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  Technology: Ballmer Sets Loose Windows 7 Public Beta At CES on Thursday January 08, @03:30PM

Posted by timothy on Thursday January 08, @03:30PM
from the conventional-wisdom-ranks-it-high dept.
Windows
CWmike writes "The rumors turned out to be true. Microsoft will release a public beta this week of its next desktop operating system, Windows 7, hoping it will address the problems that have made Windows Vista perhaps the least popular OS in its history. Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer will launch the beta during his speech at the start of the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas on Wednesday. Preston Gralla reviewed Windows 7 beta 1, noting 'Fast and stable, Beta 1 of Windows 7 unveils some intriguing user-interface improvements, including the much-anticipated new task bar.' MSDN and Technet subscribers should be able to get the public data tonight. The general public will have to wait until Friday."
windows !freesoftware !vista nochairsthrown yay
tech windows
story
Read More 39 comments
Comments: 39
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  Mobile: Asus Reveals the Eee Keyboard on Thursday January 08, @02:40PM

Posted by timothy on Thursday January 08, @02:40PM
from the want-it-already dept.
Portables
El Lobo writes "Asus' success with its Eee line of netbooks might have come as a surprise, but the company is now determined to expand the Eee brand into every possible niche and form factor. Case in point: the insanely cool Eee Keyboard, which will surely bring a smile on the faces of those who remember the glory days of the home computer. Described as a fully functional PC with inset Qwerty key arrangement, the keyboard has a 5in touch screen that displays a suite of bespoke media controls or a Windows desktop."
hardware portables c64 why prototype
mobile portables
story
Read More 100 comments
Comments: 100
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  Technology: GOS Gadget Aims Ubuntu At Cloud Computing on Thursday January 08, @02:20PM

Posted by timothy on Thursday January 08, @02:20PM
from the prettification-always-welcome dept.
GUI
DeviceGuru writes "The gOS project has released version 3.1 of its Ubuntu-based Google-centric distribution. The release draws its packages from the Ubuntu 8.04 (Hardy Heron) repositories, but adds a bright green theme and a few alterations in default applications, but more importantly adorns its desktop with numerous gadgets based on the Mozilla Prism project along with an animated application-launch icon set based on the wbar project."
gui linux linuxbusiness !important
tech gui
story
Read More 19 comments
Comments: 19
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  Technology: Sunday Evening, the New Web Rush Hour on Thursday January 08, @01:57PM

