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Thursday, April 11, 2013

One On One: Douglas Rushkoff on Everything Happening Now

Douglas Rushkoff hurts the way only a onetime true believer can hurt. Now a professor at New York University and the New School, he was an early fan of the Internet. “I was a slacker, and it seemed like a way to slack,” he says. “We’d all work when we felt like it.” Instead of a contemplative paradise, however, the marriage of networked technology and capitalism tortures our consciousness with an incessant, demanding present. “We’ve attached ourselves to it,” he says; “We respond to things when it wants us to, which is all the time.”

Mr. Rushkoff is the author of “Present Shock: When Everything Happens Now,” a book that examines what it means to live in a world of incessant communication, multiple identities and a nearly apocalyptic sense of powerlessness in the face of global electronic connectivity. The book’s title is a play on that of Alvin Toffler’s 1970 landmark “Future Shock,” which posited that someday change would outpace our contemporary ability to adapt. Now, Mr. Rushkoff says, the acceleration of change is asymptomatic, and the idea of adapting to achieve anything like tranquil thought is a receding speck in the rear-view mirror.

Following is an edited interview with the author, who stopped in San Francisco on his way between Los Angeles and New York.

Q.

You say we have “a new relationship with time.” What is it, and why is that a bad thing

A.

What we’ve done has made time even more dense. On Facebook, your past comes into your present when someone from your second grade class suddenly pops up to send you a message, and your future is being manipulated by what Facebook knows to put in front of you next. Present shock interrupts our normal social flow.

It didn’t have to be this way. When digital culture first came along, it was supposed to create more time, by allowing us to shift time around. Somehow instead we’ve strapped devices to ourselves that ping us all the time.

Q.

Hasn’t time been collapsing for centuries We moved from the rhythm of seasons to living by the clock in the Industrial Age. We’ve paced in front of the microwave for decades.

A.

Yes, but it has hit a point where we have lost any sense of analog time, the way a second hand sweeps around a clock. We’ve chosen the false “now” of our devices. It has led to a collapse of linear narratives and a culture where you have political movements demanding that everything change, now. The horrible truth is we are linear beings; we can’t multitask, and we shouldn’t keep interrupting important connections to each other with the latest message coming in.

Q.

It’s a funny thing: the counterculture used to talk about “Be here now,” and the need to chase after self-awareness by seeking the eternal present. What is the difference between that world of the “now” and this one

A.

People are seduced by signals from the world, but that is manipulation, not reality. Computers have learned more about us than we’ve learned about them.

Q.

In an earlier book, you wrote about the need for everyone to learn how to write in programming languages as a kind of basic literacy for how the world now works. How is that going

A.

I learned Javascript, now I’m learning PHP and Python. Learning how to code really makes me understand that the world is made out of programs. Traffic is a grid of varying quality. Television is a read-only format. It’s also a way to think critically about digital environments. I saw the motives and choices better by looking at how they were constructed.

Q.

Between learning to code and writing this book, what habits have you changed

A.

I quit Facebook a couple of weeks ago. It’s probably bad for sales, but it felt a little hypocritical to promote my book by soliciting a lot of lightweight “likes.” I don’t mind Twitter, because I have a sense of control. With Facebook, I don’t really know where my information is going, or how it’s being used.

Q.

Reading a book takes time, and writing one takes even longer. Given how you feel about the world, how does doing one and expecting other people to do the other make any sense

A.

I was anachronistic. I spent two years writing this. I’m asking people to give me six hours in which they read it. That’s asking for more than the $26 to buy the book! But it was also an act of me claiming my time for myself. I hope people see reading this as a way to claim some of their time back too.



Ellen Pao, Who Sued Kleiner Perkins, Joins Reddit

You still can’t ask Ellen Pao anything. But Reddit announced Thursday that the former venture capitalist will now be working with the social networking site, home of the popular Ask Me Anything chats.

Ms. Pao shocked Silicon Valley when she filed a discrimination suit last spring against her employer at the time, the legendary venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins. The suit was much debated but brought up widespread accusations that the Valley, for all its 21st-century tech, had medieval attitudes toward women. Ms. Pao has maintained her silence about the suit

Yishan Wong, Reddit’s chief executive, said on the company’s blog that Ms. Pao had been “a formal and informal adviser to reddit for more than a year, and recently decided to finally join us full time. She’ll be working on helping us build strategic partnerships that benefit the community.”

