risk of illegal copying. It might prove a viable competitor to iTunes, if it works as advertised and if it can scale to handle millions of users."
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Glide Effortless to Compete in File Sharing Market

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  • OK, fine (Score:5, Funny)

    by Hey Pope Felcher . . ( 921019 ) on Saturday November 05, 2005 @08:28PM (#13960198)
    In fact, Leka explains, the system is smart enough to identify copyrighted music that has been uploaded by users into the system.

    Err, how exactly?

    Does it listen out for generic beats, mixed with generic vocalizations of generic lyrics, flavoured out by massive over production?
    • Re:OK, fine (Score:5, Insightful)

      by AvantLegion ( 595806 ) on Saturday November 05, 2005 @08:35PM (#13960225) Journal
      Does it listen out for generic beats, mixed with generic vocalizations of generic lyrics, flavoured out by massive over production?

      You know, that would work far better than a Slashdot-posted joke should...

    • Most likely not. (Score:5, Interesting)

      by CyricZ ( 887944 ) on Saturday November 05, 2005 @08:37PM (#13960235)
      I know you're kidding, but the fact of the matter is that they probably won't. They'll probably just scan for filenames containing a name of a famous artist or band. A threatening letter will be sent automatically, even in cases of non-infringement [com.com].

      • A threatening letter will be sent automatically...

        Why would they even have to do that? According to TFA, everything will be on _their_ servers. All they would have to do is have their "Brittany-BackStreatBoy-ETC" scanner delete any file they though was "infringing" and send the user who uploaded it an email saying "sorry, Charlie, we deleted your upload". Problem solved.

        The PHB's of this corp will probably convince the media companies that no copyright material is ever traded since it always stays on

        • Why would they just delete the file?

          They could always strike a deal with the recording industry. They quietly report any violations, and the recording industry lawyers take the infringers to court. Perhaps there will be some financial benefits for the alert.

    • Re:OK, fine (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Seumas ( 6865 )
      Storing all of your private data on a stranger's computer for a fee, remotely accessible, granting permission to scan everything you have (so clearly it's only so private to begin with, right?) for allegedly copyrighted material (who knows how they know if it's copyrighted by YOU or someone else or if you're allowed to use it or if it's just a PHOTO of Metallica when you saw them backstage)...

      Hell, what could possibly go wrong?!
    • Re:OK, fine (Score:1, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward
      But the hilarious part is surely this:

      It allows file sharing without the risk of illegal copying.

      Yeah, the great risk of illegal copying. Everytime you start your DC client and search for (and subsequently download) the latest movies, you must understand that you you risk actually getting them. The horror!

      PR people can spin just about anything. Submitters too. :)
    • Re:OK, fine (Score:5, Funny)

      by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Saturday November 05, 2005 @11:41PM (#13960903)
      "Err, how exactly?"

      Three words: Amazon Magic Turk.
    • No, that's probably non-copyrighted music since the work has to reach a certain level or artism, or haven't it? (i'm not sure, but most music is so crappy it should be free.)
  • by ASUSanator ( 700145 ) on Saturday November 05, 2005 @08:29PM (#13960201) Journal
    Does it work in lynx? :P
  • by CyricZ ( 887944 ) on Saturday November 05, 2005 @08:29PM (#13960204)
    I prefer to store data on my own computer, for privacy reasons. I will not use these services for sensitive, private data, because I do not know who else has access to said data. And I see no point in using their service only for non-sensitive needs, while returning to my existing solutions for private matters.

    I doubt their service offers anything beyond what is already possible with a solid Linux or BSD setup, while costing far more and lacking the security I've come to expect.

    • Read... the.... f*cking... article...

      The software, disclosed in mid-October, is called Glide Effortless. It's a set of 12 applications for content creation, communication, E-commerce, and sharing. The apps are Glide Photos, Glide Music, Glide Video, Glide Docs, Glide AllMedia, Glide Contacts, Glide Calendar, Glide Timeline (Glide's search engine), Glide Mail, Glide Cast (audio, text, and video conferencing), Glide Share, and Glide Shops.

      (emphasis mine) The real hook is that they are talking to media cr
    • First- what is this 'private data' that everyone is so worried about? Kiddie porn? It's not like anyone uses Quicken anymore- you can get banking info on-line. So I always wonder what the heck is so private.

      Other than that, these on-line services provide a few advantages that typical desktop apps don't.

