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3301
I arrived just a coupla days ago because I was searching for a decent thesaurus I could run offline. (Us poets and writers like words...Funny, that.)

And -- suddenly -- there was Mobysaurus. Top program  :Thmbsup: :Thmbsup:

The mechanism to buy a permanent key led me here.

So now you're stuck with me!! 

Har de Har, Welcome  :P

 :tease:
3302
Living Room / Stephen's Weekly Tech News - Edition 10
« Last post by KynloStephen66515 on April 26, 2010, 04:11 PM »
StephensMasthead (Rev01).gif

Well, I'm kinda a day late with this, but as I have explained to mouser, this week has been a heavy workload so I have had no time on my hands to do this, anyhow, I hope you all enjoy this special, extended Edition of the Weekly Tech News!

-Stephen



Verizon, Vodafone dent Google's Nexus One hopes

The Nexus One might have been a bridge too far for Google.


It's a nice phone, but Google's Nexus One won't change the world if it's not available on the biggest network in the U.S.
(Credit: CNET)

There's perhaps no other project as important as mobile computing at Google, save of course the need to preserve Internet search dominance. But Google's mobile ambitions took a hit Monday as two key parts of its Nexus One strategy failed to come to pass.

First off, Vodafone announced it will be...Read More...


Today's green news: Electric vehicles

Car maker gets in on home energy; GE, Nissan team on smart charging for electric cars; Better Place swaps electric taxi batteries in Tokyo and signs deal with....Read More...


Apple sued over iPhone's liquid sensors

Lawsuit claims technology is faulty, which could lead to false positive results and Apple denying warranty coverage...Read More...


Senator calls on FTC to tackle social-net privacy

New York Senator Charles Schumer has come out swinging against new announcements by Facebook that modify how much member data is shared with third-party companies, suggesting that the Federal Trade Commission needs to promptly address the issue of social-network privacy.

A press release from Schumer's office announced that he has written to the FTC to ask that the agency "examine the privacy disclosures of social-networking sites to ensure they are not misleading or fail to fully disclose the extent to which they share information...(and) provide guidelines for use of private information and prohibit access without user permission."

This was prompted by the new products and services unveiled by Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg at the social network's annual developer conference, which took place in San Francisco last week. The big showcase at F8 was the "Open Graph," which aims to forge firmer channels of communication between multiple social-networking sites. In conjunction, Facebook rolled out something called "Instant Personalization," which lets users easily share the bulk of their personal profile information with third-party companies.

According to Schumer, frequent changes to social-networking privacy policies can be extremely confusing for users, and that the FTC currently does not regulate this at all.

"Hundreds of millions of people use social-networking sites like Facebook, MySpace, and Twitter every day," Schumer said in a press release. "These sites have helped reconnect old friends, allow families from far away to stay in touch, and created new friendships; overall they provide a great new way to communicate. As these sites become more and more popular, however, it's...Read More...


McAfee to compensate home users for bad update

Home users affected by McAfee's virus update fiasco last week may be entitled to compensation, according to the company. But no word yet on whether that also applies to business customers....Read Forum Topic


New BlackBerries Juice Up WiFi Calling

esearch In Motion on Monday unveiled two new BlackBerry smartphones and a voice over WiFi feature to its voice technology. The new devices are the BlackBerry Pearl 3G and the BlackBerry Bold 9650. The new BlackBerry Pearl 3G measures 4.25 by 1.96 by 0.52 inches and weighs 3.3 ounces. It has a 624 MHz processor with 256 MB of flash memory and a microSD/SDHD memory card slot that supports cards of up to 32 GB capacity. Other Pearl 3G features are an optical trackpad and a keyboard; a media player for videos, pictures and music; and dedicated media keys...Read More


2013: The Year Tech as We Know It Changes

The market is in a planning cycle, and analysts are being asked to take a look in their crystal balls and describe what 2013 will look like. Clearly, we will have more bandwidth, 3-D TV will be ramping, and most of us will either be using tablet devices for something or moving to the next big thing...Read More...


Facebook's Open Graph: Now Everyone's the Center of Attention

At its f8 developers' conference in San Francisco last week, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg presented his vision of a cross-site social platform whose developmental state may already be quite far along. Essentially, he sees a kind of online social sphere wherein anything one communicates that he likes gets channeled to Facebook, where that like becomes a public fact...Read More...


Can Robotic Repairmen Neutralize Windows 7's Annoyances?

