Intel’s Roadmap Revealed: 6 Notebook CPUs Ahead

Get a preview of Intel’s plans for new dual-core chips this year.



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Central processing unitMulti-core processorIntelIntel Corporationprocessor

OfCom’s new plans for Internet piracy

OfCom, the UK’s independent competition and regulatory authority for the telecommunications industry, has released a new draft of their policies towards Internet piracy. There are many changes in the new draft especially when it comes to dealing with Internet pirates. 

Under the new system, users who break piracy laws will be…

Skype for iPhone now runs over 3G

Well pass the lord and praise the ammunition: Skype for iPhone now works over 3G, allowing you to make Skype calls – presumably long distance – without using your regular minutes. According to the latest update you can “Call using your 3G connection. Skype-to-Skype calls on 3G are free until at least end of August 2010, after which there will be a small monthly fee (operator charges for data will still apply).”

This extra fee sounds a little rough if you ask me. It’s not like Skype is doing anything special with the bits it’s transferring, right?

What’s New in Version 2.0.0

Upgrades / improvements include:
- Call using your 3G connection. Skype-to-Skype calls on 3G are free until at least end of August 2010, after which there will be a small monthly fee (operator charges for data will still apply).
- Near CD-quality sound for Skype-to-Skype calls using wideband audio (SILK codec) on iPhone 3GS and 2nd generation iPod touch.
- Enhanced call quality indicator.
- Improved start-up time.
- Fast access to the dial pad from iPhone home screen.

via RedmondPie


‘iPhone Killer’ is Finally Here: It’s Not Quite What You Think

Watch out, iPhone: A new open-source device is an iPhone killer--literally.

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Open source - iPhone - iPhone 3G - smartphone - Handhelds

UK national ID program scrapped entirely


I’m not familiar with the vagaries of UK politics, specifically the new “coalition” government and the implications of the latest election, but this is a good move no matter what party you’re in. The national ID cards, a grievously flawed part of a crippled program, are to be completely abolished within 100 days. For a state that has invested so heavily in surveillance, this about-face comes as rather a surprise — though a pleasant one, to be sure. Rejoice, UK cousins!

The lady in the video has the most inscrutably satisfied tone towards the end, there. Cracks me up.


Facebook: Just Tell Users What’s In It for Them

Facebook could avoid future privacy fiascos with better marketing. Sell the sizzle, not the bacon.

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Facebook - Privacy - Security - Social Networking - Online Communities

Rock Band 3 may include a keyboard

Xbox360 owners have the opportunity right now to download a two song demo of Green Day:Rock Band from the Xbox Live Marketplace. The demo contains two songs, Boulevard of Broken Dreams and Welcome to Paradise. When you open the demo it shows a teaser image for Rock Band 3 with...

Two Years Later, Apple Still Won’t Fix Safari Hole

A security researcher complains that Apple still hasn't fixed the carpet bomb attack for Safari on Mac OS X.

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Apple - Safari - Mac OS - Operating system - Mac OS X

Poisoned PDFs? Here’s Your Antidote

Embedded malware represents a new twist that makes PDF dangers even worse. We’ll show you how to stay safe.

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Portable Document Format - Document - Data Formats - Publishing - PDF

Bugs and Fixes: Security Woes for Windows, McAfee, Firefox

Critical updates plug OS and browser holes; an antivirus update crashes PCs.

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McAfee - Personal computer - Anti-Virus - Clients - WWW

Quick look at the Sprint EVO 4G: OMG AMAZING

Guys. Seriously. This is a nice phone. This is like the HTC HD2 with a future and it has some amazing speed, screen size, and network capabilities. If you’re up in the air about the Droid and aren’t tied to a carrier, get this.

I’ll do a full review next week.

Music by Closely Watched Trains


Google just shot cable’s Franz Ferdinand


One could be forgiven for writing off Google TV. After all, there are precedents for web TV failures (Apple TV) and precedents for ostentatious Google windmill-tilting (Wave, Buzz, a dozen others), so I don’t blame the doubters. I’d be one but for the fact that this is too big to be an experiment; it’s a declaration of war. The question is: against whom?

Against Apple? Yes, to some extent. Against set-top boxes? In a way. But primarily, I think it’s against the TV providers. Not in a direct way: as many have noted, Google TV, being a delivery system, relies entirely on others for its content. No, Google is leaning on Comcast and DirecTV and all them indirectly. Like the music industry and Napster, or the mobile phone industry and the iPhone, it’s less a direct assault and more an ultimatum: “Change or die.”

