Mar
8
2009
David Gerard writes “iPhone development sounds closed-shop but simple — apply to be a developer, put application on the App Store, you and Apple make money. Except Apple can’t keep up with the request load — whereas getting a developer contract used to take a couple of days, it’s now taking months. Some early developers’ contracts are expiring with no notice of renewal options. And Apple has no idea what’s going on or the state of things. If you want to maintain a completely closed system, it helps if you can actually keep up with it.” Reader h11:6 points out news of a recent study which suggests that “Android’s open source nature will give it a boost over Apple’s iPhone,” and thus take the lead in sales as soon as three years from now. It will be interesting to see how they deal with the flood of proposed apps as their popularity rises.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Apple’s iPhone Developer Crisis | tags: Apple, developer, google, iphone, news, open source, Phone | posted in technical news
Mar
8
2009
Tom Brearley and David Somers are the 19-year-old developers behind Twitterfall, one of the hottest Twitter tools on the web.
Comments Off on Twitterfall: a Google for the Twitterverse | tags: developer, google, twitter, web | posted in technical news
Mar
8
2009
Tom Brearley and David Somers are the 19-year-old developers behind Twitterfall, one of the hottest Twitter tools on the web.
Comments Off on Twitterfall: a Google for the Twitterverse | tags: developer, google, twitter, web | posted in technical news
Mar
8
2009
thefickler writes “Gone are the days when governments could easily hide top secret bases. These days it’s a weekend pastime to see who can find top secret facilities using Google Earth. Now it’s the UK government’s turn to be outraged after a secret facility was revealed by a British tabloid. The facility is said to be located in Faslane on the River Clyde in Scotland. This nuclear base was previously blurred out by the request of the British Government. However, with the latest update provided via Google Earth, many of the blurred out locations were accidentally revealed.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Google Earth Uncovers Secret UK Nuke Base | tags: google | posted in technical news
Mar
8
2009
thefickler writes “Gone are the days when governments could easily hide top secret bases. These days it’s a weekend pastime to see who can find top secret facilities using Google Earth. Now it’s the UK government’s turn to be outraged after a secret facility was revealed by a British tabloid. The facility is said to be located in Faslane on the River Clyde in Scotland. This nuclear base was previously blurred out by the request of the British Government. However, with the latest update provided via Google Earth, many of the blurred out locations were accidentally revealed.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Google Earth Uncovers Secret UK Nuke Base | tags: google | posted in technical news
Mar
8
2009
SmugJerk writes “Authorities are continuing to apply pressure on Sweden’s filesharing community amid the trial of several principals of The Pirate Bay filesharing site. Today they seized a fileserver containing about 65 terabytes of files, corresponding to around 16,000 full-length movies.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Big Swedish Filesharing Server Seized | tags: google, pirate bay | posted in technical news
Mar
8
2009
SmugJerk writes “Authorities are continuing to apply pressure on Sweden’s filesharing community amid the trial of several principals of The Pirate Bay filesharing site. Today they seized a fileserver containing about 65 terabytes of files, corresponding to around 16,000 full-length movies.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Big Swedish Filesharing Server Seized | tags: google, pirate bay | posted in technical news
Mar
8
2009
In an apparent privacy error that underscores some of the biggest problems surrounding cloud-based services, we’re hearing that Google has sent a notice to a number of users of its Document and Spreadsheets products stating that it may have inadvertently shared some of their documents with contacts who were never granted access to them.
Comments Off on Google Privacy Blunder Shares Your Docs Without Permission | tags: google, privacy | posted in technical news
Mar
8
2009
An anonymous reader writes “The UK government, backed by a bunch of charities that raise funds for research into cancer, heart disease and diabetes, has launched an advertising campaign that links the ‘inactive’ or passive gaming lifestyle with death and illness. It’s part of a bigger ‘Change4Life’ campaign that has also linked playing games with making children obese. The new ads show a young child playing a PlayStation game, with the caption ‘Risk an early DEATH, just do nothing.’ To say this has annoyed the UK games industry would be a grave understatement. Trade association ELSPA has already called an urgent meeting with authorities to have the ads pulled, and trade magazine MCV has complained to the country’s Advertising Standards Authority as well. As MCV Associate Editor Tim Ingham says in an impassioned opinion piece, ‘Change4Life’s advertising campaign makes a mockery of everything the industry has achieved in the last decade.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on UK Government Ads Link Games With "Early Death" | tags: cap, games, google, playstation | posted in technical news
Mar
8
2009
arcticstoat writes with a snippet from bit-tech.com; musician Matthew Applegate “plans on assembling a virtual orchestra of 20 retired relics of computing at the National Museum of Computing at Bletchley Park. The choice of venue will even allow Applegate to feature the infamous Colossus Mark 2 computer in the event, which was used for code-breaking in World War II and was recently reconstructed at Bletchley Park in 2007. … A wide selection of computing fossils be used in Applegate’s final musical presentation, which is called ‘Obsolete?’ This includes the Elliot 803 (a 1960s machine with 4KB of memory), the aforementioned Colossus Mark 2, a Bunsviga adding machine (pictured) and a punch card machine. As well as this, there are also some machines that will look nostalgically familiar to kids who grew up with the home computer generation, including a BBC Micro, an Atari 800XL, a Dragon 32 and an Amstrad CPC464.” The article’s list of the members of this “orchestra” makes an interesting checklist of computer hardware history.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Old Computers Resurrected As Instruments At Bletchley Park | tags: Apple, computers, google, Mac | posted in technical news