Apr
10
2009
unr3a1 writes to tell us that Time Warner Cable has responded to the massive criticism of its new plan to cap user bandwidth with a new pricing model. Users will be given a grace period in which to assess their pricing tier. The “overages” will be noted on their bill, allowing them to change either their billing plan or their usage patterns. “On top of a 5, 10, 20, and 40-gigabyte (GB) caps, the company said this week that it would offer an additional 100GB tier for heavy users. Prices (so far) would range from .95 to .00 a month, with users charged an extra dollar for every GB more they download, although that charge is also capped at . An ‘unlimited’ bandwidth plan, therefore, tops out at 0.”

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Comments Off on Time Warner To Offer Unlimited Bandwidth For $150 | tags: cap, google | posted in technical news
Apr
10
2009
waderoush writes “At the CHI 2009 conference, which wrapped up yesterday in Boston, Microsoft researchers showed off two radical prototypes that push the boundaries of user interfaces. One was a ‘pseudo-transparent’ iPhone-like device called nanoTouch, which has a trackpad on the back rather than a traditional touch screen and gives visual feedback in the form of a simulated image of the user’s finger (the effect is like looking straight through the device). The other was a folding dual-screen device called Codex that can switch automatically between landscape, portrait, collaborative, or competitive modes depending on its ‘posture’ or orientation. If Microsoft doesn’t build such devices itself, ‘somebody else will, so it’s really important to understand what the issues are,’ said researcher Ken Hinckley.”

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Comments Off on Microsoft’s "Pseudo-Transparent" and Fold-Up PCs | tags: cap, google, iphone, microsoft, Phone | posted in technical news
Apr
10
2009
the_insult_dog writes “Computerworld has an article up (with videos) about some of the coolest Easter eggs and other software surprises, ranging from full-featured games to strange messages from robots. What other eggs are out there? What’s the coolest egg ever?”

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Comments Off on Best Easter Eggs and Other Software Surprises | tags: games, google, robot | posted in technical news
Apr
10
2009
Sweden’s tax authorities are cracking down on unreported webcam stripper income. They estimate that hundreds of Swedish women are dodging the law, resulting in a tax loss of about 40m Swedish kronor (£3.3m) annually. The search involves tax officials examining stripper websites, hours upon hours, for completely legitimate purposes. A slightly disheveled project leader said 200 Swedish strippers had been investigated so far, adding the total could be as much as 500. “They are young girls, we can see from the photos. We think that perhaps they are not well informed about the rules,” he said.

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Comments Off on Swedish Tax Office Targets Webcam Strippers | tags: google, news, web | posted in technical news
Apr
10
2009
palegray.net writes “Inspired by a recent Ask Slashdot, I’ve written a step-by-step tutorial for setting up an Openfire server on Debian Linux, for those interested in running their own open source collaboration server. Aimed at those just getting started with collaboration software, the tutorial shows precisely how to get Openfire up and running quickly on a base Debian install, and offers a basic feature tour of the software’s plugin and IM gateway functionality.”

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Comments Off on How To Build an Openfire Chat Server On Debian 5 | tags: google, linux, open source | posted in technical news
Apr
10
2009
aleph60 writes “A German researcher is about to resurrect the first fully electronic general-purpose stored-program computer, the Manchester Mark 1 (1948). The functional replica will run the source code of an original program from 1952 by Christopher Strachey, whose sole purpose was generating love letters; it is historically interesting as one of the first examples of a text-generating program. The installation will be shown at an art exhibition in Germany at the end of April.” Here is researcher David Link’s Manchester Mark I emulator home, which generates a new love poem on each page load. When the Mark I had been used to search for new Mersenne primes in 1949, a press account coined the phrase “electronic brain” to characterize it.

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Comments Off on Researcher Resurrects the First Computer | tags: developer, google, program | posted in technical news
Apr
10
2009
Comments Off on Berlusconi offers own homes to quake survivors – Reuters | tags: 3G, google, news, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
10
2009
Comments Off on Hostage captain recaptured by pirates after dramatic escape attempt – Times Online | tags: cap, google, news, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
10
2009
Comments Off on Thai protesters target Asia summit – Reuters | tags: google, news, security, tv, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
10
2009
bhodge writes “Aside from the obvious ‘it stops working’ answer, how does flash media — such as USB, SD, and CF — fail? Unlike with traditional hard drive, where anyone who’s worked with computers for a while knows what a drive failure looks like, I don’t know anyone who has experienced such a failure with flash. I’ve haven’t been able to find more than scant evidence of what such failures look like at the OS level. The one account I have found detailed using a small USB drive for /var/log storage; it failed very quickly, and then utterly (0 byte unformatted device), after five years of service in the role. This runs contrary to other anecdotal claims that you should still be able to read the media after you can no longer write to it. So my question is: what have you seen of the nature of flash media failure, if anything?”

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Comments Off on How Does Flash Media Fail? | tags: computers, google | posted in technical news