Feb 24 2009

AOL updgrades Bebo with a bunch of new features

Bebo gets better integration with other social services; AOL pre-announces future features.

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Feb 24 2009

Why iPhone Service Prices Probably Won’t Budge

There’s no shortage of buzz over predictions that iPhone service costs are about to drop, but I wish to respectfully disagree with that expectation. The predicted price drop is supposed to be the result of a trickle-down effect from the heating up of competition for cellular customers

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Feb 24 2009

Windows 3.1 running on a Nokia N95

In what can only be called “totally frakking awesome”, someone installed Microsoft Windows 3.1 on a Nokia N95. By using DOSBox, Polish developer Marcin-PRV was able to install the ageing operating system on the Symbian-powered smartphone, allowing both operating systems to run side-by-side.

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Feb 24 2009

Pirate Bay Trial Day 7: Screenshots for Evidence

After a long weekend break, both sides have returned to the Stockholm court room. Day 6 of the trial was a rest day, so we skip to Day 7 where the IFPI’s evidence collector relies only on screenshots and admits he’s not a BitTorrent expert. Furthermore, the Prosecution don’t know where policeman Jim Keyzer is.

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Feb 24 2009

Cold-War Era Naval Vessels Up For Grabs

mcleland lets us in on a Wall Street Journal story about two cold-war era, formerly top-secret vessels the US Navy is trying to give away. At issue are the Sea Shadow (the ancestor of all modern naval radar-evading technology) and the Hughes Mining Barge (a floating dry-dock and more-or-less base for the Sea Shadow). While the ships are being ‘given away,’ there are multiple regulations involved, making the gift a very costly one. “A Naval Museum is ‘a bloodthirsty, paper-work ridden, permit-infested, money-sucking hole,’ warns the Historic Naval Ships Association. Because the Navy won’t pay for anything — not rust-scraping or curating — to keep museums afloat, survival depends on big crowds.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Feb 24 2009

Zero-Day Excel Exploit In the Wild

snydeq writes “Microsoft Excel has a zero-day vulnerability that attackers are exploiting on the Internet, according to security vendor Symantec. The problem affects Excel 2007 both without and with Service Pack 1, according to an advisory on SecurityFocus, and other versions going back to Excel 2000. The program’s vulnerability can be exploited if a user opens a maliciously crafted Excel file, allowing a hacker to leave a Trojan horse on the infected system.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Feb 24 2009

$100 Linux Wall-Wart Now Available

nerdyH sends us to LinuxDevices for a description of a tiny Linux device called the Marvell SheevaPlug. “A 0 Linux wall wart could do to servers what netbooks did to notebooks. With the Marvell SheevaPlug, you get a completely open (hardware and software) Linux server resembling a typical wall-wart power adapter, but running Linux on a 1.2GHz CPU, with 512MB of RAM, and 512MB of Flash. I/O includes USB 2.0, gigabit Ethernet, while expansion is provided via an SDIO slot. The power draw is a nightlight-like 5 Watts. Marvell says it plans to give Linux developers everything they need to deliver ‘disruptive’ services on the device.” The article links four products built on the SheevaPlug, none of them shipping quite yet. The development kit is available from Marvell.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Feb 24 2009

Supreme Court of India Comes Down On Bloggers

An anonymous reader writes “The Indian Supreme Court has ruled that bloggers cannot shelter under an escape clause such as ‘Any views expressed are solely those of the writers’ to exercise freedom of speech in discussions and statements online. The ruling comes in response to an anti-defamation case filed against a 19 year old student’s Orkut community, commenting upon the right-wing political organization Shiv Sena. This organization is based in the western state of Maharashtra and has been responsible for inflammatory speeches and numerous attacks upon non-Maharashtrians.” The article does not make it entirely clear whether the student owner is himself accused of defamatory speech, or only commenters posting on his site. His defense that an Orkut community is not equivalent to a public forum was denied.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Feb 24 2009

Red Hat Returns To the Linux Desktop

CWmike writes “Red Hat used to be in the desktop business along with all the other Linux distributors. Then, they left. Now, however, Red Hat is switching from Xen to KVM for virtualization. As part of that switchover, Red Hat will be using not only KVM, but the SolidICE/SPICE desktop virtualization and management software suite to introduce a new server-based desktop virtualization system. Does this mean that Red Hat will be getting back into the Linux desktop business? That’s the question I posed to Red Hat CTO Brian Stevens, in a phone call after the Red Hat/KVM press conference, and he told me that, ‘Yes. Red Hat will indeed be pushing the Linux desktop again.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Feb 24 2009

The Chinese (Web Servers) Are Coming

Glyn Moody writes “The February 2009 Netcraft survey is not the usual ‘Apache continues to trounce Microsoft IIS’ story: there’s a new entrant — from China. ‘This majority of this month’s growth is down to the appearance of 20 million Chinese sites served by QZHTTP. This web server is used by QQ to serve millions of Qzone sites beneath the qq.com domain.’ What exactly is this QZHTTP, and what does it all mean for the world of Web servers?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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