Let’s just address the Apple and set-top box issues first. Is Google sucker-punching Apple? Kind of — with the Froyo announcement, they clearly have Cupertino in their sights. But Apple TV isn’t really a vital target. When was the last time you saw one? Does anyone know what it even does? There are external hard drives with more functionality. Google’s not attacking them, but it may be attacking the iTunes hegemony. Google TV will be pulling its shows from the your cable or from web sources, whichever is more convenient. I guarantee they’re going to make it unbelievably easy — easier than iTunes — to watch, buy, and so on. But iTunes is dug in and isn’t going anywhere anytime soon. Google can bide their time there — and flank them.

As for set-top boxes: it’s unclear just how much functionality the Logitech hardware will have, and whether Google TV will allow for mods and apps that provide Popcorn Hour or Boxee-level media management. Boxee has said they see Google TV as complementary rather than competition, but that kind of soft-pedaling is expected on announcement day. Set-top boxes, DVRs, and in-TV web stuff is a real muddle right now; the average TV buyer will almost certainly be bewildered by the options and mystified by the arbitrary limitations. Think of Google TV as being for TVs what Google Maps is for location. There’s a lot of stuff you can do with it, but they don’t do nearly everything themselves: they provide a foundation. I’m thinking (hoping) that Google TV will be similar. There’s more to ask when it comes to home theater PCs: are HTPCs, like Brontosaurus, simply too big to live? I suspect they’ll remain as the hardcore collector’s delivery method of choice. Offline, as hi-def as you want, and under your control. They just won’t be big time.

So it’s a holding action against Apple and an encouraging shoulder-punch to the set-top box community. What’s the main objective? Force the cable and satellite giants’ hands. The providers have fought channels a la carte and other seemingly obvious advances in TV-watching for years now because they’re a threat to the 20-year-old money tree called basic cable. They’ve been dragging their feet for a decade, adding internet functionality piece by piece, but now that Google has thrown their hat into the ring, they have to get serious. They may have inertia, but Google has momentum. But don’t get any romantic notions about this being a David versus Goliath moment. This is just New and Improved Goliath versus Goliath Classic.

Not that Google TV is going to be any great shakes when it actually hits. TVs are already semi-web-connected, and competitors like Yahoo! have plenty of time to craft a credible competitor. Google will just be another brand for a while, but like Android, it will be cheap and plentiful, and always improving. Whenever anyone leaves Yahoo’s system or Vizio’s built-in web widgets, they’ll go to Google, the way feature phone upgraders and WinMo refugees are adopting Android in herds. Like other Google products, it’ll launch incomplete and pick up steam as it goes.

So why is it a threat to cable providers? Simple. Who wants to pay for two pipes? When I went to Comcast’s site to browse for alternative services, the option of getting internet through them was frustratingly obscured behind package deals and cable TV. What if I don’t want TV? Unpossible! Customers are led to believe that there are two distinct pipes running side by side into their house: TV and internet. Sure, that once was the case (and may still be in some areas, admittedly (though not for long)), but it sure as hell isn’t any more, and Comcast is terrified that the subscribing population at large will find out. That’s why they don’t want to give out a la carte: in order to offer options, you must first admit that options exist. If it were up to them, we’d all buy one magical pipe that gives us 100 channels (say for $60) and another pipe that gives us high-speed internet ($50), and never know that in fact, it’s all a big stream of 1s and 0s coming from the big digital content provider in the sky.

Furthermore, the traditional advertising models, pretty much set down in the early days of radio (content, more content after these messages, ads, more content) are all kinds of fun to cling to. I don’t blame them. A million dollars for 30 viewer seconds that will probably be skipped past? Sure, sign here, and we have a nice bridge for sale, too.

DVRs (and eventually Hulu) have done some damage to this concept, but it’s easier for people to think of them as magic VCRs with a tape you never have to rewind. By taking the familiar Google concepts and brands traditionally associated with the internet and putting them on your TV, practically unaltered, Google is rubbing the viewer’s nose in it: It’s all data! Can’t you see?! Data coming through the pipe! Don’t be a fool!

It takes a certain confluence of circumstances to make a new technology or delivery method seem legit to consumers, even though the tech may have been around for years. AOL legitimized “the internet.” iTunes legitimized digital media downloads (Apple is good at this; they’ve legitimized several things). Google is in the process of legitimizing internet-connected TV, even though Yahoo and Samsung and all the others have been kicking it around for a year and a half now. They were doing it at their own rate. Now they’ll have to do it at Google’s rate.