At about this time last year, we received some skeptical comments from folks who questioned whether it was wise for Betanews to declare Windows 7's automated troubleshooting system one of the new operating system's Top 10 features -- #8, to be specific...Read More...


Why Doesn't Linux Dominate in the Developing World?

There's no doubt FOSS is steadily gaining popularity in government circles, as evidenced most recently by the United States White House's own decision to adopt -- and even contribute back to -- open source Drupal. A proposal from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, meanwhile, suggests that certain regulation-mandated submissions should be required to be written in Python...Read More...


IBM's Nanoscale World Map Could Guide Chip Development

IBM researchers in Switzerland said they've come up with a patterning technique that lets them create structures as small as 15 nanometers. One nanometer is a millionth of a millimeter. In comparison, a human hair is between .03 and .25 mm thick. Using the nanopatterning technique, the researchers have created a three-dimensional replica of the Matterhorn that's 25 nanometers high...Read More...


NASA Observatory Sheds New Light on Sun

Two months after the launch of NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory, its first images are now arriving back on Earth with more detail about the sun than has ever been seen before. Some of the images from the spacecraft reveal in new clarity the material streaming outward and away from sunspots..Read More...


Hawking: Aliens are out there, likely to be Bad News

Renowned physicist Stephen Hawking has repeated his long-held belief that intelligent aliens are likely to exist, and that a visit by them to present-day humanity would probably have unfortunate consequences for us.

Publicising a new documentary he has made for the Discovery Channel, the legendary boffin told the Times at the weekend:


“To my mathematical brain, the numbers alone make thinking about aliens perfectly rational... If aliens ever visit us, I think the outcome would be...Read More...


Boobquake fails to destroy planet

Planet Earth has not (yet) been destroyed by today's terrifying Boobquake experiment - one Indiana student's response to Iranian cleric Hojatoleslam Kazem Sedighi's insistence that immodestly dressed women provoke earthquakes.

Sedighi recently declared: "Many women who do not dress modestly ... lead young men astray, corrupting their chastity and spread adultery in society, which increases earthquakes."

Well, Jennifer McCreight decided to put this to the test, and attempt a critical mass of immodesty primarily involving a load of women flashing a Richter-tempting amount of jub.

She declared: “On Monday, April 26th, I will wear the most cleavage-showing shirt I own. Yes, the one usually reserved for a night on the town. I encourage other female skeptics to...Read More...


Users' passwords exposed by Splunk

Splunk, a kind of Google for business technology that boasts it can help reinforce your security, has exposed the accounts of major customers to hackers following a web site slip up.

The passwords of customers on Splunk.com were revealed after some debug information leaked on to its production servers. The debug code exposed users passwords to Splunk.com as clear text, the company said.
 

Splunk has reset all affected users' passwords in what it called an "abundance of caution", and purged the log files and indexes of users' active sessions on Splunk.com. It advised customers to change the temporary password as soon as possible.

Also, Splunk urged those who used their Splunk.com password on other systems or web sites to also change those passwords.

That should mean around half of Splunk users affected should have to...Read More...





Video of The Week




Got a story you feel needs sharing with the world? Submit it to me via PM and, after approval and verification, I will happily add it to next weeks Tech News!

Visit the Tech News Archive Here.
3303
Living Room / Re: For when your PC next plays up...
« Last post by KynloStephen66515 on April 26, 2010, 10:43 AM »
 :D  :Thmbsup: :Thmbsup: :Thmbsup: :Thmbsup: :Thmbsup: <--- 5 Thumbs up!

-Stephen
3304
 :Thmbsup:

Congrats on your first post being the SECOND most useless ive ever seen :D - Also...Welcome you also :)
3305
Living Room / Stephen's Weekly Tech News - Edition 9
« Last post by KynloStephen66515 on April 18, 2010, 06:44 PM »
StephensMasthead (Rev01).gif

Hi guys, after I missed last week, I promised you some good stories this week, so lets take a look what we have on offer.

I'm gonna try stray away from anything iPad related this week, seeing as it seems to have stolen the spotlight on all the other Tech News sources!

Enjoy,

-Stephen



The next, big thing for Intel: Sandy Bridge

Simply put, Sandy Bridge is an extension of Moore's Law that will take Intel chips to the next level of integration and performance....Read More...


U.S. seeks climate ideas after Copenhagen fell short

The United States is asking for ideas about how to tackle global warming without raising expectations of breakthroughs in 2010 ahead of climate talks among the world's top emitters on Sunday in Washington.

