FCC hints at taking action against Comcast

“A hallmark of what should be seen as a reasonable business practice is certainly whether or not the people engaging in that practice are willing to describe it publicly,” The Wall Street Journal quoted Martin as saying.

But video-sharing companies, academics, and public-interest groups say that Comcast’s actions go beyond simple network management and actually violate several principles outlined by the FCC to ensure that traffic flows freely over the Internet. These groups have launched formal complaints against Comcast, and the FCC has been looking into these complaints.

Comcast has argued that it doesn’t block P2P traffic. Instead, it says it simply slows down packets so that it can better manage its network. The company has complained that file sharing software, such that used by BitTorrent, permits a few customers to use an inordinate amount of bandwidth, which degrades the network performance for the vast majority of its customers.

Martin has said he understands the need for companies to manage their networks. And he has said that reasonable network management practices are acceptable.

Still, if the FCC finds that Comcast has violated its Net neutrality principles, it will be a big deal. In the past, carriers have argued that regulation and new laws were not needed because network operators had not abused their power as network gatekeepers. But if the FCC acknowledges that one major broadband provider has crossed this line, then it could add more weight to the arguments of those supporting Net neutrality legislation.

But now it looks like Chairman Martin, and by extension the commission, sees Comcast as going beyond simply managing its network. But even if the FCC decides that Comcast has violated Net neutrality principles, it’s unclear what the agency can actually do to Comcast. The principles are not agency regulation. And there are no Net neutrality laws on the books, so it’s hard to say what kind of enforcement the FCC can impose.

Martin didn’t say for certain that the FCC would take action against Comcast. But he did say that he was troubled by Comcast’s initial denial of slowing or blocking traffic, according to news reports from people who attended the speech. What worried him most was the fact that Comcast wasn’t forthcoming to its customers about what it was doing.

The Federal Communications Commission is edging toward taking action against cable operator Comcast for monkeying with its customers’ peer-to-peer traffic, according to several news reports.

The FCC held an open hearing last month to discuss whether or not Comcast went too far in its “traffic shaping” measures and what could be done to make the experience more transparent to consumers.

On Friday FCC Chairman Kevin Martin indicated during a speech at Stanford University’s Law School that the commission may take action against the cable operator, which has been accused of blocking or slowing down the peer-to-peer file sharing service BitTorrent on its broadband network.

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Verizon exec Some Net neutrality fans suffer from

How to accomplish that in a congested network? The answer may include delaying peer-to-peer transfers. “For me as a carrier, I need to satisfy the VoIP customer–whether it’s mine or someone else’s is irrelevant here–by delivering those packets in a timely fashion,” Lynch said. “That may mean that for economic reasons, within the network, to keep the cost reasonable to keep the price reasonable, that I need to slow down (what’s not) a time-sensitive file.”

ASPEN, Colo.–Verizon’s chief technologist took a swipe at Net neutrality advocates on Tuesday, saying the concept has become overly politicized and important engineering details have been overlooked in Washington debates.

“The issue was an engineering issue,” Waz said in a panel discussion following Lynch’s speech. He added that critics claimed Comcast was trying to disadvantage P2P video to benefit its own video offerings–but they never explained “why we wouldn’t interfere with streaming video” from sites like YouTube that could be handled better.

A Verizon representative told us after the talk that the company is not prioritizing VoIP over peer-to-peer traffic, and that Lynch was speaking generally about approaches to the problem of congestion that all broadband providers face. Verizon has stressed that it spends over $16 billion a year on adding greater capacity to its network and says it is working collaboratively with peer-to-peer companies through the P4P working group to “maximize networks for consumers.”

What may strike an outside observer as bizarre is that the FCC votes for an order before it’s actually written. The order is still being drafted, and the text of the document will eventually be released. (One source in a position to know said that the dissenting FCC commissioners still haven’t been given the text.)

“Governments need to make sure they have a very thorough record,” he said. “The FCC of late has not been doing that.”

