Category Archives: Tech News

Water Main Break At Space Center Stalls Shuttle

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — A water main break at NASA’s spaceport put launch preparations on temporary hold Wednesday for the next-to-last shuttle flight.

Space shuttle Discovery was supposed to be moved from the hangar to the Vehicle Assembly Building at Kennedy Space Center in preparation for a fall liftoff. The massive building where the fuel tank and booster rockets are attached to a shuttle.

Read more: Water Main Break, Space Shuttle, Nasa, Shuttle Delay, NASA Water Main Break, Space Shuttle Discovery, Technology News

Most Hacking Victims Blame Themselves: Symantec

Just under two-thirds of all Internet users have been hit by some sort of cybercrime, and while most of them are angry about it, a surprisingly large percentage feel guilt too, according to a survey commissioned by Symantec.

Read more: Symantec, Hacking Guilt, Hacking, Hacking Software, Hackers, Technology News

Microsoft Suspends ‘Fort Gay’ Gamer Over ‘Offensive’ Name–Then Apologizes

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — Microsoft Corp. and the chief rules enforcer for Xbox Live are apologizing to a small West Virginia town and a 26-year-old gamer accused of violating the online gaming service’s code of conduct by publicly declaring he’s from Fort Gay – a name the company considered offensive.

The town’s name is real. But when Moore tried to tell Seattle-based Microsoft and the enforcement team at Xbox Live, they wouldn’t take his word for it. Or Google it. Or check the U.S. Postal Service website for a ZIP code.

Read more: Xbox, Fort Gay, Fort Gay Xbox, Xbox Fort Gay, Microsoft, Technology News

New iPod Touch REVIEWS: Critics Take On Apple’s New Device

Apple’s new iPod Touch, the “flagship” of its iPod line, has just hit the Apple store.

Is it worth spending $230 (minimum) to upgrade to Apple’s latest model?

We’ve compiled iPod Touch reviews from TechCrunch, Engadget, The Mossberg Solution and other critics to help you decide. Check out the reviews below, and see pictures of the new iPod here. Learn more about Apple’s upgrades to the iPod Nano and iPod Shuffle here and here.

Read more: iPod Touch, Slidepollajax, Ipod Touch 4, New Ipod Touch, Ipod Touch 4g, Ipod Touch Reviews, New Ipod Touch Reviews, New Ipod Touch Review, Ipod Touch Review, Ipod, Apple, Technology News

HP Sues Ex-CEO Mark Hurd Over New Job At Oracle

SAN FRANCISCO (AP, Jordan Robertson) — Hewlett-Packard Co. is suing former CEO Mark Hurd to stop him from taking a job at rival Oracle Corp.

The complaint filed Tuesday in a California state court comes a day after Oracle hired Hurd as co-president to help lead the database software maker as it tries to muscle in on more of HP’s turf.

The lawsuit shows the growing rancor between the two companies, which are longtime partners that are now competing in the market for computer servers.

HP claims that Hurd wouldn’t be able to perform the job at Oracle without spilling HP’s trade secrets and violating a confidentiality agreement. Hurd signed such an agreement as part of a severance package from HP that could top $40 million.

The lawsuit mentions that Hurd was responsible for preparing HP’s strategic plans and was privy to a “highly confidential” analysis of Oracle’s competitiveness against HP.

Read more: Steve Jobs, Hewlitt Packard, Larry Ellison, Apple, California, Ibm, Hp Ceo Mark Hurd, Mark Hurd, Oracle, Oracle Corp, Hp, Mark Hurd Sexual Harassment, Business News

HTC: iPhone’s ‘Quiet’ Challenger

BEIJING — East Asia is the world’s electronics factory, yet unless they are Japanese, producers are largely anonymous. Now HTC Corp., a Taiwanese maker of smart phones, is moving out of the shadows and trying to establish its own brand name as it competes with Apple’s iPhone.

HTC supplies U.S. carriers Verizon, Sprint and T-Mobile but says a year ago only one in 10 Americans knew its name. With the help of marketing by cellular carriers and HTC’s own television ads during the baseball World Series, HTC says that number is up to 40 percent.

Read more: Htc, Iphone, HTC iPhone, Iphone Alternative, iPhone Rival, Taiwan, Smartphones, High Tech Computer, Verizon, Sprint, T-Mobile, Att, Technology News

Jack Hidary: Internet-Powered TV — Yahoo vs. the World

Yahoo and Vizio are endrunning the competition so far in TV Widgets — Race is early — Apple’s iTV and Google TV steaming into port

Even as 3d television is getting all the headlines today, flat screen TVs with internet connectivity are spreading across the market with amazing speed. Who will control the software platform for this new world?

Yahoo is cutting deals right and left for its TV Widgets. Yahoo has cut deals to carry its TV Widgets with Samsung, Sony, LG and Vizo. Now it is adding additional makers: China’s Hisense, ViewSonic, MIPS Technologies and Sigma Designs.

Vizio has one of the more interesting offerings. Their apps bar and their mobile-phone like remote with flip keyboard make it one of the more usable platforms for combining internet and tv experiences.

Check out the VX552XVT review on CNET.com

According to CNET, Yahoo and other apps are much faster on Vizio platforms than native Yahoo Widgets. Vizio has also thrown in Rhapsody and many other non-Yahoo widgets.

