Mar
26
2009
In an effort to make the BlackBerry stand out further from the pack, Research In Motion’s investment arm announced plans to invest in startup Xobni, which makes an e-mail search tool. Xobni-inbox spelled backward-creates a tool that works with Microsoft’s Outlook and lets users quickly search the contents of e-mail messages easily.
Comments Off on Will Xobni Help BlackBerry Take On the iPhone? | tags: iphone, microsoft, Phone | posted in technical news
Mar
26
2009
Backed by the ACLU, a group of Pennsylvania parents is suing to block an enthusiastic DA who has threatened to file child porn charges against teen girls who appear semi-undressed in candid cell-phone photos—unless they agree to attend a five-week program on “what it means to be a girl in today’s society.”
Comments Off on Parents Fight Against "Sexting" Teens | tags: Phone, program, tv | posted in technical news
Mar
26
2009
There are tons of sites out there comparing other sorts of products. Affiliate programs have spawned so-called review websites, most of which simply rank the companies based on the payout. A new site, HostMonk, doesn’t.
Comments Off on Hosting Reviews Without The Monkey Business? | tags: program, web | posted in technical news
Mar
26
2009
Charlie Miller, the security expert who won both this and last year’s CanSecWest Pwn2Own security contests by exploiting Macs running Safari, repeated in an interview that he’d recommend Macs to typical users as a safer alternative to Windows PCs.
Comments Off on Pwn2Own contest winner: Macs are safer than Windows | tags: Mac, security | posted in technical news
Mar
26
2009
narramissic writes “In a paper set to be delivered at an upcoming security conference, University of Texas at Austin researchers showed how they were able to identify people who were on public social networks such as Twitter and Flickr by mapping out the connections surrounding their network of friends. From the ITworld article: ‘Web site operators often share data about users with partners and advertisers after stripping it of any personally identifiable information such as names, addresses or birth dates. Arvind Narayanan and fellow researcher Vitaly Shmatikov found that by analyzing these ‘anonymized’ data sets, they could identify Flickr users who were also on Twitter about two-thirds of the time, depending on how much information they have to work with.'”

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Comments Off on Researchers Can ID Anonymous Twitterers | tags: google, network, security, twitter, web | posted in technical news
Mar
26
2009
audiovideodisco writes “Every year the Loebner Prize goes to the chatbot (and the corresponding human companion) that fares best on a Turing test administered by a panel of judges. Discover talked to Kevin Warwick, the professor who runs the competition, to get pointers on how one would go about detecting a bot. While there are some general approaches you can use, nothing is foolproof — and asking about Sarah Palin can be downright deceptive. One judge concluded an interlocutor was a bot because it didn’t recognize Palin’s name … but it turned out the chatter was a French librarian who’d simply never heard of her.” The chat transcripts show how difficult picking bot from non-bot is getting.

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Comments Off on Is Your IM Buddy Really a Computer? | tags: google, tv | posted in technical news
Mar
26
2009
CharlotteShma writes “Some old writer once said that in order to keep going, he needed to hear the scratch of the pen on the page. Some self-proclaimed keyboard aficionados would make the same argument for computer keyboards. Is it possible that the old ‘clicky’ keyboards are making a comeback? Now that we’ve replaced the old buckling springs with rubber domes, our keyboards are only getting quieter and quieter. According to the people at Unicomp Inc., all keyboards made since the early 1990s are, frankly, no good. They still use and produce vintage IBM Model M keyboards in their small factory in Lexington, Kentucky. The IBM Model M keyboards are ugly, built like tanks, and, most importantly, have a spring under each key which clicks when you press it.” Not sure what’s ugly about them — most other keyboards are ugly, when you shut your eyes.

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Comments Off on Old-School Keyboard Makes Comeback of Sorts | tags: google, IBM | posted in technical news
Mar
26
2009
Legislation may by 2016 restrict the paint color options for California residents looking for a new car. Black and all dark hues are currently on the banned list. The California Air Resources Board says that the climate control systems of dark-colored cars need to work harder than their lighter siblings — especially after sitting in the sun for a few hours.

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Comments Off on California May Reduce Carbon Emissions By Banning Black Cars | tags: google | posted in technical news
Mar
26
2009
Death Metal writes “Chief Security Engineer Andrea Barisani and hardware hacker Daniele Bianco used handmade laser microphone device and a photo diode to measure the vibrations, software for analyzing the spectrograms of frequencies from different keystrokes, as well as technology to apply the data to a dictionary to try to guess the words. They used a technique called dynamic time warping that’s typically used for speech recognition applications, to measure the similarity of signals. Line-of-sight on the laptop is needed, but it works through a glass window, they said. Using an infrared laser would prevent a victim from knowing they were being spied on.” (This is the same team that was able to pick up the electromagnetic signals emitted by PS/2 keyboards.)

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Comments Off on Laser Sniffing Captures Typed Keystrokes From 50-100 Feet | tags: cap, google, laptop, Phone, security, technology | posted in technical news
Mar
26
2009
An IBM-Sun merger is a tantalyzing possibility; snydeq writes “Fatal Exception’s Neil McAllister suggests that an IBM/Sun merger could crown Big Blue king of enterprise software development. ‘Acquiring Sun would make IBM the clear leader in Java, as it would become the caretaker of the open source reference implementation of the JRE,’ which, along with GlassFish, would become entry-level gateways to IBM’s WebSphere stack. Moreover, MySQL would give IBM’s database division a significant entry-level hook, and NetBeans/Eclipse would unify IBM’s front against Visual Studio. ‘All in all, this move would solidify IBM’s role as “the developer company,”‘ McAllister writes. ‘In other words, if this merger goes through and you’re an enterprise developer and you’re not an IBM customer now, get ready — because you soon will be. Better bring your wallet.'” And blackbearnh writes with a short interview with Brian Aker (who came to Sun as MySQL’s director of architecture, and is now the lead for MySQL fork Drizzle) about what life would be like under Big Blue’s control.

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Comments Off on What an IBM-Sun Merger Might Mean For Java, MySQL, Developers | tags: database, developer, google, IBM, mysql, open source, sql, web | posted in technical news