Lynch’s remarks come weeks after the Federal Communications Commission ruled against Comcast for adopting the same general sort of network management practices. By a narrow 3-2 vote, the FCC handed Comcast a cease-and-desist order telling it not to interfere with BitTorrent transfers, even though the company had already ceased the practice back in March.

On a related note, Lynch said that Verizon was trying to work cooperatively with large content holders–the very ones that said Monday they wanted broadband providers to filter their networks–and wanted them to “feel comfortable that their content will be dealt with in the way they truly believe it should be.”

Kathleen Abernathy, a former FCC commissioner and now a partner at the law firm of Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld, agreed that the term Net neutrality made little sense. (Abernathy is also a director of the Progress and Freedom Foundation, a free-market group that has been a critic of the concept.)

Robert McDowell, one of the two dissenting FCC commissioners, said there were “evidentiary jurisprudence” problems with the agency’s ruling. In part, McDowell said, “there were a couple of unsigned declarations” that the FCC relied on.

“It was such a great phrase that it’s morphed into more than what it really is,” Abernathy said. “You have to peel it back and ask, ‘What do you really mean?’”

Taking the measure of Net neutrality
Joe Waz, Comcast’s senior vice president for external affairs, said the arguments of Net neutrality proponents–presumably meaning groups like Free Press and Public Knowledge–were “absurd.”

Updated at 11 p.m. PT with subsequent comments from a Verizon representative.

Lynch gave the example of a customer placing a call using a voice over Internet Protocol, or VoIP, service that relies on time-sensitive packets. Unless a continuous stream of VoIP packets arrives, the call quality can suffer or even become incomprehensible.

“We need to guard against turning technical and business decisions into political decisions,” Verizon’s Richard Lynch said at the Progress and Freedom Foundation’s technology policy conference here.

(Credit:
Declan McCullagh/News.com)

Verizon CTO Richard Lynch tells conference attendees that engineers, not lobbyists or interest groups, should be making decisions on how to manage broadband networks. He says some Net neutrality advocates hear of a 22-millisecond delay and get a case of ‘paranoia.’

Spokesman Michael Balmoris replied in a way that didn’t exactly answer the question: “We have said that we are working with some in the content industry with the goal of encouraging the legal downloads of movies, TV shows, and other entertainment and content–we want our customers to access any legal content they want. In addition,
let’s set the record straight: we have not said that we are going to
filter our customers traffic to detect possible copyright violations.”

Both Comcast and Verizon said that engineers, not lawyers and lobbyists, should be making network management decisions. “I do get very, very concerned that the people who are taking things like deep packet inspection and making it a horrible thing need to look at it from an engineer’s viewpoint,” Lynch said.

AT&T, by contrast, said in January that it was testing technology to spot piratical activity. On Monday, we asked the company about its current plans. (We asked: “Can you confirm that AT&T is not monitoring and has no plans to monitor its customers’ traffic or other online activities to detect possible copyright infringements?”)

Some people hearing this “get all incensed and they accuse me of violating things I didn’t even know that I could violate,” he said. Customers who are “doing a P2P download or e-mail, they aren’t going to see that 22-millisecond delay. And yet that’s the kind of thing that seems to (cause) paranoia.”

But he stopped short of saying Verizon would actively monitor its customers’ online activities to detect copyright violations. “I can’t tell you that I will police for you,” he said. “I don’t think it would be appropriate for me to do that…(We want) to stay on the right side of the privacy position that we’ve taken as a company.”

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What’s next, Google Autos or Google Music

(Credit:
Hitwise)

Google Autos or Google Music are the guesses that Hitwise hazarded Wednesday. “Our thinking was that Google might want to fill natural gaps in its portfolio of offerings based on the interests of its users. We looked at which categories are receiving the most traffic from Google in which Google does not have its own property,” Hitwise’s Heather Hopkins wrote in a blog post.

