« June 2010 »
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30
You are not logged in. Log in
Entries by Topic
All topics  «
Blog Tools
Edit your Blog
Build a Blog
RSS Feed
View Profile
My Blog
Wednesday, 23 June 2010
Walmart Offering Up iPhone 4 On Launch Day

Walmart


As Apple is preparing to meet a large demand for iPhone 4, Walmart can now be added to the list of distributors on the launch day of June 24, according to MacNN.


The reason for the move is an attempt to help Apple alleviate some of the stresses of good 'ol supply and demand, giving customers an opportunity to purchase the handset from multiple retail stores.  Best Buy and Radio Shack are also ramping up to offer up the newest iPhone on June 24 as well.. Nokia BH 105 Grey with DC 4 Refurbished


This would be the first time that Walmart will be selling the iPhone on a launch day of the device.  Before, only previous versions of the iPhone were made available by the company, much later on.  We all remember the images of huge lines outside of AT&T and Apple Stores. 


It should be noted though that Walmart will not be participating in pre-orders of the device, which are slated to start this coming Tuesday, through Apple as well as AT&T.


Image courtesy of pmptoday.com


 




Rosetta Stone, BP, Denny’s, Dick’s Sporting Goods among big market movers Thursday


Posted by vitavilolu-phone at 6:00 AM EDT
Tuesday, 22 June 2010
Biker embarks on social media-driven trek across Canada

Biker embarks on social media-driven trek across Canada



Thanks to Olivier Kerebel, I’ll never think of the French as pinky-pointed tea-sipping, croissant-nibbling wimps again. Instead, I’ll think of Olivier’s epic thigh-busting bike ride across Canada that he’s recently launch from Toronto’s Dundas Square. I’ll also think of his savvy use of social media to bring his friends along for the journey.


I met Olivier when he was crashing on a friend’s couch (set up via couchsurfing.org). The Parisian is in Canada for a year on a temporary visa, and hopes to eventually end his bike ride in Vancouver. His last blog update - befreetochange.wordpress.com/- places him in Sudbury, Ont. and he’s posted the mandatory photos of the Big Nickel.



Follow Olivier's bike journey across the country with social media.



Olivier is using an array of Web 2.0 tools to document his trip and share it with peers. He has a knack for shooting video while riding that isn’t too shaky, and even narrating a monologue while pedaling – which he somehow manages to upload to YouTube. There’s lots of pictures on his WordPress blog, and Olivier is also updating a Facebook page and Twitter account.


But my favourite social media feature of this biking journey is Olivier’s use of Polldaddy.com. A simple radio-button poll sits on the right side of his blog, and after June 6 Olivier’s followers will click away to decide which route he will take across the country. It reminds me of the “Choose Your Own Adventure” book series I was fond of in elementary school. Nokia 2730C. The ability to help determine Olivier’s fate and how he experiences Canada during his trek adds real appeal to reading the blog.


Currently, the poll asks followers how cruel or how nice they plan to be to Olivier in their voting. Right now, it looks like Olivier’s in for a tough ride as 88 per cent of respondents indicate they’ll favour more difficult paths (including me – I’m hoping for a Grizzly encounter).


Olivier is also raising money for Save the Children through his blog, and anyone can make a donation online with a credit card. His goal is a humble $1500, but I’m guessing he’ll meet enough people along the way and gain enough interest with this blog that he’ll surpass that mark before he hits the Prairies.


rosalind.o’connell(at)edelman.com



mobile

Posted by vitavilolu-phone at 5:00 PM EDT
Hewlett-Packard spends $1.6M to lobby government in 1Q, one of highest spends in industry












Hewlett-Packard spends $1.6M on 1Q lobbying


WASHINGTON — Hewlett-Packard Co. spent $1.6 million to lobby the U.S. government in the first quarter on a smorgasbord of issues including federal spending on technology, enforcement of immigration laws and health care reform.


