Archive for May, 2010

Quickoffice brings simple Excel editing to iPhone

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

Despite the addition of Microsoft Exchange and the App Store with version 2.0 of the
iPhone’s firmware, the device is still a long way from competing with Windows Mobile handsets when it comes to the native editing of several popular file formats. Mobile-productivity software company Quickoffice is trying to change that with a new iPhone application that lets users edit their
Microsoft Office Excel spreadsheets.

The option to edit files joins the functionality to view other file types, including movies, music, images, Microsoft Word documents, PDFs, and iWork documents (akin to Quickoffice’s QuickAccess sister product). QuickOffice says it will continue to push out editing for other file formats, such as Microsoft Word, in future releases.

To edit a cell, you simply tap it with your thumb and type in a new value. There are also options to format what’s inside it, run formulas, and add new pages.

(Credit:
Quickoffice)

MobileFiles Pro joins a handful of other iPhone applications that let you view and edit Excel spreadsheets, including Spreadsheet, Spreadsheet LX, iSpreadsheet, and the upcoming Mariner Calc app which is due in a few weeks.

Spreadsheet editing is made finger friendly with Quickoffice's Excel editing tool.

Called MobileFiles Pro, this $9.99 application can pull in Excel workbooks from any of your computers (over Wi-Fi) or on the Web through MobileMe’s iDisk sharing. It supports editing over multiple pages in a workbook, row and column resizing and insertion, and manages to do it all with a good deal of simplicity.

Daily Tidbits Nine Inch Nails is the coolest band

Monday, May 24th, 2010

Nine Inch Nails band leader Trent Reznor announced in a blog post on the band’s official page Wednesday that a “subversive” group contacted him recently with 400GB of HD footage from three of the band’s recent concerts. In a move that would send shock waves through the music industry, Reznor provided a link to the file and challenged fans to create compelling videos out of all the footage. Those interested can find more information about the video on the Nine Inch Nails Web site.

Thursday at the Consumer Electronics Show, Sonoro Audio, a German designer and engineer of high-priced audio products, announced that it has partnered with music-streaming service Pandora to make Web radio available in its entire line of Elements W radios. Much like other devices that interface with Pandora, users will be able to access all their stations anywhere a broadband connection can be established. The company’s Elements W line of radios will be made available sometime in the next few months.

Slacker.com, a service that provides personalized online radio stations, announced Thursday that it has partnered with Research In Motion to bring its offering to BlackBerry devices. Dubbed Slacker Mobile, the service will provide personalized music discovery and listening with the help of 100 pre-programmed stations, as well as 10,000 individual artist stations. The app is free and available now.

Mobile TV provider FLO TV released a report Thursday detailing the growth of television viewership on mobile phones. According to its research, the average consumer is now spending 20 minutes per day watching television on a mobile phone. It also found that viewership increased 103 percent over the daily average during the one-day playoff between Tiger Woods and Rocco Mediate at the 2008 U.S. Open and the company witnessed a 22 percent jump on Election Day.

eFresh.com, the self-titled “eBay for produce”, announced Thursday that it has secured $5.4 million of venture funding in a round that was led by Rabobank. eFresh executives say they will use the cash to expand the company’s presence internationally and increase the usability of the site.

Salesforce jumps on the Twitter-for-CRM bandwagon

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

Service Cloud already helps clients keep tabs on the likes of Facebook, Blogger, and Web forums.

“While $20 billion of software is being spent on call centers, the customers are somewhere else,” he said.

(Credit:
Salesforce)

Alex Dayon, Salesforce CRM’s senior vice president of customer service and support, said that with the abundance of social-media tools on the Web, people are turning to “crowdsourced” help with customer-service issues. I don’t blame them. When was the last time you spent ages on the phone with your TV manufacturer only to have some random Twitter follower provide you the solution in five minutes?

With the app, called Salesforce CRM for Twitter, clients can monitor Twitter messages that pertain to their company, aggregate the replies and conversations around those messages, and then respond to the inquiries and complaints and whatnot.

Salesforce's Service Cloud dashboard. Click for larger version.

Twitter customer service: It’s the hot new thing that all the kids are doing! Salesforce has added a new application to its “app exchange” so that clients who use its Service Cloud product can better wrangle Twitter for customer service purposes. It’ll be available this summer.