By scrutinizing the traffic Google searches produce, Internet analysis firm Hitwise in January predicted that Google might launch a virtual world. Lo and behold, Google launched Lively on Tuesday. So what’s next?

In the top 20 classes of Internet sites toward which Google sent traffic, only three have no corresponding in-house Google project, according to Hitwise’s June 2008 research.

“The data suggests Google Autos and Google Music,” Hopkins said. “I am not sure we’ll see Google Government just yet!”

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CTIA A platform for changing the subject

CTIA is “where we meet with press and analysts to communicate our message. So for Motorola and for us with the AT&T mobile TV announcement this week, it’s about having our stories already out there.”

–Gina Lombardi, president, MediaFlo USA.

And then finally AT&T and Qualcomm’s MediaFlo USA announced that AT&T would finally be launching its live mobile TV service that uses the MediaFlo network, providing some positive news for a service that has seen lackluster success since it was launched more than a year ago on the Verizon Wireless network.

In time for CTIA

Meanwhile, Motorola is also facing some tough challenges. The company, which has seen its handset market share plummet due mostly to a lack of compelling new products, said in January, amid pressure from activist investor Carl Icahn, that it would consider separating its handset business from the rest of the company in an effort to increase shareholder value and revive the struggling business. On Wednesday, it officially announced its plan to break the company into two publicly traded entities.

The following morning, Motorola announced that it was spinning off its handset business after a two-month internal study about what to do with the struggling cell phone division that has steadily been losing market share.

“CTIA has become a focal point for the industry,” said MediaFlo’s Lombardi. “It’s where we meet with press and analysts to communicate our message. So for Motorola and for us with the AT&T mobile TV announcement this week, it’s about having our stories already out there.”

Such a spin-off could make sense, especially if Sprint and Clearwire can find someone else to pay for it…like Comcast and Time Warner, as the aforementioned Journal article suggested.

It’s that time of year again when U.S. cell phone executives gather at the semi-annual
CTIA Wireless trade show to show off new products and hobnob with each other. But this year it seems like some companies are working extra hard to clear the air before they hit the Las Vegas show floor.

First, there was a story on The Wall Street Journal Web site on Tuesday night that cited unnamed sources who said Sprint Nextel was talking to Comcast and Time Warner about helping fund a joint venture between Sprint and Clearwire to launch a combined WiMax network.

According to the Journal, Hesse has been “pressing all parties to wrap up discussions in time for the wireless industry’s trade show next week in Las Vegas, so Sprint can have something to present to investors.”

This may not be a new strategy for companies that have hit a bumpy road, but it’s a trend I noticed this week as I was bombarded with a one-two punch on a couple of big stories in the wireless industry.

For the past several months, Sprint’s investors have been questioning the company’s plans to continue funding a new 4G wireless network based on WiMax technology as it steadily continues to lose customers from its traditional cell phone business. The company’s new CEO Dan Hesse has said he plans to refocus the company’s attention on its core business. Rumors have been floated that Sprint might spin off its WiMax network, known as Xohm, and combine it with Clearwire’s network.

My guess is that Motorola wanted to clear up questions about the fate of the beleaguered handset business before the big industry gathering, so the company could try to focus attention on new products that are being launched by the other half of Motorola’s business, the side that sells set-top boxes to cable companies and communications gear to large companies and governments.

But news that AT&T, the largest cell phone operator in the U.S., is getting ready to launch the service in the next couple of months could help spur renewed enthusiasm.

In one fell swoop, Sprint Nextel, Motorola, and Qualcomm, MediaFlo’s, parent company have managed to preempt many of the questions they were likely to be bombarded with from reporters and analysts at the upcoming show.

While some people may say the timing of the announcement the week before CTIA was purely coincidental, I would disagree. For one, the company made the announcement before it has even found a CEO for the new handset company, a move that several analysts noted as unusual.