The amount was nearly double HP's $840,000 lobbying tab from the first quarter of 2009. HP spent $710,000 on lobbying in the fourth quarter of 2009.


Kristy Sternhell, formerly a counsel to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, was among the people who lobbied on behalf of HP, which is the world's biggest technology company by revenue.


HP said in its latest lobbying-disclosure form, filed with the House clerk's office, that it lobbied Congress and various government agencies. Those agencies included the Homeland Security and Labor departments, which HP lobbied on immigration-related issues, including legislation involving the creation of a computer network to verify that workers in the U.S. are legally able to work. Other agencies included the Health and Human Services department and the Federal Reserve System.. Nokia X3 Red on Black Unlocked GSM Cellular Phone


HP's $1.6 million tab ranked among the highest for technology companies in the latest period.


Other big-time Silicon Valley tech firms spent less. Google Inc. spent $1.4 million in the first quarter to lobby the federal government on issues including its decision to stop censoring search results in China, and Oracle Corp. spent $1.1 million, in part on regulatory issues concerning its recent acquisition of Sun Microsystems.


However, Microsoft Corp., consistently one of tech's biggest lobbying spenders, spent more than HP — $1.7 million on lobbying in the latest period.




Apple Releases Safari 5.0

Posted by vitavilolu-phone at 4:00 AM EDT
Monday, 21 June 2010
Native iPad App Library Passes 10,000 Milestone
Apple’s iTunes App Store now lists more than 10,000 universal and iPad specific apps, with nearly 1,000 more being added every week.


According to a report by Mac Stories, Apple’s iPad library includes over 2,100 games and includes a broad mix of content from digital books to productivity and news apps to rich media apps.


Around 78% of iPad specific titles are paid apps, echoing the findings of an earlier report by Moblix that cited an 80% paid mix in April when the iPad store first opened with around 3,000 titles.. Sony Ericsson XPERIA X10


A slightly smaller percentage (around 75%) of the iPhone’s 225,000 titles are also paid apps. This indicates iPad users are more willing to pay for premium content.


Faster growth, despite Apple’s approval process

According to a report by PadGadget, growth of the iPad apps library has outpaced the original iPhone App Store, which took almost five months to reach the 10,000 app milestone in 2008.

The site also notes that Google’s Android Market took almost 11 months to reach 10,000 apps; that store has no approval process in place screening apps for performance as advertised or other quality control issues.


Google currently forbids Android tablet makers from putting Android Market on their non-smartphone devices, so there is no official market for Android-based tablet software comparable to what Apple maintains for iPad users.


In just 63 days, Apple’s curated App Store for iPad has taken third place after iPhone apps and Android smartphone apps. PadGadget notes that HP’s Palm/webOS, RIM’s BlackBerry App World, and Nokia’s Symbian platform all boast fewer than 7,000 apps.


“I Speak Dragon†2010 Contest For Dragon NaturallySpeaking or MacSpeech Dictate Users

Posted by vitavilolu-phone at 3:00 PM EDT
Microsoft Office Web Apps: Why to use and Why not

Microsoft's going the Google way to offer its widely used and highly-priced Office Suite Online for free. The Redmond company offers free online office components that comprises Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote as a part of free online suite called Office Web Apps. That said, the online edition of the Microsoft Office is an substantial development for consumers in the current round of updates. Overtly, it projects Microsoft's commitment to cloud computing - - promoting applications online instead of desktop programs. On a broader perspective it seems the software giant is all set to take on the rivals such as Google and Zoho offering online office suites. BlackBerry Pearl 9100 Black Unlocked GSM Cellular Phone. With a week's time for the release of new version of traditional desktop Microsoft Office version - Office 2010, we decided on an extensive comparison with online version.  Before you set out to purchase the desktop version, you need to see whether the online version of Office Suite has enough to do with.


In order to use the free Office Web Suite you need to visit the office.live.com. To work on the new online Office you will need a free account for the company's broader Windows Live onilne service.