A document obtained by Reuters on Friday listing U.S. questions to delegates from 16 other major economies shows the two-day talks will focus on the fate of U.N. climate talks, the non-binding Copenhagen Accord, and the Kyoto Protocol.

It does not answer key questions such as what the United States, the biggest emitter behind China, plans to....Read More...


Microsoft kills upshirt scene in Kin ad

And so the upshirt goes the way of the upchuck.

After pressure from some people who found it creepy and thought it encouraged sexting, Microsoft intends to re-edit an ad for its new, socially networked cell phone, Kin.

The ad, which some might consider about as dangerous as an ice cream cone in a gunfight, showed a young chap take a Kin shot of whatever was up his shirt--presumably tautly trained pectorals-- and send it to...Read More...


Let the Rich Internet App Battle Begin

It was a big week for Rich Internet Applications. Adobe's Creative Suite 5 and Microsoft's Visual Studio 2010, as well as its Silverlight 4, all lend momentum to the drive to move RIAs off the browser. The platforms have sharpened new methodologies for designing simpler client-side Web apps that maintain data on stronger server-side apps....Read More...


Obama on Space Exploration: We've Got to Be Smart
Responding to a hail of criticism over his decision to end the Constellation program to return to the moon, President Obama told NASA employees on Thursday that no one is more committed to manned space exploration than he is, and that he expects to see humans land on Mars within his lifetime....Read More...


NSA Chief: Cyberwar Rules of Engagement a Policy Minefield

NSA Chief: Cyberwar Rules of Engagement a Policy Minefield...Read More...


The Life Expectancy of Linux

Linux can't be around forever, can it? For that matter, what does the future hold for operating systems in general? "If you asked me to predict what operating systems would look like in the future, I would probably give you quite a pessimistic answer," said blogger Jeremy Visser. "I think that future OSes will be more and more locked down, and you will be doing less with them while thinking you are doing more."...Read More...


Astroboffin says 'black holes murder galaxies'

About 25,000 light years from earth, nestled in the center of our galaxy, lurks a supermassive black hole. Luckily for us, our galaxy's matter-sucking hub is far less active than those at the core of many other galaxies.

If it weren't, we'd all be dead. Or, more likely, our earth would never have come to be in the first place.

Such are the conclusions of a team of researchers from the University of Nottingham's School of Physics & Astronomy, led by PhD student Asa Bluck, who gave a talk on Friday at the 2010 Royal Astronomical Society National Astronomy Meeting (RAS NAM) entitled "The Co-Evolution of Massive Galaxies and their...Read More...

Google Chrome OS to route print jobs around planet

Google has explained how it intends to print from its browser-obsessed Chrome OS netbooks. Naturally, it will send all your jobs across the net, through its servers, and back down to a PC elsewhere in the room.

In fact, Google intends to send all your print jobs through its servers, whether they're coming from a desktop or a mobile or some other notebook that has nothing to do with Chrome OS. Well, through its servers or - in theory - someone else's.

The company has open sourced the code for its online print service, hoping to encourage other outfits to duplicate this contraption hat takes print jobs across the world and back again.

We would argue it would be easier to...Read More...


School secretly snapped 1000s of students at home

A suburban Philadelphia school district secretly captured thousands of images of students in their homes, sometimes as they slept or were partially undressed, according to documents filed in federal court.

Using a system to track lost or stolen laptops, officials from the Lower Merion School District also covertly surveilled students as they used their school-issued Macs, logging online chats and taking screenshots of websites they visited, according to the documents.


The allegations came to light in a lawsuit filed by the family of Blake Robbins, which argues that the LANrev software illegally invaded his privacy. The family first learned of the surveillance in November when an assistant principal...Read More...





Video of The Week


Thanks to mouser for providing us with this weeks video!



Got a story you feel needs sharing with the world? Submit it to me via PM and, after approval and verification, I will happily add it to next weeks Tech News!

Visit the Tech News Archive Here.
3306
Living Room / Pure Boredom Post: The 3 Word Story Game
« Last post by KynloStephen66515 on April 18, 2010, 06:04 PM »
Well...most of you know this game, but for those that don't...

You are only allowed to say 3 words, and they must add on to the previous post, to create a story.

  • Please never add "the end"
  • Please only post once
  • No irrelevant posts like "lol" or such things...We need each post to be from seperate users, not just a core few!

IE:  

Post 1: One day the
Post 2: cat ran into
Post 3: the living room
etc...

You don't have to play, but would be fun to see what we can come up with.