      Portability for one. It would be nice to move around anywhere, and always have my files and applications available to me (with a net connection). Home to work, and to my mom's house for the holidays with
      • by CyricZ ( 887944 ) on Saturday November 05, 2005 @08:50PM (#13960294)
        Financial information is the first thing that comes to mind. Anyone who is serious about investing, for instance, has a multitude of financial data that they need to store, and that often is best kept private.

        Then there is just personal correspondence that is just that: personal. I don't want other people to have easy access to letters I have sent to friends and family. For instance, I don't want others to know that my nephew James has testicular cancer, and may lose his genitals.

        You keep thinking about kiddie porn. Those of us who do not deal with such filth still do have many reasons to keep our data private. Services like these do not offer the privacy that is required, and even with their advantages, the security problems still far outweigh the benefits.

        • The problem with your nephew James and his testicles....is that nobody cares.

          While yes, it is private- there is really no incentive for anyone to do anything with it. With potentially millions of customers, things like this just fall into the category of 'noise'.
          • Since you have that anti-privacy attitude, would you care to allow us to all access your personal computer? After all, if such personal information is just "noise", then I know you'd have no problem allowing us full access.

            • Your missing the point. The point is what is the motivation for someone to hack into your computer and get personal information? What profit is there in personal communcations? Even investment information is a moot point (so what if they know what stocks/mutual funds you own? Now if you have your accounts and brokers stored on your computer, you are an idiot). The information doesn't need to be freely available because it isn't worth digging for.

              -everphilski-
              • No, you missed the point. And that is that no hacking of an individual's computer needs to be done when using a centralized service such as this. Only one server needs to be compromised for the data of potentially millions upon millions of individuals to be stolen.

                And there's nothing wrong with storing sensitive data on a computer. You just have to do it sensibly. Often times that means making sure that physical access to the machine is limited. Running a secure operating system such as OpenBSD also helps.
            • Sure...have a look at my computer. You'll find out that I go to worldsex.com a couple times a week. You'd probably also learn this from analyzing the dried up goo on my keyboard.

              You can read my e-mail, which is pretty boring. And maybe look at the Excel spreadsheet of my college credits, and see that I do very poorly in math. (And by viewing my e-mail, you'll see that I've been going to college since 1986 and still don't have my degree.)

              Let's see what else...I lost about $6,000 in a really bad purchase
          • While the above post was marked flamebait there is too much truth to it. Data are very poorly managed behind doors for financial firms, hospitals and credit card companies in general. They have a very high layoff rate in the IT departments and the scale of the data they manage daily is overwhelming. Their IT guys are not the "money-making" group, therefore they are expandable... and so is their data.

          • You probably don't lock your doors at night, either. Or lock your car door. Or have an alarm system on your car or your home. Or lock any drawers at work. Or use a passcode for your voicemail. Or a pin number for your bank account.

            I mean, nobody would care about your stuff. And with so many cars and homes and drawers and cubicles and bank accounts and voicemail accounts out there, your measely stuff will just get lost in the noise.
        • by hoggoth ( 414195 ) on Saturday November 05, 2005 @10:00PM (#13960520) Journal
          >I don't want others to know that my nephew James has testicular cancer, and may lose his genitals.

          Uncle Cy, I can't believe you just posted that.
          Dad's right, you are an asshole.
          Don't bothering visiting me in the hospital anymore.

          -James

      • Why not just use an app like VNC to allow remote connection to your pc?
      • by Anonymous Coward
        If you don't feel the need to have confidential information please post your bank card numbers, credit card numbers, social security number, email addresses, phone numbers, work information, home address, family status and their respective addresses and phone numbers, computer logs and all other personal information. Nobody is likely to use them for anything and they will simply get lost in all the noise....
      • First- what is this 'private data' that everyone is so worried about? Kiddie porn? It's not like anyone uses Quicken anymore- you can get banking info on-line. So I always wonder what the heck is so private.
        How about people who use a computer to run a business from home. Is that $99/yr going to buy you a service that is HIPAA compliant if you are in the medical business?
      • First- what is this 'private data' that everyone is so worried about? Kiddie porn?