Posted by timothy on Thursday January 08, @01:57PM
from the not-a-creature-was-stirring-except-that-darn-mouse dept.
The Internet
Barence writes "For anyone who assumes weekday evenings are the worst time to enter the online scrum, it may be a surprise to learn that the peak internet rush hour, when average web speeds slow to a crawl, is in fact Sunday between 5pm and 6pm. This surprise fact came out of Ofcom's recent research that also told us the blindingly obvious news that actual broadband speeds are less than half of those advertised by the ISPs."
internet captainobvious pr0n
tech internet
story
Read More 51 comments
Comments: 51
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  Technology: Twitter Hack Details Revealed on Thursday January 08, @12:10PM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday January 08, @12:10PM
from the my-password-is-p4ssw0rd dept.
Security
Jack Spine writes "Twitter co-founder Biz Stone has confirmed both to ZDNet UK and Wired's Threat Level blog that a dictionary attack was used to hack Twitter. After the hacker distributed details on the Digital Gangster forum, celebrities such as Britney Spears and Barack Obama had their accounts defaced. Wired spoke to the alleged hacker, while ZDNet UK got in contact with someone who had been on the Digital Gangster forum at the time."
security it twitter happiness ytcracker
tech security
story
Read More 138 comments
Comments: 138
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  Linux: The 2008 Linux and Free Software Timeline on Thursday January 08, @11:28AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday January 08, @11:28AM
from the year-in-review dept.
Linux
diegocgteleline.es writes "Here is LWN's eleventh annual timeline of significant events in the Linux and free software world for the year. As always, 2008 proved to be an interesting year, with great progress in useful software that made our systems better. Of course, there were some of the usual conflicts — patent woes, project politics, and arguments over freedom — but overall, the pace of free software progress stayed on its upwardly increasing trend. 2008 was a year that saw the end of SCO — or not — the rise of Linux-based 'netbooks,' multiple excellent distribution releases, more phones and embedded devices based on Linux, as well as major releases of software we will be using for years (X.org, Python, KDE, ...)."
linux yearoflinuxonthedesktop time
linux linux
story
Read More 76 comments
Comments: 76
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  Technology: NVIDIA Offers 3D Glasses For the Masses on Thursday January 08, @10:46AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday January 08, @10:46AM
from the holding-out-for-the-fourth-dimension dept.
Graphics
Vigile writes "A new stereoscopic 3D gaming technology has hit the street today from NVIDIA, though demoed earlier in the year, that promises to bring high quality 3D gaming to the PC. The GeForce 3D Vision technology utilizes active shutter glasses and a 120 Hz display (either 120 Hz LCD or 3D-Ready DLP TVs) to bring an immersive 3D effect to PC games. Using the depth buffer information stored in DirectX, the NVIDIA software is able to construct a stereo 3D image out of existing game content while the 120 Hz requirement gives each eye 60 frames of motion per second negating the physical detriments that were known to occur with previous 3D offerings. The review at PC Perspective details how the technology works, the performance hit your games take while using it and the advantages and disadvantages to the user's gaming experience with 3D Vision."
graphics games porn parallaxerror nvidia
tech graphics
story
Read More 172 comments
Comments: 172
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  Your Rights Online: Blu-ray Update Sent To User Via Credit Card Records on Thursday January 08, @10:07AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday January 08, @10:07AM
from the allright-that's-just-plain-scary dept.
Privacy
wmoyes writes "Back in September I ran into a Best Buy store to buy a Samsung BD-P2550 Blu-ray player. I didn't give the clerk my name, telephone number, or address, just my debit card. The player has sat happily in my living room without ever being networked or registered. Today I was shocked to find a package waiting for me at home from Best Buy — inside was a firmware update CD for the player. I used to think Windows Update was scary, but Samsung's update service tracked me to my house using the mag stripe from my bank card. Has this happened to any other Blu-ray owners?" Or is there a simpler explanation?
privacy breachoftrust askslashdot datamisuse betterthanidentitytheft
yro privacy
story
Read More 364 comments
Comments: 364
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  Technology: Google Over IPv6 Coming Soon on Thursday January 08, @09:29AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday January 08, @09:29AM
from the what-no-ipv5 dept.
Google
fuzzel writes "Today Google announced Google over IPv6 where ISPs can sign up their DNS nameservers so that their users will get access to an almost fully IPv6-enabled Google, including http://www.google.com, images and maps, etc., just like in IPv4. Without this only http://ipv6.google.com is available, but then you go to IPv4 for most services. So, start kicking your ISPs to support IPv6 too, and let them sign up. Check this list of ISPs that already do native IPv6 to your doorstep. The question that now remains is: when will Slashdot follow?"
internet google why ipv6
tech google
story
Read More 182 comments
Comments: 182
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  Technology: "Smash Your Hard Drive" To Fight Identity Theft on Thursday January 08, @08:47AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday January 08, @08:47AM
from the i-can-get-behind-that dept.
Privacy
Will Do This For Free writes "BBC News has a story about the only fireproof way of safeguarding your personal information when dumping your old computer: 'It sounds extreme, but the only way to be 100% safe is to smash your hard drive into smithereens. [...] The more thoroughly the better.' This sounds like so much fun that I almost feel like doing it right now. Let me press Submit Story first."
technology privacy willitblend officespace dban
tech privacy
story
Read More 359 comments
Comments: 359
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  Technology: Researcher Says Social Networks Link Terrorists on Thursday January 08, @07:57AM

