Apr 3 2009

Trick Used To Pass French "Three Strikes"

Glyn Moody writes “France’s ‘Loi Hadopi’ — better known as ‘three strikes and you’re out’ — was passed by the National Assembly late last night when only 16 deputies were present (the vote was 12 in favor, 4 against). Most politicians had left because it was expected that the vote would take place next week. In this way, President Sarkozy has sneaked his controversial legislation through the French parliament — and shown his contempt for the democratic process. So now what?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Apr 3 2009

How vulnerable are the iPhone and BlackBerry? VERY!

This week brings the CTIA wireless powwow and a bevy of new (mostly smart) phones. Palm’s Pre is on the runway. HTC is launching new Google Android phones (and ads to go with them). Nokia is paying attention to the U.S. again with a thin smartphone. And even Motorola has a phone that looks pretty good.

Share

Apr 3 2009

Angry villagers run Google Street View car out of town

A Google Street View car was taking photographs of Broughton, Buckinghamshire when it was spotted by a local resident. Worried it would help burglars in the area, he warned the car not to enter his village then roused his neighbours, who angrily surrounded the vehicle (with pitchforks?) until it swung a U-turn and fled.

Share

Apr 3 2009

New Entrant In the Race For Wafer-Thin Speakers

Smivs notes another technology aiming to become the ubiquitous flat, flexible loudspeaker in public and private spaces. This one comes out of the University of Warwick, in the UK, and may reach the market before year’s end. We’ve discussed other attempts on this problem over the years, including a touch-sensitive display that is also a speaker, and an approach based on nanotubes. “The arrangement also allows for highly directional and accurate sound, say the researchers. The speakers would be ideal in public places such as passenger terminals since the sound quality does not deteriorate as much as conventional speakers… The flat speakers are relatively inexpensive to manufacture, say the researchers, and can be printed with design or concealed inside ceilings.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Apr 3 2009

IBM About To Buy Sun For $7 Billion

plasticsquirrel was one of several readers to send in the sharpening rumors that IBM is on the verge of acquiring Sun Microsystems, as we discussed last week. The pricetag is reportedly billion. According to the NYTimes’s sources, “People familiar with the negotiations say a final agreement could be announced Friday, although it is more likely to be made public next week. IBM’s board has already approved the deal, they said.” After the demise of SGI, one has to wonder about the future of traditional Unix. If the deal goes through, only IBM, HP, and Fujitsu will be left as major competitors in the market for commercial Unix. And reader UnanimousCoward adds, “Sun only came into the consciousness of the unwashed masses with the company not being able to get E10K’s out the door fast enough in the first bubble. We here will remember some pizza-box looking thing, establishing 32 MB of RAM as a standard, and when those masses were scratching their heads at slogans like ‘The Network is the Computer.’ Add your favorite Sun anecdote here.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Apr 3 2009

Quantum Setback For Warp Drives

KentuckyFC writes “Warp drives were generally considered impossible by mainstream scientists until 1994 when the physicist Michael Alcubierre worked out how to build a faster-than-light drive using the principles of general relativity. His thinking was that while relativity prevents faster-than-light travel relative to the fabric of spacetime, it places no restriction on the speed at which regions of spacetime may move relative to each other. So a small bubble of spacetime containing a spacecraft could travel faster than the speed of light, at least in principle. But one unanswered question was what happens to the bubble when quantum mechanics is taken into account. Now, a team of physicists have worked it out, and it’s bad news: the bubble becomes unstable at superluminal speeds, making warp drives impossible (probably).”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Apr 3 2009

Preston Responds On ICANN CyberSafety Constituency

An anonymous reader writes “After coverage here on Slashdot and elsewhere, Cheryl Preston has responded. She says that ‘some netizens have missed the mark by turning the rather hum-drum constituency formation issue into a rash of (admittedly sometimes quite humorous) charges, allegations, and ad hominem attacks. I can only wish that I had control of some global Mormon conspiracy network, that this were a money-making proposition, and that my powers of persuasion could possibly move ICANN to adopt a content regulatory system…in reality, the CyberSafety constituency is interested in many current GNSO issues, such as Fast Flux Hosting (FFH); the development of a Registrants’ Rights Charter; the gathering of identity information on WHOIS; and public order issues with the granting of new Top Level Domain names, to name a few.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Apr 3 2009

Gmail Marks Five Years In Beta

TrekkieTechie writes “Though in fact the big day was April 1st, Google celebrated the five-year anniversary of the popular online email service Gmail with a post on the service’s blog, saying ‘we want to give a big thank you to all of you who use Gmail every day, to those who’ve been around since the beginning, to those who were using an AJAX app before the term AJAX was popular, to those who started chatting right in your email … we couldn’t have gotten here without you.’ The milestone has also prompted speculation about when, if ever, Gmail will lose its beta status, and Ars Technica recently sat down with Todd Jackson, Gmail’s Project Manager, to discuss the reasoning behind that nagging beta label.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Apr 3 2009

Google uncloaks once-secret server

Unusually, the search giant designs its own servers. For the first time, Google unveils one publicly, showing a surprise built-in battery.

Share

Apr 3 2009

Sources: Google In Late Stage Talks To Acquire Twitter

Here’s a heck of a rumor that we’ve sourced from two separate people close to the negotiations: Google is in late stage negotiations to acquire Twitter. We don’t know the price but can assume its well, well north of the 0 million valuation that they saw in their recent funding.

Share