Mar 23 2009

5 Freeware Photoshop Alternatives and Web-based editing

This morning I thought I’d try and spice this blog up a little by making my own logo and then I realised why I never did it before: this laptop is godd*mn slow! This is why I never got to installing Photoshop, the program I’ve been using for years to create my own stuff.

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Mar 16 2009

Apple holding back on web-based 3D graphics for the desktop

Apple has added 3D position and transform capabilities to WebKit, along with the 2D CSS-based transform abilities added some time ago. However, Apple allows access to these advanced 3D abilities only via Mobile Safari. If Apple enables the features on the desktop, they could kickstart the development of a whole new class of visually rich web applic

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Mar 9 2009

Scientists deploy first Web-based, secure voting system

Computer scientists affiliated with the Center for Research on Computation and Society (CRCS), based at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS), in collaboration with scientists at the Université Catholique de Louvain (UCL) in Belgium, deployed the first practical, web-based implementation of a secure, verifiable…

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Mar 8 2009

Wolfram Promises Computing That Answers Questions

An anonymous reader writes “Computer scientist Stephen Wolfram feels that he has put together at least the initial version of a computer that actually answers factual questions, a la Star Trek’s ship computers. His version will be found on their Web-based application, Wolfram Alpha. What does this mean? Well, instead of returning links to pages that may (or may not) contain the answer to your questions, Wolfram will respond with the actual answer. Just imagine typing in ‘How many bones are in the human body?’ and getting the answer.” Right now, though the search entry field is in place, Alpha is not yet generally available — only “to a few select individuals.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Feb 26 2009

Best FOSS Help Desk Software For Small Firms?

Nocts writes “I’m currently working for a moderately sized company that manages a large portion of its internal help desk questions through a Jabber-based chat room. What we’re looking for instead is an open source, preferably Web-based solution that will give us the ability to have floor representatives queue questions and concerns in a similar fashion to BugTraq, directed at the help desk. Email capability would be preferred for elaboration of specific issues, but the more we can centralize everything into the queued system the better. Any recommendations and experiences? Just about any language is doable since I have the ability to configure and upgrade our servers and we’re looking at about a user base of 100 people, with around 5-10 questions a minute.”

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Feb 26 2009

Google Responds To ‘Gfail’ Outage With Apps Status Dashboard

In response to its extended Gmail outage yesterday, Google has just launched the Google Apps Status Dashboard. The dashboard offers an at-a-glance look at the system health of most popular Google services, including Gmail, Google Calendar, and the company’s suite of web-based document editors.

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Feb 24 2009

Outage Knocks Gmail Offline For Many Users

Many readers noted an outage affecting Google’s gmail service last night. Firmafest points to a statement from Google, according to which only a small subset of users were affected. According to reader CaptHarlock, mail itself remained accessible through IMAP clients, and the chat feature via external applications. jw3 asks “Of course, gmail is just one of the many providers of web-based e-mails. When I look around, almost everyone seems to be using them nowadays. So — what do you do? Do you trust that the site of your web-based e-mail provider will never go down? Do you make backups of all your e-mails?” (Some readers still seem to be unable to reach the site, too.)

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Feb 24 2009

Outage Knocks Gmail Offline For Many Users

Many readers noted an outage affecting Google’s gmail service last night. Firmafest points to a statement from Google, according to which only a small subset of users were affected. According to reader CaptHarlock, mail itself remained accessible through IMAP clients, and the chat feature via external applications. jw3 asks “Of course, gmail is just one of the many providers of web-based e-mails. When I look around, almost everyone seems to be using them nowadays. So — what do you do? Do you trust that the site of your web-based e-mail provider will never go down? Do you make backups of all your e-mails?” (Some readers still seem to be unable to reach the site, too.)

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Feb 19 2009

Web-based IDEs Edge Closer To the Mainstream

snitch writes “Last week Mozilla released Bespin, their web-based framework for code editing, and only a few days later Boris Bokowski and Simon Kaegi implemented an Eclipse-based Bespin server using headless Eclipse plug-ins. With the presentation of the web-based Eclipse workbench at EclipseCon and the release of products like Heroku, a web-based IDE and hosting environment for RoR apps, it seems that web-based IDEs might soon become mainstream.”

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Feb 14 2009

Web Scam Bilks State of Utah Out of $2.5M

KitB sends in a story in the Salt Lake Tribune that tells of a Web-based scam, resembling some used by Nigerian gangs, that snared the state of Utah. .5M was sent to a bank account in Texas before the bank raised a question and then froze .8M in the account. “Thieves apparently used a Nigerian-based scam to steal .5 million from the Utah treasury, covering their tracks by using intermediaries and a church address. A Salt Lake Tribune review of the names listed in a search warrant as receiving or transferring money [found] names of African origin or connections to that continent. Michael Kessler, … a forensic accounting [investigator] in New York City, said the thieves appear to have used a simple scam that originated in Nigeria about five years ago. The Utah theft is the first time he’s seen a government victimized. ‘Their IT people should have known better,’ Kessler said after reviewing a copy of the search warrant Thursday. ‘It sounds like any kid could have done this.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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