Of course, Qualcomm’s MediaFlo isn’t in the same sort of dire trouble that Sprint and Motorola are in, although the company has been beat up the past year in a series of legal battles with Broadcom and others. But a year after MediaFlo launched its live mobile TV service with Verizon Wireless, questions are brewing about mobile TV’s success, or rather its lack of success. Earlier this week, Qualcomm’s CEO Paul Jacobs told an audience at a conference in Hollywood that subscriber uptake on MediaFlo has been going slower than the company would like, according to RCR Wireless News.

If the deal could be announced before CTIA, Hesse could re-emphasize Sprint’s commitment to its traditional business and finally put to rest concerns that investors have about its WiMax initiative.

Trade shows are typically where companies make new product announcements. And while I’m sure there will be some new handsets and services announced at CTIA, my feeling is that some of the more troubled companies like Sprint Nextel and Motorola, will use the conference to let the press, analysts, and investors know they have a plan moving forward.

“A show like CTIA gives us a date to drive towards in making decisions and getting our stories together,” said Gina Lombardi, president of MediaFlo USA. “We could have waited and announced the AT&T news next week, but we wanted to have the news out there so we have a story to tell. This show for us is really about being able to communicate our message.”

For Sprint Nextel and Motorola, which are each going through massive upheavals as brand new CEOs try getting their businesses back on track, CTIA offers an opportunity to get a more positive story into the media.

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Nvidia leapfrogs ATI–for now

Wait a few months, though. By then it will be ATI’s turn to strut its stuff.

A fresh crop of mid-range graphics cards based on Nvidia’s newest chip is threatening to make ATI an also-ran–at least until ATI returns the favor and puts Nvidia in its place.

It’s not easy competing in the graphics processing unit (GPU) market. One minute you’re the star garnering all the awards for crunching through games like Crysis, Company of Heroes, and Call of Duty 4, the next minute you’re toast.

PNY GeForce 9600 GT, Diamond HD 3850

Based on reviews this time around it’s Nvidia’s turn to make the leap. CNET, which reviewed a card from Asus, said the 9600 GT has “faster performance than anything from ATI in this price range.” And the 9600 GT may be putting pressure on the high end too. At least one review site compared the 9600 GT to ATI’s higher-end sibling the 3870, a segment where the Nvidia chip has a distinct price advantage. AnandTech said: “It looks like the GeForce 9600 GT is the better buy. It’s cheaper than the Radeon HD 3870 and offers…better overall performance.”

(Credit:
PNY Technologies, Diamond Multimedia)

That’s what may be happening to ATI in the mid-range graphics market. Cards based on Nvidia’s just-released GeForce 9600 GT are streaming onto the market, quickly relegating ATI’s HD 3850–the previous darling of the mid-range market–to the runner-up category.

“(The 9600 GT) stacks up against the 3850 very well, a little more expensive…and lot more powerful,” said Jon Peddie, president of Jon Peddie Research which covers the graphics chip market. “They leap-frog each other every quarter.”

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Five great freebies improve your Office experience

Teach Excel some new tricks with ExTools
If you could create your own Excel toolbar, it would probably include a list of your favorite worksheets, a super-clipboard for storing text you reuse frequently, and the ability to save and back up a worksheet with one click. It may also let you switch a vertical range to horizontal (and vice versa) with a single click, reverse the order of a row of cells just as quickly, and save a selection as an Excel, text, HTML, or comma-delimited (CSV) file. You get all these features and more with ExTools, and its partner for Office 2007, ExTools RX.

Propose as many as five different meeting times and let TimeBridge Personal Scheduling Manager poll attendees find the best one.

You have to register (name, e-mail address, and time zone) to send meeting invitations, but attendees need not sign up, though they can invite others, and add the meeting to their Outlook or Google Calendar. You can also network your calendars to see who’s available when prior to scheduling the meeting.

After you download and install the program (and after Microsoft “validates” your copy of Office), you’ll find a Remove Hidden Data option on the File menu of your Office apps. You can also remove the hidden information from several files at once by running the program separately. Among the information the program removes are comments, revision marks, deleted text, user names, and macros.

