Mar
6
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Wired has a story about Rob Spence, a Canadian filmmaker who plans to have a mini camera installed in his prosthetic eye. ‘A camera module will have to be connected to a transmitter inside the prosthetic eye that can broadcast the captured video footage. To boost the signal, he says he can wear another transmitter on his belt. A receiver attached to a hard drive in a backpack could capture that information and then send it to another device that uploads everything to a web site in real time. … Even though his project is still in its early stages, Spence says many people have already told him they wouldn’t be comfortable being filmed. “People are more scared of a center-left documentary maker with an eye than the 400 ways they are filmed every day at the school, the subway, the mall,” he says. He hopes he will help get people thinking about privacy, how surveillance cameras and the footage they record are being used and accessed.'” Spence runs a blog for the ‘Eyeborg Project,’ as he calls it, and has recently posted a video about the progress they’re making.

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Comments Off on Filmmaker Working On Eye-Socket Camera | tags: cap, google, privacy, web | posted in technical news
Mar
5
2009
Anyone who may have thought the death of Netscape would signal the end of the browser wars, boy were they mistaken. In fact, it could be argued that it was at that point it all began.
Comments Off on Browser Battle: Nine Browsers of Today and Tomorrow Compared | tags: cap | posted in technical news
Mar
5
2009
GamesIndustry is running an interview with Theodore Bergquist, CEO of GamersGate, in which he forecasts the death of physical game distribution in favor of digital methods, perhaps in only a few years. He says, “Look at the music industry, look at 2006 when iTunes went from not being in the top six of sellers — in the same year in December it was top three, and the following year number one. I think digital distribution is absolutely the biggest threat [traditional retailers] can ever have.” Rock, Paper, Shotgun spoke with Capcom’s Christian Svensson, who insists that developing digital distribution is one of their top priorities, saying Capcom will already “probably do as much digital selling as retail in the current climate.” How many of the games you acquire come on physical media these days? At what point will the ease of immediate downloads outweigh a manual and a box to stick on your shelf (if it doesn’t already)?

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Comments Off on How Much Longer Will Physical Game Distribution Survive? | tags: cap, games, google | posted in technical news
Mar
3
2009
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes “Jammie Thomas, the defendant in Duluth, Minnesota, RIAA case Capitol Records v. Thomas, has served her expert witness’s report. The 30-page document (PDF), prepared by Prof. Yongdae Kim of the Computer Science Department of the University of Minnesota, attacks the reports and testimony of Prof. Doug Jacobson, the RIAA’s expert, and the work of the RIAA’s investigator, Safenet (formerly known as MediaSentry). Among other things, Dr. Kim termed MediaSentry’s methods ‘highly suspect,’ debunked Dr. Jacobson’s ‘the internet is like a post office’ analogy, explained in detail how FastTrack works, explored a sampling of the types of attacks to which the defendant’s computer may have been subjected, accused Jacobson of making ‘numerous misstatements,’ and concluded that ‘there is not one but numerous possible explanations for the evidence presented during this trial. Throughout the report I demonstrate possibilities not considered by the plaintiff’s expert witness in his evaluation of the evidence…’ Additionally, he concluded, ‘MediaSentry has a strong record of mistakes when claiming that particular IP addresses were the origins of copyright infringement. Their lack of transparency, lack of external review, and evidence of inadequate error checking procedures [put] into question the authenticity and validity of the log files and screenshots they produced.'”

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Comments Off on MediaSentry & RIAA Expert Under Attack | tags: cap, google, news | posted in technical news
Mar
3
2009
waderoush writes “If you thought Mosaic was the first graphical Web browser, think again. In their first major interview, three of the four Finnish software engineers behind Erwise — a point-and-click graphical Web browser for the X Window system — describe the creation of their program in 1991-1992, a full year before Marc Andreessen’s Mosaic (which, of course, evolved into Netscape). Kim Nyberg, Kari Sydänmaanlakka, and Teemu Rantanen, with their fellow Helsinki University of Technology student Kati Borgers (nee Suominen), gave Erwise features such as text searching and the ability to load multiple Web pages that wouldn’t be seen in other browsers until much later. The three engineers, who today work for the architectural software firm Tekla, say they never commercialized the project because there was no financing — Finland was in a deep recession at the time and lacked a strong venture capital or angel investing market. Otherwise, the Web revolution might have begun a year earlier.”

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Comments Off on The Finns Who Invented the Graphical Browser | tags: cap, google, program, technology, web | posted in technical news
Mar
3
2009
If you frequently capture screenshots to add to your site or blog or to send to co-workers, here’s an app you’re sure to like! Screen Dash combines screenshot capturing, image-editing and paint tools, and instant image hosting, complete with HTML code for Web forums, for embedding, and for email. It is unmatched when it comes to instant hosting.
Comments Off on Amazing Photo Editing Tool, Great for Bloggers | tags: cap, email, web | posted in technical news
Mar
3
2009
Apple is poised to introduce new versions of its Time Capsule wireless backup appliance and AirPort Extreme 802.11n wireless routers, regulatory filings with the Federal Communications Commission reveal.
Comments Off on Apple ready with new Time Capsules, AirPort Extremes | tags: Apple, cap, wireless | posted in technical news
Mar
3
2009
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes “Lest there be any doubt that District Judge Michael J. Davis, presiding over the Duluth, Minnesota, case, Capitol Records v. Thomas, really does ‘get it’ about the toxic effect the RIAA, its lead henchman Matthew Oppenheim, and their lawyers have had on the judicial process, all such doubt should be removed by the order he just entered (PDF). It removes control of the decision-making process from the RIAA, Oppenheim, and the lawyers. In the order Judge Davis spells out, in the clearest possible terms so that there can be no misunderstanding, that at the extraordinary 2-day settlement conference he has scheduled for later this month, each record company plaintiff is ordered to produce an ‘officer’ of the corporation, or a ‘managing agent’ of the corporation, who has corporate, decision-making, ‘power.’ The judge makes it clear that no one who has ‘settlement authority’ with any limits or range attached to it will be acceptable. This means that ‘RIAA hitman’ Matthew Oppenheim will not be able to control the settlement process as he has been permitted by the Courts to do in the past.”

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Comments Off on Judge Orders Record Company Execs To Duluth | tags: cap, google, news | posted in technical news
Mar
2
2009
nandemoari writes “It seems the world’s most popular social networking site was just moments away from acquiring another — and few of us ever knew about it. A Facebook executive has revealed that a planned takeover of Twitter only fell apart because of a disagreement over stock valuations. Despite the rather miserable economy, Facebook is still looking to buy out other firms and says it could make a billion dollars a year from advertising. Peter Thiel, a venture capitalist who put up some of the money behind Facebook, discussed the deal in a Business Week interview. Thiel says the two sides agreed a 0 million purchase price and that Twitter would receive the payment in Facebook stock rather than cash — which is a common solution in large takeovers where there simply isn’t the money available for a buyout.”

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Comments Off on Facebook Nearly Added Twitter To Friends List | tags: cap, facebook, google, network, networking, news, twitter | posted in technical news
Mar
1
2009
ZosX writes “An article over at Popular Mechanics announces that, for the first time, solar cells have been manufactured for the much sought-after figure of /Watt. They also talk about a new study of the cost of the particular raw materials used in different manufacturing processes. The conclusion is that the company that just achieved the /W milestone, using cadmium telluride technology, may not prove to be the long-term winner capable of meeting demand when it rises into the terawatt range.”

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Comments Off on Solar Panels Reach $1 a Watt | tags: cap, google, mechanics, technology | posted in technical news