Mar
27
2009
adamengst writes “If you’ve had an Xserve drive fail, you may have considered saving some money by putting a replacement drive inside its Apple Drive Module. That may be a false economy, though. TidBITS explains why, while pinning Apple down on exactly what goes into Apple Drive Modules and why they cost so much more than bare retail drives.”

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Comments Off on Going Deep Inside Xserve Apple Drive Modules | tags: Apple, google | posted in technical news
Mar
27
2009
Patrick Bowman writes “I’m with a small (okay, it’s just me) startup planning a camera-related USB device for the mass market. It’s probably patentable so I can’t give details. I can handle the software but have no hardware design or manufacturing experience. Does anyone have any recommendations for a company to handle the PCB design and manufacture? Instead of starting from scratch I’ve also considered approaching one of the companies (mostly in China) that make similar devices and asking them to modify their hardware for my requirements, and to provide their source for me to modify. Has anyone taken this route before? How did it work for you?”

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Comments Off on Circuit Board Design For a Small Startup? | tags: china, google | posted in technical news
Mar
27
2009
circletimessquare notes a New Scientist piece calling attention to a recent study by the National Academy of Sciences, which attempts to raise awareness of the dangers of severe solar electromagnetic storms. “In 1859, amateur astronomer Richard Carrington noticed ‘two patches of intensely bright and white light’ near some sunspots. At the same time, Victorian era magnetometers went off the charts, stunning auroras were being viewed at the equator, and telegraph networks were disrupted — sparks flew from terminals and ignited telegraph paper on fire. It became known as the Carrington event, and the National Academy of Sciences worries about the impact of another such event today and the lack of awareness among officials. It would induce un-designed-for voltages in all high-voltage, long-distance power lines, and destroy transformers, as Quebec learned in 1989. Without electricity, water would stop flowing from the tap, gasoline would stop being pumped, and health care would cease after the emergency generators gave up the ghost after 72 hours. Replacing all of the transformers would take months, if not years. The paradox would be that underdeveloped countries would fare better than developed ones. Our only warning system is a satellite called the Advanced Composition Explorer, in solar orbit between the Sun and the Earth. It is 11 years old and past its planned lifespan. It might give us as much as 15 minutes of warning, and transformers might be able to be disconnected in time. But currently no country has such a contingency plan.”

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Comments Off on The Underappreciated Risks of Severe Space Weather | tags: google, network | posted in technical news
Mar
27
2009
MojoKid writes “After Intel filed a lawsuit against NVIDIA late last month, alleging that a four-year-old chipset license agreement the companies signed did not extend to Intel’s future generation CPUs with ‘integrated memory controllers’ (like Nehalem), NVIDIA decided to fight with fire. Today, NVIDIA filed a countersuit in the Court of Chancery in the State of Delaware against Intel Corporation for breach of contract. Furthermore, the action also seeks to terminate Intel’s license to NVIDIA’s valuable patent portfolio, which no doubt is reverberating with some level of intensity in the halls of Intel.”

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Comments Off on NVIDIA Countersues Intel Over License Conflict | tags: google, Intel | posted in technical news
Mar
27
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Someone over at Redmond flipped the wrong switch, it would seem. Ars Technica spotted that the Windows 7 download page on TechNet had switched to say Release Candidate instead of Beta. It’s now back to Beta, but not before Ars got all the details off the page: ‘The public RC will apparently be coming in May 2009, and not in April as previously rumored. The RC testing program will be available at least through June 2009, and the actual build will expire June 1, 2010. Both 32-bit and 64-bit versions will be available in English, German, Japanese, French, and Spanish.’ A screenshot and all the text on the RC download page, which was set to be published ‘May 2009’ is saved over at Ars.”

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Comments Off on Windows 7 RC Download Page Points To May Release | tags: google, japan, japanese, program, redmond, windows 7 | posted in technical news
Mar
27
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Who needs crusty old rubbish like the Victorian era or World War II? Instead, an Ofsted report leaked to The Guardian details proposals to teach UK primary school children how to use Wikipedia, Twitter, podcasts and blogs. Presumably they’re already au fait with b3ta and 4chan. And you already can’t get the kids off Bebo without a crowbar.”

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Comments Off on Proposal Suggests UK Students Study Wikipedia and Twitter | tags: google, news, twitter, wikipedia | posted in technical news
Mar
27
2009
After running through a series of ad campaigns designed to make Windows look cool, then victimized, then simply inescapably ubiquitous, Microsoft is now hoping to attack Apple in new ads that portray Macs as unaffordable compared to generic PCs. According to a report by the Associated Press, Microsoft hired Crispin Porter + Bogusky…
Comments Off on Microsoft to attack Mac pricing in new series of TV ads | tags: Apple, cap, Mac, microsoft, tv | posted in technical news
Mar
27
2009
After suffering humiliation at the hands of a hacker in 2007, the future of anti-piracy company MediaDefender is in serious doubt. The stock price of its parent company has plunged, and the two founders of MediaDefender have now left the sinking ship.
Comments Off on MediaDefender Founders Leave Sinking Ship | posted in technical news
Mar
27
2009
Companies across the technology industry are jockeying to associate themselves with “cloud computing,” but few agree on the term’s definition.
Comments Off on The Internet Industry Is on a Cloud—Whatever That May Mean | tags: technology | posted in technical news
Mar
27
2009
Already in January Australian Terry Baume had written a short paper describing the psyb0t malware that was beginning to crop up in Linux systems. Most of these are DSL routers, in that they allow a greater level of stealth because they are online longer than individual PCs.
Comments Off on Linux : Psyb0t Attacks Linux Routers (Update) | tags: linux, malware, stealth | posted in technical news