        Maybe you're the kind that thinks being on Big Brother would be 'cool'. Maybe you're the kind of guy who talks openly about everything including but not limited to your sex life chatting in your cell phone on public transportation (Yes, I hear you without trying to listen in because I'm sitting in the seat right in front of you in what would be normal talking distance). Maybe you're the kind that is so completely oblivious to
    • Just make sure you GPG encrypt everything that you put on their servers. Use a 4096 or 8192 bit key to be extra sure they can't get at the data.
    • "And I see no point in using their service only for non-sensitive needs, while returning to my existing solutions for private matters."

      a.) Hard drives fail.
      b.) Some of us actually use several different computers where the only common connection is the internet. Myself, I have a desktop, laptop that travels with me, and my workstation at work. I use GMail for sharing stuff between them. I wouldn't mind a better solution.
      c.) Extra options is a good thing, not a bad thing.
  • TransMedia Corp (Score:5, Informative)

    by taskforce ( 866056 ) on Saturday November 05, 2005 @08:31PM (#13960210) Homepage
    The comparny who are pulling this off, http://www.transmediacorp.com/ [transmediacorp.com]. The link wasn't included in the summary nor the article.

    Personally, I think this looks very impressive, and it will be interesting to see how it pans out.

    • Er, "The document contains no data." Doesn't exactly inspire confidence.
      • As determined earlier [slashdot.org], it would appear that they run their servers off of Windows. That may be why their site is experiencing so many problems right now.

        But you're right, it does leave a very bad impression. I'm sure there are many users here now who will forever associate this company and product with a completely dead server.

        • Re:TransMedia Corp (Score:2, Insightful)

          by zoips ( 576749 )
          Or maybe, you know, it was /.'d. But of course that never happens to a server running on a *nix platform and Apache httpd, because those magically overcome any lack of bandwidth or lack of processing power from an unexpected surge in load. Seriously, just Shut. The. Fuck. Up.
          • You're the only one suggesting the idea that *nix servers are immune to problems.

            But then again, let's consider what this company is doing. They're offering a web-based service. One would think that they're capable of setting up a server, regardless of the operating system, that can handle a fairly significant load. And in all fairness, a Slashdotting is not a large load in the whole scheme of things. They're lucky they didn't make the front page of the BBC or New York Times sites!

    • Ill wait for them to go bust and get the open source clone / replacement.
    • Re:TransMedia Corp (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Texas_Refugee ( 258092 ) on Saturday November 05, 2005 @10:42PM (#13960658)
      Are you kidding? This is the worst vaporware announcement I have ever seen. They can't even keep their webservers up. If some no-name startup can come out of nowhere and build what is described as 10 times more complete and complicated than anything I have ever seen before, I tend to think it is complete bullshit.

      If things like this exist, they dont magically ship completely formed. You hear about them for a while and then they slowly add features and scale up. From what I can tell from the google cache, there is not a single reputable technology person in the company, only a nobody CEO.

      According to his bio, he was previously a director at "RxRemedy" which apparently no longer exists. In fact that company was under investigation by the SEC according to a simple google search. Here is a link to the SEC investigation into the company that my google search for RxRemedy turned up: http://www.sec.gov/litigation/complaints/comp17650 .htm [sec.gov] (in the document, search for RxRemedy) So let's see, his only listed previous company was investigated for investor fraud.

      What a freaking joke. This man probably belongs in prison.

      I am amazed that slashdot would put vaporware garbage like this on their front page.

  • Zzzz (Score:2, Insightful)

    by rootedgimp ( 523254 )
    Is this the sort of thing anyone in the /. community would use? I don't mean to troll, but aren't there already a million and a half applications that people are already familiar with / already have installed that could do the exact same thing(s)? This isn't the days of Hotline anymore. (Though it did pwn for its time... Ahh, the power of dc++)
  • Link: Glide Effortless [transmediacorp.com]

    Seems like they're planning one gargantuan Flash site to run it all, judging by their current introductory site and the "flashy" screenshots [transmediacorp.com] of their upcoming one.
    • I hate mods who mark your post Redundant before they look at the timestamps. You posted this 2 minutes after the first post of this link. Thus you derserve no mods because you were too late on your post. ;) But you don't deserve a minus. Oh well, thanks for the link.
  • Bullshit (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Jarnis ( 266190 ) on Saturday November 05, 2005 @08:34PM (#13960220)
    'Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof'

    Will run on any browser, phone, mobile device, set top box.. and will do everything office, itunes, windows etc does... and magically solves music piracy on the sidelines by magically knowing what's legal and what's not.

    Same old story... Noname company comes out of nowhere, claims their product will cure cancer, end hunger and guarantee world peace all in one go. I call 'bullshit', until presented with real proof of the claims laid out.
    • Will run on any browser, phone, mobile device, set top box.. and will do everything office, itunes, windows etc does... and magically solves music piracy on the sidelines by magically knowing what's legal and what's not.
      ...The software package also runs background processes to end world hunger and add millions to your bank account.
    • You can do anything at zombo.com [zombo.com], anything at all!

