May
6
2009
Comments Off on Canada won't let seal ban 'contaminate' free trade talks – Calgary Herald | tags: google, Mac, news, tv | posted in technical news
May
6
2009
Comments Off on US Presses Visiting Pakistani Leader on Taliban Threat – New York Times | tags: google, news, obama, youtube | posted in technical news
May
6
2009
A key goal of every IT department is to reduce the time and effort needed to deliver value to the business. Agile practices enable teams to build less, but return the same value by focusing on early delivery of the features that have the highest business value and not wasting money on the features that don’t…



Comments Off on Agility! An Approach to Fight Global Recession | posted in technical news
May
6
2009
theodp writes with news that details for the Kindle DX are now available. “Specs-wise, the big changes are a larger 9.7-inch screen that rotates to landscape display, a PDF reader, and more storage space. The Kindle DX carries a 9 price tag (compared to the 9 Kindle 2).” Engadget has a series of pictures from Jeff Bezos’ presentation, and the Amazon product information page has further details and a video. According to the press release, Amazon has worked out a deal with The New York Times, The Boston Globe, and The Washington Post to “offer the Kindle DX at a reduced price to readers who live in areas where home-delivery is not available.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Comments Off on Amazon Kindle DX Details Revealed | tags: amazon, kindle, news | posted in technical news
May
6
2009
coondoggie writes “The Federal Trade Commission and Distributed Computing Industry Association locked horns over a proposed law that would govern how peer-to-peer networking technology would be used and regulated. Before the Subcommittee on Commerce, Trade, and Consumer Protection, the Federal Trade Commission expressed its doubts about companies protecting sensitive consumer information (PDF) or sensitive data over P2P internet file-sharing networks. It doesn’t help the P2P cause that the technology continues to pop up in bad practices. Recently a company that monitors peer-to-peer networks said it found classified information about the systems used onboard the president’s helicopter in a shared folder on a computer in Iran, after a file containing the data was accidentally leaked on a peer-to-peer network last summer. Meanwhile the DCIA said any laws would likely be ineffective and stifle the business opportunities P2P can generate.” An article on CNet points out that the wording of the bill would make it apply to just about everything related to communications on the internet.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Comments Off on Proposed Peer-To-Peer Law Sparks Animosity | tags: network, networking, technology | posted in technical news
May
6
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Evidence has been growing that Apple is developing a new gaming console. Now, there are some possible details about how a combined media/game console might work, based on patent applications filed by Apple in late 2007 and early 2008. Here is some what we can look for: having your personal music integrated into a title, a ‘natural’ gesture multitouch interface, and a single online store that sells games, media, and video.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Comments Off on Apple Racks Up the Gaming Patents | tags: Apple, games | posted in technical news
May
6
2009
Frequent Slashdot contributor Bennett Haselton writes with his idea for mass adoption of anti-virus software: “If the US government did more to encourage people to keep their computers secure — by buying TV ads to publicize free private-sector anti-virus programs, or subsidizing the purchase of anti-virus software — we’d all be better off, on average. That’s not just idealistic nanny-statism, but something you can argue mathematically, to the point where even some libertarians would agree.” Read on for the rest of Bennett’s thoughts.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Comments Off on Let Big Brother Hawk Anti-Virus Software | tags: computers, program, tv, virus | posted in technical news
May
6
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Viviane Reding, Information Society Commissioner of the European Union, is calling for the United States to hand over control of ICANN (Internet Corporation For Assigned Names and Numbers). She said that the organization running ICANN needs be free of control by a single nation, and rather controlled by a private entity and governed by multiple nations. ICANN, headquartered in Marina Del Rey, California, was created in 1998 to oversee a number of Internet related tasks. Reding said, ‘In the long run, it is not defendable that the government department of only one country has oversight of an internet function which is used by hundreds of millions of people in countries all over the world.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Comments Off on European Union Asks US To Free ICANN | posted in technical news
May
6
2009
narramissic writes “Microsoft has identified 12 application types that won’t be accepted at the MarketPlace for Mobile store. Among them: VoIP apps, programs that are larger than 10MB, and programs that change the default browser on a device. Overly restrictive? Maybe. But perhaps the clear set of rules (PDF) will prevent confusion similar to what’s been encountered over Apple’s policy for approving or rejecting applications from the App Store.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Comments Off on Microsoft Bans VoIP, Rival Stores At Mobile Market | tags: Apple, microsoft, mobile, program | posted in technical news
May
6
2009
Comments Off on Canadians released from quarantine in China – CTV.ca | tags: china, chinese, google, news, tv, virus | posted in technical news