The Office Web Apps run smoothly on all major browsers - Internet Explorer, Firefox, Safari and Chrome. As is expected, the online version of Office suite lacks some of the local desktop version of Office. Microsoft is trying to ensure that the profitability of its Desktop suite is not compromised. Then, why did Microsoft launch the online Office Web Apps? The software major is draws a line between the two versions — referring the Office Web Apps as a companion to desktop Office for "light" work.


Let's take a look at the major pros and cons of using the Office Web Apps over Office 2010


Pros


User Interface


Online version of the Office suite wears a simpler look and feel than its desktop counterpart. It includes the Ribbon feature.


Storage


The new Web Apps boasts of a 25 gigabytes of free online storage for the documents, via a companion Microsoft online storage system called SkyDrive. The Office Web Apps produce documents that use the same file formats as the desktop programs. The desktop program gets fully accurate when it is opened in desktop Office. This is clearly fidelity. In the tests the claim is held true, at least on my Windows PC.


Features



  • The new version of desktop Office suite has several new features, but most of them are devoted to power users or corporate users. It isn't a big change as the predecessors.

  • Two web apps, Excel and OneNote allow multiple users to log on work on the same document togather.  The Excel online is a reduced version of the

  • The Office Web App use a variety of fonts and styles, insert and resize photos and create tables.

  • It allows you to view documents but not edit them on your iPhone or iPad. It also works with other mobile devices.


Dell lowers 1st-qtr profit by $100M to set aside legal reserve it may have to pay SEC

Posted by vitavilolu-phone at 2:00 AM EDT
Sunday, 20 June 2010
AT&T hole exposes iPad users’ e-mail addresses; hackers harvested data by tricking website












AT&T hole exposes iPad users' e-mail addresses


SAN FRANCISCO — AT&T Inc. on Wednesday acknowledged a security weak spot that exposed the e-mail addresses of apparently more than 100,000 users of Apple Inc.'s iPad, a breach that could make those people vulnerable to precision-targeted hacking attacks.


The vulnerability only affected iPad users who signed up for AT&T's "3G" wireless Internet service.


It involved an insecure way that AT&T's website would prompt iPad users when they tried to log into their AT&T accounts through the devices. The site would supply users' e-mail addresses, to make log-ins easier, based on unique codes contained in the SIM cards inside their iPads. SIM cards are used to tell cell-phone networks which subscriber is trying to use the service.


The hacker group that claims to have discovered the weakness — the group calls itself Goatse Security — said it was able to trick AT&T's site into coughing up more than 114,000 e-mail addresses, including those apparently of famous media personalities and important government officials.


A representative for the group told The Associated Press late Wednesday that the group contacted AT&T and waited until the vulnerability was fixed before going public with the information. AT&T said the problem was fixed Tuesday but that it was alerted to it by a business customer.


Gawker Media Inc.'s Valleywag website earlier reported on the breach.


AT&T said it will notify all iPad users whose e-mail addresses may have been accessed.


"We take customer privacy very seriously and while we have fixed this problem, we apologize to our customers who were impacted," the company said in a statement.


AT&T noted that the only information hackers would have been able to steal using this attack were users' e-mail addresses. But that can be enough to launch a highly effective attack, since the attacker also knows that the person receiving the e-mail is an iPad user and an AT&T customer and would expect to receive e-mail from Apple and AT&T about their accounts. Criminals could use that knowledge to trick them into opening e-mails that plant malicious software on their computers.. Nokia 6555


An Apple representative deferred requests for comment to AT&T.


Apple has sold more than 2 million iPads since they went on sale two months ago. The iPad comes in two different flavors — one that only connects to the Internet via Wi-Fi, and another that also can connect through AT&T's "3G" cellular network. The Wi-Fi-only models aren't affected by the breach. Apple hasn't specified how many of each model it has sold.