      Welcome!

  • by stonedonkey ( 416096 ) on Saturday November 05, 2005 @08:40PM (#13960246)
    From TFA:

    The software, disclosed in mid-October, is called Glide Effortless. It's a set of 12 applications for content creation, communication, E-commerce, and sharing. The apps are Glide Photos, Glide Music, Glide Video, Glide Docs, Glide AllMedia, Glide Contacts, Glide Calendar, Glide Timeline (Glide's search engine), Glide Mail, Glide Cast (audio, text, and video conferencing), Glide Share, and Glide Shops.

    Sounds like a "jack of all trades, master of none" situation here. Purely speculative, of course, but these individual apps would take quite a long while to polish to the level of their competitors, requiring a huge staff that a start-up just wouldn't have. It would be nice to have an all-in-one, platform-agnostic, Web-accessible solution, but it reminds me too much of those multi-function printers and mobile devices where the sum is less than its parts.

    There's also the Google Mail syndrome, where people don't get on board en masse because they already have a Yahoo/MSN/whatever email address. Not only does the Glide suite have to be compelling, it has to make the user say "I need the whole thing" in the face of him or her already possessing individual programs they're already familiar with and are paying for. If I were TransMedia, I would have released demo versions of their individual apps, rather than cramming everything into one high-profile release. I think that's just asking for trouble.
    • There's a lack of people getting a google mail address?

      I got one because I already had a Yahoo and MSN address. Hotmail deleted my name because I didn't sign in a whopping 30 days and the Yahoo one is swamped by mailing lists/spam - now I know better to prevent that - by keeping on signing services to my Yahoo address:)

      Many others I know got a gmail address just because.
  • by MisterLawyer ( 770687 ) <mikelawyer AT gmail DOT com> on Saturday November 05, 2005 @08:42PM (#13960253)
    They ought to throw in a few science and astronomy applications (or maybe just some porn), and rename it to " Astroglide [astroglide.com] Effortless".

    The subliminal association would undoubtedly boost sales.

  • Think of it as iTunes, iPhoto, iMovie, iCal, Mail, document sharing, shopping, and a few other apps all in one seamless application hosted as a service on the Web that could be accessed by any browser on any computer.
    And it makes your bowel movements smell like fresh cinnamon buns! It does everthing! - Transmedia Marketing Dept.
    • I might have believed them if they hadn't said iMovie. The first step when using iMovie is usually to dump around 10GB of DV footage into the app. On my home Internet connection, that would take around five days to upload - hardly something I would expect the average home user to want to do.
      • I didn't think of the issue of the raw dv size but yes, another reason to be sceptical of their claims.

        My issue is the idea someone could come out of nowhere and make a net based application suite anywhere as good as iMovie, iMail, etc. Take iMovie, IMO an incredible program that could almost justify buying a Mac Mini just for that alone. IMO these guys hit me as all sizzle and no steak.

        Now if Google said they had something like this I might believe them but not these guys.

  • Reminds me of... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by penguin_asylum ( 822967 ) on Saturday November 05, 2005 @08:48PM (#13960277)
    This sounds just like what google is supposed to be trying to do... Free web-based versions of applications, including the supposed office suite, and the mail... But they've beaten google to parts of it; the question is whether this will discourage google from continuing, and if they will be as successful as google has been with this type of venture.
  • Ads for Nerds? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by rolfwind ( 528248 ) on Saturday November 05, 2005 @08:48PM (#13960278)
    Promises are cheap. Slashvertising must be cheap too.

    Do these people have any track record? It's a startup? So I guess not.

    Why is this making news before it comes out?

    All I'm reading here are big promises on a product that a cross between .Mac/Google's offerings so- anything new to see here?

    Oh wait....

    From TFA:
    "Not only is TransMedia selling Glide to end users, it's also licensing the software to media companies [b]so they can sell it as a branded service.[/b ] As a result, companies like Comcast, Disney, SBC, and Verizon will have the opportunity to offer an integrated, monetizable service that, at first glance, look significantly more compelling than the offerings from Internet portals like AOL and Internet software services like MySpace.com."

    Gee, what I wanted, along with those Disney and eBay branded credit cards I don't have nor want.... just the corporations I trust with my personal info.
    • "companies like Comcast, Disney, SBC, and Verizon will have the opportunity to"

      See, this creates the impression that they've already got contracts with Comcast, Disney, SBC, and Verizon.

