Mar
13
2009
The iPhone 3.0 countdown is officially on: Apple has announced plans to reveal the next generation of its iPhone operating system at a media event next Tuesday. While the company’s keeping up its usual wall of mystique, we’ve compiled a list of some of the most discussed features users want to see. I’m no psychic, but some of these seem to be shoo-
Comments Off on Apple’s iPhone 3.0: 10 Features That Might Make the Cut | tags: Apple, iphone, Phone | posted in technical news
Mar
13
2009
Defeat Globalism writes to tell us that many journalists, bloggers, and media law specialists are concerned about a new ruling by a US Court of Appeals in Boston. The new ruling is allowing a former Staples employee to sue the company for libel after an email was sent out informing other employees that he had been fired for violations of company procedures regarding expenses reimbursements. “Staples has asked the full appeals court to reconsider the ruling, and 51 news organizations have filed a friend-of-the-court brief saying that the decision, if allowed to stand, ‘will create a precedent that hinders the media’s ability to rely on truthful publication to avoid defamation liability.’ But Wendy Sibbison, the Greenfield appellate lawyer for the fired Staples employee, Alan S. Noonan, said the ruling applies only to lawsuits by private figures against private defendants, that is, defendants not involved in the news business, over purely private matters.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Libel Suits OK Even If Libel Is Truthful | tags: email, google, news | posted in technical news
Mar
13
2009
Some people care about bags; obsession is a better word. (See the Bags subforum of the Every Day Carry Forums for evidence.) How are the straps attached? Is that 1050 denier, or 1600? Makers like Crumpler, Ortlieb and Maxpedition inspire impressive brand-loyalty, but probably no bag maker has customers more enthusiastic than Tom Bihn’s. (There really is a Tom Bihn, too — he’s been designing travel bags since he was a kid; now he has a factory with “all the cool toys” to experiment with designs and materials.) When I started looking for a protective case for my MacBook Pro, I discovered that a few of my coworkers were part of the Bihn Army, and after some Tupperware-style evangelism I was convinced to buy a few items from the Bihn line-up: a backpack (used); then a messenger bag (new); then a mid-sized briefcase, used, which is now my portable filing cabinet. (Take this bias for what you will; I stuck with my previous messenger bag for more than a decade.) For a just-completed trip to Israel, which I couldn’t quite make in true one-bag travel fashion, I brought along one of the newest Bihn Bags — the Checkpoint Flyer — and found it to be worth its (considerable) price. Read on for my review.

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Comments Off on Traveling With Tom Bihn’s Checkpoint Flyer | tags: google, Mac, mobile | posted in technical news
Mar
13
2009
Penguinisto writes “According to CNET, Knowledge Ecology International’s FOIA request for information about ACTA was denied. ACTA is the pending copyright treaty believed to have been authored by lobbyists for the content cartels. Even stranger, the denial cited ‘national security reasons (PDF). While it is not unusual for the White House of any administration to block FOIA requests for national security reasons, one would think that a treaty affecting civil interests alone wouldn’t qualify for such secrecy. Not exactly sure what involvement the former RIAA mouthpiece Donald Verelli (a recent Obama pick for the DOJ) may have in this.” KEI is not alone; the European Parliament wants to see the ACTA documents too.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on FOIA Request For Pending Copyright Treaty Denied | tags: google, obama, security | posted in technical news
Mar
13
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Following the long-awaited release of FFmpeg 0.5, Phoronix has conducted an interview with three FFmpeg developers (Diego Biurrun, Baptiste Coudurier, and Robert Swain) about this project’s recent release. In this interview they talk about moving to a 3/6-month release cycle, the criteria for version 1.0, Blu-Ray support on Linux, OpenCL and GPGPU acceleration, multi-threading FFmpeg, video APIs, their own video codecs, and legal challenges they have run into.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on An Interview With the Developers of FFmpeg | tags: developer, google, linux, tv | posted in technical news
Mar
13
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Cyber Warfare is a hot topic these days. A major reorganization may be looming, but a critical component is a culture where technologists can thrive. Two recent articles address this subject. Lieutenant Colonel Greg Conti and Colonel Buck Surdu recently published an article in the latest DoD IA Newsletter stating that ‘The Army, Navy, and Air Force all maintain cyberwarfare components, but these organizations exist as ill-fitting appendages (PDF, pg. 14) that attempt to operate in inhospitable cultures where technical expertise is not recognized, cultivated, or completely understood.’ In his TaoSecurity Blog Richard Bejtlich added ‘When I left the Air Force in early 2001, I was the 31st of the last 32 eligible company grade officers in the Air Force Information Warfare Center to separate from the Air Force rather than take a new nontechnical assignment.’ So, Slashdot, how has the military treated you and your technical friends? What changes are needed?”

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Comments Off on How Do Militaries Treat Their Nerds? | tags: google, news, security | posted in technical news
Mar
13
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Researchers at the University of Miami and at the Universities of Tokyo and Tohoku, in Japan, have discovered a spin battery effect: the ability to store energy into the magnetic spin of a material and to later extract that energy as electricity, without a chemical reaction. The researchers have built an actual device to demonstrate the effect that has a diameter about that of a human hair. This is a potentially game-changing discovery that could affect battery and other technologies. Quoting: Although the actual device… cannot even light up an LED…, the energy that might be stored in this way could potentially run a car for miles. The possibilities are endless, Barnes said.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on "Spin Battery" Effect Discovered | tags: google, japan | posted in technical news
Mar
13
2009
“Liar liar, pants on fire!” One kid from Cincinnati won’t be able to listen to that one again after allegedly having an iPod touch actually set his pants on fire, resulting in melted underwear and second degree burns on his leg.
Comments Off on iPod touch—not lies—sets kid’s pants on fire | posted in technical news
Mar
13
2009
Apple is exploring the possibility of including a wireless “remote wand” with future versions of its Apple TV media system that would provide users with precise control over a cursor on the Apple TV screen in very much the same way a conventual mouse controls a cursor on a PC. It would also unlock three-dimensional controls similar to those offered
Comments Off on Apple exploring Magic Wand controller for next-gen Apple TV | tags: Apple, tv, wireless | posted in technical news
Mar
13
2009
Now that you can export and import email filters with Gmail, we’ve decided to compile some of our favorite filters for organizing your inbox into a single, handy download. Come and get it!
Comments Off on Ten Must-Have Gmail Filters Available for Download | tags: email, gmail | posted in technical news