Archive for January 29th, 2009

Gmail grows up with offline e-mail access

January 29th, 2009 | Category: ZDNet

Google is catering to business customers who want to use Gmail even without a network connection. Will Google Apps now pose a stronger threat to Microsoft? Significantly increasing the utility and competitiveness of its Web-based e-mail service, Google is enabling an experimental ability to read,…

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AT&T, Comcast expected to help RIAA fight piracy

January 29th, 2009 | Category: ZDNet

AT&T and Comcast are expected to be among a group of ISPs that will cooperate with the music industry in battling illegal file sharing. AT&T and Comcast, two of the nation’s largest Internet service providers, are expected to be among a group of ISPs that will cooperate with the…

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Intel EU antitrust delay rejected

January 29th, 2009 | Category: ZDNet

The chipmaker, which stands accused of anti-competitive actions against its rival AMD, has failed to convince a European judge to delay the case over the issue of missing documents. Intel has failed in its bid to delay European Commission antitrust procedures against the chipmaker. The Commission’s…

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Scientists "Teleport" Quantum Information One Meter

January 29th, 2009 | Category: Slashdot.org

the4thdimension writes “While we may not be beaming up to the Enterprise anytime soon, a team of scientists from the University of Maryland and the University of Michigan have managed to teleport information between two atoms up to a meter apart. Until this point, only very tiny distances were able to be traveled. However, using a complicated system of photons, ions, lasers, and electromagnetics, scientists have managed to ‘teleport’ information contained on one atom to another atom that is in a separate sealed container. This can lead to a wide range of developments in computing and communications.” Update: 01/29 22:29 GMT by T : Sorry, it’s a dupe, but today’s article in Time is better reading than the abstract anyhow.

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Lie Detector Company Threatens Critical Scientists With Suit

January 29th, 2009 | Category: Slashdot.org

An anonymous reader writes “The Swedish newspaper DN reports (google translation) that the Israeli company Nemesysco has sent letters to researchers at the University of Stockholm, threatening legal action if they do not stop publishing findings. An article called “Charlatanry in forensic speech science: A problem to be taken seriously” was pulled by the publisher after threats of a libel lawsuit.” Online translations can be a little wonky; if your Swedish is as bad as mine, this English-language article describes the situation well.

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The Case Against Web Apps

January 29th, 2009 | Category: Slashdot.org

snydeq writes “Fatal Exception’s Neil McAllister offers five reasons why companies should re-consider concentrating their development efforts on browser-based apps. As McAllister sees it, Web apps encourage a thin-client approach to development that concentrates far too much workload in the datacenter. And while UI and tool limitations are well known, the Web as ‘hostile territory’ for independent developers is a possibility not yet fully understood. Sure, Web development is fast, versatile, and relatively inexpensive, but long term, the browser’s weaknesses might just outweigh its strengths as an app delivery platform.”

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CMU Video Conference System Gets 3D From Cheap Webcams

January 29th, 2009 | Category: Slashdot.org

Hesham writes “Carnegie Mellon University’s HCI Institute just released details on their “why-didn’t-I-think-of-that-style” 3D video conferencing application. Considering how stale development has been in this field, this research seems like a nice solid step towards immersive telepresence. I was really disappointed with the “state-of-the-art” systems demoed at CES this year — they are all still just a flat, square, video stream. Hardly anything new. What is really cool about this project, is that researchers avoided building custom hardware no one is going to ever buy, and explored what could be done with just the generic webcams everyone already has. The result is a software-only solution, meaning all the big players (AIM, Skype, MSN, etc.) can release this as a simple software update. ‘Enable 3D’ checkbox anyone? YouTube video here. Behind the scenes, it relies on a clever illusory trick (motion parallax) and head-tracking (a la Johnny Lee’s Wiimote stuff — same lab, HCII). It was just presented at IEEE International Symposium on Multimedia in December.”

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OLPC 2.0 — One Laptop Foundation Reboots

January 29th, 2009 | Category: Slashdot.org

Greg Huang writes “In early January, the One Laptop Per Child Foundation laid off half its staff and shed work on the Sugar graphical interface. Now, OLPC founder Nicholas Negroponte and president Chuck Kane for the first time detail the foundation’s new plans, describe how the XO laptop will do what netbooks can’t do, and share their hope to keep working with Sugar developer Walter Bender, who left OLPC last year.”

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“Live Expansion” Announced for Warhammer Online

January 29th, 2009 | Category: Slashdot.org

Zonk brings word that Mythic has announced their plans to expand Warhammer Online in the coming months using a series of live events that will open up new careers, gear, and zones. The first event, planned for sometime in March, will allow access to the Dwarf Slayer and the Orc Choppa, as well as a new RvR scenario. Later, players will race to unlock a massive new zone, the Lands of the Dead. The expansion itself is titled “A Call to Arms,” and it will be rolled out free of charge.

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Fannie Mae Worker Indicted For Malicious Script

January 29th, 2009 | Category: Slashdot.org

dfdashh writes “A former Fannie Mae contractor has been indicted by a federal grand jury in Baltimore, MD for computer intrusion. He attempted to propagate a malicious script throughout the company’s 4,000 servers. The DC Examiner has details of the incident: ‘Had this malicious script executed, [Fannie Mae] engineers expect it would have caused millions of dollars of damage and reduced if not shutdown operations at [Fannie Mae] for at least one week. … The virus was set to execute at 9 a.m. Jan. 31, first disabling Fannie Mae’s computer monitoring system and then cutting all access to the company’s 4,000 servers, Nye wrote. Anyone trying to log in would receive a message saying “Server Graveyard.” From there, the virus would wipe out all Fannie Mae data, replacing it with zeros, Nye wrote. Finally, the virus would shut down the servers.’”

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