S&P adds green index

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

The U.S. Carbon Efficient Index is part of S&P’s global thematic index series, which also covers such green themes as water, forestry, and carbon efficiency.

Microsoft, Cisco, Apple, and Google are among the tech companies included in the U.S. Carbon Efficient Index.

Standard & Poor’s launched on Monday its S&P U.S. Carbon Efficient Index, designed to measure the performance of large-cap U.S. companies operating with a low carbon emissions footprint.

David Blitzer, chairman of Standard & Poor’s Index Services index committee, said in a statement, “Organizations around the world are paying greater attention to the impact of greenhouse gases on our climate, as increasingly more investors consider carbon efficiency as an important investment theme.”

The index, which currently has 362 companies gleaned from the S&P 500, are selected using calculations from Trucost, an environmental data gathering organization.

Investors received another tool Monday designed to track green themes and greenbacks.

Xumii puts all of people’s social networks in thei

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

That’s pretty cool, and another nice feature is the ability to share photos or other files with people on that all-encompassing friends list. So, for example, a user could access their Flickr photos, select a picture, and then have it sent to any friends on their list.

Xumii allows anyone to access friends and information from multiple social networks on their mobile phones.

Whether this is a good thing for us and our ability to detach ourselves from our computers is a question for someone else to answer.

(Credit:
Daniel Terdiman/CNET Networks)

That’s what Xumii, which presented at DemoFall Monday afternoon, has set out to obviate.

In the demonstration, the company showed how users can access a list of friends from any social network they’re part of, a list that will show each friend, the service they’re part of, and whether they’re online or not.

SAN DIEGO–Who needs a computer to access the many social networks people are members of these days?

The idea is that users will be able to access their various social networks through their mobile phones on a single application, rather than having to rely on computers and full browsers.

Ultimately, what’s nice about Xumii is that it will allow people to take their social networks in their pocket, and not worry–as I’m sure many do–that while they’re on the go they are out of touch. This way, they can stay in touch no matter where they are, and they can continually update their friends with the latest things they’re doing, or the most recent photos they’ve taken.

While thousands, or even millions, of people regularly switch between services like Facebook, imeem, MySpace, and others, it can be cumbersome to do all that switching.

Google wins Street View privacy suit

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

The Borings are not alone in their ire toward the Google Maps feature. As reported earlier, residents in California’s Humboldt County complained that the drivers who are hired to collect the images are disregarding private property signs and driving up private roads. In January, a private Minnesota community near St. Paul, unhappy that images of its streets and homes appeared on the site, demanded Google remove the images, which the company did.

“Today’s satellite-image technology means that…complete privacy does not exist,” Google said in its response to the Borings’ complaint

Not long after the feature launched in May 2007, privacy advocates criticized Google for displaying photographs that included people’s faces and
car license plates. And last May, the company announced that it had begun testing face-blurring technology for the service.

However, the U.S. District Court for Western Pennsylvania wasn’t impressed by the suit and dismissed it (PDF) Tuesday, saying the Borings “failed to state a claim under any count.”

A couple in Pittsburgh whose lawsuit claimed that Street View on Google Maps is a reckless invasion of their privacy lost their case.

Ironically, the Borings subjected themselves to even more public exposure by filing the lawsuit, which included their home address. In addition, the Allegheny County’s Office of Property Assessments included a photo of the home on its Web site.

Aaron and Christine Boring sued the Internet search giant last April, alleging that Google “significantly disregarded (their) privacy interests” when Street View cameras captured images of their house beyond signs marked “private road.” The couple claimed in their five-count lawsuit that finding their home clearly visible on Google’s Street View caused them “mental suffering” and diluted their home value. They sought more than $25,000 in damages and asked that the images of their home be taken off the site and destroyed.

However, Google claims to be legally allowed to photograph on private roads, arguing that privacy no longer exists in this age of satellite and aerial imagery.

Microsoft helps keep Koobface virus off Facebook

Saturday, May 15th, 2010

Koobface is a mass-mailing virus that arrives in Facebook users’ in-boxes announcing a message like “You look funny in this new video.” Clicking on the link takes recipients to a Web site where they are prompted to download a Trojan masked as an Adobe Flash update. The Trojan could allow an attacker to remotely steal a victim’s Facebook password and other information or even use the computer to launch attacks on other computers.

Details on how to protect against Koobface are on Facebook’s security page.

Microsoft is working with Facebook to keep the persistent Koobface virus off the popular social-networking site, the companies said on Thursday.

