Mar
19
2009
iPhone OS, Android, webOS, Windows Mobile, BlackBerry, S60; if you’re in the market for a new smartphone, your choices have been getting exponentially more complicated lately, and 3.0 won’t make the selection any easier. Luckily for you, Engadget is here to make sense of a frightening and uncertain landscape.
Comments Off on Engadget’s Full Comparison of iPhone3.0 to Other Mobile OS | tags: cap, iphone, mobile, Phone, web | posted in technical news
Mar
19
2009
Symantec today formally unveiled its cloud-based storage service, Norton Online Backup, which allows you to manage through a Web interface up to five PCs on your home network under a single license.
Comments Off on Symantec Launches Cloud Storage For Consumers | tags: consumers, network, web | posted in technical news
Mar
19
2009
CWmike writes “Internet Explorer 8 has shipped in its final version and is ready to take on its rivals. Preston Gralla reviewed it and says the latest version of Microsoft’s browser leapfrogs its closest competition, Firefox 3, for basic browsing and productivity features — it has better tab handling, a niftier search bar, a more useful address bar, and new tools that deliver information directly from other Web pages and services. IE8 has also been tweaked for security and includes a so-called ‘porn mode,’ new anti-malware protection, and better ways to protect your privacy. The most noticeable new features? Accelerators and Web Slices. Think of an Accelerator as a mini-mashup that delivers information from another Web site directly to your current browser page. Web Slices deliver changing information from a Web page you’re not actively visiting directly to IE8. There’s one big problem for many, though. No add-ins, and there doesn’t appear to be such an ecosystem on the horizon. So if you’re a fan of add-ins and customizing the browser itself, writes Gralla, Firefox is superior. But for the actual browsing experience, IE8 has the upper hand — for now.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Look Out, Firefox 3 — IE8 Is Back On Top For Now | tags: google, malware, microsoft, privacy, security, web | posted in technical news
Mar
19
2009
If You have been following to latest articles, I compiled 43 PSD to XHTML, CSS Tutorials article some time ago. This should be considered as next step to web development process. There are a lot of really professional and high quality XHTML, CSS templates available for free – if You are familiar with coding, You can learn many new techniques just b
Comments Off on 101 High Quality CSS And XHTML Free Templates And Layouts: P | tags: web | posted in technical news
Mar
19
2009
pnorth writes “Editors at Wikipedia have removed a link to a blacklisted web site that sat uncontested for over 24 hours in the main body of the Australian regulator’s own Wikipedia entry. The link, which directs readers to a site containing graphic imagery of aborted foetuses, was inserted into ACMA’s Wikipedia entry by a campaigner against Internet filtering to determine whether Australia’s communications regulator had a double-standard when it came to censoring web content. The very same link motivated the regulator to serve Aussie broadband forum Whirlpool’s hosting company with a ‘link deletion notice’ and the threat of an ,000 fine. Last night, the link became the subject of “warring” between several Wikipedia administrators in the lead up to it’s removal, with administrators saying they didn’t want to be used to prove a point.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Activists Use Wikipedia To Test Aussie Net Censors | tags: google, web, wikipedia | posted in technical news
Mar
18
2009
Jack Spine writes “The UK government, which is becoming increasingly Orwellian, has said that it is considering snooping on all social networking traffic including Facebook, MySpace, and bebo. This supposedly anti-terrorist measure may be proposed as part of the Intercept Modernisation Programme according to minister Vernon Coaker, and is exactly the sort of deep packet inspection web inventor Sir Tim Berners-Lee warned about last week. The measure would get around the inconvenience for the government of not being able to snoop on all UK web traffic.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on UK Gov’t May Track All Facebook Traffic | tags: facebook, google, myspace, network, networking, program, web | posted in technical news
Mar
18
2009
Twitter is one unique web service which is facilitating different people to connect with each other.This article will focus on explaining the cool tools that litterally & awesomely extend features offered by Twitter.
Comments Off on 20+ Extremely Useful Twitter Tools | tags: twitter, web | posted in technical news
Mar
18
2009
The NYTimes is running a tip-of-the-iceberg story about how the age of Google is resulting in more mistrials as the traditional rules of evidence, honed over many centuries, collide with the always-on Internet. Especially when jurors carry the always-on Internet in their pockets. (We discussed one such case recently.) “The use of BlackBerrys and iPhones by jurors gathering and sending out information about cases is wreaking havoc on trials around the country, upending deliberations and infuriating judges. … Jurors are not supposed to seek information outside of the courtroom. They are required to reach a verdict based on only the facts the judge has decided are admissible, and they are not supposed to see evidence that has been excluded as prejudicial. But now, using their cellphones, they can look up the name of a defendant on the Web or examine an intersection using Google Maps, violating the legal system’s complex rules of evidence.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Internet-Caused Mistrials Are On the Rise | tags: google, iphone, Phone, web | posted in technical news
Mar
18
2009
spge writes “Computer Shopper magazine has interviewed the UK Home Office about its relationship with the Internet Watch Foundation and discovered that the government doesn’t actually know what the IWF does, although it still plans to force UK ISPs to subscribe to the IWF’s blacklist. The main story makes for interesting reading, but the best bit is the full transcript of the interview. Short version: the IWF investigates suspected child porn websites and adds any it finds to a list that ISPs can use to block these sites; uk.gov wants ISPs to use this list; however, the IWF is not an official government organization, does not appear to have legal permission to view child pornography, and quite possibly is breaking the law by doing so.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on UK Gov. Clueless About Own Internet Blacklist | tags: google, web | posted in technical news
Mar
18
2009
On websites that have a lot of pages, breadcrumb navigation can greatly enhance the way users find their way around. In terms of usability, breadcrumbs reduce the number of actions a website visitor needs to take in order to get to a higher-level page, and they improve the findability of website sections and pages.
Comments Off on Breadcrumbs In Web Design: Examples And Best Practices | tags: web | posted in technical news