Posted by samzenpus on Thursday January 08, @07:57AM
from the you-have-a-terrorist-request dept.
Social Networks
An anonymous reader writes "At the International Conference on Cyber Security 2009 in New York, Evan Kohlmann, a senior investigator and private consultant for Global Terror Alert, claimed that a new breed of terrorists are using online forums to recruit people who align themselves with the mission of Al Qaeda, creating global networks of would-be terrorists."
social it !news duh crikey
tech social
story
Read More 163 comments
Comments: 163
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  Games: EGM Magazine Shutting Down on Thursday January 08, @05:31AM

Posted by Soulskill on Thursday January 08, @05:31AM
from the fare-thee-well dept.
The Media
Gamasutra reports that Ziff Davis Media has sold a number of gaming websites, including 1Up.com, and will be shutting down their popular magazine, Electronic Gaming Monthly. Some of 1Up's staff was laid off as well, though the new owners want to keep the rest of it intact. The sale was motivated by an unprofitable business model made worse by the recent downturn in the economy. 1Up's James Mielke has made a post about the final hours of EGM, and a glimpse at the final issue, saying, "...the final, secret, unpublished issue of EGM will show up here on 1UP shortly in the near future. You will be able to read every hi-res page, ads and all (last time I checked at least) on 1UP, to see the beautiful job that crew did, even with the guillotine hanging over our heads every minute of the day."
games media egm ugo sad
games media
story
Read More 57 comments
Comments: 57
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  Ask Slashdot: How Long Should Companies Make E-Bills Available? on Thursday January 08, @03:19AM

Posted by samzenpus on Thursday January 08, @03:19AM
from the forever-billed dept.
Businesses
theodp writes "If you say goodbye to paper and hello to green, you may learn first-hand that no good deed goes unpunished. Try to pay your final Verizon Wireless bill online after switching carriers, for example, and don't be surprised if you get a sorry-Dave-I'm-afraid-I-can't-do-that reply. Other vendors may curtail e-Bill services 30 days after you end service. And a promise of access to up to seven years of paperless statements is somewhat empty if you'll be cutoff as soon as you no longer have an account. With more-and-more companies enticing consumers to go paperless, how long a period of time should the records be made available online? Should it extend beyond the life of an account?"
business forever dumbquestion askslashdot printit
askslashdot business
story
Read More 241 comments
Comments: 241
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  Games: Wii Game Devs Testing Waters With Less-Casual Games on Thursday January 08, @02:19AM

Posted by Soulskill on Thursday January 08, @02:19AM
from the timmy-is-confused dept.
Wii (Games)
MTV's Multiplayer Blog has a pair of interviews with Wii game developers about how they're struggling to reach a more hardcore gaming audience. Jordan Itkowitz, lead designer for Deadly Creatures, wants to stay away from designing a typical collection of mini-games, saying, "The trick is to get those new players to step outside that easy comfort zone and try some genres and experiences that, while accessible and familiar to gamers, are still a bit foreign to anyone who's new to the culture." Dan Borth of Red Fly Studio is skeptical of the viability of hardcore games without relying on Nintendo and other major companies to "put a valiant effort in properly supporting developers to create great games."
wii games toolittletoolate
games wii
story
Read More 82 comments
Comments: 82
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Screenshot-sm   Idle: Hippies Say WiFi Network Is Harming Their Chakras on Thursday January 08, @12:58AM

Posted by samzenpus on Thursday January 08, @12:58AM
from the what's-with-all-the-negative-waves dept.
Image
Anti-Globalism writes "A group of hippies is complaining that a recently installed WiFi mesh network in the UK village of Glastonbury is causing health problems. To combat the signals from the Wi-Fi hotspots, the hippies have placed orgone generators around the antennae." Although there have been many studies that show no correlation between WiFi and health issues the hippies say, "Yeah, well, you know, that's just, like, your opinion, man."
wireless idleispants humor getajob idle
idle humor
story
Read More 303 comments
Comments: 303
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  Technology: Unemployment Claims Crash State Web Sites on Wednesday January 07, @10:35PM

Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday January 07, @10:35PM
from the sell-your-computer dept.
The Internet
1sockchuck writes "A sign of the times: a surge in filings for unemployment benefits has crashed online application systems in four states this week. Web sites in Ohio, New York, Kentucky and North Carolina have been knocked offline by unusually high volumes of jobless claims. Phone applications systems appearing to be faring even worse in many states. The thin silver lining: states are hiring workers for phone banks and buying new servers to prop up their web sites."
internet money kentucky faring ohshit
tech internet
story
Read More 209 comments
Comments: 209
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  Science: Mobile Phones To Fill Poor Nations' Healthcare Gap? on Wednesday January 07, @09:02PM

Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday January 07, @09:02PM
from the can-you-cure-me-now dept.
Medicine
Ian Lamont writes "The Industry Standard has reported on a couple of projects that aim to turn the humble mobile phone into a tool that can improve healthcare systems in the developing world. While poor countries lack adequate healthcare facilities, many have booming mobile phone use, even in rural areas. One company spawned by the MIT Media Lab seeks to leverage widespread mobile phone use with a Java app that lets community workers refer patients for treatment, fill out questionnaires about patient health and send real-time information back to doctors at health clinics. Another hardware-focused project started by a group of researchers at UCLA aims to create a device that can be attached to mobile phones and test blood samples for HIV, malaria, and other diseases, and send the test results to a hospital. However, it's not clear whether most mobile phones in developing countries can support these technologies, or if local healthcare infrastructures can effectively use the data generated by mobile phones."
selfpromotion medicine tricorder meh dialadoc
science medicine
story
Read More 50 comments
Comments: 50
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  Developers: The Power of the R Programming Language on Wednesday January 07, @07:33PM

Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday January 07, @07:33PM
from the much-better-than-Q dept.
Programming
BartlebyScrivener writes "The New York Times has an article on the R programming language. The Times describes it as: 'a popular programming language used by a growing number of data analysts inside corporations and academia. It is becoming their lingua franca partly because data mining has entered a golden age, whether being used to set ad prices, find new drugs more quickly or fine-tune financial models. Companies as diverse as Google, Pfizer, Merck, Bank of America, the InterContinental Hotels Group and Shell use it.'"
programming arrrrr yapl pirates developers
developers programming
story
Read More 335 comments
Comments: 335
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  Science: The Illuminati Project Pushes For Dark Skies In 2009 on Wednesday January 07, @06:31PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday January 07, @06:31PM
from the daddy-what-were-light-bulbs? dept.
Space
An anonymous reader writes "2009 is the 400th anniversary of Galileo's observations of Venus, Saturn and Jupiter published in Sidereus Nuncius ('Starry Messenger'). To improve scientific literacy, the NOAO and NASA are promoting dark-sky initiatives in 2009 to draw attention to the problem of light pollution which obscures nearly all night sky colors and objects except for the moon and a few bright stars and planets. Project Illuminati is a Flickr project by James Cann to showcase the beauty of light pollution to raise awareness and educate fellow Earthmates to lower energy consumption and become more curious about our place in the universe."
space earth nasa switchoff fnord
science space
story
Read More 290 comments
Comments: 290
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  Hardware: OLPC Downsizes Half of Its Staff, Cuts Sugar on Wednesday January 07, @05:44PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday January 07, @05:44PM
from the austerity-a-side-effect-of-reality dept.
Portables
One Laptop Per Chewbacca writes "Nicholas Negroponte, the leader of the One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) project, has announced that the organization will be laying off half of its staff, cutting salaries of the remaining employees, and ending its involvement in Sugar development. The organization has had serious problems with production and deployment and has been fragmented by ideological debates as Negroponte shifts the agenda away from software freedom and towards Windows. Ars Technica concludes: 'The OLPC project's extreme dependence on economy of scale has proven to be a fatal error. The organization was not able to secure the large bulk orders that it had originally anticipated and fell short of meeting its target $100 per unit price. The worldwide economic slowdown has made it even more difficult for OLPC to find developing countries that have cash to spare on education technology.'"
portables technology money education splenda
hardware portables
story
Read More 344 comments
Comments: 344
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  Science: Why Does the US Have a Civil Space Program? on Wednesday January 07, @05:00PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday January 07, @05:00PM
from the why-indeed? dept.
NASA
BDew writes "The Presidents of the National Academy of Science and the National Academy of Engineering have commissioned a study on the Rationale and Goals of the US Civil Space Program. In short, the Academies are asking why the nation has a civil space program (including human, robotic, commercial, and personal spaceflight). The study is intended to provide a strategic framework for the nation's activities in space that can provide consistent guidance in an increasingly interconnected world. The members of the study committee are interested in the views (positive or negative) of the general public, particularly those people with a scientific and/or technological interest."
nasa usa space government whynot
science nasa
story
Read More 276 comments
Comments: 276
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  Technology: OpenID Fan Club Is Shrinking on Wednesday January 07, @04:20PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday January 07, @04:20PM
from the and-watch-that-basket-carefully dept.
Security
A.B. VerHausen writes "Even though there's a whole new Web site devoted to understanding and using OpenID, some companies are dropping the login method altogether. OStatic is reporting that the 'free Web site network Wetpaint announced recently that it will no longer support OpenID as a login option for its wiki, citing low usage and high support costs as reasons.' Apparently, fewer than 200 registered users bothered with OpenID, and the extra QA and development time doesn't make it worthwhile to support. This can't come as welcome news on top of the internal issues the article mentions the OpenID Foundation is having now, too." I've actually been quite happy with OpenID, since I have spawned far too many username/password pairs over the last 20-plus years, but it's a major chicken-and-egg problem. Hopefully someone out there will build a better mousetrap ...
security it internet openid happiness
tech security
story
Read More 304 comments
Comments: 304
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  News: New Energy Efficiency Rules For TVs Sold In California on Wednesday January 07, @03:38PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday January 07, @03:38PM
from the free-markets-are-just-too-wacky-and-non-linear dept.
Television
petehead writes "The LA Times reports on regulations expected to pass in 2009 that will not allow energy-inefficient TVs to be sold in the state. 'State regulators are getting ready to curb the growing power gluttony of TV sets by drafting the nation's first rules requiring retailers to sell only the most energy-efficient models, starting in 2011... The regulations would be phased in over two years, with a first tier taking effect on Jan. 1, 2011, and a more stringent, second tier on Jan. 1, 2013.'" According to the Energy Commission's estimates, purchasers of Tier 1-compliant TVs would shave an average of $18.48 off their residential electric bill in the first year of ownership.
tv usa peoplesrepublicofcalifornia justtaxelectricity socrazyitjustmightwork
news tv
story
Read More 571 comments
Comments: 571
