May
13
2009
destinyland writes “Want to build a robot this summer? ‘Robot-loving Japanese are tinkering with screwdrivers and motors instead of heading to the beach,’ and this article identifies the stores and sites serving robot hobbyists. Several sites are actually selling leftover industrial robots, but there’s a variety of smaller-size robot vendors, from Tokyo’s Vstone Robot Center to Carl’s Electronics in Oakland (which sells sound-activated ‘Hydradzoids’ and solar-powered robots that crawl). Hasbro even sells their own functioning R2-D2 droid with real sonar navigation and a ‘voice recognition response module.'”

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Comments Off on For Building DIY Droids, It Helps to Live In Japan | tags: japan, japanese, robot | posted in technical news
May
13
2009
Brad Wardell of Stardock and Ron Carmel of 2D Boy recently spoke with Gamasutra about their efforts to move the games industry away from restrictive DRM. Despite the fact that both have had their own troubles with piracy, they contend that overall piracy rates aren’t significantly affected by DRM — and that most companies know it. Instead, the two suggest that most DRM solutions are still around to hamper a few more specific situations. Quoting: “‘Publishers aren’t stupid. They know that DRM doesn’t work against piracy,’ Carmel explains. ‘What they’re trying to do is stop people from going to GameStop to buy games for , none of which goes into the publishers’ pockets. If DRM permits only a few installs, that minimizes the number of times a game can be resold.’ … ‘I believe their argument is that while DRM doesn’t work perfectly,’ says Wardell, ‘it does make it more difficult for someone to get the game for free in the first five or six days of its release. That’s when a lot of the sales take place and that’s when the royalties from the retailers are determined. Publishers would be very happy for a first week without “warez” copies circulating on the Web.'”

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Comments Off on Why Bother With DRM? | tags: games, web | posted in technical news
May
13
2009
Comments Off on Tearful Mulroney recalls pain of RCMP letter – Toronto Star | tags: google, Mac, network, news, tv | posted in technical news
May
13
2009
Comments Off on Dhalla abuse charges 'false' – Edmonton Sun | tags: google, news, tv | posted in technical news
May
13
2009
Comments Off on Riot police stand guard over Tamil protest – Globe and Mail | tags: google, news, youtube | posted in technical news
May
13
2009
No, what we have here is a failure to communicate. The Google Chrome blog wrote: “Our test team did a great job in qualifying two Stable updates and a Beta update this week, and we just didn’t have the bandwidth to push a Dev channel release.” A ZDNet writer took bandwidth to mean, well, bandwidth, and before you could say “huh?” the tale took off.



Comments Off on Google ran out of bandwidth? … Google? | tags: google | posted in technical news
May
13
2009
While anti-piracy company MediaDefender only got involved in hindering downloaders, BayTSP is the outfit that tracks file-sharers and sends infringement notices to ISPs. Using cumulative data from its entertainment industry clients, the company reveals which nation’s sharers get caught infringing the most.



Comments Off on BitTorrent: King of Copyright Infringements | posted in technical news
May
13
2009
Google Launches Search Options, Declares Real-Time Search Biggest Challenge



Comments Off on Google has just launched a new “search options” | tags: google | posted in technical news
May
13
2009
mjasay writes “Mozilla’s Asa Dotzler points to some interesting long-term trends in browser market share, noting that ‘browser releases aren’t having any major impact on the macro trends,’ which suggests that a better IE will likely have little impact on its sliding market share. The most intriguing conclusion from the data, however, is that Firefox could surpass IE market share as early as January 2013 if Firefox continues to gain 5 percent every year, even as IE drops 5 percent each year. In the past, Microsoft might have fought back by tying IE to other products to block competition, but with the EU keeping a close antitrust eye on Microsoft and the US Obama administration keen to make an example of an antitrust bully, Microsoft may have few good options beyond good old fashioned competition, which doesn’t seem to be working very well for the Redmond giant, as the market share data suggests. Microsoft’s loss of IE market power, in turn, could have serious consequences for the company’s efforts to compete with Google on the Web.”

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Comments Off on IE Losing 10% Market Share Every Two Years | tags: google, Mac, microsoft, obama, redmond, web | posted in technical news
May
13
2009
CWmike writes “Saying that its users are becoming increasingly sophisticated, Google has unveiled a list of new search technologies geared to help users ‘slice and dice’ their Google search results, along with a new tool to help them cull information instead of Web pages. Marissa Mayer, vice president of Google’s Search Products, said of Search Options in a blog post, ‘We have spent a lot of time looking at how we can better understand the wide range of information that’s on the Web and quickly connect people to just the nuggets they need at that moment.’ Google Squared, set to be released to users as part of its Google Labs program later this month, pulls up information from different sites and presents it in an organized manner.”

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Comments Off on Google Unveils Search Options and Google Squared | tags: google, program, web | posted in technical news