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Apple Threatens A Lawsuit To Block The Sale of its Trash (Literally!)

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Broken Glass Stair From The Apple Store

Apple has a reputation for being rather controlling when it comes to its hardware and software designs, but a new story coming out of Gizmodo really pushes this perception to a new level. Ex Apple employee Mark Burstiner is in legal hot water with Apple over allegations of theft, but his story isn’t as clear-cut as it might sound.

Over a year and a half ago Mark was coming off a shift at the Fifth Avenue New York Apple store, while construction workers were hauling away pieces of a broken step that needed to be replaced near the entrance. Mark was dressed in civilian clothing, and for some unknown reason, asked if he could keep the cracked 250lb glass step that was presumably being hauled away to the dump.  The construction crews helped him load up his price, and if this were a normal story, it would end here.

Fast forward to eight days ago when Mark was preparing to move, and decided to list his prize on Ebay.  Rather than being mocked and ridiculed for attempting to sell a broken piece of trash, he received several bids, and was eventually contacted and harassed by Apple legal representatives who requested he return the broken step. You could argue the legality of this case on behalf of Apple, or squatter’s rights, but either way it is a bizarre story.

Feel free to read his entire testimony for yourself, but can anyone come up with a plausible theory for why Apple would care? It certainly adds evidence to the theory that some people will buy anything from Apple, even trash. The current bid was $6,300 at the time of this posting, go figure.

Murphy’s Law: An Open World of Warcraft?

Don’t burn your credit cards or start sending recruit-a-friend notices to everyone in your address book: World of Warcraft is not going open-source. You will still have to pay a monthly fee of $14.99 for the privilege of stomping your virtual friends and NPCs into corpse dust, and you will not be permitted to split WoW off into a side project that grants anyone with your name a free pass to level 80 (and/or a fixed "I win!" button). Blizzard isn’t stupid.

WoW might not be going open-source, but the company behind it is using the 1-2-3 trick of the open-source world to encourage increased adoption and interest in its core piece of software. In what I believe is a first for the genre, you’ll soon be able to access in-game mechanics from a separate Web or mobile app. You might not be able to run your daily quests off of your iPhone, but for WoW enthusiasts looking to make a tidy profit throughout their adventures in Azeroth, Blizzard’s mobile access should give you up-to-the-minute information for your business profiteering.

So how does this exactly work?

Blizzard’s using the tried-and-true method of hooking interested parties into a service offering, but it’s hard to discern exactly where the chain begins. That statement’s a little nebulous, so allow me to clarify: A large number of World of Warcraft’s features and offerings are themed around the same kinds of techniques for adoption that you see in the open-source world.

Borrowing a Page

Take World of Warcraft as a whole. It’s a game. You pay money for it every month, analogous to a service that you would purchase based on an open-source platform running in an office. The game’s completely free to download, much as an open-source program is yours to grab from wherever it happens to be hosted. The two realities diverge a bit when it comes to the feasibility of using the program: You can always use open-source apps without their pricy service or support offerings, though you can’t do a thing with World of Warcraft unless you pony up the monthly service fee (or hack the game into an illegal private server).

Still, the principle is there. World of Warcraft allows its users to build and incorporate add-ons to further customize their overall experience. While users can’t (or are extremely discouraged to) hack the actual mechanics of the game, they can nevertheless come pretty close to expanding the game’s features to a near-cheating classification. You can tweak your Warcraft experience much like an open-source developer can build new functionality into a program at a moment’s notice (Firefox add-ons, anyone?).

The Open Auction House

The auction houses scattered throughout the land serve as vital components of the game’s economy. Consider them a service that’s been built overtop the core hack-and-slash functionality of the game–much like a support mechanism that one would normally pay for on top of an open-source piece of software. Instead of paying cash, you’re paying in-game currency to use this service. If you want to expand your business beyond your faction’s linked auction houses, you have to pay a larger cut of your profits for the added service.

The new mobile and Web app that links to the auction house takes us right back to the beginning of the cycle. In this case, you’re getting a program for free–the in-game Auction House (I’m not counting in-game currency as a fee for use, as it’s not… real). The service spinning off of that is the mobile or Web-based access to the in-game auction program. Although the basic elements of the mobile and Web-based service will be free, an addition premium feature is expected to cost something extra for access.