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  Science: Spookfish Uses Mirrors For Eyes on Wednesday January 07, @03:22PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday January 07, @03:22PM
from the still-working-on-the-trenchcoat dept.
Earth
Kligat writes "The brownsnout spookfish in the Pacific is the first known vertebrate to use mirrors to focus light into its eyes. Despite being a species known for 120 years, this was not known until a live specimen was caught between New Zealand and Samoa last year. The fish lives over 1,000 meters below the ocean's surface, so the light focused by the mirrors' perfectly curved surfaces provides a major advantage over other fish."
science earth evolution fishstory perfect
science earth
story
Read More 77 comments
Comments: 77
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  Linux: All of Vietnam's Government Computers To Use Linux, By Fiat on Wednesday January 07, @02:52PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday January 07, @02:52PM
from the power-to-the-people dept.
Linux Business
christian.einfeldt writes "The Vietnamese Ministry of Information and Communications has issued an administrative ruling increasing the use of Free Open Source Software products at state agencies, increasing the software's use both in the back office and on the desktop. According to the new rule, 100% of government servers must run Linux by June 30, 2009, and 70% of agencies must use OpenOffice.org, Mozilla Firefox, and Mozilla Thunderbird by the end of 2009. The regulation also sets benchmarks for training and proficiency in the software. Vietnam has a population of 86 million, 4 million larger than that of Germany, and is one of the world's fastest-growing economies."
linuxbusiness it government linux communism
linux linuxbusiness
story
Read More 359 comments
Comments: 359
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  Technology: Google Router Rumors on Wednesday January 07, @02:04PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday January 07, @02:04PM
from the google-cars-too-pass-it-on dept.
Google
An anonymous reader writes "There's a new rumor that Google is developing its own router. The company won't comment on the story, but it's been in the hardware business for a while and expanded its presence with Android. If Larry Ellison can go halvsies with HP on a server, then Eric Schmidt should certainly be able to make Cisco nervous."
google networking grouter googlefood wiretap
tech google
story
Read More 258 comments
Comments: 258
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  News: Green Is In At CES, But Is It Real? on Wednesday January 07, @01:16PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday January 07, @01:16PM
from the hi-fi-jumpropes dept.
Earth
OTL writes "You've heard the talk of 'Green' throughout the whole of 2008, but the way a product affects the environment will be a huge consideration in consumer buying habits, at least when it comes to gadgets. But, the CEA report also said that consumers are very skeptical about the green claims made by high-tech firms for their products. More than 38 percent of those interviewed by the CEA said they were confused by green product claims and 58 percent wanted to know the specific attributes that prompted hi-tech firms to label their products green."
technology business earth greenwash motorola
news earth
story
Read More 160 comments
Comments: 160
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  News: $30B IT Stimulus Will Create Almost 1 Million Jobs on Wednesday January 07, @12:20PM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Wednesday January 07, @12:20PM
from the i'm-sure-they-won't-filter-anything-either dept.
Government
itif writes "This report takes a look at how many jobs you get if you invest $10 billion each in three different IT infrastructure projects — broadband, health IT and the smart grid. It argues that if you are going to be spending billions on a stimulus package, investing in 'digital infrastructure' creates more jobs than physical infrastructure (e.g. roads and bridges) in the short-term, and you get a whole host of other benefits in the long-term."
government !create punywage socialism gosplan
news government
story
Read More 758 comments
Comments: 758
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  IT: Data Breaches Rose Sharply In 2008 on Wednesday January 07, @11:44AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Wednesday January 07, @11:44AM
from the my-password-is-p4ssw0rd dept.
Security
snydeq writes "According to the Identity Theft Resource Center, more than 35 million data records were breached in the US in 2008. Tracking media reports and disclosures companies are required to make by law, the ITRC noted a 47 percent increase in breaches last year at a range of well-known US companies and government entities. The majority of the lost data was neither encrypted nor protected by a password. A third of the breaches occurred at business entities. One in six breaches were attributed to insider theft, a figure that more than doubled between 2007 and 2008, ITRC said."
security ohmygod ohnoes crysmonub mygoditsfullofbreaches
it security
story
Read More 43 comments
Comments: 43
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  Apple: Apple's Life After Steve Jobs on Wednesday January 07, @10:59AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Wednesday January 07, @10:59AM
from the cut-the-turtleneck-budget-in-half dept.
Apple
animusCollards writes "Slate ponders a post-Steve Jobs Apple, including possible successors, and the future is... boring. '..it's certainly true that Jobs' style is central to the company's brand and the fierce connection it forges with its customers. His product announcements prompt hundreds of millions of dollars worth of free press coverage and whip up greater and more loyal fans, generating ever-greater interest in the company. ... At some point, all that will end. Jobs will eventually leave the company. There are no obvious plans for succession; in addition to Schiller, observers finger Tim Cook, Apple's COO, and Scott Forstall, who helped develop Mac OS X and the iPhone's software, as contenders for the job. But Tuesday's keynote illustrated how difficult it will be for any of those guys to replace Jobs.'"
apple woz stop stevejobs endofanera
apple apple
story
Read More 387 comments
Comments: 387

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