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 ::: Monday, June 30 ::: |
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 ::: Friday, June 27 ::: |
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 ::: Monday, June 23 ::: |
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 ::: Friday, June 20 ::: |
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Insane: Bill challenges ICANN, VeriSign
This is exactly the sort of thing ICANN was set up to protect against. It's becoming obvious that VeriSign will never step back and let free enterprise reign. I applaud the representatives who are sponsoring this bill and I sincerely hope that ICANN gets the come-uppance they deserve.
At this point, I hold little hope that ICANN can be rehabilitated at all. We simply need to excise it like the tumor it is and put the future of the web in much more capable (and culpable) hands.
1:34 PM CST :: echo commentCount('95871199'); ?>
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 ::: Thursday, June 19 ::: |
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Whoa: IMAX Indianapolis
The IMAX theater inside the Indiana State Museum in Indianapolis is showing Matrix:Reloaded starting this Friday and continuing for a couple of weeks. I am sorely tempted to make the four hour drive to check it out. I've never seen an IMAX film before and you have to admit some of the fight scenes would be mind-bending in such a large format.
That sure is a long way to drive just to see a movie though.
2:21 PM CST :: echo commentCount('95837316'); ?>
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Uh huh:USB Forum creates USB 2.0 consumer confusion
Here's a novel concept... why not just print the throughput on the box? Why confuse everyone with the nuances of whether "full speed" is faster or slower than "high speed" or if the device in question is truly USB2 or merely adheres to the adjusted USB1.1 standard? The theoretical maximums in question are often the purest of fantasy anyway. No need to make things worse.
I'm just happy they decided that all USB would be backward compatible. We certainly don't need a repeat of the WiFi debacle.
2:02 PM CST :: echo commentCount('95836737'); ?>
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Hmm: Of the Playstation Portable
It stills seems strange to me that Sony and Nokia both claim to be targeting a different market than Nintendo owns with the GameBoy et al. Personally, I can't imagine needing more than one portable gaming system and, right now at least, the chances of any system having more games than the Nintendo offerings is slim to none.
1:53 PM CST :: echo commentCount('95836490'); ?>
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 ::: Wednesday, June 18 ::: |
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 ::: Tuesday, June 17 ::: |
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Eh: Network cards and dodgy Win 2003 drivers
On the face of it, this vulnerability sounds pretty serious. Leaking FTP and POP passwords is, after all, a big deal. However, if you consider the exploit vector for such a leak it becomes fairly obvious that the problem is far from critical.
Assuming, for example, that I was able to bounce a packet off your machine and retrieve the "pad" data which could contain your password. How would I have any way of determining that some random string of bytes was in fact a password unless I already knew it? Taking it one step further, even if I did know it was a password, I'm not sure there would be any reliable means of determining which service that password was originally transmitted for. That said, it's generally a pretty good idea to stay on top of LAN driver patches anyway for performance and data corruption reasons.
1:58 PM CST :: echo commentCount('95762971'); ?>
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 ::: Monday, June 16 ::: |
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 ::: Friday, June 13 ::: |
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Yep: On MS, AV and Addictive Updates
This is the first argument regarding the Microsoft buy-out of GeCad which seems believable. If WindowsUpdate were automatic and (shudder) compulsory, Microsoft could put off announcing security holes until everyone was patched up. That way they could claim that they fixed the hole before it became a wide-spread problem.
Mark my words, there is nothing about this whole situation that will turn out to be good for Microsoft customers.
11:42 AM CST :: echo commentCount('95634252'); ?>
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 ::: Wednesday, June 11 ::: |
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Ahem: Microsoft to buy antivirus expertise
I think everyone is missing the point here. Microsoft buying GeCad to help promote "Trustworthy Computing" is akin to Firestone buying a company who manufactures tire patches to improve the safety rating of their tires. It seems counter-intuitive to me to assume security holes are impossible to eliminate. Anti-virus protection should be insurance, not a front-line defense.
It's also worth noting that GeCad developed a truly cross-platform scanning engine. Microsoft will be more than happy to bury that product forever.
2:25 PM CST :: echo commentCount('95560780'); ?>
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 ::: Tuesday, June 10 ::: |
Good luck: Microsoft aims higher with Web software
Microsoft has built their reputation upon eventually succeeding with products nobody wanted. This, however, I consider to be a fairly hard sell. Any web developer worth their salt would cringe mightily at the mere mention of FrontPage.
The biggest problem with any web design tool is that it's far too easy to fall into the trap of designing cookie cutter pages. If everyone uses FrontPage and all FrontPage sites look and feel a certain way, then what's the advantage in hiring professional designers? Like I said, a tough sell.
2:20 PM CST :: echo commentCount('95517888'); ?>
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 ::: Monday, June 9 ::: |
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Interesting: Lost Indiana
This is a pretty cool project. I've often felt the urge to document these sort of places as I discovered them. Such sites may not be unique to Indiana, but it seems like we have more than our fair share of them. We just seem to get tired of things and leave them be.
4:38 PM CST :: echo commentCount('95481541'); ?>
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 ::: Friday, June 6 ::: |
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Nope: Sony Portable DVD Player
While I can certainly cede a few points to Sony for the cool factor of such a gadget, I find it hard to see how a $600 player can compete when you can get a whole laptop for $699 which would offer DVD playback at twice the screen size. Battery life could be a key issue, but unless you've got a lot of discretionary income $600 still seems a little high. I'd say somewhere between $200 and $250 is the sweet spot for this sort of an item.
[thanks to Gizmodo for the link]
3:04 PM CST :: echo commentCount('95383828'); ?>
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 ::: Thursday, June 5 ::: |
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Heh: Xbox 1.5 rumours gather speed
I suppose it's good that Microsoft is listening to their customers, but since this is "a purely cosmetic makeover" and no "changes will be made to the internals of the system" it falls a bit short of the goal in my mind. Even if it does sport a smaller footprint the box will likely have the same weight as the original Xbox which, if dropped from a height of greater than two feet, is capable of creating a black hole upon impact.
1:27 PM CST :: echo commentCount('95337286'); ?>
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 ::: Tuesday, June 3 ::: |
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 ::: Monday, June 2 ::: |
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Yep: Microsoft to drop standalone IE
Why should they bother since AOL is going to test and distribute it for them? Besides, now that they have achieved their goal and killed Netscape, there's no real need to continue pumping cash into the IE sinkhole.
What the article fails to mention is that this announcement kills IE for Mac as well. If AOL kills Mozilla, then Mac users will be left with Safari. Speaking of which, I guess we now know why Safari went with KHTML instead of Gecko. It must be nice to have friends in high places.
10:21 AM CST :: echo commentCount('95194174'); ?>
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dinoneil[at]newdream[dot]net
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