“In working with Facebook, we were able to add detection of Koobface to our Malicious Software Removal Tool (MSRT), which checks computers running Windows software to detect and remove viruses,” Jeff Williams, a principal group program manager for the MRST, wrote in a guest post on the Facebook Blog.

The MSRT has removed Koobface nearly 200,000 times from more than 133,600 computers around the world just in the past two weeks, he wrote.

Koobface has been around since August mostly targeting social networks, and a variant that targets only Facebook users surfaced in December. Facebook has been hit by at least one other version since then.

Windows 7 The upgrade Vista users deserve

Saturday, May 15th, 2010

(Credit:
Larry Magid)

I don’t know how much Microsoft plans to charge for the upgrade once it’s officially available, but the company should give it away free to anyone who bought Vista or a PC with Vista preinstalled. Even though there are some new features,
Windows 7 strikes me mostly as a bug fix. It speeds up Windows and fixes one of its most annoying “features” and makes one particularly useful change to the user interface. It seems to me that anyone who paid for Vista is entitled to this upgrade.

Podcast: Larry Magid talks about Windows 7 with CNET’s Ina Fried.

You can also “pin” icons to the task bar so that they’re always there. And Windows 7 features “jump lists” that show you files you recently opened with that program. Another change is that the dreaded “user account control,” or UAC, which nags you whenever you try to install software, is more granular. With Vista it was either on or off. But with Windows 7, you have more control over how it operates. For example, you can tell UAC not to notify you when you make changes to Windows settings, or only when programs try to install software or make changes to your computer (a good idea to protect you against malicious software).

For example, the task bar at the bottom of the screen now displays icons for all running programs. If you mouse over that icon, you’ll see the window translucently appear in a preview mode over part of the bottom of the screen. If that program has more than one window you’ll see all of them. With Internet Explorer (but not yet
Firefox), you’ll also see all open tabs. You can mouse over one of those windows to see a full-screen preview and click on it to bring it to the foreground.

Microsoft has launched a free, public, beta test of the software, but to participate you must download it by Feb. 10. It’s not for everyone. Microsoft strongly recommends that “only experienced computer users sign up” for the beta program. Displayed on the screen is the caveat, “For testing purposes only.” The beta will expire in August, but should be replaced by a newer beta or the real product. If you’re game, you can download the beta test of Windows 7 at Microsoft’s Web site

For more on Windows 7, check out Beyond Binary by Ina Fried.

Based on my limited tests, Windows 7 also seems to go to sleep and wake up faster. When I open the lid on my notebook PC, the computer comes to life almost immediately and–as is the case with Macs–it immediately restores my wireless networking connection, so I don’t have to wait or click around to get back online. It’s as if Microsoft finally entered the 21st century.

I don’t know why it took so long, but Microsoft has finally fixed Vista.
Only it isn’t calling it Vista. Instead the company is working on what it’s calling a new version of Windows, Windows 7. The operating system isn’t commercially available, but is likely to be out by the end of the year.

Although none of my PCs supports it, Windows 7 comes with multitouch. So if you have compatible hardware, you’ll be able to use gestures with your fingers for all sorts of tasks, including zooming in and out of Web pages and photos. It’s too early to know whether Windows 7 will work with the vast majority of programs and devices out there. In my tests, it performed well. It works with my old printer, router, and other peripherals, plus all the programs I’ve tested. But it will take months of testing before we know if it will work with the millions of possible combinations of hardware and software. That’s why it’s not a good idea to install it on a machine that you use for real tasks.

Aero dynamics
Windows 7 is what Vista should have been. Like Vista, it retains the translucent “aero” and much of the operating system’s look and feel. But with Windows 7, aero is more than window dressing.

I installed it on two machines, a brand new desktop and an older notebook PC. The notebook installation was an upgrade of an old copy of Vista that I’ve had for a couple of years. As is often the case with Windows, the OS on that machine got pretty slow after two years of use. But Windows 7 sped it up. Until now, every new version of Windows was slower than the one it replaced.

Listen now:

Download today’s podcast

Bottom line: Windows 7 is prettier, cleaner, faster, and generally better than Windows Vista. But it’s not really a new operating system as much as a fix for things that are wrong with Vista. It looks like Microsoft got it right this time. Let’s hope it does right by its existing Vista customers by offering it as a free or very low-cost upgrade.