Ms. Pao herself went on to add: “I grew up in Maplewood, New Jersey, raised by enginerds on ‘Star Wars,’ computers and books. I live in San Francisco, via New York City, Boston and Hong Kong. I’ve worked with dozens of tech companies, traveling to 11 countries on five continents, to help build a variety of consumer and business platform companies.”

She said her favorite Reddit categories were Ask Me Anything and pareidolia, which is pictures of things that look like things they are not (trees that seem to have faces, etc). That is a perfect choice, because a court will eventually decide whether her suit is what it says it is or is something else entirely.



TimesCast: Bitcoin Has Real-World Investors

The Times’s Nathaniel Popper discusses Bitcoin, the online currency that has attracted a number of investors, including Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss.

Google Introduces a Tool for Planning for Your Digital Afterlife

One of the most haunting questions facing Web companies and their users is, what happens to the stuff of our digital lives after we die

Are our Facebook status updates, Flickr photos and Gmail messages like physical journals and photo albums for our families to flip through Should our iTunes playlists be like records passed down through generations Would we rest easier knowing that our digital lives would exist for eternity, or that our private postings would stay that way

On Thursday, Google announced a new tool for managing your digital afterlife. Google users can choose whether they want their information deleted or to name a beneficiary, as in a will. Users can have different directives for different products â€" deleting Gmail and Drive but sharing Picasa and YouTube content, for instance.

“We hope that this new feature will enable you to plan your digital afterlife â€" in a way that protects your privacy and security â€" and make life easier for your loved ones after you’re gone,” Andreas Tuerk, a Google product manager, wrote on the company’s public policy blog.

Google users choose whether to activate the feature after their accounts are inactive for three, six, nine or 12 months. Google will send a text message and e-mail before taking any action. The feature, called Inactive Account Manager, is accessible on the account settings page.

Before, survivors could gain access to data stored with Google only with a court order, and that was rare.

Google introduced the feature as states begin to pass laws about what happens to digital remains. Federal privacy laws do not generally address the issue, but Congress is considering it. Google often says it prefers technological solutions to legislative ones.

Other companies are also thinking about the issue. Facebook has grappled with how to confirm that users have died â€" so the site doesn’t suggest becoming friends with them, for instance â€" and how to handle it when survivors use a deceased person’s page as a memorial.

And Evernote is working on Evernote Century, which would guarantee that information stored on Evernote is accessible for 100 years and let people designate who can have access to it, even if Evernote goes out of business.

Of course, if we reach the Singularity, as many in the tech world believe we will, we will not need these tools because we will all live forever.



Canadian Teen’s Suicide Ignites Calls for Review of Rape Case

The recent suicide of a Canadian teenager has revived outrage that the authorities did not do enough to investigate allegations that she was gang-raped in 2011 and bullied after photographs of the assault were shared and posted online.

This week, the network of hackers who identify themselves as belonging to the Anonymous collective said it had uncovered the names of the teenagers believed involved in the rape of the high school student, Rehtaeh Parsons, and urged the authorities to pursue the case. No one was ever charged in the sexual assault of Ms. Parsons, who hanged herself last week and was taken off life support on Sunday after what her family described as years of struggle with depression and anger.

The case has revived scrutiny of the case of Ms. Parsons, who was 17, that has gained momentum online with calls for the authorities to act. Some drew comparisons to the Steubenville rape in Ohio in the United States, because a cellphone photograph that was distributed among students at Ms. Parsons’s school apparently shows the sexual assault taking place.

In a video and using #opjustice4rehtaeh, Anonymous solicited Twitter users to send e-mails divulging information and that it had names of two of the “alleged rapists” but would soon have all four.

Anonymous video on the Parsons case

On Thursday, on Twitter, it linked to a message describing what it had so far uncovered, saying, in part:

Now, it took us only a few hours to identify the boys that assaulted Rehtaeh. This wasn’t some high-tech operation that involved extracting private messages from someone’s Facebook account. Dozens of e-mails were sent to us by kids and adults alike, most of whom had personal relationships with the rapists. Many recalled confessions made by these boys blatantly in public where they detailed the rape of an inebriated 15-year-old girl.

