Apr 7 2009

Konami Announces a Game Based On A 2004 Battle In Fallujah

The LA Times reports that Konami has announced Six Days in Fallujah, a video game due out next year that is based on an actual battle fought in Iraq in 2004. Quoting: “The idea for the game … came from US Marines who returned from the battle with video, photos and diaries of their experiences. Instead of dialing up Steven Spielberg to make a movie version of their stories, they turned to Atomic Games, a company in Raleigh, NC, that makes combat simulation software for the military. … ‘The soldiers wanted to tell their stories through a game because that’s what they grew up playing,’ said John Choon, senior brand manager for the game at Konami… More than a dozen Marines are featured in documentary-style video interviews that are interspersed with the game’s action. The Marines reappear in the game itself, doing pretty much what they did during the war. One tells the story of how he furiously wrote a letter to his wife and begged a chaplain to give it to her if he died. Another, Eddie Garcia, talks about how his right leg was shredded in a mortar attack, and how he suffered survivor’s guilt after he was taken out of combat.”

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Apr 7 2009

New Fundamental Law of Network Economics

intersys writes “A new fundamental law of economics has been formulated by Rod Beckstrom, former Director of the National Cyber Security Center. In Words: The value of a network equals the net value added to each user’s transactions (PDF) conducted through that network, valued from the perspective of each user, and summed for all. It answers the decades-old question of ‘how valuable is a network.’ It is granular and transactions-based, and can be used to value any network: social, electronic, support groups, and even the Internet as a whole. This new model or law values the network by looking from the edge of the network at all of the transactions conducted and the value added to each. One way to contemplate the value the network adds to each transaction is to imagine the network being shut off and what the additional transactions’ costs or loss would be. Beckstrom’s Law replaces Metcalfe’s law, Reed’s law, and other concepts which proposed that the value of a network was based purely on the size of the network (and in the case of Metcalfe’s law, one other variable).”

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Apr 7 2009

XP Reprieve, Downgrade May Continue After Win7

CWmike writes “Gregg Keizer reports that Microsoft acknowledged today it has ‘broadened the options’ for PC makers to continue offering Windows XP as a downgrade from Vista — and potentially even Windows 7. However, the company would not confirm specific reports that HP has been given the green light to sell new PCs with Windows XP Pro pre-installed through the end of April 2010. ‘Windows XP went into semi-retirement in June 2008, when Microsoft stopped selling it at retail and withdrew Windows XP Home from use on all but netbooks, though it allowed XP Professional to be installed as a Vista downgrade. Since then, Microsoft has extended the final date it will sell XP Professional install media to large computer makers and smaller systems builders to July 31, 2009, and May 30, 2009, respectively. Today, Microsoft denied that it had extended the life span of Windows XP, and intimated that those rights were built into the newer operating system — in this case, Vista — and did not expire at some arbitrary date.'”

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Apr 7 2009

Australia To Build Fiber-To-the-Premises Network

candiman writes “The Australian PM, Kevin Rudd, has just announced that none of the private sector submissions to build a National Broadband Network was up to the standard, so instead the government is going to form a private company to build a fiber to the premises network. The network will connect to 90% of premises delivering 100Mb/s. The remaining 10% will be reached with wireless and satellite delivering up to 12Mb/s. The network cost has been estimated at 43 billion AU dollars over 8 years of construction — and is expected to employ 47,000 people at peak. It will be wholesale only and completely open access. As an Australian who voted for the other guys, all I can say is, wow.”

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Apr 7 2009

Internal Instant Messaging Client / Server Combo?

strongmantim writes “I manage an internal help desk (25-30 people) for a medium-large company in the healthcare industry. We’re looking for an internal, secure, FOSS (if possible) instant messaging / presence awareness client and server combo. Transmission of Protected Health Information is a sensitive issue, so the server has to be able to log any conversations that occur. It is preferred that the client not support outside protocols such as AIM, MSN, Yahoo, etc.; if it does, I will have to promulgate and enforce yet one more policy that my techs not connect to them. All of the computers that will connect run Windows XP. The system should be scalable up to ~100 people (in case we decide to include our entire office in the roll-out). Hardware and OS for the server are not an issue. Oh, and one more thing: It has to be free. Suggestions?”

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Apr 6 2009

Microsoft Boasts 96% Netbook Penetration

An anonymous reader writes “Citing figures from market research firm NPD, Microsoft says Windows’ share of the US netbook market has ballooned from less than 10% in the first half of 2008 to 96% as of February. ‘The growth of Windows on netbook PCs over the last year has been phenomenal,’ wrote Brandon LeBlanc, Microsoft’s in-house Windows blogger, in a post Friday. Information Week author Paul McDougall notes Microsoft’s 8% decline in Windows sales is due to netbooks sporting Linux. How does Redmond make an 80% gain in netbook market share without the sales numbers reflecting that gain?”

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Apr 6 2009

Fonera 2 To Launch With Extended Functionality

The next installment in the Fonera router family is set to make its debut in a couple of weeks, and the additions to the hardware are relatively impressive. Promising full support for networked storage, automatic downloads, sharing of a USB 3G connection, and a few other perks in addition to the normal range of functionality found in the Fonera routers this package packs quite a punch. “Like the original Fonera and Fonera+ routers, the principals of this hippie-love-in-styled product still apply. You buy the router and hook it up to your internet connection as normal. The trick is that the router shares a part of your bandwidth on a public-facing connection. Other Fon owners can log in and use this public network for free. In turn, you — as a Fonera owner — can travel the world and use other Fon hotspots. It’s a neat idea and everybody wins, except the money-grabbing telcos.”

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Apr 6 2009

Google’s interest in Twitter: consciousness search

Why would Google want to buy Twitter? They have yet to properly monetize Youtube, another company they’ve purchased for what some think was way over value. It is all about the consciousness search.

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Apr 6 2009

Google Chrome on Linux is Coming! (Screenshots!)

Screenshots of the pre-alpha builds of Google Chrome

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Apr 6 2009

Sony Pictures in Talks With YouTube

CNet is reporting that Sony Pictures may be in talks with YouTube to license full length movies to the video sharing site. Set to post nearly a half a billion dollars in losses this year, YouTube could certainly use some juice to combat sites like NBC-owned Hulu which already has an array of movies for streaming. “sources familiar with the negotiations told CNET News. Details about what a final agreement could look like are sparse, but any partnership between the two powerhouses would likely benefit both. Representatives from both companies declined to comment. Word of the negotiations comes a week after Disney announced it had licensed short-form content to YouTube. Those clips will come from a range of Disney brands, including ABC and ESPN. For YouTube, obtaining short-form clips from Disney is an important step but still doesn’t provide what YouTube needs most.”

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