Jan
8
2009
Here’s some breaking news: At the Microsoft CES Keynote, Steve Ballmer has just announced the launch of the Windows 7 Public beta. Customers of Technet and MSDN can get the beta right away (if you hadn’t already been tempted by the various leaks) while the rest of us will have to wait until 2 days from now to snag the trial OS.


Comments Off on Breaking News From CES: Windows 7 Public Beta Released | tags: tech, windows | posted in technical news
Jan
8
2009
For every billion that the federal government spends on tech as part of a stimulus package, it will create or retain approximately 31,000 jobs, according to a think tank advising President-elect Barack Obama on tech policy.


Comments Off on Stimulus math: $30B in spending equals 950K tech jobs | tags: tech | posted in technical news
Jan
8
2009
snydeq writes “Sustainable IT’s Ted Samson raises questions regarding the purchasing of carbon offsets, a practice growing in popularity among tech companies such as Dell, Yahoo, and Google in an attempt to achieve ‘carbon neutrality.’ Essentially financial instruments, carbon offsets enable companies to invest money in sustainable endeavors in an attempt to counteract the carbon footprint they incur conducting their business. But as a recent article in the Wall Street Journal shows, measuring the value of these carbon offsets is tricky business, as some recipients of offsets say the results of their sustainable efforts would be achieved regardless of any one company’s investment. ‘The question of whether carbon offsets hold value just scratches the surface of the overall carbon-neutrality question,’ Samson writes. ‘For the time being, there isn’t even a consistent approach to measuring an organization’s carbon footprint in the first place. And if you don’t know how much CO2 you’re responsible for, how do you know how much offsetting is necessary to become neutral?'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on The Inexact Science of Carbon Neutrality | tags: tech | posted in technical news
Jan
8
2009
An anonymous reader writes “SD cards with a theoretical maximum capacity of 2TB are in development by Panasonic and the SD Association, it has been announced. The technology is called ‘Secure Digital Extended Capacity’, or ‘SDXC’, and Panasonic has announced it will soon show off a 64GB SDXC card. Using the new technology, read/write speeds are set to hit 300MBps. SanDisk and Sony are using the same standard to develop Extended Capacity cards in Sony’s Memory Stick Pro and Memory Stick Micro range. SDXC utilises Microsoft’s new exFAT file system — AKA ‘FAT 64’ — which first appeared in Windows Vista SP1, and has a theoretical file size limit of 16 exbibytes.” Reader xlotlu adds a note about the “proprietary exFAT file system, which is available for licensing under NDA. There are currently no specific patents on exFAT, but its legal status is uncertain since it’s based on FAT. The FAT patents have been previously upheld in court.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Panasonic Working On 2-Terabyte SD Cards | tags: tech, windows | posted in technical news
Jan
8
2009
techmuse writes “Lexus has announced plans to send targeted messages to buyers of its cars based on the buyer’s zip code and vehicle type. Unlike regular spam, these messages will be delivered directly to the buyer’s vehicle, and will play to the vehicle’s occupants as audio. Lexus has promised to make the messages relevant to the car buyers.” Imagine the fun that some targeted malware could do — not that such a thing could happen to a Lexus.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Lexus To Start Spamming Car Buyers In Their Cars | tags: tech | posted in technical news
Jan
8
2009
CWmike writes “The rumors turned out to be true. Microsoft will release a public beta this week of its next desktop operating system, Windows 7, hoping it will address the problems that have made Windows Vista perhaps the least popular OS in its history. Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer will launch the beta during his speech at the start of the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas on Wednesday. Preston Gralla reviewed Windows 7 beta 1, noting ‘Fast and stable, Beta 1 of Windows 7 unveils some intriguing user-interface improvements, including the much-anticipated new task bar.’ MSDN and Technet subscribers should be able to get the public data tonight. The general public will have to wait until Friday.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Ballmer Sets Loose Windows 7 Public Beta At CES | tags: tech, windows | posted in technical news
Jan
8
2009
Barence writes “For anyone who assumes weekday evenings are the worst time to enter the online scrum, it may be a surprise to learn that the peak internet rush hour, when average web speeds slow to a crawl, is in fact Sunday between 5pm and 6pm. This surprise fact came out of Ofcom’s recent research that also told us the blindingly obvious news that actual broadband speeds are less than half of those advertised by the ISPs.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Sunday Evening, the New Web Rush Hour | tags: tech | posted in technical news
Jan
8
2009
Jack Spine writes “Twitter co-founder Biz Stone has confirmed both to ZDNet UK and Wired’s Threat Level blog that a dictionary attack was used to hack Twitter. After the hacker distributed details on the Digital Gangster forum, celebrities such as Britney Spears and Barack Obama had their accounts defaced. Wired spoke to the alleged hacker, while ZDNet UK got in contact with someone who had been on the Digital Gangster forum at the time.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Twitter Hack Details Revealed | tags: tech | posted in technical news
Jan
8
2009
Comments Off on Reactions to racism not as strong as we think, study finds – CBC.ca | tags: tech, tv | posted in technical news
Jan
8
2009
Comments Off on Blazing fireball spotted shooting through Calgary skies – The Tech Herald | tags: tech | posted in technical news