We’re afraid to ask if anyone even bothered to check the EXIF data on the rape/child pornography being openly shared by hundreds of students throughout your community.

At this time we can honestly say we’re confident we know the identities of the people involved in Rehtaeh’s rape.

Portions of a message posted on a Facebook page created by Ms. Parsons’s family on April 7 described her version of events that day in November 2011:

She went with a friend to another’s home. In that home she was raped by four young boys … one of those boys took a photo of her being raped and decided it would be fun to distribute the photo to everyone in Rehtaeh’s school and community where it quickly went viral. Because the boys already had a “slut” story, the victim of the rape Rehtaeh was considered a SLUT. This day changed the lives of our family forever.

One year later the police conclude their investigation to state that it comes down to “he said, she said” they believed the boys raped her but the proof in a court of law was difficult to gather.

On April 4, Ms. Parsons hanged herself in the bathroom at home and was discovered when her mother broke down the door.

Rehtaeh is gone today because of The four boys that thought that raping a 15yr old girl was OK and to distribute a photo to ruin her spirit and reputation would be fun. Secondly, All the bullying and messaging and harassment that never let up are also to blame. Lastly, the justice system failed her.

A petition on Change.org called for a fresh inquiry. Anonymous called for a demonstration outside the Police Headquarters on Sunday, April 14.

Officials have taken note. Royal Canadian Mounted Police in a statement called on the public to avoid vigilantism. The justice minister, Ross Landry, said in a statement that he had asked government officials for options to review it. A statement from the premier of Nova Scotia said the board of Ms. Parsons’s school had been asked to review its initial handling of the case.

The authorities quoted in a Canadian television network’s online report said there was not enough evidence at the time to bring charges.

During the course of their initial investigation, the police identified but did not release the names of the youths, as is standard procedure in Canada, but even if they had been charged their names would not have been released because they were juveniles. In addition, the prosecution at the time did not bring charges because it did not think the case was strong enough to result in a conviction.

In a statement this week, Ms. Parsons’s father, Glen Canning, addressed the justice minister, expressing frustration over the absence of charges, saying in part:

Why is it they didn’t just think they would get away with it; they knew they would get away with it. They took photos of it. They posted it on their Facebook walls. They emailed it to God knows who. They shared it with the world as if it was a funny animation.

How is it possible for someone to leave a digital trail like that yet the RCMP don’t have evidence of a crime What were they looking for if photos and bragging weren’t enough

Why was this treated like a minor incident of bullying rather than a rape Isn’t the production and distribution of child porn a crime in this country Numerous people were emailed that photo. The police have that information (or at least they told us they did). When someone claims they were raped is it normal to wait months before talking to the accused

For the love of God do something.

Ian Austen contributed reporting from Ottawa.

Follow Christine Hauser on Twitter @christineNYT.



Education Life: Teaching the Techies

Data science is the hot new pursuit in higher education, a field spawned by the enormous amounts of data that modern technologies create â€" be it about the online behavior of Facebook users, tissue samples of cancer patients or crime in cities. Data scientists crunch the data, use mathematical models to analyze it, create narratives or visualizations to explain it, then suggest how to use the information to make decisions.

In the Education Life section of The New York Times, Claire Cain Miller writes about this trendy new field. In the last few years, dozens of programs have sprung up in response to the excitement about Big Data.

Because data science is so new, universities are scrambling to define it and develop curriculums. They cannot roll out programs fast enough to meet employer demand. North Carolina State University introduced a master’s in analytics in 2007, and all 84 of last year’s graduates had job offers, according to Michael Rappa, who conceived of and directs the university’s Institute for Advanced Analytics. The average salary was $89,100, and more than $100,000 for those with prior work experience.

At the University of San Francisco, the charter class of students with master’s in analytics will soon graduate. And in the fall, Columbia is introducing master’s and certificate programs heavy on data crunching; New York University will have two new degrees lined up. Meanwhile, the University of Washington has opened the eScience Institute for studying data across disciplines and has a new Ph.D. program in Big Data.