Lets get started...


Heres your starting 3 words!






If programming was
3307
Living Room / Re: Weekly TechNews Appology for 10/04/2010
« Last post by KynloStephen66515 on April 13, 2010, 04:13 PM »
I wish it could constitute as a break lol  :up:
3308
Anyway it's definitely a ridiculous thing. The zealotry and misplaced responsibility over copyright protection is quite frustrating. The store should not be responsible for policing their users, just as Google should not be responsible for policing YouTube (current Viacom suit) or ensuring that photos uploaded to Picasa are not violating someone's copyright.

I disagree, but only in cases of them policing photos that could possibly be used for malicious purposes, or ones that are possibly of minors (nude photos obviously) so they can report possible child pornography to the relevant authorities and inform them who had issued them printed.

Obviously I'm only disagreeing with you for these specific purposes.
3309
Living Room / Re: now we have nettops... but portable monitors?
« Last post by KynloStephen66515 on April 13, 2010, 04:05 PM »
I don't know of any, but Ive always been curious about this.

Ive also often wondered about being able to stick 2 extra monitors into my laptop bag so when i take out my laptop I can still have 3 screens :D
3310
Living Room / Weekly TechNews Appology for 10/04/2010
« Last post by KynloStephen66515 on April 13, 2010, 03:55 PM »
Hey guys,

I feel I must apologize for failing to provide you with your weekly dose of TechNews this week.

I started a new job on Monday so ended up falling asleep on Sunday to fix my body clock and didn't realize until about 1 hour ago that I had not done it. (Ya didn't miss much, it was all about the iPad in the news last week anyway, so not much variety ^_^)

Ill tell you what, next week's episode will be extra super special and feature some cool content for you all :D

Sorry again

-Stephen

i-sorry.jpg
3311
Is there a board here on the specifics of DC IRC?


There are no specific 'Forum Boards' regarding the use of the DC IRC channel.

If you dont want to use mIRC due to it playing havok with your computer, try an alternative like XChat or YChat, or perhaps something else.
3312
Zazzle has actually been around for ages. I mentioned them in my reply above. ;) Didn't know they were doing shoes and skateboards now though, hehe.

- Oshyan

Yeah...I saw that...honest? haha sorry :P
3313
New contender:

www.zazzle.com

Pretty great custom stuff, they even go as far as allowing you to customize your own skateboards and shoes!
3314
12. News You Can Use

DC Member Stephen66 has been filling in for Ehtyar in posting weekly summaries of interesting tech/computer/security news articles that he comes across on the web.  He even forced me to create an archive page where you can browse through past editions.


Forced?

Do it, or ill get the dragon to eat you!  ------>     :Wizard:

LOL, Cheeky sod  :D
3315
Nice photos  :) remind me of my pops photos when he was in Europe when he was in the Air Force.

<< California born and raised blah :huh: Glad I moved to Oregon ;D I mainly just play PC games,listen to music, and exercise.My name is Bryan and I'm pretty boring lolz.I also type slooo  :P

Welcome  :up:

Better late than never eh  8)
3316
Living Room / Re: Stephen's Weekly Tech News - Edition 8
« Last post by KynloStephen66515 on April 09, 2010, 06:33 AM »
Your Sig - All children left unattended will be given a mocha and a puppy.

completely off topic, i know, but it made me giggle...just thought you might wanna know  :Thmbsup:

haha
3317
Living Room / Re: Processors (CPU)?
« Last post by KynloStephen66515 on April 09, 2010, 06:27 AM »
I have the impression that i7, i5 and i3 is the high, mid and low performance versions. Correct?

As far as I can see...yes  :up:
3318
also, i hope someone with a bit of TV clout makes a documentary about how they sat outside a politician's (or Feargal Sharkey's) house and downloaded loads of "illegal" content via their hacked wi-fi signal. thereby making the house owner, i.e. the politician (or Mr. Sharkey) an internet "pirate" deserving nothing less than a holiday in prison.

They would probably say its breaking copyright by showing video recordings of building's on the TV since the designer of the house never dropped copyright status, or some crap like that lol
3319
Well, It seems like the UK Government have finally lost the plot completely.

The new Digital Economy bill states that free wifi could be scrapped due to massive fines possibly being given to small and large business's alike, for allowing somebody to connect to their network, and downloading/uploading/viewing illegal information.

Copyright holders will be able to apply for a court order to gain access to the names and addresses of serious infringers and take action against them while ISPs would be able to suspend accounts of offenders.