Office 2007 adds the Document Inspector that cleanses Word 2007, Excel 2007, and PowerPoint 2007 of revisions, versions, presentation notes, hidden rows and columns, and other metadata, including personally identifiable information. To activate this feature, click the Office button and choose Prepare>Inspect Document>Inspect. After it runs, select Remove All as necessary.

Tomorrow: For bullet-fast app launches, skip the menu and go straight to the command prompt.

Keep your secrets by running Office 2007's Document Inspector before sharing your files.

Microsoft Office is so jam-packed with features that an entire industry has been created to help people find the ones they need. (An example is Addintools’ $30 Classic Menu for Office 2007.) Why would anyone suggest that you add even more functions to Office apps? Because the best free Office add-ins can save you considerable time and trouble, without costing you a red cent. Here are five of my favorite Office helpers.

View the responses of meeting attendees by clicking a link in the TimeBridge Outlook toolbar.

YouTube comes to PowerPoint
No matter how many fancy transitions, jumping graphics, animated lines of text, or “borrowed” comic strips you add to your PowerPoint slides, your audience will be sawing logs unless you provide them with content that matters. Shyam Pillai’s YouTube Video Wizard lets you insert a YouTube video in any version of PowerPoint from 97 to 2007 with just a few clicks. After you download and install the program, just click Insert>YouTube video, insert the video’s URL, choose to play it once or loop it, set the size and placement of the playback window in the slide, and then run your presentation. The video will be embedded in a slide, complete with Flash control. You must have a working Internet connection to run the video, and there’s not much you can do to embellish the slides they appear on, but now you can let lonelygirl15 help you get your message across.

Keep people from viewing the data hidden in Office docs
You may be sharing more information than you intend to when you send someone a Word document, Excel worksheet, or PowerPoint presentation. If two or more people have worked on the file, there’s a good chance that anyone who opens the file subsequently can view insertions and–more importantly–deletions made by each person, as well as any comments they may have made, and other personal information relating to the file’s creator. Microsoft’s Remove Hidden Data program for Office 2003 and XP will remove such data in a file before you share it. (See below for a description of Office 2007′s built-in Document Inspector, which functions similarly.)

Send text messages from Outlook
If you use Outlook 2003 or 2007 and you’re having a hard time keeping track of your text messages, why not let the program manage your SMS correspondence for you? The Microsoft Office SMS Add-in lets you treat each message like an e-mail: save drafts, view all sent items, forward them as e-mail or SMS, even spell-check messages before you send them. There are some restrictions, however: you can send messages to any phone on a GSM network, but you can’t retrieve messages from the phone, and the program does not support Flash SMS or the Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS).

I counted 67 different features, though more are being added all the time. While technically free, ExTools is officially donationware; the developer requests a donation of $5 or more, so if you find it useful, drop a few dollars in the e-hat to help ensure that the features keep on coming.

Poll attendees to find the best time for a meeting
Everybody’s busy, as anyone who has ever tried to schedule a meeting with more than two attendees quickly learns. TimeBridge Personal Scheduling Manager is an Outlook add-in that lets you send e-mails to the attendees with as many as five proposed meeting times. They select the times they’re available or not, and they can even mark one of the times as “best.” Once all the people respond, the program sends you and the attendees an e-mail suggesting the best time, which it adds to your Outlook calendar. The program places a toolbar in Outlook 2003 and 2007, from which you can create a new meeting, view your scheduled meetings, and edit your account settings.

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Yahoo says Microsoft’s bid is distracting workforc

Microsoft’s unsolicited $44.6 billion offer to acquire Yahoo has spooked workers because of the uncertainty surrounding the deal, Yahoo said. This may make it tough, according to Yahoo, for the company to retain and attract “key employees and hire new talent.”

“The review and consideration of the Microsoft proposal…have been, and may continue to be, a significant distraction for our management and employees,” Yahoo said in the company’s annual report filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Yahoo cautioned that the deal “may adversely affect our business.”