In a related article, “Geek Appeal: New York vs. Seattle,” Ms. Miller takes note of how New York and Seattle are dueling to be the next hotbed for data education.



Speak Up, the Internet Can’t Hear You

The Internet might have looked very different than it does today. When Marc Andreessen and Eric Bina were building Mosaic, the browser that practically created the Web in 1993, they included the ability to annotate any page. Discussions immediately sprang up. But they quickly realized that the server to host the annotations would have had to scale to enormous size, which was not practical. So they took the feature out.

What would the Web have looked like if annotation had managed to stay in Maybe a million conversations would have bloomed, and some of the furious divides that plague this country would have been bridged. Or maybe it just would have been a deafening free-for-all, cranking up all the cranks.

Twenty years later, there is a vast amount of discussion on the Web, much of it in the form of comments and reviews. But it is generally hosted by corporations - Facebook, Google, Amazon - that are selling ads or products, which kind of undermines the democratic spirit of give and take. When the companies fail, like Myspace did, the content simply goes away.

Maybe that is why there is now a renewed appetite for exploring ways of facilitating commenting across the Internet that give more control to individuals. Many of those interested in seeing that happen - including start-ups, academics, libraries and early adopters - came to San Francisco this week for the I Annotate conference. It was a discussion about discussion.

“Why now” asked Dan Whaley, founder of Hypothes.is, a start-up that hosted the conference with help from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. “The Web is more mature. Browsers are better. There’s the potential of interoperability, of openness. We can create a parallel Web that is a conversation about the world as it found through the Web.”

An overlay of commentary would improve discovery. One scientist at the conference said that in biomedicine, there were 150 to 250 new articles a week, which means that if everyone in the field read them, they would never have time to do any research. Annotations could help drive the best papers to the forefront of attention.

Give Mr. Whaley, who in 1995 was a co-founder of the first travel company on the Web, credit for thinking big. Hypothes.is is no mere app that helps you buy some trinket. It wants to create an incentive for people to do their work to the highest standard, and make it harder to spread work that does not meet that standard. A preliminary version of its annotation system was introduced at the conference; a bigger roll-out will happen at the end of the year.

Many start-ups have tried to develop commenting systems, as Hypothes.is readily acknowledges. A prominent effort during the first Internet boom was Third Voice. It offered free software that allowed users to essentially place sticky notes on Web sites. Only other Third Voice users could see the comments, which were hosted on the start-up’s computers.

Web site owners did not like it, for obvious reasons; users were hard to control. Third Voice failed in 2001, but some of the issues that plagued it - How do you encourage useful comments while restricting trolls When does criticism boil over into attacks - are still around.

One thing Hypothes.is has going for it is that it is a nonprofit organization. “If you want to create a conversation layer over the entire Web, you can’t own it,” Mr. Whaley said. “People won’t trust it.”

But then, there are all sorts of ways to do annotations, including more targeted ventures. One of the start-ups presenting at the conference was RapGenius.com, which is getting both traction and attention. It started out as a music commentary site, where fans annotated the lyrics. Then the musicians started showing up to annotate their lyrics. Now it has branched out to other documents, like “The Great Gatsby,” the manifesto of the Los Angeles police officer-turned-killer Christopher Dorner and Archibald MacLeish’s poem “Ars Poetica,” which is annotated in images.

“We’re developing a social network that is specifically around close-reading texts,” said Jeremy Dean of Rap Genius.

He was peppered with questions. What about copyright What about trolls Once a text is annotated, is there less desire to work on it by a new crop of readers That might ultimately make the site rather static. And what is the business model here

“I’m a Ph.D. in English,” Mr. Dean said. “I just started working here a month ago. I don’t have a great answer to that.” Nevertheless, Silicon Valley is excited: Marc Andreessen has invested $15 million in it. Annotating’s moment could finally be here.



Daily Report: Tumblr Shutters a News Blog, Not Yet a Year Old

Tumblr, the popular social blogging site, shut Storyboard, the multimedia news blog that it created last May report on its own community, Leslie Kaufman reports in Thursday’s New York Times.

The company did not give much explanation for why it decided to close the site suddenly and dismiss its skeletal staff of three. When the blog opened, it garnered a lot of attention for its innovative approach to storytelling.