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Steve Jobs does not want to be left out of this party so is relaunching AppleTV as iTV. But will a separate box ever be as successful as built-in functionality? I think now. Apple should cut deals immediately with TV makers or just come out with its own set. Consumers outside of the early adopter geek set cannot install yet another box to save themselves.

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Yahoo TV Widgets

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Check out the great chart on internet TV platformsin this article from Broadcast Engineering.

Let’s hope this spells the final deathknell for traditional IPTV. IPTV despite billions of dollars of investment has never really taken off. There are some small successes in Europe, but it is not a scalable solution.

The big question is what will mass scale internet connected TVs combined with open widgets do to traditional distribution models. Once penetration reaches 20 million homes, we wil begin to see the pillars shake. Then at 50 million homes, the grand old parthenon will finally come down.

Read more: Samsung, Flat-Panel-Tv, Internet TV, Iptv, Tv, Vizio, Yahoo Widgets, Lg, Sony, Apple TV, Cable Tv, Googletv, Itv, Apple, Steve Jobs, Future of Television, Technology News

Deepwater Horizon’s Blowout Preventer Pulled From Gulf, FBI Present

ON THE GULF OF MEXICO — A crane hoisted a key piece of oil spill evidence to the surface of the Gulf of Mexico on Saturday, giving investigators their first chance to personally scrutinize the blowout preventer, the massive piece of equipment that failed to stop the gusher four months ago.

It took 29 1/2 hours to lift the 50-foot, 300-ton blowout preventer from a mile beneath the sea to the surface. The five-story high device breached the water’s surface at 6:54 p.m. CDT, and looked largely intact with black stains on the yellow metal.

Read more: Nasa, Bp, Oil Spill, Blowout Preventer, Deepwater Horizon, Fbi, Gulf of Mexico, Gulf Oil Spill, Transocean, Oil Well, Green News

Solar Probe Plus Mission Announced: NASA Plans Trip To The Sun

It’s a little too hot to send people, but NASA plans to send a spacecraft to the sun by 2018.

As part of their Solar Probe Plus mission, the spacecraft will orbit in the sun’s outer atmosphere, constantly sampling the environment and testing for radiation.The main goals are to discover why the sun’s atmosphere is hotter than its surface, and what causes “solar winds” that affect the rest of the solar system.

Read more: Sun Mission, Sun, Nasa, NASA Sun, Solar Mission, Solar Probe Plus, Sun Probe, Solar Probe, Technology News

Sophia Dembling: Bidding Farewell to Accidental Books

Three women sat side-by-side in the first row of coach. The woman by the window read a Kindle. The woman on the aisle read an iPad. The woman in the middle read a plain old book.

Two out of three travelers prefer digital reading.

(Admittedly, my sample is small. But hang with me…)

One of travel’s great pleasures is time to read — long, luxurious stretches sitting in airports, on trains, airplanes, on the beach, if you’re lucky. Reading is what makes flying tolerable, allowing you to check out of the whole claustrophobic scene around you and enter another world of your choosing. I consider reading a necessary component of travel.

I’m no Luddite. I have discovered the pleasure of podcasts on airplanes, and fervently hope that when WiFi becomes standard on flights I will have the strength of character to resist it.

But I’m no early adopter either. So while I’ll probably succumb to the the digital reader eventually, for now, I’m still a book girl.

And yes, I am saddened by what appears to be the inevitable passing of analog books, for many reasons, including because it will mean the end of accidental books — those books we find left behind in airports, take off the bookshelves of rented beach cottages, pick from the rack of second-hand English-language books in foreign shops. Accidental books are books we might not have chosen given unlimited choice, but also don’t mind reading when they fall in our path.

I like leaving books and magazines behind on trips — in airports, on park benches, in hotel rooms. On a trip through several Alpine nations, I left my copy of Wally Lamb’s She’s Come Undone in a park in Switzerland, found someone else’s copy (or was it mine, traveling on a tighter schedule?) on a bench in Austria a few days later. I left Postcards by Annie Proulx in the Portland, Oregon airport, then felt guilty because it was such a depressing book. Would it spoil someone’s holiday?

I reread Lolita because it was all that appealed to me among the yellowed collection on a rickety rack in a small grocery store on a Greek island. (I don’t remember which; we were sailing with friends and one little yachters’ port town looked a lot like the next.) I read Everyone Worth Knowing by Lauren Weisberger because a someone I met on a trip was done with it and passed it along. I preferred Weisberger’s first book, Devil Wears Prada, which I found in a hotel library. And I liked Hypocrite in a Pouffy White Dress by Susan Jane Gilman more than I expected after taking a shot on it when I found it, and little else that appealed, in an airport newsstand.

I have tried to picture how this sort of serendipity could translate to the digital age, but I can’t see it. Accidental books will fade away like so many things that are being eclipsed by new technology: happening upon interesting stories as you page through a newspaper, nostalgia for people in our past who now are eternally in our present via Facebook, the intimacy of handwritten letters.

Books are bulky. They’re heavy. They take up a lot of space. With a digital reader, you can carry hundreds of books everywhere you go. But you have to choose all those books, one at a time — no more surprises. And when you are done, your books become no more than useless bits and bytes. Unless, of course, you would like to leave your Kindle on an airplane seat for me to find.

Read more: Kindle, Lolita, Reading, Luggage, Airports, Wally Lamb, Readers, Facebook, Devil Wears Prada, Digital Age, Annie Proulx, Vacation, Books, Digital Books, Nostalgia, Flying, Ipad, Books News