Microsoft updates MSN Money
Posted by Tom Warren on 27 May 2003 - 16:31 · 3 comments & 306 views
- Advertisement
-
-
(1 reply)
#1 Posted by Ibrim on 27 May 2003 - 17:02
- Still looks really junky, and quite cheap. MSN has one of the worst design houses powering it.
Everything looks like it comes from the same template, which is slightly altered on each new site to accommodate ads, and other bloat. Breaking the flow of the original design style.
Clearly no real thought is given to end users. The pinnacle of Mongoloid design.
How many times do you see a msn site style ripped off and used by another on the net? I see tons of apple rips, sites with clear glass style tabs and sharp icons.
If one gets past the eye cancer, who knows maybe MSN has some useful info on its web pages.
-
#2 Posted by net-cruizer on 27 May 2003 - 17:36
- Sweet! looks cool. That'll go nice with my Money 2003 Deluxe & Business Edition.
Submit to reddit
Submit to blinklist
Bookmark on del.icio.us
Add to furl
Share on Facebook
Add to Windows Live
Microsoft has updated its CNBC on MSN Money personal finance site with a redesign and the addition of new tools and resources.
New dynamic home pages throughout the site deliver financial news and the company has also added what it describes as 'Decision Centers' in each section of the site to offer user-definable information and tools.
Through MSN Mobile, consumers can receive Briefing.com's market report and breaking news from Reuters, including the top 25 most recent stories via a pocket PC or the top five via a mobile phone.
A 'Credit Card Analyzer' tool has also been included to help users search for the most cost-effective credit card from MSN's online database.
"Now more than ever, consumers want useful resources that help them tackle important financial challenges," said Chris Jolley, director of product management for the Financial Products Group at Microsoft.
HP may have picked a good time to announce the robot. Fear of flying after Sept. 11, 2001, has led to a rash of interest in videoconferencing. And the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) outbreak has put a further crimp on already sluggish business travel.
The promise of such technology is that a remote co-worker can hear the formal part of a meeting as well as participate in the chitchat within the room. Using a joystick, the distant participant can pick up on a sound in one part of a room and join in that conversation. However, those present at a meeting should be forewarned that the microphone on the robot is sensitive; hushed conversation in a corner might not be so private.
But for all its potential, the current model is still very much a work in progress. HP still has no commercial plans for the robot, which was built using a number of Windows-based PCs. Although the robot allows people to see the face of a co-worker in near-real time,there is about a one-second delay before the remotely connected colleague can be heard. And although an earlier version of the robot was designed to travel around the office via a joystick controlled by the person, HP has made the latest version static while it tries to work out some of the kinks.
HP is not unique in pursuing robots as a replacement for travel. For example, Los Angeles-based InTouch Health sees robots as a way to allow expert doctors and health care providers to be virtually at the bedside of patients that are hundreds or thousands of miles away.
But HP's lead researcher says that the company is far ahead of other such projects.
"So far the best things that have been done--they still kind of look spooky," said HP Labs researcher Norm Jouppi.
To be fair, HP's first attempt was rather off-putting in its own right--resembling a slightly bulkier version of No. 5 from the '80s movie "Short Circuit."
Mechanical engineer Stan Thomas said that when he joined the team, he noticed that people spent more time looking at the robot's shiny metal parts than at the video screen that's displaying their co-worker. Thomas helped redesign the device to have a more human-looking (and less jarring) form--the current blue, plastic model resembles a giant Lego.
People seem to like the fact that the new model doesn't have arms, Jouppi said. Although the arms on the first version allowed the robot to perform simple tasks such as pushing an elevator button, researchers say people were put off by the fact that the robot could touch things.
"They'd seen too many movies" with robots crushing things, Jouppi said.
HP wouldn't say how much such a robot could cost--though it is certain to be more than the price of a few plane tickets. The current setup for the distant co-worker uses five PCs, five cameras and a surround-sound system, creating a virtual environment. The in-office robot is made up of two PCs, a number of cameras, four directional microphones and several speakers. A high-speed 802.11a wireless network is needed at the meeting site to transmit the information back to the remote colleague.
Jouppi wishes that his pet project was already a reality.
"I'd like to have something like this," he says. "I have to go on a business trip next week for a two-hour meeting."