But we already have weather widgets and on-demand and Boxee and TiVo! Yeah, and we already had Nomads and ball mice and candy bar phones — until we had something else. Google’s taking an extant concept and making it simpler and better, or so we hope — it’s kind of what they do. Unfortunately for cable providers, that concept is analogous to net neutrality in your TV — let’s call it “pipe parity,” in which viewers know that it’s all just data coming from some datacenter somewhere and being turned into video by a box in their home. The more prevalent Google TV and nascent pipe parity is (having it in Sony TVs is, no doubt, only the beginning), the more cable and satellite providers will have to provide for it. As the insensibility of their double-dipping becomes more and more evident to viewers, they’ll have to accommodate, though it’ll be a while before any serious changes take place. Satellite, for instance, may not have much of a place in the hierarchy in a couple years outside of getting content to the savage prairies where cable hath spread not its high-bandwidth tentacles.

And of course Google will have to accommodate the providers, as well: after all, it’s NBC or CBS or FOX that creates, licenses, and owns the content every Google TV viewer will want. It goes both ways — but it’s been a long time since it’s gone any way but the networks’. People have been clicking between channels by hitting the up and down buttons for a good 60 years now: it’s practically inborn. TV providers have been capitalizing on it for exactly as long, but now as bandwidth and accessibility catch up to television and movies as they caught up to music seven or eight years ago, they’ll have to switch their game up if they want to stay afloat. Otherwise they’ll end up like the music industry: a criminally obstinate, publicly mocked pariah, with their asses hanging in the wind, suing the customers they chiseled for half a century, and whining all the way to the poorhouse. Christ, good riddance! Let’s hope Comcast doesn’t end up the same way. Actually, on second thought, I’d pay good money to see that.

It’ll take some time, and I’m guessing there are things Google isn’t telling us. Other big players like Netflix, iTunes, TiVo, and so on will have a say in the new order — no sense pretending they’re going to disappear. But I don’t think this is a lark on Google’s part. Like they said, they want a piece of the 4-billion strong TV market, and they’re going to get it one way or another. What remains to be seen is who will ride shotgun — and who will get thrown under the bus.


Symantec to Buy VeriSign’s Authentication Business

Symantec will pay US$1.28 billion to acquire VeriSign's security business.

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VeriSign - Symantec - Security - Business - Consultants

Facebook Fixing Embarrassing Privacy Bug

Facebook is scrambling to fix a new Web site glitch that could allow users' private information to become exposed.

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Facebook - Privacy - Social network - Security - Online Communities

FTC Asked to Investigate Google Wi-Fi ‘snooping’

Consumer Watchdog has asked the FTC to investigate Google Street View's collection of Wi-Fi data.

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Google - Consumer Watchdog - GoogleStreetView - Search - Search Engines

Security Goes to the Movies: Iron Man 2

How Hollywood's new blockbuster reflects today's security industry.

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Iron Man - Hollywood Los Angeles California - Security - Business Services - Business

Google’s Wi-Fi Spying: What Were They Thinking?

Google revealed Friday that its Street View cars have been collecting sensitive personal information from unencrypted wireless networks in Germany

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Google - GoogleStreetView - Wi-Fi - Germany - Searching

Google: The Accidental Spy

Google admits it goofed while collecting Street View data, but what a mess.

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Google - Google Street View - Searching - Search Engines - Wi-Fi

Will 4G Fix Wireless Voice Quality?

Will new WiMax and LTE wireless technologies address the dropped calls, latency, and line noise that many users have come to associate with wireless calls?

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WiMax - 3GPP Long Term Evolution - 4G - Wireless - Business

The Cutest Robots in the World

Sure, someday these machines will band together and take over--but they're so darned cute!

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robotic - Robot - Companies - History - Industrial

I’m not buying this performance gaming NIC nonsense


“Up to 10X faster than standard connections, the Killer 2100 delivers unprecedented performance while reducing stuttering, freezing and other symptoms of lag in online games. The result? Higher scores, more kills.”

Woah woah woah. Shut the front door. Let’s just take a look at this. 10 times faster than what, exactly? Latency is introduced in so many places other than the NIC that I would say the NIC is the most efficient part of the system. Packet loss occurs at any of like a billion places your bits are exchanged, redirected, backed up, and so on. Buying one of these NICs would be like buying a moving driveway for your car and saying it improved mileage.

