Mar
8
2009
foxxo writes “I’m a library worker, so I get lots of questions about our collection when I’m out in the stacks. I’d love to be able to access our online catalog and give patrons more comprehensive guidance without directing them to the reference desk. What options are available for a portable device with Wi-Fi connectivity, full-featured Web browsing, and (most importantly) no cellphone-style activation and service fees? Size is important, too; I need something I can carry in my pocket, not a micro-notebook with full keyboard. (And I am a library worker, so low cost is key!)” One device that sounds interesting in this category is the GiiNii Movit (not yet released, but shown off at CES). What can you recommend that’s out there now?

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Best Wi-Fi Portable Browsing Device? | tags: google, Phone, web | posted in technical news
Mar
8
2009
foxxo writes “I’m a library worker, so I get lots of questions about our collection when I’m out in the stacks. I’d love to be able to access our online catalog and give patrons more comprehensive guidance without directing them to the reference desk. What options are available for a portable device with Wi-Fi connectivity, full-featured Web browsing, and (most importantly) no cellphone-style activation and service fees? Size is important, too; I need something I can carry in my pocket, not a micro-notebook with full keyboard. (And I am a library worker, so low cost is key!)” One device that sounds interesting in this category is the GiiNii Movit (not yet released, but shown off at CES). What can you recommend that’s out there now?

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Best Wi-Fi Portable Browsing Device? | tags: google, Phone, web | posted in technical news
Mar
8
2009
The tracker is based on the same OpenTracker software that the Pirate Bay has been using for the last couple of years. “By using BitTorrent we can reach our audience with full quality, unencrypted media files. Experience from our early tests show that if we’re the best provider of our own content we also gain control of it.”
Comments Off on Norwegian Broadcasting sets up its own BitTorrent tracker | tags: encrypted, pirate bay | posted in technical news
Mar
8
2009
David Weinberger, co-author of The Cluetrain Manifesto and the more recent Everything is Miscellaneous received a letter today from Verizon. A “legalistic pamphlet” that informed him he has 45 days to opt out of ‘agreeing’ to let Verizon share his personal information.
Comments Off on Verizon Customers – Just Say No! | posted in technical news
Mar
8
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Computer scientist Stephen Wolfram feels that he has put together at least the initial version of a computer that actually answers factual questions, a la Star Trek’s ship computers. His version will be found on their Web-based application, Wolfram Alpha. What does this mean? Well, instead of returning links to pages that may (or may not) contain the answer to your questions, Wolfram will respond with the actual answer. Just imagine typing in ‘How many bones are in the human body?’ and getting the answer.” Right now, though the search entry field is in place, Alpha is not yet generally available — only “to a few select individuals.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Wolfram Promises Computing That Answers Questions | tags: computers, google, web, web-based | posted in technical news
Mar
8
2009
eirikso writes with an interesting story from Norway; the state broadcaster there has decided to put up some of its content on BitTorrent. “The tracker is based on the same OpenTracker software that the Pirate Bay has been using for the last couple of years. By using BitTorrent we can reach our audience with full quality, unencrypted media files. Experience from our early tests show that if we’re the best provider of our own content we also gain control of it.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Norwegian Broadcasting Sets Up Its Own Tracker | tags: encrypted, google, pirate bay | posted in technical news
Mar
8
2009
Harry writes “Sunday is the final day of business for Circuit City, the once-dominant national consumer electronics chain done in by the rise of Best Buy, the crummy economy, and multiple failings of its own. I paid a final visit of respect to my local store, and found that they’d gotten rid of just about all the unopened electronics products, and were therefore selling off stuff like broken computers and the toilet-paper dispenser from the restroom. Whether or not you were ever a fan, it was a sad scene.” NPR has a segment on the end of the Circuit City era as well.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on The Last Will and Testament of Circuit City | tags: computers, google, news | posted in technical news
Mar
8
2009
Creative uses of buses in advertising campaigns by various companies.
Comments Off on Clever and Creative Bus Advertising | posted in technical news
Mar
8
2009
Ubuntu is a great operating system, but a small modification and adding here and there will make the ubuntu desktop a enjoyable experience.
Comments Off on : 9 features Ubuntu should implement | tags: desktop, ubuntu | posted in technical news
Mar
8
2009
Every once in a while though you’ll stop and stare at the sky, or be struck by the beauty of an everyday thing. This can happen even with the web, if you take a moment. Well, I’m here today to give you that moment. Geeks and Geekettes, Nerds and Nerdesses, I present to you my Seven Wonders of the World Wide Web.
Comments Off on Seven Wonders of The World (Wide Web) | tags: web | posted in technical news