Jan
14
2009
Comments Off on TTC launches 'e-alerts' to help riders plan – Toronto Star | tags: email, google, network, news, tv | posted in technical news
Jan
14
2009
Comments Off on Read website terms carefully before hitting 'accept' button – Telegraph-Journal | tags: 3G, email, facebook, google, network, networking, news, privacy, web | posted in technical news
Jan
13
2009
Comments Off on Read website terms carefully before hitting 'accept' button – Telegraph-Journal | tags: email, facebook, google, network, networking, news, privacy, web | posted in technical news
Jan
13
2009
Comments Off on TTC To Launch Email Alerts Wednesday – blogTO | tags: email, google, network, news | posted in technical news
Jan
13
2009
CurtMonash writes “Much is being made of the deliberations as to whether President Obama will be able to keep using his beloved “BarackBerry.” As the NYTimes details, there are two major sets of objections: infosecurity and legal/records retention. Deven Coldeway of CrunchGear does a good job of showing that the technological infosecurity problems can be solved. And as I’ve noted elsewhere, the ‘Omigod, he left his Blackberry behind at dinner’ issue is absurd. Presidents are surrounded by attendants, Secret Service and otherwise. Somebody just has to be given the job of keeping track of the president’s personal communication device. As for the legal question of whether the president can afford to put things in writing that will likely be exposed by courts and archivists later — the answer to that surely depends on the subject matter or recipient. Email to his Chicago friends — why not? Anything he’d write to them would be necessarily non-secret anyway. Email to the Secretary of Defense? That might be a different matter.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Solving Obama’s BlackBerry Dilemma | tags: email, google, obama, security | posted in technical news
Jan
13
2009
 blogTO |
TTC To Launch Email Alerts WednesdayblogTO – 23 hours agoWe've just received news that the TTC plans to officially launch their "E-Alert subscription service" this Wednesday at 1pm during a news conference chaired by Adam Giambrone.
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Comments Off on TTC To Launch Email Alerts Wednesday – blogTO | tags: email, google, news | posted in technical news
Jan
13
2009
ubergamer1337 writes “Next semester I will be participating in a college study abroad program known as Semester at Sea. The gist of it is that over four months 600ish students sail around the world on a converted cruise ship, visiting diverse port cities while taking classes when we are between ports. Debates about its educational merit aside, my internet options while I will be at sea will be severely limited. We get just 100 minutes of internet access for the entire voyage, and once thats gone the only internet access we have is a university email address, which is limited to messages under a megabyte with no attachments. I have been pondering different ways to staying in contact with friends and family back at home without running to an internet cafe in every port, and I have already decided that I want to set up a blog that can be updated by email, but I wanted to ask the collective wisdom of Slashdot if anyone knows of any other ways to transmit more then just your standard message through email. Some things I would be particularity interested in being able to figure out would be a way to send photos (encode them as text?), and a way to get Wikipedia pages etc. emailed to me.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Internet Communications While At Sea? | tags: email, google, program, wikipedia | posted in technical news
Jan
13
2009
Comments Off on TTC To Launch Email Alerts Wednesday – blogTO | tags: email, google, network, news | posted in technical news
Jan
13
2009
Comments Off on Review: Palm's Versatile, Inexpensive New Centro Smartphone – FOXNews | tags: developer, email, google, news, Phone | posted in technical news
Jan
13
2009
r2k writes “Apple’s iTunes Plus files are DRM-free, but sharing the files on P2P networks may be an extremely bad idea. A report published by CNet highlights the fact that the account information and email address of the iTunes account holder is hidden inside each and every DRM-free download. I checked, and I found I couldn’t access the information using an ID3 tag editor, but using Notepad I found my email address stored inside the audio file itself.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on iTunes DRM-Free Files Contain Personal Info | tags: Apple, email, google, network | posted in technical news