Yahoo stated the obvious in its annual report on Wednesday by saying Microsoft’s bid to buy the company is distracting executives and employees.

Nonetheless, Yahoo has rejected Microsoft’s offer and Microsoft has indicated it isn’t planning to give up. That means Yahoo employees should get used to distractions, at least for the time being.

Full coverage
Microsoft’s big bid for Yahoo Click here for the latest on the software giant’s attempt to buy the Net pioneer.

The ironic thing about Yahoo’s claims is that the company appeared highly unfocused to many well before Microsoft came calling. Yahoo insiders, analysts, and others close to the company told CNET News.com just prior to Yahoo going public with Microsoft’s offer ,that the company was bogged down by ineffective group decision-making and a damaging aversion to taking risks.

They say Yahoo has for some time been mired in bureaucracy and an embarrassing inability to respond to more nimble (though considerably larger) Google.

Included in the filing was the mention of seven shareholder lawsuits against Yahoo over the administration’s handling of Microsoft’s offer.

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Graphics upgrade for Dell XPS notebook coming

(Credit:
Dell)

There will be two options. One will be done with an “installation package” and the other will be a “do-it-yourself kit.”

The upgrade from the Nvidia dual 8700M GT to dual 8800M GTX graphics is in the works and will likely be released later this month, according to Dell.

Dell said that the MediaDirect “incompatibility means that the MediaDirect software needs to be upgraded. Unfortunately, the upgrade will require a reformat and reinstallation. Beyond that, it will also require you to repartition the hard disk to make room for the new version of MediaDirect, which is a bit larger. Data loss has been a major concern for the engineers working on a solution. At this point, it would appear that there’s really no way around wiping the drive to make the upgrade work with every feature.”

Some users were upset when Dell upgraded the graphics in newer models of the M1730 to the 8800M GTX. The XPS 1730 with the 8800M GTX earned a score of almost 13,500 in 3Dmark06–which is about a 49 percent performance gain over two 8700M GT cards in the same notebook.

“Considering the number of screws holding this beast together, most people will probably want the installation,” Dell said.

Dell will offer an Nvidia dual graphics chip upgrade for 17-inch XPS M1730 gaming notebook owners–but stepping up won’t be a cakewalk for MediaDirect users.

There is one gotcha though. “MediaDirect 3.3 is not compatible with the driver for the (new) Nvida card,” Dell said. MediaDirect is a Dell technology that enables a user to watch DVD movies, slideshows, or listen to music without having to boot the complete XP operating system. MediaDirect is installed in a special partition on the hard disk drive. When the computer is off, pressing the MediaDirect button will boot the MediaDirect partition instead of XP.

Dell XPS M1730 notebook with Nvdia 8800M GTX

“In other words, games like Crysis, BioShock, Far Cry 2 and Age of Conan will scream,” Dell said.

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Fish, bicycles, and open-source vendors

Even so, I don’t think Blankenhorn and I fundamentally disagree. We perhaps just disagree on how elemental money is to open-source development.

Strangely, I’ve heard complaints that I’m focusing too much on the company and not enough on the project, and as a result the product is suffering. I find this strange because the project doesn’t pay my bills, feed my children, or buy my beer, the company does, and without those things, the project itself couldn’t exist. If, instead, I had taken some corporate sysadmin job, I’d have been spending maybe 5-10 hours a week on Puppet, instead of between 10 and 60 hours a week like I’ve been doing for the last three and a half years. This, I think, is the thing that people tend to forget about open source–yes, you can make money doing open source, but in doing so you almost always put yourself in conflict between making money and writing code.

Putting aside the idea that beer is necessary to the existence of Puppet, I’d summarize Kanies’ findings as “company = cash = code.” It’s very simple, and not all that hard to believe.

commentary

Luke Kanies, founder of the Puppet project and the company, Reductive Labs, that offers support for it, gives some indication as to why companies are important to the creation and sustenance of open-source code:

It’s the same thing with the Gnome community and other open-source communities. Cash gives developers more time to write code, and cash comes from companies.