Mousing over Internet Explorer icon shows open tabs.

A day in the life of a Sundance filmmaker

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

Timoner, 36, who’s staying here in a huge mountainside house with her 5-year-old son and extended family, also competed at Sundance in 2004 with the rock ‘n’ roll documentary Dig!. Dig! won the Grand Jury Prize and immediately got picked up for U.S. distribution by Palm Pictures.

The final task for Timoner before the pre-premiere parties kicked into full gear, was participating in a panel about developing compelling stories in film. She admitted it was hard to engage in the panel, with the screening just hours away.

Getting ready
Some of the guests at the We Live in Public household were still in PJs at about 10 a.m. Monday, but they were mostly bright-eyed and some were already a little stressed. Timoner got showered and dressed for the many photo shoots that awaited her.

Taking a quick break from the busy schedule, Timoner checks in with her son, Joaquim, who offers a taste of his ice cream.

Several audience questions were prefaced with complements, and the chatter outside the screening room seemed positive. Some audience members were impressed by the story of Harris’ life, although others questioned whether he truly was a visionary or just another dot-comer who wasted away millions. Others recognized Timoner’s feat in editing together 10 years worth of footage and for hitting on such a relevant message about technology in our lives.

(Credit:
Michelle Meyers/CNET News)

(Credit:
Michelle Meyers/CNET News)

Timoner and Harris’ interview with the Sundance Channel was fun to watch because it clearly showed their relational dynamic. Harris, who spent much of the day with a cigar in hand, doesn’t always agree on Timoner’s view of her story, which led to a little friction on the set. Yet Harris has given Timoner his full support and access to footage.

As a result, however, Timoner revealed, “Now I’m nervous about living up to (the hype).”

Now more seasoned about rights, distribution, and the potential for Web distribution, she’s not even sure she’ll sell her film, even though perspective buyers have already expressed interest. Of course, it depends upon the offer (no news yet as of Tuesday afternoon), but she’ll do some serious weighing this time around, she said, still sorry to have given up rights with Dig!
True to the theme of We Live in Public, the following are highlights from Timoner’s day on the other side of the camera:

Later that night, at the premiere party downtown, Timoner, at last with a cocktail in hand, said the feedback had been amazing and there had been lots of sales interest both from film and TV distributors.

We Live in Public documents the tumultuous life of Josh Harris, who Timoner refers to as “the greatest Internet pioneer you’ve never heard of.” It’s a sort of cautionary tale about the effect the Web is having on society.

“He said we’d be trapped in virtual boxes” and he was right, Timoner said. “It was like being shot with a lightening bolt. I had never had a clearer vision…Society and technology had to catch up to Josh’s vision.

As she got her make-up done, Timoner seemed excited and energetic. “We’re going to blow people’s minds today,” she said, adding that she was likely living the best and most important 24 hours of her life.

(Credit:
Michelle Meyers/CNET News)

The doors open
There’s nothing more annoying or unexpected than traffic here in Park City. Just when it seemed like the weekend crowd had cleared out, the roads were completely backed up en route to We Live in Public’s screening venue, which meant not only was Timoner and her crew late, so were audiences and press members.

Dress for Sundance premieres runs the gamut. One of the opening night filmmakers wore a formal gown. Timoner opted for a more casual purple knit top with neckline detail, a black vest (to help hide the fact that she couldn’t wear a bra with the shirt, she said), black skinny pants with a subtle brown print, and an Obama pin, which helped keep the neckline in place. All of the clothes, she said, were designed by a friend of hers.

And she was also reeling in the all the hype the movie had already received. Among other feedback, a writer for the The San Francisco Bay Guardian, for one, had just posted a great review: “I can’t express enough how awesome this film is, or how horrifyingly revealing of where our own society has headed. You wanna talk about the film of Sundance ‘09? Look no further.”

Besides, the movie is about who he is through Timoner’s eyes, and he doesn’t want to define himself that way. “I like who I am right now,” he said. Harris, who watched hours on end of TV while growing up as the youngest of many siblings, now lives in Ethiopia, where he’s shown in the film living relatively simple life.

What you don’t hear, however, is what it’s like for the makers of such films as they anticipate showing their work to the world for the very first time. What is their range of emotions as they prepare for what could be a standing ovation or a mass exodus before the credits even roll?

