Mar 21 2009

Report: Apple leaks 17-inch iMac for $899?

An Italian blog site notices a mention of a 9 iMac on Apple’s education site. Currently, Apple is offering only iMacs in 20- and 24-inch screen sizes, starting at ,199. But it’s unclear whether the 17-incher is really new or not.

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Mar 21 2009

How the iPhone 3.0 Will Create a New Mobile Economy

he iPhone 3.0 software includes the ability to copy-and-paste, a landscape keyboard, and push notifications. However, none of these updates were as revolutionary as the new features Apple offered to iPhone application developers. The one to watch however is the ability to purchase items within an application.

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Mar 21 2009

30 Creative Examples of Illustrations in Web Design

Adding illustrative elements to a web design can take it to a whole new level. In this article, you’ll be able to set your eyes on some of the best examples of websites that have chosen to use illustrated elements as part of the design.

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Mar 21 2009

Google De-indexes $5M ToysRUs Domain, Toys.com

What a waste! Now the value of Toys ‘R’ Us’ .1M purchase of Toys.com has been relegated to type-in traffic and potentially some of the inbound links to Toys.com.

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Mar 21 2009

US Nuclear Sub Crashes Into US Navy Amphibious Vessel

Kugrian writes “Showing that it’s not just the British and the French who have trouble seeing each other on the high seas, a US Nuclear submarine yesterday crashed into a US Navy heavy cruiser. The USS Hartford, a nuclear-powered attack submarine, was submerged as it crashed into the USS New Orleans in the strait of Hormuz, resulting in the spillage of 95,000 litres of diesel fuel. Both vessels were heading in the same direction when the collision occurred in the narrow strait and were subsequently heading to port for repairs. A spokesman for the 5th Fleet said that the USS Hartford suffered no damage to its nuclear propulsion system.” According to the USS New Orleans’ Wikipedia page, it’s actually an amphibious transport dock.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Mar 21 2009

The Coming Censorship Wars

KentuckyFC writes “Many countries censor internet traffic using techniques such as blocking IP addresses, filtering traffic with certain URLs in the data packets and prefix hijacking. Others allow wiretapping of international traffic with few if any legal safeguards. There are growing fears that these practices could trigger a major international incident should international traffic routed through these countries fall victim, whether deliberately or by accident (witness the prefix hijacking of YouTube in Pakistan last year). So how to avoid these places? A group of computer scientists investigating this problem say it turns out to be surprisingly difficult to determine which countries traffic might pass through. But their initial assessment indicates that the countries with the most pervasive censorship policies — China, Iran, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia — pose a minimal threat because so little international traffic passes their way. The researchers instead point the finger at western countries that have active censorship policies and carry large amounts of international traffic. They highlight the roles of the two biggest carriers: Great Britain, which actively censors internet traffic, and the US, which allows warrantless wiretapping of international traffic (abstract).”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Mar 21 2009

No Business Case For IPv6, Survey Finds

alphadogg writes “Business incentives are completely lacking today for upgrading to IPv6, the next generation Internet protocol, according to a survey of network operators conducted by the Internet Society (ISOC). In a new report, ISOC says that ISPs, enterprises and network equipment vendors report that there are ‘no concrete business drivers for IPv6.’ However, survey respondents said customer demand for IPv6 is on the rise and that they are planning or deploying IPv6 because they feel it is the next major development in the evolution of the Internet.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Mar 21 2009

Major Rogue Anti-Virus Program Shut Down

krebsatwpost writes “TrafficConverter.biz, one of the more notorious pay-per-install affiliate programs, was dismantled this week after media attention caused Visa and Mastercard to shut down the group’s payment operations. The action comes just a few days after a report by The Washington Post that showed some affiliates were making more than 0,000 USD a week installing rogue anti-virus software. The credit card industry may have been spurred by the fact that the first version of the Conficker worm told infected systems to download a file from TrafficConverter, although the story posits that this could have been an attempted Joe Job rather than a blatant attempt to drum up more installs.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Mar 21 2009

Facebook Users’ Verdict On Redesign: Hate! – CBS News

So there’s a new Facebook app out there, designed to poll users on the social network’s latest redesign. The results? Hundreds of thousands have responded. 94 percent give it a thumbs-down. Ouch.

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Mar 21 2009

Apple’s next-gen iPhone has video camera

Apple this year will finally introduce video recording capabilities on at least one of its upcoming iPhone models, AppleInsider has been told.

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