Apr 7 2009

Obama Administration Defends Warrantless Wiretapping

a whoabot writes “The San Francisco Chronicle reports that the Obama administration has stepped in to defend AT&T in the case over their participation in the warrantless wiretapping program started by Bush. The Obama administration argues that that continuation of the case will lead to the disclosure of important ‘state secrets.’ The Electronic Frontier Foundation has described the action as an ’embrace’ of the Bush policy.” Update: 04/07 15:18 GMT by T : Glenn Greenwald of Salon has up an analysis of this move, including excerpts from the actual brief filed. Excerpt: “This brief and this case are exclusively the Obama DOJ’s, and the ample time that elapsed — almost three full months — makes clear that it was fully considered by Obama officials.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Apr 6 2009

25 Useful Blogs for Web Design and Development

These are daily updated and cover a wide range of topics including inspiration, design trends, tutorials, interviews, website showcase, programming techniques and resources.

Share

Apr 4 2009

Second Circuit Expands Trademark Rights, Restricts Consumer

In a what could be a potentially serious blow to Google’s AdWords business, and to consumers’ ability to find information about competing offerings on the Internet, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals ruled today that a trademark owner can sue Google for trademark infringement for selling its mark as a keyword as part of the AdWords program.

Share

Apr 4 2009

The Eight Levels of Programmers

Have you ever gotten that classic job interview question, “where do you see yourself in five years?” When asked, I’m always mentally transported back to a certain Twisted Sister video from 1984.

Share

Apr 4 2009

No More OpenMoko Phone

TuxMobil writes “Bad news for FreeRunner fans: development of the first Open Source smartphone will be discontinued. (English translation via Google) OpenMoko executive director Sean Moss-Pulz said at OpenExpo in Bern (Switzerland) that the number of staffers will be reduced to be able to stay in business. OpenMoko had high intentions: the offspring from Taiwanese electronic manufacturer First International Computer (FIC) wanted to produce an Open Source smartphone. Not only with Open Source software pre-installed, but with free drivers and open specifications of the hardware components. This would give programmers as well as users complete freedom. Up to now the manufacturer has produced two models, the first has sold 3,000 units and the second one 10,000. Both models were targeted primarily to developers. From the beginning, OpenMoko had to fight with different problems. The smartphones came onto the market after a huge delay. Some phones came with construction defects. Also, changes in the team slowed down the development. Software development for the current smartphone will be continued but with fewer resources, Moss-Pultz said. He still hopes the community will support the FreeRunner.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Apr 3 2009

First Look At Fedora 11 Beta Release

Ars Technica has a first look at the latest beta release from the Fedora universe and it has several new shiny-bits including kernel modesetting, ext4, and faster boot times. “Fedora 11, which is codenamed Leonidas, is scheduled for final release at the end of May. It will include several new features and noteworthy improvements, such as RPM 4.7, which will reduce the memory consumption of complex package activity, tighter integration of PackageKit, faster boot time with a target goal of 20 seconds, and reduced power consumption thanks to a major tuning effort. This version of Fedora will ship with the latest version of many popular open source software programs, including GNOME 2.26, KDE 4.2, and Xfce 4.6. This will also be the first Fedora release — and possibly the first mainstream distro release — to use the new Ext4 filesystem by default.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Apr 2 2009

Latest iPhone Developer Agreement Bans Jailbreaks

The “iPhone Developer Program License Agreement” governs what iPhone developers can and cannot do. Now, jailbreaking, assisting in jailbreaking, and developing and distributing jailbreak apps are among the things that the latest revision of that agreement does not condone.

Share

Apr 2 2009

Time Warner Expanding Internet Transfer Caps To New Markets

Akido37 writes “Time Warner Cable is expanding its transfer capping program to new markets in Rochester, NY, Austin, TX, San Antonio, TX, and Greensboro, NC. It seems they have been testing plans with 5, 10, 20, or 40GB of data transfer per month, with prices ranging from to a month. BusinessWeek quotes Time Warner Cable CEO Glenn Britt saying, ‘We need a viable model to be able to support the infrastructure of the broadband business … We made a mistake early on by not defining our business based on the consumption dimension.’ Ars Technica adds, ‘The BusinessWeek article notes that only 14 percent of users in TWC’s trial city of Beaumont, Texas even exceeded their caps at all. My own recent conversations with other major ISPs suggest that the average broadband user only pulls down 2-6GB of data per month as it is. One the one hand, this suggests that caps don’t really bother most people; on the other, it indicates that low cap levels aren’t needed to keep traffic ‘reasonable’ since it’s actually quite low to begin with.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Apr 1 2009

TiVo Announces DVR-SuperAdvance

mark0 writes “TiVo has announced the TiVo DVR-SuperAdvance. The PC World review says, ‘Familiar TiVo interface; DVR can record not-yet-broadcast programming; potentially useful as a wagering aid,’ though, ‘[it is] expensive; access to programming is limited; footage is displayed in standard definition only.'” Hopefully, TiVo will supply a review unit.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Apr 1 2009

CloudLeft Public License Closes User Data Loophole

FreedomFighter writes “In a Cloud Standards breakthrough, the FSF is teaming up with major cloud computing vendors to form the Free and Open Cloud Alliance (FOCA), a trade marketing association supporting Free(TM) and Open Cloud Computing (FOCC). The new CloudLeft Public License (CPL) is based on the ideas that data wants to be Free(TM) and all your Cloud(TM) are belong to us. It closes the ‘user data loophole’ by requiring the release of not only the source code for a CloudLeft platform but also the data passing through it. This renders most security issues void while appropriately setting the users’ expectation of privacy. ‘In the past, I’ve said that “cloud” is complete gibberish, but while discussing fashion during my weekly squash game with Stallman he convinced me that this was a great opportunity.’ said Larry Ellison, CEO of Oracle. RMS, who previously said that ‘cloud’ is worse than stupidity was also pleased about the return of the advertising clause, requiring the use of the ‘GNU/Cloud’ name, as he is ‘tired of haranguing the GNU/Linux community about this.’ Full details will be available next Monday, including the first marketing and outreach program — ‘FOCC: IT in 2009.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share