The government added new clauses to the bill, to replace opposition amendments made in the Lords, on blocking websites used for illegal file-sharing.


Seems also, that we are slowly moving towards being a 'nanny state'.


The movement of the bill also covers p2p file sharing and anti-copyright theft.  This will also include such things as myself, doing the Tech News.  This is because they are moving to stop people from doing it legally, even when linking and mentioning the copyright holder.

Even something so simple as having a picture of your favorite celeb on your desktop background, would be made illegal through this legislation.


Now, as your resident Technical News provider, I felt this is something that needs to be discussed with the DC Community, and also, quote (while its still legal) the following text, taken from a Free British Newspaper called 'Metro'

Small businesses could face huge liability fines if the latest incarnation of the Digital Economy Bill comes into force, after the Government admitted in a note on the legislation that businesses which provide free WiFi access would not be exempt from the Bill's rules.

Parts of the Bill are designed to combat online piracy, yet could mean that thousands of WiFi hotspots are closed as businesses face the same penalties for copyright infringement as individual subscribers, including being disconnected - and would be held responsible for the actions of customers using their networks.

Internet cafés, shops and even libraries and universities would be affected by the legislation.

Lilian Edwards, professor of internet law at Sheffield University, claims: 'Even if they password protect, they then have two options - to pay someone like The Cloud to manage it for them, or take responsibility themselves for becoming an ISP effectively, and keep records for everyone they assign connections to, which is an impossible burden for a small café.'

The digital rights campaigning organisation the Open Rights Group has hit out against the latest revelations, saying on their blog: 'Quietly, through the backdoor, allowing the use of legitimate technology has effectively been criminalized... [the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills] and Mandelson are relying on very narrow, quickly thought-up, probably inaccurate technical advice.'

'This is unreasonable and incredibly bureaucratic. This Bill is going to make life very difficult for a very wide range of users – the governments notes admit as much.'


The above text, is basically showing that "The Cloud" _HAS_ to take over, failing that, the wifi provider is made to shut down, or face severe legal action.

The MPs involved 'House of Commons' sit down on 7th April 2010 in regards to the Digital Economy Bill, do not seem to understand what they are talking about, and kept quoting P2P ("Person 2 Person File Sharing") {Last time I heard, it was called Peer 2 Peer?}.

However, The one thing I did agree with, is that, just because they are cracking down on copyright theft, does not mean that the copyright holders will make any more money, because generally, if a person did not pay to download it, they did not _WANT_ to pay for it, and would never of listened to/viewed/used etc... otherwise.

If you would like to know more about this, please google "The Digital Economy Bill" or visit the following links for more ingo.

http://news.bbc.co.u..._8606000/8606892.stm ({BBC} 2 Hour 24 Minute 'House of Commons' Video Recording Included)
http://www.metro.co....ill-free-wifi-access ({Metro} Short Info Text)

*Forgot to mention, this bill has been approved, for full info, please view the video*
3321
Living Room / Re: First iPad Reviews Are In
« Last post by KynloStephen66515 on April 05, 2010, 06:58 PM »
The Gizmodo website sums up the early iPad reviews and they are quite positive..

Im still not buying one! lol
3322
Living Room / Re: Deceitful Software Awards
« Last post by KynloStephen66515 on April 05, 2010, 06:46 PM »
Shameful behavior aside... ;)

This is a major part of why I've decided to do any future software releases through DC - Good, Bad, or Indifferent the answers are always honest.

 Good thinking batman :Thmbsup:
3323
I know this is a little late, but Congratulations to everybody who won! :P
3324
Living Room / Re: The little bug who grew up to become a feature
« Last post by KynloStephen66515 on April 05, 2010, 05:08 PM »
Wow, such a cool feature caused by such a small accident in the coding stages!  :Thmbsup:
3325
Living Room / Stephen's Weekly Tech News - Edition 8
« Last post by KynloStephen66515 on April 04, 2010, 12:50 PM »
StephensMasthead (Rev01).gif

Hey Guys, hope you all enjoy this Easter Weekend's edition of the Weekly Tech News!

-Stephen



Deep challenges for offshore wind

A Rhode Island project vying to beat out Cape Wind as the first offshore wind farm in the U.S. hit a major roadblock this week, a sign of the tough technical and economic issues developers face as they go farther offshore.

