Feb
15
2009
Comments Off on Recession keeps tourists away – Canada.com | tags: google, news | posted in technical news
Feb
15
2009
Comments Off on A Pearl of a phone – Channel News Asia | tags: google, mobile, news, Phone, technology | posted in technical news
Feb
15
2009
Comments Off on Scientists: Pace of Climate Change Exceeds Estimates – Washington Post | tags: google, news, tv | posted in technical news
Feb
15
2009
The emulator will also be regularly updated to ensure that formats that fall out of favour remain supported in the near and far future. Called Keeping Emulation Environments Portable (Keep), the project aims to create software that can recognise, play and open all types of computer file from the 1970s onwards.
Comments Off on KEEP: Emulator That Aims To Save Obsolete File Formats | posted in technical news
Feb
15
2009
While U.S. President Barack Obama’s blackberry has been claimed to be a spy-proof device, the world’s most famous hacker Kevin Mitnick says that it can still be breached.He said that Obama’s super-secure BlackBerry only makes cracking into it more challenging, but it can still be done.
Comments Off on Hacker: Obama’s ‘spy-proof’ blackberry can be breached | tags: obama | posted in technical news
Feb
15
2009
The world of search is changing, and changing fast. The days of people typing a couple of words into a search box and hoping for the best are numbered.
Comments Off on How Search Engines Are Getting Smarter | posted in technical news
Feb
15
2009
Technibble, the Australian site for aspiring computer techies, recently released the second version of its popular Computer Repair Utility Kit, a collection of 57 hand picked tools to help you diagnose and repair your Windows machine.
Comments Off on A Computer Repair Utility Kit You Can Run From a Thumb Drive | tags: Mac | posted in technical news
Feb
15
2009
Thomas Hawk writes “An interesting twist over at the Fake Chuck Westfall Blog. Fake Chuck (like Fake Steve before him) has a blog out parodying Canon’s real Technical Information Advisor Chuck Westfall. It seems that Canon and their lawyers over at Loeb & Loeb are none too fond of all the fun that Fake Chuck and DSLR geeks everywhere have been having at their expense and have sent Fake Chuck’s blog hosting company, WordPress, a notice to take the blog down. Canon’s lawyers cite that Fake Chuck’s blog is ‘calculated to mislead recipients,’ even though the blog has ‘fake’ in the title, ‘fake’ in the URL and ‘fake’ just about everywhere else in the blog. What in the heck is wrong with Canon? Do they really thing that trying to shut down a parody blog is going to make their new 5D Mark II ship any faster?” After Fake Chuck removed the Canon logo from his site, WordPress is standing behind him and has rebuffed Canon’s demand.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Canon Tries To Shut Down "Fake" Canon Blog | tags: google | posted in technical news
Feb
15
2009
Ponca City, We love you writes with news of research from the Salk Institute into small, unconscious eye movements called “microsaccades,” the purpose of which has been in question for many years. A recent study showed that those movements were essentially responsible for maintaining a coherent image for interpretation by the brain. They are also the cause of a famous optical illusion in which a still image appears to move. ‘”Because images on the retina fade from view if they are perfectly stabilized, the active generation of fixational eye movements by the central nervous system allows these movements to constantly shift the scene ever so slightly, thus refreshing the images on our retina and preventing us from going ‘blind,'” explains Hafed. “When images begin to fade, the uncertainty about where to look increases the fluctuations in superior colliculus activity, triggering a microsaccade,” adds Krauzlis.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on "Microsaccades" Help To Refresh Your Field of View | tags: google, news | posted in technical news
Feb
15
2009
The New York Times is running a story about the criteria involved when Google scraps one of their projects. While a project’s popularity among users is important, Google also examines whether they can get enough employees interested in it, and whether it has a large enough scope — they prefer not to waste time solving minor problems. The article takes a look at the specific reasons behind the recent cancellation of several products. “Dennis Crowley, one of two co-founders who sold Dodgeball to Google in 2005 and stayed on, said that he had trouble competing for the attention of other Google engineers to expand the service. ‘If you’re a product manager, you have to recruit people and their “20 percent time.”‘ … [Jeff Huber, the company’s senior vice president of engineering] said that Google eventually concluded that Dodgeball’s vision was too narrow. … Still, Google found the concepts behind Dodgeball intriguing, and early this month, it released Google Latitude, an add-on to Google Maps that allows people to share their location with friends and family members. It’s more sophisticated than Dodgeball, with automatic location tracking and more options for privacy and communication.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on How Google Decides To Cancel a Project | tags: google, privacy | posted in technical news