The lights dimmed and Timoner settled in her seat next to mother, sister, and brother, David, who co-produced Dig!. She went along for the ride, smiling at moments and enjoying the film’s music. As the movie finished, her mom’s lips read, “I loved it.”

(Credit:
Michelle Meyers/CNET News)

Appropriately, she introduced the film telling the packed room that she screeched to the finish with the film, which was only completed seven days prior, and rushed it because she feels “we’re at a tipping point.”

(Credit:
Michelle Meyers/CNET News)

Timoner had been hired by Harris to film the underground bunker project, called Quiet, and continued to follow him over the years as she was drawn by his character, even if she didn’t quite understand his message. But it wasn’t until spring 2006, when she started noticing people walking around oblivious to the world typing into their BlackBerrys, or posting their every thought and move on social-networking status feeds, that she realized Harris was a true visionary.

That’s when it hit Timoner that she never said good-bye to her son, Joaquim, who had been hanging out with his two cousins. That was certainly worth running back in the house for.

This journalist called it a night at 1 a.m., but the We Live in Public party continued, reportedly.

(Credit:
Michelle Meyers/CNET News)

“The virtual world is starting to take over our lives,” she told the audience.

During the 1990s dot-com boom, Harris was considered a sort of “Warhol of the Web” by creating the first Internet television network, Pseudo.com, and then an underground bunker in Manhattan where 100 people lived together on camera for 30 days before getting shut down as a millennial cult by the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the New York police on New Year’s Day 2000.

Below are two videos that I shot of Timoner at Sundance.

“On any other day I would have found that really interesting,” she said. “This is one of the biggest days of my whole life,” she said, walking with her sister Rachel Timoner, a rabbi, on their way to one last photo shoot at the Hollywood Life House.

Timoner arrives before the screening of her film and poses on the press line as flashes flicker all around.

Harris’ next experiment, which led him to a mental breakdown, was a six-month stint living with his girlfriend under 24-hour live surveillance online, long before the days of Justin TV.

So she set to work, along with a huge team of collaborators, culling 5,000 hours of video into the film, which prominently features Internet entrepreneur Jason Calacanis and also offers a couple clips of MySpace CEO Chris DeWolfe.

Jason Calacanis and Josh Harris pose for a shot at the We Live in Public after-premiere party Monday night. Or was it Tuesday morning by then?

Filmmaker Ondi Timoner starts her day Monday, the day of her film's world premiere, by getting her make-up done professionally. She knows she has many photo shoots ahead.

Click here for more information about the We Live in Public and Timoner.

Ondi Timoner, who’s here competing with her documentary, We Live in Public, gave CNET News some insight into the mania of festival life for a filmmaker by allowing us to shadow her Monday, the day of her film’s world premiere. We’ll tell you all about that jam-packed day, but first some background on the film and Timoner.

On any other a day, Timoner would be fully engaged in this panel with two other Sundance filmmakers. However on Monday, hours before her premiere, she was a little distracted.

Fitting given the film's name, the We Live in Public after-premiere party was streamed on the film's Web site. Here Natalie Lent, left, of ID Public Relations, Timoner, and Harris watch themselves being streamed.

Calacanis is interviewed heavily in the film about what Harris was doing relative to the rest of the dot-co industry. He got a laugh talking about Psuedo.com and the accompanying rave-like behavior with supermodels wearing almost nothing “on the laps of nerds playing Doom.”

Unscripted, however, was the chit-chat en route from place to place. One particular disappointment for Timoner, was word that Twitter had gone down, and her posts, including photos, had not been updating for more than a day. Timoner is a Twitter rookie, apparently not yet wise to Twitter’s bugginess. “My publicist said I had to Twitter. If the film is We Live in Public, I had to live in public.”

Strike a pose
It was nonstop shoots, interviews, and meetings for Timoner, Harris and the film entourage and they kept to a tight schedule managed largely by production coordinator Cristin Mizelle. Timoner and Harris were received by everyone as true stars, striking their poses before the bright lights.

But afterward, she admitted she’s a little concerned as to how he’ll respond to his quote that he had never heard of Josh Harris. That was poignant, she felt, because here you have one of the biggest Web executives never having heard him. “No one had heard of him,” which is what made his story that much more amazing, she said.

Harris refuses, however, to actually see the film, although he planned to attend the question-and-answer session following the opening night screening. “I can’t do it,” he said, after the Sundance Channel interview, likening watching a movie about his life and his mental breakdown to watching a video of someone giving birth.