The state's Public Utilities Commission on Tuesday blocked a power purchase agreement to purchase electricity from an eight-turbine installation off the coast of Block Island. Regulators ruled that the proposed purchase price--24.4 cents per kilowatt-hour in 2013, which is almost double the retail rate in the state--was too high, a move which casts doubt on whether the project will move forward.
 

A GE offshore wind turbine being tested in Europe, where offshore wind is projected to grow rapidly this decade.
(Credit: General Electric)

Cape Wind, meanwhile, on Wednesday announced...Read More...


Analyst expects 700,000 iPads to sell this weekend - Apply iPad Launch Day

Analyst revises sales estimates, more than doubling the number of tablets he expects Apple to sell the first weekend it's available....Read More...


Fraudsters Can Easily Buy SSL Certificates, Researcher Finds

Two university researchers discovered at a recent security conference that security companies often deal with governments that can compel certificate authorities to produce SSL security keys for them. Those keys can then be used to sign certificates as any other Web site, enabling a law enforcement authority -- hypothetically speaking, of course -- to spoof virtually any other site. However, you don't need to be a government to compel a certificate authority to issue an SSL certificate for a major Web mail service of your choice. You just need a...Read More...


Sharp's Next-Gen Mobile Touchscreens: 3-D for the Naked Eye

Japanese electronics giant Sharp on Friday unveiled a liquid crystal display touchscreen that lets viewers see three-dimensional images without special glasses. That announcement kicked off speculation that the screen will be used in Nintendo's forthcoming 3DS game console, which will have the same kind of...Read More...


From the DC Forums - How I’d Hack Your Weak Passwords

* You probably use the same password for lots of stuff right?
    * Some sites you access such as your Bank or work VPN probably have pretty decent security, so I'm not going to attack them.
    * However, other sites like the Hallmark e-mail greeting cards site, an online forum you frequent, or an e-commerce site you've shopped at might not be as well prepared. So those are the ones I'd work on.
    * So, all we have to do now is unleash Brutus, wwwhack, or THC Hydra on their server with instructions to try say 10,000 (or 100,000 – whatever makes you happy) different usernames and passwords as fast as possible.
    * Once we've got several login+password pairings we can then go back and test them on targeted sites.
    * But wait… How do I know which bank you use and what your login ID is for the sites you frequent? All those cookies are simply stored, unencrypted and nicely named, in your Web browser's cache. (Read this post to remedy that problem.)

And how fast could this be done? Well, that depends on three main things, the length and...Read More... - Read Forum Topic


The Great Firewall of China Will Engulf the Gutless

For anyone thinking that the Google-China dynasty war would be resolved quickly -- and that mutual economic concerns would ultimately force both armies to ratchet down this uniquely 21-century cyberduel -- this was the week for the rudest of awakenings. The hacking hits just keep...Read More


Prefab May Give Any Software Open Sourciness

A new tool developed at the University of Washington has the potential to make all software effectively open source -- in a way. Rather than manipulating the software's code, however, the application -- dubbed "Prefab" -- hijacks what it displays and makes it...Read More...


Opera alerts EU to hidden Windows browser-ballot

Just when it seemed like Microsoft's European anti-trust tangle on browser choice in Windows was over, trouble is stirring again.

Opera Software has told The Reg that it has informed the European Union of a possible problem with a fix that was designed to make Internet Explorer in Windows comply with EU antitrust law. Opera has also informed Microsoft.

Opera said the browser-ballot screen Microsoft introduced to Windows so users could pick a browser rather than take Internet Explorer by default is being almost completely hidden by a set of 10 IE configuration screens. Opera illustrated the problem at The Reg's San-Francisco, California, offices with a set of screen shots taken from a Thinkpad X31 running Windows XP SP2.

The fear is that PC users will...Read More...

Computer pioneer and Gates mentor Ed Roberts dies

Ed Roberts, the pioneering computer engineer and early mentor to Bill Gates and Paul Allen, died Thursday at age 68.

Roberts will perhaps be best remembered for the Altair 8800, developed and marketed in both kit and assembled forms by his company, Micro Instrumentation and Telemetry Systems, better known by its acronym, MITS.

Roberts founded MITS during a stint...Read More...


April Fools 2010 - All the gags, after the fact

Word that the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) - the most powerful atomsmasher ever assembled by the human race - caused a hyperdimensional portal leading to an inhabited parallel universe to open up deep beneath Switzerland, in what may be the...Read More...





Video of The Week




Got a story you feel needs sharing with the world? Submit it to me via PM and, after approval and verification, I will happily add it to next weeks Tech News!

Visit the Tech News Archive Here.
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