Free App Fridays: Writing

Posted by vitavilolu-phone at 1:00 PM EDT
Saturday, 19 June 2010
AT&T security hold exposes iPad users’ e-mails; hackers harvested data by tricking AT&T site














AT&T security hole exposes iPad users' e-mails


SAN FRANCISCO — AT&T Inc. on Wednesday acknowledged a security weak spot that exposed the e-mail addresses of apparently more than 100,000 users of Apple Inc.'s iPad, a breach that could make those people vulnerable to precision-targeted hacking attacks.


The vulnerability only affected iPad users who signed up for AT&T's "3G" wireless Internet service.


It involved an insecure way that AT&T's website would prompt iPad users when they tried to log into their AT&T accounts through the devices. The site would supply users' e-mail addresses, to make log-ins easier, based on unique codes contained in the SIM cards inside their iPads. SIM cards are used to tell cell-phone networks which subscriber is trying to use the service.


The hacker group that claims to have discovered the weakness — the group calls itself Goatse Security — said it was able to trick AT&T's site into coughing up more than 114,000 e-mail addresses, including those apparently of famous media personalities and important government officials.


A representative for the group told The Associated Press late Wednesday that the group contacted AT&T and waited until the vulnerability was fixed before going public with the information. AT&T said the problem was fixed Tuesday but that it was alerted to it by a business customer.


Gawker Media Inc.'s Valleywag website earlier reported on the breach.


AT&T said it will notify all iPad users whose e-mail addresses may have been accessed.


"We take customer privacy very seriously and while we have fixed this problem, we apologize to our customers who were impacted," the company said in a statement.


AT&T noted that the only information hackers would have been able to steal using this attack were users' e-mail addresses. BlackBerry ASY18083001 microUSB Car Charger. But that can be enough to launch a highly effective attack, since the attacker also knows that the person receiving the e-mail is an iPad user and an AT&T customer and would expect to receive e-mail from Apple and AT&T about their accounts. Criminals could use that knowledge to trick them into opening e-mails that plant malicious software on their computers.


An Apple representative deferred requests for comment to AT&T.


Apple has sold more than 2 million iPads since they went on sale two months ago. The iPad comes in two different flavors — one that only connects to the Internet via Wi-Fi, and another that also can connect through AT&T's "3G" cellular network. The Wi-Fi-only models aren't affected by the breach. Apple hasn't specified how many of each model it has sold.




Next »
Top 10 benefits of iPhone 4 over iPhone 3GS

Posted by vitavilolu-phone at 11:00 AM EDT
Friday, 18 June 2010
Akamai buys Velocitude, which delivers content to smartphones, for undisclosed sum

Technology News

Video game-heavy Army recruiting center at Philadelphia mall closing at end of July

Posted by vitavilolu-phone at 9:00 AM EDT
Thursday, 17 June 2010
Alternative sites to check out on Quit Facebook Day

Alternative sites to check out on Quit Facebook Day



Happy Quit Facebook Day. 


Think of the endless invitation to Mafia Wars or pleas to search for a missing cow on Farmville, not the constant updates from friends who just have to tell the world that they “just can’t wait for Friday†or that a “Sausage, eggs and mee goreng and a cup of Nescafe Gold†really perked them up today. Wall Chargers. All that could come to an end.



Nestor Arellano



 


Last time I checked the Quit Facebook Day movement, which officially starts today has only signed up 26,977 committed Facebook quitters out of the social networking site’s 400 million members. So good luck with that.


However, writer Steven Vaughan-Nichols has come up with a list of seven alternative sites that you might what to check out. We have his list here but you can also read the whole story on ITBusiness.ca


WikiHow also has this step-by-step advice on Facebook-weary on how to kick the habbit – How to Quit Facebook.


 


Here’s Steve’s list:


Appleseed


While this open-source project is still in beta, it’s an interesting take on social networking. Instead of being under the control of one company and one set of administrators, Appleseed works via a distributed server software package tied together with the ASN (Appleseed Social Network).