      But they don't. They're just saying companies *like* those, who decide to buy in but have not yet done so will be able to do the promised things...

      It's like if I write a web page saying "through placing my personal ad on Craigslist, women like Elle Macpherson, Angelina Jolie, the Spice Girls, Christina Aguilera, Audrey Tauto
    • Re:Ads for Nerds? (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Slashvertising must be cheap too.

      Indeed. If you follow the link to the homepage of the submitter of this story, [lot49.com] you'll see that it leads to Thomas Clayburn's weblog. Follow the link to the submitted article, [informationweek.com] and you'll see that it's written by Thomas Clayburn. Of course, it's not immediately obvious, because, when submitting this article, Thomas Clayburn hid behind the alias "Dotnaught".

      I'm also a bit wary that Transmedia's website, [transmedia.co.uk] the company behind this product, uses almost identical styles to

    • Is it really that hard to download an app, ie iTunes and do cool stuff.

      Doing EVERYTHING via the web is a waste, if you really want it that badly, make the Xprotocol standard
      part of mozilla, then we can run X apps.

      Are people that lazy they cant download an app in 12seconds? or do corporates prevent app installations?
      Or is the real ticket here, controlling the user, via one app, no 200 versions to maintain ??
  • by ForumTroll ( 900233 ) on Saturday November 05, 2005 @08:49PM (#13960286)
    Simply because you have all these features does not necessarily mean that you're going to be a successful competitor against products like iTunes. iTunes has been marketed so well that it has become almost synonymous with online music shopping. Without support of the major labels and strong advertising companies you simply will not be successful against a product like iTunes in the mainstream market. Furthermore, many people use iTunes as a simple player and therefore when they do feel the need to shop online for music it's just so easy for them to do so through the iTunes interface.

    Also, it seems that they're striving to have a lot of features however many sites that do this do indeed come out with many features however they don't perform any of those features exceptionally well. I guess we'll have to wait and see, but a startup company boasting this many features doesn't exactly give me a lot of confidence in the quality of all these services. This service, from what I can see, is also only available in a subscription based service model which quite frankly the majority of this market is not interested in. Their free plan also only comes with 50MB of space which is not going to persuade people to yet again switch service providers.

    Most of the features they're boasting are also fairly standard and people are not going to switch to a new service unless it offers significant benefits. For example, why would I switch to use this email service when they only give me 50MB of space and other free services give me 50 times that amount? Switching these services is also a pain in the ass for myself and everyone who communicates with me.
  • Sounds like the KDE browser with a couple new ioslaves to me.
  • and I'm going to call it: Astroglide
  • by Laebshade ( 643478 ) <laebshade@gmail.com> on Saturday November 05, 2005 @08:57PM (#13960321)
    Sounds like a 'personal lubrication' brand...
  • It's effortless because nobody will put in the effort to use it.
  • by TypoNAM ( 695420 ) on Saturday November 05, 2005 @09:12PM (#13960379)
    They forgot to use their own product to upload some data because I only get
    "This web document contains no data" out their server. ;)
  • PRWeb has moved (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Infonaut ( 96956 ) <infonaut@gmail.com> on Saturday November 05, 2005 @09:13PM (#13960385) Homepage Journal
    Its new address is www.slashdot.org.

  • by alucinor ( 849600 ) on Saturday November 05, 2005 @09:17PM (#13960400) Journal
    They almost missed it ... November's here already, less than two months left to enter!
  • ASCAP & Transmedia (Score:1, Informative)

    by desNotes ( 900643 )
    September 21, 2004
    ASCAP ANNOUNCES STRATEGIC TECH RELATIONSHIP WITH TRANSMEDIA

    The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) announced today that it has entered into an agreement with TransMedia for the use of TransMedia's Colaborata 2.5 digital media management and collaboration platform. Colaborata 2.5 provides an integrated, online media environment to securely manage and preview music, videos, pictures, documents and related information.

    "Technological innovation and member service are
  • How in the hell are they going to provide feature-filled web-based applications to end users and other businesses if their web server can't even stand up to a Slashdotting? I may have to echo the "BS" claims already in place.
  • by catwh0re ( 540371 ) on Saturday November 05, 2005 @09:40PM (#13960463)
    Just putting your everyday apps online doesn't make it a killer service. I'd always prefer to run it locally, particularly with broadband speeds not being favourable to say editing HD footage.