Susan Etlinger, an industry analyst with the research firm Altimeter, based in San Mateo, Calif., offered one common theory why Storyboard was closed. “Tumblr has taken in a lot of money and is trying to get to profitability this year,” she said. “They are looking to cut anything that does not contribute to the bottom line. I think it may be as simple as that.”

The significance of the decision was being debated online Wednesday because Tumblr was not alone among social media sites in producing its own newslike content, often with experienced journalists.

In 2011, Flipboard hired the former Time executive Josh Quittner as editorial director. The same year the professional networking site LinkedIn hired Daniel Roth, the head of Fortune.com, to run its editorial operations.

But not all of the experiments have been successful. For example, in January 2012, Facebook hired a recent journalism school graduate, Dan Fletcher, to be its managing editor. Mr. Fletcher’s rather amorphous job seemed to be to write stories about trends on Facebook. Last month, he announced he was leaving. He said that Facebook did not need reporters and that articles detracted from activity on Facebook, which he said was inherently more interesting.

“Tumblr’s Storyboard and editorial operation never made any sense to me. Guess I am not the only one,” Charlie Warzel, deputy technology editor at Buzzfeed.com, an online news site that has its own reporters but also has content sponsored by advertisers, wrote in a Twitter post.

In a phone interview, he added, “It is always peculiar when a social network branches out into publishing, it just seems odd to bring on even excellent editorial talent to cover what is already going on organically.”

The demise of Storyboard seemed to be taken hardest by other online journalists. Tumblr had not hired marketing people but journalists from more traditional outlets to run Storyboard. Jessica Bennett, Storyboard’s executive editor, had previously been at Newsweek/ The Daily Beast.

Ms. Etlinger said she appreciated that journalists were disappointed but said that online news was still in a very experimental stage. “I think we are going to see a lot of failed experiments before we see a form of journalism that makes money online,” Ms. Etlinger said.



PC Sales Still in a Slump, Despite New Offerings

PC Sales Still in a Slump, Despite New Offerings

It should be one of the most exciting periods in years for people looking to buy new PCs, with a new version of Windows on sale and shelves full of slick touch-screen devices to run it.

Trying out a Dell computer at an electronics store in Miami.

But not only have the new offerings failed to stop the downward slide in PC shipments that has been going on for the last year, they appear to have made it worse.

On Wednesday, the research firm IDC reported that worldwide PC shipments declined 13.9 percent during the first three months of the year compared with the same period a year earlier.

To put those numbers into perspective, that is the most severe decline in the PC market since IDC began tracking the business almost two decades ago and almost double the rate of decline that the firm was expecting for the quarter.

Gartner, another research firm, had estimates that were only slightly better, showing an 11.2 percent decline in PC shipments for the first quarter.

This is the fourth consecutive quarter of year-over-year declines in shipments for the PC.

Many of the challenges facing the PC business have not changed during the last year. Smartphones and tablets, while not perfect substitutes for PCs, are pulling dollars out of consumers’ wallets that might have otherwise gone to laptop or desktop computers. People are simply more excited about those mobile technologies, with their touch-screens, than they are about buying conventional computers.

In this environment, Microsoft introduced Windows 8 last October. The software, a bold redesign of the company’s flagship operating system, is tailored to run on tablets, traditional keyboard-and-mouse computers and hybrid devices that combine elements of both. But it seems that the changes Microsoft made with Windows were so extreme that they scared off buyers.

“At this point, unfortunately, it seems clear that the Windows 8 launch not only failed to provide a positive boost to the PC market, but appears to have slowed the market,” Bob O’Donnell, program vice president for clients and displays at IDC, said in a statement. He said that “radical changes” to elements like the user interface and higher costs had made PCs less attractive compared with tablets and other devices.

“Microsoft will have to make some very tough decisions moving forward if it wants to help reinvigorate the PC market,” Mr. O’Donnell added.

The severity of the decline in the market is further evidence that the “post-PC era” heralded several years ago by Steven P. Jobs, Apple’s former chief executive, was not an empty slogan. Mr. Jobs, who died in 2011, predicted that PCs would endure, but that smartphones and tablets would become the devices people favored for most of their computing needs.