Observe this handy chart I made for the occasion.

To be honest, I’m sure it’s a perfectly good network card. But I really don’t think that any of the effects of lag, packet loss, choke, or all the other things that can go wrong with a sustained connection, are occurring in whatever it replaces. My onboard Ethernet can easily sustain two or three megabytes per second, and games use a tiny fraction of that. Furthermore, these days, most gameplay is calculated client-side, which is the reason you don’t have to lead your shots any more. Lag is resolved and predicted for at the server level. You’re a hundred times, a hundred thousand times, more likely to get gameplay problems from a fragmented hard drive, outdated graphics drivers, an old sound card — hell, moving the shadows notch up or down one setting will affect your performance way more than getting a $129 special network interface card.

Look, when it comes to trading bits with your router or cable modem, even the cheapest PCs out there are hot rods. Don’t even think about getting one of these things — but if you feel the need to investigate further, head over to http://www.bigfootnetworks.com/killer-2100/“>Bigfoot Networks. And when you come back, some guy was talking about a bridge he had for sale.


Autonomous car reverse-powerslides into coned off parking spot. That is all


Sooo, this robo-car just flips itself on in there. That’s… great, though it seems kind of impractical. Shouldn’t we be careful what we teach our robots? They might get cocky.

Full video from the Stanford Racing Team (with science-y explanation) below.

[via IEEE Spectrum and Metafilter]


Wi-Fi, WirelessHD Cozy up to WiGig Standard

Both the Wi-Fi Alliance and WirelessHD vendor SiBeam want to work more closely with WiGig, they said Monday.

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Wi-Fi Alliance - WirelessHD - Wireless Gigabit Alliance - Wireless - SiBeam

Gadzooks! Why, this miniature cannon is most delightful!


Ah, parlour cannon. Who among us has not built one in the idle hours between chase and whist? I myself have fashioned one out of the mouthpiece of an Oriental “Hou-kah” and the base of a common telegraph console. It absolutely devastated the jellied quail I had brought for supper. But this is the tiniest parlour cannon of them all — yet still packs a ruddy knuckle, what? That ale receptacle was quite disintegrated. Yes; capital.

[via Reddit]


Funny/Not funny: Volvo’s crash avoidance feature fails during demo


Boy, I feel for Volvo right now. During this UK demonstration of the new S60’s collision avoidance system, something… went wrong. Nobody was hurt, luckily, but I get the feeling somebody’s paycheck is going to be hurting pretty soon. Apparently the engineer who prepped the car just messed up the batteries. Sure, this kind of things happens, but man, when you invite a hundred journalists to watch you not crash a car, there’s really only one thing you absolutely cannot do. Guess what that is?

Check out the video over at Wired UK.


IRig Turns IPhone, IPad Into a Rockstar Studio

Your local guitar shop is apparently next on the iPhone's hit list. IK Multimedia has announced AmpliTube iRig, a complete hardware and software setup for...

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iPhone - IkMultimedia - Smartphones - Handhelds - AmpliTube

Zero Punctuation: Splinter Cell: Conviction


Sit back, turn down your speakers to hide the NSFW language and enjoy the latest Zero Punctuation.


A few things to know about electric bikes

We like electric vehicles here at CrunchGear, from the Volt to the Leaf to the Eneloop to the U3-X. But none of those are very common purchases, and although electric cars are looked forward to with anticipation, electric bikes seem to have escaped the notice of the US altogether. Japan and Eastern Asia have these things all over the place, but even here in eco-friendly Seattle, they’re rare as hens’ teeth.

If you’re thinking about getting one, maybe to simplify a short 3-or-4-mile commute, there are some things you should know. This little post does a good job summing up the basics so you don’t get taken in down at ye olde electricke bi-cycle shoppe.

The main things you’ll run into are battery type and size, and engine wattage. Beyond that the trim level seems to be largely — well, not superficial differences, but you always get diminishing returns as the price goes up.


Sony atracTable to take on Microsoft Surface

image courtesy of pocket-lint.com Sony is set to take on the Microsoft Surface next month, with their new Sony atracTable prototype, according to pocket-lint.  Sony purchased the technology off of a Swiss company, Atracsys, which has been developing the atracTable since 2008. Atracsys specializes in multi-touch interactive projects,...

Erasing Your Digital Tracks on the Web

We routinely enter personal information at various sites on the Web--and the Internet never forgets. Here are some sound ways to take your data back.

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Data - Privacy - Security - Facebook - Social network