Mar
21
2009
Looking at a regular graph of traffic data from Digg and Facebook, it would be easy to assume that Digg is lagging far behind Facebook’s staggering growth. However, Compete just produced a very different graph that compares traffic at Digg and Facebook since their respective launches, and according to this data, Digg is actually doing better than F
Comments Off on Can Digg Keep Up With Facebook? | tags: facebook | posted in technical news
Mar
21
2009
Al writes “Scientists from the University of Texas at Dallas have created nanotube-based artificial muscles that are light as air and work even under extreme temperatures. The ‘muscles’ expand width-wise by about 200 percent when a voltage is applied, but are stronger than steel lengthwise. The nanotubes within the fiber naturally stick together. Applying a voltage makes them obtain a charge and repel one another. The researchers created them by stretching bundles of entangled carbon nanotubes into long threads. Several cool videos show the strange stuff in action. Some experts, including one from NASA, believe that the nanotube muscles’ ability to withstand extreme heat and cold could make them suitable shape-shifting materials for future space missions.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Nanotube Muscles Are Strong As Steel, Light As Air | tags: google, news | posted in technical news
Mar
21
2009
“We need young people, instead of — a smart kid coming out of school, instead of wanting to be an investment banker, we need them to decide if they want to be an engineer, they want to be a scientist, they want to be a doctor or a teacher,” the president said.
Comments Off on Obama urges students to study engineering, not finance | tags: obama | posted in technical news
Mar
21
2009
These Applications/Experiments might not be put to use as it is, however, they serve their purpose of demonstrating the power of JavaScript and the Browser. Following are the top 5 experiments from the bunch.
Comments Off on 5 Best Chrome Experiments – The Power of JavaScript! | posted in technical news
Mar
21
2009
Apple has already filed a civil suit against Michigan iPod repairman Nicholas Woodhams, alleging that he obtained 9,000 free iPods by manipulating Apple repair and warranty programs. Now, prosecutors in Michigan have also filed criminal charges over the matter.
Comments Off on Michigan iPod scammer gets hit with criminal charges | tags: Apple, program | posted in technical news
Mar
21
2009
During Apple’s iPhone 3.0 event, the presentation of a mobile-attached blood glucose monitor for diabetic users apparently bored some journalists in the room. However, the demonstration not only revealed Apple’s most important leap yet in mobile devices, but also answered the pleas of a diabetic blogger.
Comments Off on "Jesus Phone 3.0" touches diabetic blogger | tags: Apple, iphone, mobile, Phone | posted in technical news
Mar
21
2009
tlhIngan writes “Since October 1, 2008, Sony has been billing game publishers for DLC bandwidth usage. The game companies are forced to pay 16 cents per gigabyte downloaded by users (the ‘Playstation Network Fee’) regardless of whether the content is free or paid. The good news is that free content will only be billed during the initial 60 days it’s up, but paid content will require fees forever. (No word on whether free content will mysteriously disappear after 60 days, though.) Given that some popular game demos run over a gigabyte by themselves, it could easily start costing publishers serious money (16 cents each for a few million downloads adds up). So far, it hasn’t cut down the content available (or few publishers have started pulling content), but it’s too soon to tell. It should be noted that Microsoft isn’t charging publishers any money for content on Xbox Live, though some may argue that the ‘gold premium content’ is the same thing.” Perhaps this is one of the reasons various publishers are pressuring Sony for a PS3 price cut.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Sony Charges Publishers For DLC Bandwidth Usage | tags: games, google, microsoft, network, news, playstation, xbox | posted in technical news
Mar
21
2009
narramissic writes “A report released Friday by a group of cyber-security experts from greylogic finds it is very likely that the Foreign Military Intelligence agency (the GRU) and Federal Security Service (the FSB) directed cyber attacks on Georgian government servers in July and August of 2008. ‘Following a complex web of connections, the report claims that an Internet service provider connected with the Stopgeorgia.ru web site, which coordinated the Georgian attacks, is located next door to a Russian Ministry of Defense Research Institute called the Center for Research of Military Strength of Foreign Countries, and a few doors down from GRU headquarters.’ But Paul Ferguson, a researcher with Trend Micro who has reviewed the report, says it’s a ‘bit of a stretch’ to conclude that the Georgia attacks were state-sponsored. ‘You can connect dots to infer things, but inferring things does not make them so,’ he said. One other interesting allegation in the report is that a member of the Whackerz Pakistan hacking group, which claimed responsibility for defacing the Indian Eastern Railway Web site on Dec. 24, 2008, is employed by a North American wireless communications company and presents an ‘insider threat’ for his employer.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Report Links Russian Intelligence Agencies To Cyber Attacks | tags: google, Intel, security, web, wireless | posted in technical news
Mar
20
2009
Facebook unveiled their new design last week, and guess what: it sucks. It seems like every time they tweak their design, they end up making it more confusing and lame. So, we looked into our crystal ball to see what Facebook will probably look like in a few years. And this is what we saw
Comments Off on What Facebook Will Look Like In A Few Years | tags: facebook, tv | posted in technical news
Mar
20
2009
First off, It’s important to note that, if you actually have a Twitter Strategy, you’re a dickhead. This isn’t an insult, it’s just a statement of fact, and the more we know about ourselves as people, the more we can grow and evolve and achieve oneness. It’s a bitter pill to swallow, but better you hear it from me than from someone you care about.
Comments Off on The Ultimate Guide To Twitter | tags: twitter | posted in technical news