(Credit:
Michelle Meyers/CNET News)

Always the director, Timoner argued with Sundance staff to let them start the film a little late.

Her concern, of course, was that DeWolfe would feel like he should have known who Harris was. But Timoner quickly moved on.

But her smile really warmed with this line: “Someone told me it’s the best documentary they’ve ever seen.”

PARK CITY, Utah–The Sundance Film Festival is all about film buzz. Word spreads quickly about the biggest tearjerkers, the most overhyped films, the pleasant surprises, and the ones mostly likely to make their way to the cineplex.

“But I had some brilliant Twitters,” she said. “Now there missing. There all stuck in Twitterland somewhere.”

The applause was loud and the audience was fully engaged in the question-and-answer panel, on which Calacanis also participated.

Here’s the trailer:

“You make a film for 10 years and you want some people to see it from the beginning,” she said with a smile, but in a voice that showed an elevated stress level.

Just when you’d think Timoner could finally relax, she overwhelmed me with her crazed Tuesday schedule of sales meetings and press interviews, never mind the inauguration, an event she had been talking about all day.

There wasn’t much time to dwell, however, as the team, including Harris–donning a neutral-color shirt, khakis and his signature white Stan Smith sneakers–was already running behind schedule for a photo shoot and Sundance Channel interview downtown on Main Street. They grabbed coats and loaded into rented SUVs.

Meanwhile, Timoner’s crew was scrambling to come up with more tickets to give to industry insiders and others who had made last minute requests due to all the buzz.

With the film screening over, Timoner arrives at the after-premiere party we're she can relax, finally…at least until tomorrow.

Another unexpected twist was running into MySpace CEO Chris DeWolfe on the street, whom Timoner had interviewed for film and whom had offered support for it. DeWolfe said he was sorry he had to miss the screening, and confirmed he had heard good things about the film. He also asked Timoner about how he looked in the film. She assured him he comes off fine.

Dancing with the Woz ‘A Teletubby going mad’

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

The Woz said he wanted to prove that “nerds can dance.”
Well, nerds can be gracious. Nerds can smile in the face of adversity. Nerds can ride in on Segways and act like it’s the most normal thing in the world.

Tinky Winky?

While the British judge, Len Goodman, commended the Woz’s knee-spin, he concluded that his cha-cha was “a disaster”.

And then there was the dancing.

(Credit:
ABC)

But his energy never flagged, even if his grasp of the beat was akin to John McCain’s grasp of economics. He admitted that he was fine with the numerical side of the cha-cha. He struggled with the analog parts.

A dip of Smirnoff before, perhaps, a sip of Smirnoff. At least for Karina.

He was wearing a black shirt and black pants. Oh, yes, and a pink boa.

However, it was left to the Italian judge, Bruno Tonioli, a man who is also very much in touch with his analog side, to offer a graphic description: “It was like a Teletubby going mad in a gay pride parade.”

The judges gave him 13 points (out of a possible 30), 13 more than he needs if he can only muster 6 percent more of the viewers’ votes than the other contestants.

And then there was the dancing.

And then there was the dancing.

He showed the personal grace of royalty. He exuded the breezy joy of someone who, one suspects, has very little to worry about.

He got rich. And now I feared he would die tryin’.

That’s why I needed to watch Steve Wozniak’s “Dancing with the Stars” debut twice. Everybody needs to watch Wozniak twice.

Yet here is a man who is very much in touch with his analog side. In the preamble to his dance, he wore a pink satin shirt as if it had been the uniform he’d worn at Apple. (Does anyone have pictures of Jobsy in a pink satin shirt?)

(Credit:
ABC)

The true pink boa in all this is that he can’t be eliminated this week. He will dance again next week, after which the scores from both weeks will be tallied. (So I know that if you missed the voting this week, you will be madly at it next.) Even then, the bottom two will dance off for their own survival.

In an opening act that was effortful, but, at times, reminiscent of a varicose vein on cocaine, Wozniak chased his professional partner, Karina Smirnoff, around the dance floor and rarely caught a glimpse of her exquisite hem.

Site Link:Cheap Dresses ghd timberland boots Cheap Timberland Boots NBA Jerseys Cheap Nike Shoes timberland boots lacoste designer handbags timberland shoes Bose Headphonesshopping.