Open source in its present form is a commercial phenomenon, even if the motivation that gets developers writing code is not directly so. This, however, is no different from any other job: I don’t work at Alfresco because of the money, although I would absolutely quit if I stopped getting paid. (I’d have to. I have four kids and a lovely wife.) No, I’m motivated by what we’re building. Money is a necessary, foundational element of this.

Business journalist Dana Blankenhorn suggests that open-source projects do very well without vendor involvement. Given that I can’t think of an instance of a commercially used project that fits this description, I can’t agree.

One thing some people apparently don’t realize is that Puppet couldn’t have been created without Reductive Labs–there’s no way I would have had the time or motivation to create Puppet without a company devoted to funding its development. All of the money that Reductive Labs makes goes back into funding Puppet, mostly in the form of development, marketing, and community management (although less of the latter, recently). Almost all of the money I spend on marketing is in the form of conference speaking, so don’t think I’m spending big coin on TV spots or anything, but these conferences have been *huge* sources of community growth.

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Leapfrog’s Nintendo DS competitor hits stores

A few months ago we got a preview of Leapfrog’s new handheld learning/gaming systems, the Didj ($89.99) and Leapster 2 ($69.99)–and now they’re officially available.

LeapFrog doesn’t exactly bill the Didj as a Nintendo DS competitor, but the new device is geared toward 6- to 10-year-olds, an age bracket where the DS currently rules. Meanwhile, the Leapster 2 is targeted at even younger children.

I saw an early build of the game that ships with Didj and the graphics are indeed–excuse the pun–a nice leap forward for LeapFrog. At launch, 9 games are available for the system, including SEGA’s Sonic the Hedgehog, Nickelodeon’s SpongeBob SquarePants: Fists of Foam, and Indiana Jones. Another premium title, Star Wars: The Clone Wars, is due out shortly. Didj games carry an MSRP of $29.99.

While the Didj doesn’t have a Wi-Fi connection like the DS, there’s a whole online angle that LeapFrog’s working with its LeapFrog Connect Application. The application lets children customize game content (the device connects via USB to both PCs and Macs).

(Credit:
LeapFrog)

Anybody think the Didj is a worthy DS competitor? And: Can it appeal to both parents and kids?

Processor: 393 MHz Arm 9
Display: 320×240 resolution
One 24-bit 2D layer (no hardware acceleration)
One 16-bit 3D layer
One YUV video layer (no hardware acceleration)
Graphics: API OpenGL ES 1.1–A reduced instruction set version of OpenGL for embedded systems Main RAM: 32 MB DDRI 131 MHz
NAND Flash: 256MB for data storage/download content
Media Cartridge: 64MB
System Software: Brio–Firmware is built on an abstraction layer called Brio to make OS and hardware transparent to developers. This means all software must be ported to Brio to run on this device.
Screen LCD: 3.2 inches, 16.7-Million Color TFT

(Credit:
LeapFrog)

The idea behind the Didj is to up the gaming and graphics ante while continuing to integrate the learning stuff that the company’s known for. Those educational elements are starting to show up in a handful of DS games, but LeapFrog’s giving the whole educational-gaming slant a harder spin to appeal to parents who would prefer to have their grade-schoolers graduate to something other than the DS.

According to LeapFrog’s news release, “Players first select and personalize an avatar. Then they design the game, choosing background scenery, color schemes or music. Most important, parents and kids can then customize content, connecting gameplay with schoolwork. Multiplication hard to master? Kids can choose to be quizzed on the 6s, 7s and 8s tables. Spelling a stumbling block? Kids can create a custom spelling list from the 10,000-word database and practice for next week’s test.”

The Leapster 2 is also available now.

LeapFrog's Didj gaming system.

Here’s a rehash of the Didj’s key specs:

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