Mar
27
2009
cocoanaut writes “A new project launched by Google’s Python engineers could make the popular programming language five times faster. The project, which is called Unladen Swallow, seeks to replace the Python interpreter’s virtual machine with a new just-in-time (JIT) compilation engine that is built on LLVM. The first milestone release, which was announced at PyCon, already offers a 15-25% performance increase over the standard CPython implementation. The source code is available from the Google Code web site.”

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Comments Off on Project Aims For 5x Increase In Python Performance | tags: google, Mac, program, programming, web | posted in technical news
Mar
27
2009
snydeq writes to mention that a recent survey by KPMG shows that many people feel that out-of-work IT workers will be much more tempted to turn to criminal activities due to the down economy. This, coupled with an E-crime survey that shows fraud committed by managers, employees, and customers tripled between 2007 and 2008 paints an interesting picture. “In other survey results, 45 percent of respondents who handle critical national infrastructure said they are seeing an increase in the number of attacks on their systems. Fifty-one percent of respondents from the same category said the technical sophistication of those attacks is getting better. Sixty-eight percent said that of all kinds of malicious code they felt Trojan horse programs — ones that are designed to look harmless but can steal data along with other functions — had the most impact on their businesses. Rootkits are the next highest concern, followed by spyware, worms, viruses, mobile malicious code and, finally, adware.”

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Comments Off on More IT Pros Could Turn To E-Crime In Poor Economy | tags: google, mobile, program, virus | posted in technical news
Mar
27
2009
TechDirt is reporting that the ACLU has stepped in on behalf of several teens facing the threat of child pornography in Pennsylvania for sharing of nude pics of themselves. Unfortunately for a girl in New Jersey she is facing much more than just a threat as she was arrested yesterday for posting almost 30 explicit pictures of herself on MySpace for her boyfriend to see. “the ACLU has sued the prosecutor on the girls’ behalf, saying he shouldn’t have threatened them with baseless charges — which haven’t yet been filed — if they wouldn’t agree to probation and a counseling program. The prosecutor says he was being “proactive” in offering them a choice, but the ACLU says he shouldn’t be using “heavy artillery” to make the threats. As its attorney points out, teaching kids that this sort of behavior can bring all sorts of unwanted and unforeseen ramifications is a good idea, but threatening them with child-porn charges isn’t the best way to do it.”

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Comments Off on ACLU Sues Penn Prosecutor For Empty Threat of Child Porn | tags: google, myspace, news, program | posted in technical news
Mar
27
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Someone over at Redmond flipped the wrong switch, it would seem. Ars Technica spotted that the Windows 7 download page on TechNet had switched to say Release Candidate instead of Beta. It’s now back to Beta, but not before Ars got all the details off the page: ‘The public RC will apparently be coming in May 2009, and not in April as previously rumored. The RC testing program will be available at least through June 2009, and the actual build will expire June 1, 2010. Both 32-bit and 64-bit versions will be available in English, German, Japanese, French, and Spanish.’ A screenshot and all the text on the RC download page, which was set to be published ‘May 2009’ is saved over at Ars.”

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Comments Off on Windows 7 RC Download Page Points To May Release | tags: google, japan, japanese, program, redmond, windows 7 | posted in technical news
Mar
26
2009
There are tons of sites out there comparing other sorts of products. Affiliate programs have spawned so-called review websites, most of which simply rank the companies based on the payout. A new site, HostMonk, doesn’t.
Comments Off on Hosting Reviews Without The Monkey Business? | tags: program, web | posted in technical news
Mar
26
2009
Backed by the ACLU, a group of Pennsylvania parents is suing to block an enthusiastic DA who has threatened to file child porn charges against teen girls who appear semi-undressed in candid cell-phone photos—unless they agree to attend a five-week program on “what it means to be a girl in today’s society.”
Comments Off on Parents Fight Against "Sexting" Teens | tags: Phone, program, tv | posted in technical news
Mar
26
2009
Island Dog sends news that shortly after Valve showed off their new anti-piracy methods in Steamworks, Microsoft and Stardock were quick to demonstrate their new, similar technologies as well. All three companies are bending over backwards to say that this is not traditional DRM. Stardock (the company behind the Gamer’s Bill of Rights) calls their system Game Object Obfuscation (Goo), “a tool that allows developers to encapsulate their game executable into a container that includes the original executable plus Impulse Reactor, Stardock’s virtual platform, into a single encrypted file. When a player runs the game for the first time, the Goo’d program lets the user enter in their email address and serial number which associates their game to that person as opposed to a piece of hardware like most activation systems do. Once validated, the game never needs to connect to the Internet again.” Microsoft’s update to Games for Windows Live has similar protections. “You can sign in and play your game on as many systems as possible, but you have to have a license attached to your account. Of course, this only works for online games.”

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Comments Off on Stardock, Microsoft Unveil Their Own New Anti-Piracy Methods | tags: cap, developer, email, encrypted, games, google, microsoft, news, program | posted in technical news
Mar
25
2009
Pob in our analysis labs blogged earlier this week about a new variant of the RSPlug Trojan horse for Mac OS X that he had written protection against. One of the ways in which the OSX/RSPlug-F Mac Trojan horse is being distributed by hackers is in the form of a poisoned HDTV/DTV program called MacCinema.
Comments Off on Apple Mac malware: caught on camera | tags: Apple, Mac, malware, program, tv | posted in technical news
Mar
24
2009
LoneAdminOK writes “I started working for a small company in the middle of January as their IT Manager. I am the first actual ‘IT Guy’ that they have had; before me it was someone that performed another job within the company and just handled the IT on the side. The problem that I am running into is that most of the software I am finding on the network and on people’s computers isn’t owned by the company. The person before me would just get it from ‘somewhere’ and install it on the computers as needed. This is putting me in a bad position when I have to reinstall the program or find it to install on someone else’s computer. Often, I am telling people that we don’t have it or we have to buy another license, and they get mad at me because the other guy said that we had it. I can’t even tell where the versions of Windows Server that they are running came from. The only one I know is legit is the one that is installed on an HP server with the OEM sticker on it. How have any of you handled a situation like this? I don’t install ‘borrowed programs’ in a production environment because I know that if the BSA got wind of this, it would all fall on me when they stormed in.”

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Comments Off on How Do You Deal With Pirated Programs At Work? | tags: computers, google, network, program | posted in technical news
Mar
23
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Richard Stallman has published an article which warns about the ‘Javascript trap’ posed by non-free AJAX-based applications. The article calls for a mechanism which would enable browsers to identify freely-licensed Javascript applications and run modified version thereof. ‘It is possible to release a Javascript program as free software,’ Stallman writes. ‘But even if the program’s source is available, there is no easy way to run your modified version instead of the original … The effect is comparable to tivoization, although not quite so hard to overcome.'”

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Comments Off on Richard Stallman Warns About Non-Free Web Apps | tags: google, program, web | posted in technical news