In doing this, Blizzard maintains complete control over the addiction factor. The auction house is a critical element of your game–the open-source software, if you will. The add-ons are the moneymaker, which you’ll be compelled to explore due to the aforementioned addiction, be it through the in-game service or the free mobile or Web-based app.  (If you’re still confused… see the appendix at the bottom of this article!)

How it Really Works

Free begets paid. Even open-source software developers have to make money, and this is how they do so: offer a compelling product and supplement with additives once you’re hooked, or deliver a basic functionality that you can purchase extra tweaks for. Easy. Simple. Effective.

World of Warcraft might not be open-source, but both parties certainly share a common path when it comes to keeping users engaged… and paying.

 

David Murphy (@ Acererak) is a technology journalist and former Maximum PC editor. He writes weekly columns about the wide world of open-source as well as weekly roundups of awesome, freebie software. If you’re on the Black Dragonflight server… let him know!

 

Appendix

World of Warcraft

  • Downloadable for free, need to pay for "service" or "support" to correctly access program mechanics
  • Able to configure and code around set parameters to customize or tweak the program (addons) 
  • Can supplement core mechanics with additional "fee-based" services (auction house) or real fee-based servics (character customizations / transfers / etc.)

Auction House

  • A free program that allows you to run business in a virtual setting
  • Fee-based service expansions give you a larger market to choose from for selling and buying goods
  • Can customize experience with coded tweaks and add-ons to ensure stronger capabilities
  • Spin-off mobile and Web services increase your ability to interact with (and your dependence on) the initial program
  • Fee-based service expansions offer increased access via new gateways

World’s Oldest and Most Expensive Camera Hits the Auction Block [Cameras]

Daguerreotype cameras are the great-great-great-great-great-great-great grandfathers of the devices we use for snapshots today. Recently the earliest—and with an expected price of 700,000 euro, the most expensive—examples of such a camera was rediscovered in a private collection.

If you’ve got between 200,000 euro, the auction’s starting price, and 700,000 euro, the expected final price, and a weakness for old, wooden sliding-box cameras then this one’s for you. It’s got the signature of its name sake, Jacques Mande Daguerre, and was actually built by his brother-in-law.

This is a neat piece of shutterbug history and I truly hope that it ends up in a museum collection where it can be viewed by the public rather than disappearing into another private basement museum. [Slashgear]


Grey Market Core i9 Gulftown Chip Commands $1,200 on eBay

It will be awhile before Intel releases its upcoming 6-core Core i9 chip, codenamed Gulftown, to the general public, but that doesn’t mean you can’t get your hands on one sooner. The question is, should you even try?

Engineering samples — which are pre-release chips primarily intended for reviewers and may or may not sport the same features as the final product — have already started shipping, and at least one of those chips has made it onto eBay. The chip sold for $1,200, but the cost to the seller be even higher.

All Gulftown chips are bound a non-disclosure agreement (NDA), and technically speaking, ES chips aren’t supposed to be sold or traded. In reality, it happens all the time, but selling a pre-release part this early in the game is sure to burn a bridge with Intel, especially since the seller didn’t bother to blur out any identification marks, making it super easy for Intel to track the chip.

Our advice? Wait for the official release.

Image Credit: TomsHardware

eBay Giving Out Coupons and Other Compensation after Website Crash

Auction site eBay went down for several hours on Saturday, causing sellers to lose sales, as well as potentially selling items for a lower bid than they might have otherwise received had the site remained running. Oops!

eBay says it has since fixed the software SNAFU that caused all the ruckus and promises this was a one-time deal, but that doesn’t rectify the situation for sellers who were affected by the outage. To make things right, eBay said it plans on compensating vendors in several different ways.

"To minimize the impact, we’e working to ensure that sellers and buyers whose transactions were affected by the disruptions will be made as whole as possible," said president Lorrie Norrington. "This includes listing fee refunds and protection against negative or neutral buyer feedback as well as detailed seller ratings (DSRs) lower than five starts for impacted sellers, and coupons for buyers of items that were impacted by the disruption."

According to eBay, the surge of holiday shoppers caught the site off guard, which led to the crash.

Steve Jobs: “If You Have any Further Questions, Please Call or Write” [Retromodo]

Once upon a time, Apple computers didn’t come with keyboards or monitors or even cases. But they often came with a personal letter from Steve Jobs, like the one included with this Apple I, now available starting at $50,000.