That shift has big implications for the balance of power in the tech business. Last week, Gartner estimated that by 2017, the dominant operating system for all computing devices, including smartphones, computers and tablets, would be Google’s Android, with software from Microsoft and Apple far behind.

A version of this article appeared in print on April 11, 2013, on page B5 of the New York edition with the headline: PC Sales Still in a Slump, Despite New Offerings.

PC Sales Still in a Slump, Despite New Offerings

PC Sales Still in a Slump, Despite New Offerings

It should be one of the most exciting periods in years for people looking to buy new PCs, with a new version of Windows on sale and shelves full of slick touch-screen devices to run it.

Trying out a Dell computer at an electronics store in Miami.

But not only have the new offerings failed to stop the downward slide in PC shipments that has been going on for the last year, they appear to have made it worse.

On Wednesday, the research firm IDC reported that worldwide PC shipments declined 13.9 percent during the first three months of the year compared with the same period a year earlier.

To put those numbers into perspective, that is the most severe decline in the PC market since IDC began tracking the business almost two decades ago and almost double the rate of decline that the firm was expecting for the quarter.

Gartner, another research firm, had estimates that were only slightly better, showing an 11.2 percent decline in PC shipments for the first quarter.

This is the fourth consecutive quarter of year-over-year declines in shipments for the PC.

Many of the challenges facing the PC business have not changed during the last year. Smartphones and tablets, while not perfect substitutes for PCs, are pulling dollars out of consumers’ wallets that might have otherwise gone to laptop or desktop computers. People are simply more excited about those mobile technologies, with their touch-screens, than they are about buying conventional computers.

In this environment, Microsoft introduced Windows 8 last October. The software, a bold redesign of the company’s flagship operating system, is tailored to run on tablets, traditional keyboard-and-mouse computers and hybrid devices that combine elements of both. But it seems that the changes Microsoft made with Windows were so extreme that they scared off buyers.

“At this point, unfortunately, it seems clear that the Windows 8 launch not only failed to provide a positive boost to the PC market, but appears to have slowed the market,” Bob O’Donnell, program vice president for clients and displays at IDC, said in a statement. He said that “radical changes” to elements like the user interface and higher costs had made PCs less attractive compared with tablets and other devices.

“Microsoft will have to make some very tough decisions moving forward if it wants to help reinvigorate the PC market,” Mr. O’Donnell added.

The severity of the decline in the market is further evidence that the “post-PC era” heralded several years ago by Steven P. Jobs, Apple’s former chief executive, was not an empty slogan. Mr. Jobs, who died in 2011, predicted that PCs would endure, but that smartphones and tablets would become the devices people favored for most of their computing needs.

That shift has big implications for the balance of power in the tech business. Last week, Gartner estimated that by 2017, the dominant operating system for all computing devices, including smartphones, computers and tablets, would be Google’s Android, with software from Microsoft and Apple far behind.

A version of this article appeared in print on April 11, 2013, on page B5 of the New York edition with the headline: PC Sales Still in a Slump, Despite New Offerings.

PC Sales Still in a Slump, Despite New Offerings

PC Sales Still in a Slump, Despite New Offerings

It should be one of the most exciting periods in years for people looking to buy new PCs, with a new version of Windows on sale and shelves full of slick touch-screen devices to run it.

Trying out a Dell computer at an electronics store in Miami.

But not only have the new offerings failed to stop the downward slide in PC shipments that has been going on for the last year, they appear to have made it worse.

On Wednesday, the research firm IDC reported that worldwide PC shipments declined 13.9 percent during the first three months of the year compared with the same period a year earlier.

To put those numbers into perspective, that is the most severe decline in the PC market since IDC began tracking the business almost two decades ago and almost double the rate of decline that the firm was expecting for the quarter.

Gartner, another research firm, had estimates that were only slightly better, showing an 11.2 percent decline in PC shipments for the first quarter.

This is the fourth consecutive quarter of year-over-year declines in shipments for the PC.

Many of the challenges facing the PC business have not changed during the last year. Smartphones and tablets, while not perfect substitutes for PCs, are pulling dollars out of consumers’ wallets that might have otherwise gone to laptop or desktop computers. People are simply more excited about those mobile technologies, with their touch-screens, than they are about buying conventional computers.

