Mar
8
2009
An anonymous reader writes “The UK government, backed by a bunch of charities that raise funds for research into cancer, heart disease and diabetes, has launched an advertising campaign that links the ‘inactive’ or passive gaming lifestyle with death and illness. It’s part of a bigger ‘Change4Life’ campaign that has also linked playing games with making children obese. The new ads show a young child playing a PlayStation game, with the caption ‘Risk an early DEATH, just do nothing.’ To say this has annoyed the UK games industry would be a grave understatement. Trade association ELSPA has already called an urgent meeting with authorities to have the ads pulled, and trade magazine MCV has complained to the country’s Advertising Standards Authority as well. As MCV Associate Editor Tim Ingham says in an impassioned opinion piece, ‘Change4Life’s advertising campaign makes a mockery of everything the industry has achieved in the last decade.'”

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Comments Off on UK Government Ads Link Games With "Early Death" | tags: cap, games, google, playstation | posted in technical news
Mar
8
2009
Small, efficient devices such as the Acer Aspire One and Asus Eee PC are taking the battle for free software to a different front, bringing Linux to hordes of computer users who don’t know or care about Linux. They just want something that works, and when they try it, they like it.
Comments Off on Hack your Aspire One Linux netbook interface | tags: linux | posted in technical news
Mar
8
2009
So how do we go about checking the speed of USB flash drives? Maybe the following light and free software can lend a hand?
Comments Off on 5 Tools To Check The Speed Of Your USB Flash Drive (Windows) | posted in technical news
Mar
8
2009
arcticstoat writes with a snippet from bit-tech.com; musician Matthew Applegate “plans on assembling a virtual orchestra of 20 retired relics of computing at the National Museum of Computing at Bletchley Park. The choice of venue will even allow Applegate to feature the infamous Colossus Mark 2 computer in the event, which was used for code-breaking in World War II and was recently reconstructed at Bletchley Park in 2007. … A wide selection of computing fossils be used in Applegate’s final musical presentation, which is called ‘Obsolete?’ This includes the Elliot 803 (a 1960s machine with 4KB of memory), the aforementioned Colossus Mark 2, a Bunsviga adding machine (pictured) and a punch card machine. As well as this, there are also some machines that will look nostalgically familiar to kids who grew up with the home computer generation, including a BBC Micro, an Atari 800XL, a Dragon 32 and an Amstrad CPC464.” The article’s list of the members of this “orchestra” makes an interesting checklist of computer hardware history.

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Comments Off on Old Computers Resurrected As Instruments At Bletchley Park | tags: Apple, computers, google, Mac | posted in technical news
Mar
7
2009
The already well-equipped base model (although I’m loath to call anything this gorgeous and well-built a “base model”) starts with a 2.66-GHz Core 2 Duo processor from Intel, 4GB of RAM, a 320GB hard drive, two Nvidia graphics processors and a simply stunning high-resolution, 1920-by-1200-pixel screen.
Comments Off on Review: The 17-in. MacBook Pro Rocks | tags: Intel, Mac | posted in technical news
Mar
7
2009
LimeWire’s new software illustrates a growing trend: “darknets” are becoming simple to setup and use. As millions of people now find that they can easily create their own private share networks, what’s in store for content industry investigators who rely on public P2P networks to find suspected file-sharers?
Comments Off on Darknets and the future of P2P investigators | tags: network | posted in technical news
Mar
7
2009
Hutchins isn’t surveying a crowd of boozing hipsters, but rather a mass of over 300 recently laid-off workers from the Bay Area’s technology industry. They assembled here Tuesday for LaidOffCamp, a free, day-long conference for the recent victims of the souring economy
Comments Off on Tech’s Laid Off Legions Return to Their Long-Lost Passions | tags: technology | posted in technical news
Mar
7
2009
An anonymous reader writes “In a mouse and cat game, Hulu the popular online content provider of shows, movies, and more has blocked Boxee yet again from accessing the Hulu content from the Boxee application. Just as Boxee added RSS feeds to include Hulu content, Hulu responded with blocking Boxee users from accessing the content via RSS feeds the same very day. RSS feeds are publicly available and it’s really disappointing to hear that a site would block certain applications from accessing their content in such a manner. I would assume that the Boxee development team is currently working on disguising its browser to look like Firefox, Internet Explorer, or some other known browser in an attempt to fool Hulu.”

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Comments Off on Hulu Again Removed From Boxee and Again Added Back | tags: google | posted in technical news
Mar
7
2009
theodp writes “Over the past 20 years, there’s been much speculation about what the convergence of computers and TV would ultimately look like. Paul Graham says that we now know the answer: computers. ‘Convergence’ is turning out to essentially be ‘replacement.’ Why did TV lose? Graham identifies four forces: 1. The Internet’s open platform fosters innovation at hacker speeds instead of big company speeds. 2. Moore’s Law worked its magic on Internet bandwidth. 3. Piracy taught a new generation of users it’s more convenient to watch shows on a computer screen. 4. Social applications made everybody from grandmas to 14-year-old girls want computers — in a three-word-nutshell, Facebook killed TV.”

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Comments Off on Why TV Lost | tags: computers, facebook, google, news, tv | posted in technical news
Mar
7
2009
Slatterz points out a brief mention at PC Authority of a story at Torrent freak about using watermarking embedded in movies’ soundtracks to reveal the exact location of camera-wielding bootleggers in a theater; the inventors (here’s an abstract of their paper) claim it’s accurate to within 44 centimeters.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Audio Watermarks Could Pinpoint Film Pirates By Seat | tags: google | posted in technical news