That’s the starting eBay bid for this motherboard. According to the original invoice included in the auction package—dated December 7, 1976—he also was the one filling the sales forms. At least this one, which says Steven. Since it was only him and Woz at the time—and the latter was always busy creating beautiful electronics and calling the Pope—it’s pretty safe to say that this was indeed Apple’s current CEO and then CEO, CFO, CMO, COO, and CLSDI. The original package has Steve Jobs’ parents as the return address:

gawkerGallery(5407688,12,’Apple I Gallery’);

It includes:

• The computer itself
• The original shipping box, with Steve Jobs’ parents’ house as a return address
• The original manual, with schematics to build your own Apple 1
• The tape interface card
• The manual for the tape interface
• A plain Scotch-brand cassette tape with a simply-typed label “BASIC” that came with the unit
• A letter, signed by Steven Jobs in 1976, explaining connecting a keyboard and monitor, as well as detailing when dealer applications would be available
• An original full-page glossy advertisement for Apple, included when the Apple 1 computer was shipped. (The ad is almost unrecognizable as an Apple ad due to its elaborate Isaac Newton logo. The artist who drew that logo was the third original partner in Apple Corp. His stake in Apple was bought out for a couple thousand dollars when the company started getting serious).
• Photographs of all prior owners of this unit.

The Apple I was the first Apple computer. The two Steves started to sell it on July 1976. The price then was $666.66. At the time all computers needed to be assembled, but the Apple I was a motherboard—assembled by themselves at Jobs parents’ garage—was ready to connect to a keyboard, monitor, and cassette player. [eBay via Tuaw]



Ebay Crashes Windows 7 Party, Shuts Down Auctions

Windows 7 party hosts looking to make a quick buck on eBay by selling their "Signature Edition" copy of the OS may want to pay attention to three little words: Not For Resale. It’s pretty clear what that means, and likely at the request of Microsoft, eBay has begun shutting down auctions of the OS.

"While we cannot confirm why eBay has removed these specific auctions, Microsoft routinely works with online auction sites such as Ebay to remove infringing auctions," the Redmond company said in a statement. "The Signature Edition of Ultimate that was included in the Party Packs is clearly marked on the outer wrap Not For Resale."

That doesn’t necessarily mean you’re out of luck if you didn’t host a party but are itching to get your hands on a Signature Edition copy. While Microsoft hasn’t said anything, they wouldn’t be breaking new ground by making the OS available through select e-tailers. When Vista launched, Microsoft sold a Bill Gates signature copy version through Amazon. And in the meantime, there’s still plenty of auctions that have managed to slip under the radar, such as the one offered by ‘pcsalemaster,’ who’s only asking $1,249. o_0

GM Gives Up Selling New Cars through eBay

You’ll have to kick it old-school and visit a dealership the next time you plan to buy a vehicle from General Motors. That’s because the auto maker is puling the plug on its seven-week experiment of selling new cars in California through eBay, the online auction site.

As reported by The New York Times back in August, the eBay venture was considered a "crucial part of GM’s effort to return to profitability after five years of heavy losses." Mark LaNeve, GM’s vice president for U.S. sales, said the auctions would be attractive to a customers who wish to skip the whole negotiating process, but GM quickly found the opposite to be true. Vehicles were given a ‘Buy-it-Now’ price equal to GM’s supplier price and potential customers could submit a lower offer. Not surprisingly (except to GM), dealers reported receiving low-ball offers. Welcome to eBay.

Had the program succeeded, eBay said it would try to expand it nationally and was open to working with other auto makers. But with GM dealers saying the online marketplace didn’t boost sales, eBay may have a tough time drumming up interest from others.

Google Patent Imagines a Freer World for Making Mobile Calls

Imagine if, when you wanted to make a call on your cell phone, you could pick the best rate and most appropriate connection method by choosing between a group of providers bidding for your business? That would beat being locked into a rigid carrier contract. It might also introduce some unforeseen complexities, but hey  – an appropriately-designed technology system can handle that!

 

That essentially is the message in Google’s new patent (#20080232574), “Flexible Communication Systems and Methods,” which describes a system where one or more telecom carriers bid to provide connectivity for a communications “session” (think phone call). The customer then picks one of the carriers bidding for his/her business.

 

Intrigued? Get the full scoop in my article here.

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