    Some things work well being able to be accessed online (Mail and schedules are the best examples I can think of.)

    I feel that alot of the service components are going to go to waste with underuse.

    The era of the laptop doesn't combine well with the all-online paradigm. The most successful approach I have seen with online tools, are ones that download to your device, and sync/update when you get back to an internet connection. Simpler models of this are music download services, and video download services (rather than video streaming services.) Basically so you can carry your content with you, and back it up quickly to devices. Consumers want freedom over their data.

    • Just putting your everyday apps online doesn't make it a killer service. I'd always prefer to run it locally, particularly with broadband speeds not being favourable to say editing HD footage.

      If editing HD footage is your everyday app, then yes. Not that many years ago, you would have said "particularly with dial-up speeds not being favourable to say running a GUI". For example, right now I'm writing a comment in my browser, and the speed is just fine. I don't think that is the biggest issue for me, for me
      • I definitely agree with you on the pace of which broadband speeds have increased as well as the ability to be always online.

        I agree that we will concede more applications to the web, but I think these services are designed more so that any big company can go from having a small web precense to one where they can offer all kinds of online services. E.g. for the Disney example, licensees could stitch together their own localised disney commercial, and have it burnt to disc and sent to them. Or use search to g

  • by Anonymous Coward
    Ok, they're easier to maintain on several clients, but seriously now...

    they fucking suck. Admit it, you only deliver to that platform because you're too fucking lazy or stupid to code cross-platform.
  • Is that "Glide Effortless" as in "Think Different"?
  • "Think of it as iTunes, iPhoto, iMovie, iCal, Mail, document sharing, shopping, and a few other apps all in one seamless application" One of the things I like about all of the iLife programs is how easy they are to use, and simple design BUT if I was to try to wrap them up into one package well I dont think it would be as simple. and when most free e-mail providers have more space than this all in one web application. I will have to see it to believe it, but im not putting much hope in it.
  • 1) Yahoo has been doing all this for a couple of years. Photos, music, calendars, shops, auctions, mail, search... maybe not video. So what's the big difference? Oh, Yahoo isn't seamless. Right.

    2) Gimme a break. None of this can possibly compete with a desktop-based application at dialup speeds, DSL, or cable. Although I know many people, including my wife, who use Yahoo Mail as their only email application, it is still clunky and awkward compared to a locally hosted mail service. Of course it has compensat
  • I just love it when a PR written piece of festering crap gets posted as an article on /.

    On Nov. 15, a New York-based startup called TransMedia plans to release an integrated suite of consumer media applications that has the potential to radically alter the balance of power among Internet and software service providers.

    ...snip...

    As a result, companies like Comcast, Disney, SBC, and Verizon will have the opportunity to offer an integrated, monetizable service that, at first glance, look significantly mor

  • chocolate?? (Score:3, Funny)

    by se7en11 ( 833841 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @12:25AM (#13961060) Homepage
    From the article: "Initially, the products available through Glide's E-commerce system will include music, ring tones, chocolate, photo prints, and personalized products. Options are likely to expand as developers avail themselves of the Glide software developer's kit and partners build on the Glide platform.

    I'm in!! Anyone promissing ring tones AND chocolate is a sure winner.

  • This is what the internet would be if the corps. could turn back the clock and if they created the "internet". One seemless money making mechanism. No blogs, No free speech, No talking back to the corporations, No bad little net users giving them the finger just lots and lots of consumers assuming the position and saying thank you sir !
  • by Douglas Simmons ( 628988 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @01:46AM (#13961296) Homepage
    I'm just a caveman. I fell on some ice and later got thawed out by some of your scientists. Your world of p2p programs that allow file sharing without the risk of illegal copying frightens and confuses me! Sometimes the honking horns of your traffic make me want to get out of my BMW.. and run off into the hills, or wherever.. Sometimes when I get a message on my fax machine, I wonder: "Did little demons get inside and type it?" I don't know! My primitive mind can't grasp these concepts. But there is one thing I do know - when a man like my client tries to download an innocent Beyonce video and it turns out to be copyrighted bukkake, then he is entitled to no less than two million in compensatory damages, and two million in punitive damages. Thank you.
  • by mattr ( 78516 )
    Glide EffortlessLY!!!
    Please! They need to buy an adverb first, then start shopping for clues.
  • Initially, the products available through Glide's E-commerce system will include music, ring tones, chocolate, photo prints, and personalized products.
    Chocolate? How does chocolate fit in with any of the other services they're talking about?

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