Feb
27
2009
Apple this week kicked its eco-friendly MacBook campaign into overdrive with new placements on network television and top-tier internet properties; meanwhile, Research in Motion considered taking a shot at Apple in a new television commercial but ultimately couldn’t bring itself to pull the trigger.
Comments Off on Apple ramps up MacBook campaign; RIM folds on anti-Apple ad | tags: Apple, Mac, network | posted in technical news
Feb
27
2009
It has been reported for a while that the RIAA was suffering some cutbacks and dwindling support, but techdirt is reporting that the cuts may be even deeper than most originally suspected. Who knew suing potential customers would ruin your business? “I’m sure some will somehow ‘blame piracy’ for this turn of events, but it’s hard to see how that’s even remotely the issue. The real issue is that the RIAA has basically managed to run one of the dumbest, most self-defeating strategies over the last decade. Rather than helping major record labels adjust to the changing market, it continually, repeatedly and publicly destroyed its own reputation and the reputation of the labels — each time shrinking their potential market by blaming the very people they should have been working to turn into customers.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on RIAA About to Transform? | tags: google | posted in technical news
Feb
27
2009
CWmike writes to tell us that Sun’s Scott McNealy is pushing for the Obama administration to adopt a much more open-source friendly policy similar to what has been done in Denmark, the UK, and other countries. “Although open-source platforms are widely used today in the federal government — particularly Linux and Sun’s own products, Solaris and Java — McNealy believes many government officials don’t understand it, fear it and even oppose it for ideological reasons. McNealy cited an open-source development project that Sun worked on with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, during which a federal official said “that open source was anti-capitalist.” That sentiment, McNealy fears, is not unusual or isolated.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Sun’s McNealy Wants Obama to Push Open Source | tags: cap, google, linux, news, obama, open source | posted in technical news
Feb
27
2009
Synthetic Biology, a relatively new field, is seeking to find out what happened to a bunch of chemicals to make them capable of supporting a metabolism, replicating, and evolution. A Florida lab is showing some of the most promising advancements in this direction with their AEGIS (Artificially Expanded Genetic Information System) experiment. “AEGIS is not self-sustaining, at least not yet, and with 12 DNA building blocks — as opposed to the usual four — there’s little chance it will be confused with natural life. Still, Benner is encouraged by the results. ‘It’s evolving. It’s doing what we designed it to do,’ said Benner, a biochemist with the Gainesville, Fla.-based Foundation for Applied Molecular Evolution. In addition to providing an example of how alien life might be cobbled together, synthetic biology has a broad array of uses on the home front.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Florida Lab Gets Pregnant | tags: cap, google | posted in technical news
Feb
27
2009
Bruce Schneier recently wrote another essay on privacy for the BBC concentrating on how data seems to be the “pollution of the information age” and where this seems to be leading. “We’re not going to stop the march of technology, just as we cannot un-invent the automobile or the coal furnace. We spent the industrial age relying on fossil fuels that polluted our air and transformed our climate. Now we are working to address the consequences. (While still using said fossil fuels, of course.) This time around, maybe we can be a little more proactive. Just as we look back at the beginning of the previous century and shake our heads at how people could ignore the pollution they caused, future generations will look back at us – living in the early decades of the information age – and judge our solutions to the proliferation of data.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Privacy in the Age of Persistence | tags: google, mobile, privacy, technology | posted in technical news
Feb
27
2009
GlobalEcho writes “Credit default swaps (CDS) are infamous for bringing down AIG and requiring a bailout of hundreds of billions of dollars. Because the market for these was so murky, the US government has insisted that Wall Street create a clearinghouse for these contracts. In a fresh twist, part of the deal is that the models used to price CDS have been standardized, and that the pricing code was made open source, under a somewhat BSD-like license. The source code (originally written by JPMorgan) provides the basic pricing routines, plus an Excel interface. To my knowledge this is the first significant migration of an investment bank product platform from its usual super-secret proprietary home to the rest of the world.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Industry Open-Sources Model For Infamous CDS | tags: google, open source | posted in technical news
Feb
27
2009
Techdirt points out an interesting query in Slate asking why book publishers appear to be making the same mistake that record labels did with the iTunes service with DRM, and single-vendor lock-in. “Back in 2005, we noted that Apple’s dominance over the online music space, which upset the record labels tremendously, was actually the record labels’ own fault for demanding DRM. That single demand created massive lock-in and network effects that allowed Apple to completely dominate the market. If the record labels had, instead, pushed for an open solution, then anyone else could have built stores/players to work as well, and it could have minimized Apple’s ability to control the market. Yes, everyone is now opening up (including Apple), but it took a long time, and Apple had already established its dominant position. So why are book publishers doing the same thing?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Book Publishers Making the Same Mistakes as Record Labels? | tags: 3G, Apple, google, network | posted in technical news
Feb
27
2009
.5 million. Two. Point. Five. Million. Dollars. That’s what some idiot is going to pay for what could be the most expensive iPhone mod ever, the iPhone 3G “Kings Button”.
Comments Off on IPhone: World’s Stupidest, Most Expensive iPhone Mod Yet Cos | tags: 3G, iphone, Phone | posted in technical news
Feb
27
2009
Robots the size of riding lawn mowers could be used to start building a lunar outpost before humans make their next trip to the moon, according to a study by researchers at Astrobotic Technology Inc. and Carnegie Mellon University’s Robotics Institute
Comments Off on Robots May Build Lunar Outpost | tags: robot, robotics, technology | posted in technical news
Feb
27
2009
How to get the best Firefox features in Chrome today. The Google Chrome browser is designed to be lightweight in comparison to what it perceives are bloated offerings from Microsoft and Mozilla among others.
Comments Off on 10 ways to make Chrome as good as Firefox | tags: google, microsoft | posted in technical news