Feb
28
2009
On Wednesday we discussed news that the Authors Guild had objected to the text-to-speech function on Amazon’s Kindle 2, claiming that it infringed on audio book copyright. Today, Amazon said that while the feature is legally sound, they would be willing to disable text-to-speech on a title-by-title basis at the rightsholder’s request. “We have already begun to work on the technical changes required to give authors and publishers that choice. With this new level of control, publishers and authors will be able to decide for themselves whether it is in their commercial interests to leave text-to-speech enabled. We believe many will decide that it is.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Amazon Caves On Kindle 2 Text-To-Speech | tags: amazon, google, kindle, news | posted in technical news
Feb
28
2009
Kristina at Science News writes “A new way to process images reveals an extrasolar planet that had been hiding in an 11-year-old Hubble picture. After ground-based telescopes found three planets orbiting the young star HR 8799, a team took that information and reprocessed some 11-year-old Hubble Space Telescope images. Voila. There was one of the three planets, captured by Hubble but not visible until new knowledge could see the picture in a fresh light. The technique could reveal hidden treasures in many archived telescope images.” For reference, the first exoplanet to be (knowingly) directly imaged was 2M1207_b in late 2004.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Exoplanet Found In Old Hubble Image | tags: cap, google, news | posted in technical news
Feb
28
2009
I recently attended a briefing where Microsoft explained some of the new features in Windows 7 to reviewers from different publications. At the end of the meeting, the MS folks asked the half-dozen of us present what it will take for the new OS to be a success. “Injecting about three trillion dollars into the economy to end this recession,”
Comments Off on 10 Things Windows 7 Must Do To Succeed | tags: microsoft, windows 7 | posted in technical news
Feb
28
2009
What’s new in this release: * Improved SANE scanner support. * Support for digital CD audio playback. * Improved cookies management in Wininet. * Support for building stand-alone 16-bit modules. * Many fixes to the regression tests on Windows. * Various bug fixes.
Comments Off on Wine 1.1.16 Released | posted in technical news
Feb
28
2009
The Recording Industry Association of America is firing scores of workers, a “bloodbath” as some have described it.The recession, and its announced pullback of its 5-year-old litigation campaign, are among the reasons.
Comments Off on Report: RIAA Undergoing "A Bloodbath" of Massive Layoffs | posted in technical news
Feb
28
2009
A few of them haven’t been updated in months, some are updated several times an hour, but all are essential to anyone who wants to be kept abreast of his or her favorite comedian’s bowel movements
Comments Off on The 100 Best Comedy Twitters | tags: twitter | posted in technical news
Feb
28
2009
Simson writes “Beth Rosenberg and I published a fun story today about our experiences with the new face recognition that’s built into both iPhoto ’09 and Google’s new Picasa system. The skinny: iPhoto is fun, Google is creepy. The real difference, we think, is that iPhoto runs on your system and has you name people with your ‘friendly’ names. Picasa, on the other hand, runs on Google’s servers and has you identify everybody with their email addresses. Of course, email addresses are unique and can be cross-correlated between different users. And then, even more disturbing, after you’ve tagged all your friends and family, Google tries to get you to tag all of the strangers in your photos. Ick.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Face Recognition — Clever Or Just Plain Creepy? | tags: email, google | posted in technical news
Feb
28
2009
chthonicdaemon writes “I have been using Linux as my primary environment for more than ten years. In this time, I have absorbed all the lore surrounding the Unix Way — small programs doing one thing well, communicating via text and all that. I have found the command line a productive environment for doing many of the things I often do, and I find myself writing lots of small scripts that do one thing, then piping them together to do other things. While I was spending the time learning grep, sed, awk, python and many other more esoteric languages, the world moved on to application-based programming, where the paradigm seems to be to add features to one program written in one language. I have traditionally associated this with Windows or MacOS, but it is happening with Linux as well. Environments have little or no support for multi-language projects — you choose a language, open a project and get it done. Recent trends in more targeted build environments like cmake or ant are understandably focusing on automatic dependency generation and cross-platform support, unfortunately making it more difficult to grow a custom build process for a multi-language project organically. All this is a bit painful for me, as I know how much is gained by using a targeted language for a particular problem. Now the question: Should I suck it up and learn to do all my programming in C++/Java/(insert other well-supported, popular language here) and unlearn ten years of philosophy, or is there hope for the multi-language development process?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Hope For Multi-Language Programming? | tags: google, linux, Mac, program, programming | posted in technical news
Feb
27
2009
With news that users are hacking Windows and Linux Netbooks to run OS X–and run it pretty well–Apple needs to release a Netbook of its own before it loses ground in the highest-growth laptop category.
Comments Off on Why Apple must do a Netbook now | tags: Apple, laptop, linux, Netbooks, news | posted in technical news
Feb
27
2009
The number of digital storefronts reflecting availability of Apple’s high-end iMac configuration is dwindling this week in yet another sign that long-overdue updates to the all-in-one desktop line may be inching their way closer to market.
Comments Off on Availability of Apple’s high-end iMac starting to fade | tags: Apple, desktop, Mac | posted in technical news