May
10
2009
bsharma writes to let us know about a little goodie that we will be able to buy starting May 17: a battery-powered, rechargeable, cellular, Wi-Fi hot spot that you can put in your pocket. “What if you had a personal Wi-Fi bubble, a private hot spot, that followed you everywhere you go? Incredibly, there is such a thing. It’s the Novatel MiFi 2200, available from Verizon starting in mid-May (0 with two-year contract, after rebate). It’s a little wisp of a thing, like a triple-thick credit card. It has one power button, one status light and a swappable battery that looks like the one in a cellphone. When you turn on your MiFi and wait 30 seconds, it provides a personal, portable, powerful, password-protected wireless hot spot. … If you just want to do e-mail and the Web, you pay a month for the service (250 megabytes of data transfer, 10 cents a megabyte above that). If you watch videos and shuttle a lot of big files, opt for the plan (5 gigabytes). And if you don’t travel incessantly, the best deal may be the one-day pass: for 24 hours, only when you need it. In that case, the MiFi itself costs 0.” The device has its Wi-Fi password printed on the bottom, so you can invite someone to join your network simply by showing it to them.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Comments Off on Mobile Wi-Fi Hot Spot | tags: mobile, network, Phone, web, wireless | posted in technical news
May
10
2009
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes “Based upon a quick examination of the records in PACER, I detected 62 new cases brought by the RIAA against individuals in the month of April alone. In December, 2008, the RIAA had represented to Congress that they had ‘discontinued initiating new lawsuits in August [2008].'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Comments Off on RIAA Filed 62 New Cases In April Alone | tags: news | posted in technical news
May
10
2009
Comments Off on Pakistanis flee offensive, US sees fresh resolve – Reuters | tags: google, news, youtube | posted in technical news
May
10
2009
Comments Off on Dhalla Not A Target: Conservative Minister – CityNews | tags: google, news | posted in technical news
May
10
2009
Comments Off on Dhalla abuse charges 'false' – Edmonton Sun | tags: google, news, tv | posted in technical news
May
10
2009
Windows 7 has been making headlines for a few months now. If you’ve read one or two of the stories and reviews dedicated to it, you might think that you know about all that it contains: new touchscreen features, a revamped taskbar with larger thumbnail previews, Internet Explorer 8, easier networking and so on. While that sounds reasonable enough



Comments Off on 15 Things You Need To Know About Windows 7 | tags: network, networking, windows 7 | posted in technical news
May
10
2009
Here are 10 apps that pack a lot of greatness into very little space.



Comments Off on Top 10 Tiny & Awesome Windows Utilities 2009 | posted in technical news
May
10
2009
Pierre Beteille, a talented French artist, creates remarkable images by digitally modifying his self-portraits in Adobe Photoshop.



Comments Off on Wonderful Photo Manipulations [PIC] | posted in technical news
May
10
2009
T-1000, appropriately enough, lets us know about a California initiative to compile open source science and math textbooks for the state, in the hopes of saving money. The effort is spearheaded by Gov. Schwarzenegger. “The effort seems very promising, but the state’s complex standards and arduous textbook evaluation process will pose major challenges. … The governator will surely be able to stop the digital textbooks from gaining sentience and subjugating humanity, but there are trickier challenges that will be even tougher to defeat than the impending Skynet apocalypse. Textbooks are a surprisingly controversial issue in California and there is a lot of political baggage and bureaucratic red tape that will make an open source textbook plan especially troublesome. … [T]he traditional wiki approach is untenable for California teaching material. Individual changes to textbooks can become a source of fierce debate and there are a multitude of special interest groups battling over what the textbooks should say and how they should say it. It would take the concept of Wikipedia edit wars to a whole new level.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Comments Off on Open Source Textbooks For California | tags: news, open source, wikipedia | posted in technical news
May
10
2009
Village Idiot sends word of a patent granted to MIT researchers for a cone of silence a la Maxwell Smart. This one doesn’t use plastic, but rather active and networked sensors and speakers embedded in a (probably indoor) space such as an open-plan office. “In “Get Smart” secret agents wanting a private conversation would deploy the ‘cone of silence,’ a clear plastic contraption lowered over the agents’ heads. It never worked — they couldn’t hear each other, while eavesdroppers could pick up every word. Now a modern cone of silence that we are assured will work is being patented by engineers Joe Paradiso and Yasuhiro Ono of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. … Instead of plastic domes, they use a sensor network to work out where potential eavesdroppers are, and speakers to generate a subtle masking sound at just the right level. … The array of speakers… aims a mix of white noise and randomized office hubbub at the eavesdroppers. The subtle, confusing sound makes the conversation unintelligible.” One comment thread on the article wonders about the propriety of tracking people around an office in order to preserve privacy.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Comments Off on Cone of Silence 2.0 | tags: Intel, network, privacy, technology | posted in technical news