That means that as a user, you select and log into an Appleseed site. Once there, you connect with friends, send messages, share photos and videos, join discussions and participate in all the usual social networking stuff. Don’t like the specific Appleseed site you’re on? Then sign up for a different one and, according to the site, “immediately reconnect with everyone in your network.”


Diaspora


Diaspora, for all the headlines it’s gotten, is still not much more than an idea.


Technically, Diaspora sounds a lot like Appleseed. It’s also going to be built from open-source software, and it’s going to be a distributed network server application. The first Diaspora code release is slated for September.


Elgg


Rather than being a social network, Elgg is designed for companies and groups to run their own social networks.


You can either run your own Elgg installation — according to the Web site, the developers will be happy to help you — or you can host your site with a provider that specializes in Elgg sites. Starting later this summer, you’ll also be able to host it on Elgg.com itself.


While businesses and social groups may find Elgg interesting, it’s not really a Facebook competitor in and of itself.


Lorea


Lorea describes itself as “a project to create secure social cybernetic systems, in which human networks will become simultaneously represented on a virtual shared world.” It’s an experimental social network that combines some aspects of social networking, such as communities and real-time updating a la Twitter, with blogging.


Lorea may be less a Facebook competitor than a site for programmers who want to explore the fundamental concepts of how social networks should work.


OneSocialWeb


Unlike Appleseed and Diaspora, the Vodafone Group’s OneSocialWeb is not only hoping to become a social network itself, but also to be the focal point for all the other social networks you may belong to.


For example, if OneSocialWeb works as planned, it will provide the common infrastructure from which you can access all your friends’ information, photos, comments, etc., from Twitter, Facebook and other networks.


Of course, for this to work, the other social networks would have to agree to play by OneSocialWeb’s rules — and I suspect they won’t want to make it easy for users to jump from their own network to another.


Look for a public OneSocialWeb beta later this summer.


Pligg


Like Elgg, Pligg is an open-source platform for building social networks. The key difference between the two is that Pligg is also a content management system.


Specifically, Pligg is a CMS that enables users to submit and vote on news articles, like Digg. Besides the usual up-or-down voting system, Pligg offers a chance to rate the articles using a five-star scale. While more than good enough for this kind of story-sharing, Pligg really isn’t going to be the basis of a Facebook-type network.


Pip.io


Here’s the good news: Pip.io is already up and running, and it is a real would-be Facebook competitor. Here’s the bad news: It is still very rough.


For instance, when Steve  asked it to find members of Pip.io whom he already knew by using his Gmail contact list, it instead offered to let him invite everyone on his thousand-plus address book to join him on Pip.io.


The interface, which owes more to Twitter than to Facebook, is easy to use. It also enables you to use other social networks such as Facebook and Twitter from Pip.io. In short, Pip.io is trying to be both a social network and a social network client.


It may, eventually, do quite well at all these jobs. But for now, it’s a work in progress.




Free App Fridays: Writing

Posted by vitavilolu-phone at 8:00 AM EDT
Wednesday, 16 June 2010
In Case You Missed It: June 7 - June 13

The biggest problem with having Steve Jobs kick off the WWDC with the iPhone 4 announcement is that all the developer news that also happened gets buried in the press that follows. We would gladly trade three "Steve Jobs Couldn't Get Wi-Fi To Work" articles for just one great new app announcement or dongle sweetness article.

Well, we haven't forgotten that other news happens, so join the Mac|Life stafff, won't you, for all the other stuff that happened this week that isn't just about the iPhone.

Features:

- Free App Fridays: Writing - There's not a thing in the world quite like good quality free software. And if you're a writer, there are literally hundreds of choices. We've narrowed that down to three gotta haves for your Apple products for when you just have to get that idea out onto the screen.