In this environment, Microsoft introduced Windows 8 last October. The software, a bold redesign of the company’s flagship operating system, is tailored to run on tablets, traditional keyboard-and-mouse computers and hybrid devices that combine elements of both. But it seems that the changes Microsoft made with Windows were so extreme that they scared off buyers.

“At this point, unfortunately, it seems clear that the Windows 8 launch not only failed to provide a positive boost to the PC market, but appears to have slowed the market,” Bob O’Donnell, program vice president for clients and displays at IDC, said in a statement. He said that “radical changes” to elements like the user interface and higher costs had made PCs less attractive compared with tablets and other devices.

“Microsoft will have to make some very tough decisions moving forward if it wants to help reinvigorate the PC market,” Mr. O’Donnell added.

The severity of the decline in the market is further evidence that the “post-PC era” heralded several years ago by Steven P. Jobs, Apple’s former chief executive, was not an empty slogan. Mr. Jobs, who died in 2011, predicted that PCs would endure, but that smartphones and tablets would become the devices people favored for most of their computing needs.

That shift has big implications for the balance of power in the tech business. Last week, Gartner estimated that by 2017, the dominant operating system for all computing devices, including smartphones, computers and tablets, would be Google’s Android, with software from Microsoft and Apple far behind.

A version of this article appeared in print on April 11, 2013, on page B5 of the New York edition with the headline: PC Sales Still in a Slump, Despite New Offerings.

Live updates on the Gun Debate

As the Senate prepares to vote Thursday on gun measures, some Republicans are threatening to block debate. Meanwhile Senators Joseph Manchin III, a Democrat from West Virginia and Pat Toomey, a Republican from Pennsylvania, said they are trying to get the votes working for a bipartisan agreement that would extend background checks to online and gun show sales.

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Live updates on the Gun Debate

As the Senate prepares to vote Thursday on gun measures, some Republicans are threatening to block debate. Meanwhile Senators Joseph Manchin III, a Democrat from West Virginia and Pat Toomey, a Republican from Pennsylvania, said they are trying to get the votes working for a bipartisan agreement that would extend background checks to online and gun show sales.

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Filmmakers Capture Chaos After Air Strikes in Syria

A Human Rights Watch video report on Syrian government air strikes.

Human Rights Watch accused the Syrian authorities Thursday of ordering “indiscriminate and in some cases deliberate airstrikes against civilians,” in a report released on Thursday along with a video summary that included dramatic footage of the chaos and bloodshed on the ground in the immediate aftermath of such attacks. According to the rights group, its report, “is based on visits to 50 sites of government air strikes in opposition-controlled areas in Aleppo, Idlib, and Latakia governorates, and more than 140 interviews with witnesses and victims.”

The report was published just days after PBS Frontline released video of an air strike on the Syrian village of al-Bara which took place as the British filmmaker Olly Lambert was recording an interview with a rebel commander. Mr. Lambert’s footage offers a harrowing look at the impact of such bombings on the ground. The video was posted on the Frontline Web site with the filmmaker’s complete new documentary, “Syria Behind the Lines.”

A video report on the bombing of the Syrian village of al-Bara by Olly Lambert for PBS Frontline.



Filmmakers Capture Chaos After Air Strikes in Syria

A Human Rights Watch video report on Syrian government air strikes.

Human Rights Watch accused the Syrian authorities Thursday of ordering “indiscriminate and in some cases deliberate airstrikes against civilians,” in a report released on Thursday along with a video summary that included dramatic footage of the chaos and bloodshed on the ground in the immediate aftermath of such attacks. According to the rights group, its report, “is based on visits to 50 sites of government air strikes in opposition-controlled areas in Aleppo, Idlib, and Latakia governorates, and more than 140 interviews with witnesses and victims.”

The report was published just days after PBS Frontline released video of an air strike on the Syrian village of al-Bara which took place as the British filmmaker Olly Lambert was recording an interview with a rebel commander. Mr. Lambert’s footage offers a harrowing look at the impact of such bombings on the ground. The video was posted on the Frontline Web site with the filmmaker’s complete new documentary, “Syria Behind the Lines.”

A video report on the bombing of the Syrian village of al-Bara by Olly Lambert for PBS Frontline.