Video: A first glimpse at Apple TV. While a lot of companies have tried such media streaming devices, the existing ones are “kind of unreliable. They’re hard to use and nobody really likes them much,” explains PC World’s Ed Albro. “It’ll be interesting to see whether Apple, with its design smarts, can make something that really just works.” Watch it here. Best of the blogs: At least according to Dell, mobile workers want data protection, chassis protection and an LCD they can see outside. “These claims seem reasonable, but I’m always curious to know the parameters vendors use to draw their conclusions,” Stephanie Bruzzese explains in this Tech Treks post. “Just like vendors never want the press to stress-test their portables, they’re always hesitant to give exact answers to survey-type questions.” Columnist’s corner: Unified communications, particularly given the litigious world as it is today, brings several issues of which IT ought to be aware. Think legal pitfalls. “If you digitize and archive your voice mails, especially on your e-mail server, you are obligated to save them as you would any other relevant electronic document,” Ephraim Schwartz points out in Unified under law. So, be careful how you deploy. The news beat: The much-anticipated third draft of GPLv3 will debut tomorrow, months after it was originally expected. Adobe creates six versions of Creative Suite 3 with specific customer segments in mind. And security vendors are turning their focus toward smartphones. Software Development