- Facebook Games Showcase: Café World & Little Rock Pool - Of course, you're not going to get any writing done if you gets sucked into the gaming world on Facebook, but there are some pretty fun time killers nonetheless.


How-Tos:

- iPhone and iPad Tips of the Week - June 10, 2010 - This regular feature can help you learn a thing or two that you might not have stumbled on yourself. Want to check your iPhone data usage? Want to find an app quickly? Keep reading.

- How-To Watch the World Cup on Your Mac, iPhone and iPad - See, now, there are things that happen that don't involve Apple products, like the World Cup. But since our readers are Apple junkies, there must be some way to bring futbol and iProducts together. Well we've got the best of the best all ready for you to shout GOOOOOOOOAAAALLLLLLLL!!!!!!


Reviews:

- Guitar Apps for the iPad - The Six-String Thing - Maybe sports isn't really your thing. Or maybe just not soccer. No, maybe you're more a rocking out kinda guy. If that's the case, app developers are taking advantage of all that big screen goodness on the iPad to hook you up with plenty of six-string love.


- Star Walk - While a lot of apps make use of the iPad's greater screen size to cram more stuff in, an often overlooked wonderful addition is how much more beauty you can see. Star Walk takes the familiar iPhone app and brings the gorgeous night sky and interstellar space to the big screen. And at $4.99? That's a steal, people.. Sony Ericsson HBH PV720 Bluetooth Headset Retail Packaging



ipad iphone robots

 

News:

Of course, of course, we're getting to it. Yes, the iPhone 4 was announced, with pre-orders beginning next week and shipping out the week after. Meanwhile, feast your eyes on the sexiness in our photo gallery...and here's the rates on what kind of data you'll be chewing through thanks to AT&T...plus, the list of where to buy your newest iPhone is growing as Radio Shack joins the list....Wal-Mart's getting in on this action too, though with Apple's tight price controls, it's not like they can offer quite the deep cuts they'd like to...or if you're across the pond (wondering why England could only TIE the US soccer team), here's when you can get your iPhone there...and if this leak is to be believed, Apple plans on shipping a whole bunch of the new handsets; how many? How does 3 million a month sound?...just don't drop it when you get your hands on the new iPhone, because iFixYouri claims the new model is going to break, and a lot.

Of course, the feature packed iOS 4 will be coming along shortly too, and for some people with beta versions of the software, iBooks is showing up already...maybe instead of worrying so much about rolling out iBooks, Cupertino can figure out their Wi-Fi issues, as these gurus are betting the keynote gaffe was related to iOS 4's drivers...maybe someone can look into the Gold Master release and see if there isn't something glitchy going on in there; perhaps someone in the jailbreak community.... since Apple doesn't seem to be able to keep the dev community from popping the locks on the iOS action, as one enterprising hacker's already jailbroken it.... of course, all that jailbreaking will need updates once iOS goes live with a RC on June 21, though we're sure they'll get around to it...and apparently Apple got around to nabbing the iOS name from Cisco, much like how they got the iPhone name and the iPad from Fujitsu.


Meanwhile, the iPad's been making some news, first because AT&T is often a bag of fail and managed to leave a gaping hole in their network that Goatse Security drove a truck right through...upon driving said truck, Goatse loaded up on sensitive email addresses attached to the SIMs of these iPads, but whose fault was it really? inquiring minds want to know...of course we know who in government got their hands on the tablet, as many of the emails grabbed were attached to Washington bigwigs...which means of course that now the FBI is going to get themselves interested in this...in more jolly iPad news, the on-again-off-again Hulu saga continues to get new wrinkles...and Hulu better get on the stick, because mobilely speaking, netbooks are looking less and less likely to be around much longer...and we can't tell if this is the coolest iPad action we've seen lately...or if these walking robot iPhones and iPads are. You tell us.




Things for iPad Review


Posted by vitavilolu-phone at 6:00 AM EDT

Newer | Latest | Older