- Apple may use Intel chips for Macs
Apple Computer Inc. has been in talks that could lead to it using Intel Corp. chips in its Macintosh computers, The Wall Street Journal reported on Monday, reigniting decade-old speculation and sparking a 5 percent rise in Apple's stock price.
Wednesday, May 25, 2005
Nokia Unveils Handheld Internet Table
NEW YORK - Nokia Corp. is straying from its core cellular business with its first non-phone mobile device, a handheld Internet tablet for accessing the Web around the home over a wireless broadband connection.
Thursday, May 19, 2005
A Buyer's Guide to the New Gameboxes
The Wall Street Journal Online
The big videogame hardware makers – Sony, Microsoft, and Nintendo – have weighed in with plans for their next-generation of consoles. Now the question for consumers is which one to buy. More.
Monday, May 16, 2005
German -language spam
E-mail users perplexed by the barrage of German-language spam waiting in their inboxes Monday morning can point the finger of blame at the latest version of the Sober mass mailing worm which began rapidly spreading over the weekend.
EPIC
By the year 2014, what I call newsmasters will be the most sought-after and highly rewarded professional media creators the world has ever seen. View it here.
Thursday, May 12, 2005
Major Solaris features slip to 2006
Sun Microsystems has delayed the release of two major features the company has trumpeted as reasons to try its new Solaris operating system.
Tuesday, May 10, 2005
Future of Pro Digital Photography
Film is portable, durable, versatile. But its arcane chemistry is going out of style.
Yahoo hires legendary Larry Tesler
Tesler, 60, was part of the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center from 1973 to 1980 where he helped develop techniques such as "cut and paste" that are now standard in computer graphical user interfaces.
Monday, May 09, 2005
PalmOne Call LifeDrive 'Mobile Manager'
PalmOne has finally acknowledged the LifeDrive, calling it the first in a series of ‘Mobile Manager’ devices that will sit alongside the Zire, Tungsten, and Treo units. The Register quotes a PalmOne spokesperson describing the Mobile Manager series as something “designed for customers who are eager to take full advantage of the trend toward ‘digital everything’ - from documents and email to music, images and video, as standalone files or in organised folders.” That sounds perfectly pedestrian.
Hard drives in PDAs are a good thing, and we applaud PalmOne for being the first major vendor to do so (Sharp’s Japan-only Zaurus SL-C3000 beat them to the punch by a few months), but like other hardware vendors out there looking for a problem for which to sell a solution—we’re looking at you, Nokia—the ‘manage your lifestyle’ crap just sounds like the same thing we’ve been hearing for the last few years. That said, we’ll give them a chance—maybe they’ve got some fancy, streamlined interface that’s going to change the way we manage our multimedia.
Cnet story on LifeDrive Mobile Manager
Saturday, May 07, 2005
The Man Who Brewed Up Java
James Gosling sees new uses for the programming language he created 10 years ago, such as making his home-entertainment system work right.
Wednesday, May 04, 2005
U.S. Cities Set Up Wireless Networks
PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania (Reuters) -- A number of U.S. cities are becoming giant wireless "hot spots," where Internet users will be able to log on from the beach or a bus stop, a trend that's triggering a fierce backlash from telecom and cable giants.
'Tagging' helps unclutter data
Here's how we tend to organize our digital photos: We stick them into a folder on our computer and label it "Hawaii trip," or whatever. Here's a new way: Forget folders or albums. Just "tag" the photos based on what's actually in each frame.
Monday, May 02, 2005
No training wheels needed
Three Purdue University industrial designers tapped into memories of their own childhood cycling misadventures to build a bike that ditches the training wheels but keeps rookie riders stable.
Sunday, May 01, 2005
For one Silicon Valley company, hiring Indian programmers wasn't about greed, it was about survival. Read the report by Katherine Mieszkowski.
The Mozilla Foundation's Firefox Web browser passed a significant milestone in adoption on Friday, with more than 50 million copies of the program downloaded, according to its distributors.
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