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Results 181-200 of 454 for Chris Maxcer

Security Wonks Reveal Holes in Firefox Straight Out of the Gate

As Mozilla went after a Guinness World Record for the most downloads in a 24-hour period with its release of Firefox 3, it didn't take security researchers long to drop a bomb on all the browsing fun. TippingPoint's DVLabs reported that its Zero Day Initiative (ZDI) program received a critical vulnerability affecting Firefox 3.0 as well as prior versions of Firefox 2.0.x.

Hellish Ordeal Ends for State Worker Caught in Child Porn Malware Snare

Months after arresting a man for having child pornography images on a state-issued laptop, prosecutors dropped the charges when a defense-sponsored forensic investigation showed that a poorly configured laptop that had become riddled with malware was to blame ...

eBay Opens Selling Manager to Third-Party Devs

The world's largest online auction house, eBay, has announced plans to let third-party developers integrate applications directly onto eBay by giving their applications more direct access to the site's 700,000 professional sellers. The company revealed the details at its seventh annual eBay Developers Conference Monday in Chicago to approximately 700 attendees.

Microsoft Releases Hounds on Pirate Resellers

Microsoft has fired off a slew of federal lawsuits -- 21, to be exact -- against resellers in 14 states. In the suits, Microsoft claimed the resellers are engaging in the sale of pirated software. Some of the lawsuits include eight possible repeat offenders that may not have learned their lessons the first time around after settling previous lawsuits with Microsoft.

PRODUCT REVIEW

Roku’s Netflix Player: Nifty Box but Not Much Worth Watching

The Netflix Player by Roku, a television set-top box that streams play-on-demand videos and movies from mail order DVD rental titan Netflix, launched late last month to generally wide acclaim. ...

IBM’s Roadrunner Supercomputer Zooms Into Petaflop Territory

IBM has designed a new US$100 million supercomputer, called "Roadrunnner," that's powerful enough to operate at 1 petaflop -- a cool 1 thousand trillion calculations per second. That's twice as fast as the next closest supercomputer -- the IBM Blue Gene system -- and nearly three times as fast as other top supercomputers in the world. ...

Gmail Opens Door to All Features Great and Lame

Google is rolling out a new feature for Gmail users called "Gmail Labs." It promises to help Google take advantage of any esoteric Gmail idea that's hidden in the minds of Google's many engineers. ...

IBM Throws Cold Water on Hot Chips

IBM researchers, in collaboration with the Fraunhofer Institute in Berlin, have prototyped a new method for cooling microprocessors stacked on top of each other, creating a 3-D processor that could keep Moore's Law running strong for the next decade. Key to the effort is water, which seems to be the only material that can keep the stack from burning up.

Facebook’s Open Platform Gamble

The recent Facebook rumors have come true -- the social networking company is making much of its third-party application development platform open source. The company announced the change one year after it launched Facebook Platform ...

Nvidia ARMs for Mobile Chip Battle

Graphics chipmaker Nvidia has introduced a new family of processors aimed at the burgeoning industry of mobile Internet devices (MIDs). "Tegra" is the name of a new line of tiny processors smaller than a dime that Nvidia is calling the world's smallest computer on a chip. ...

Qualcomm Tosses Adobe Flash Into the BREW

Qualcomm and Adobe Systems are bringing Flash-based applications to Qualcomm's BREW (Binary Runtime Environment for Wireless) mobile platform. The two companies jointly announced their plans at Qualcomm's BREW conference in San Diego on Thursday ...

Google Marches Android Onstage for Show and Tell

Google reportedly took a moment to show off a prototype mobile phone based on its Android operating system at the Google I/O conference in San Francisco Wednesday ...

Adobe Offers Sneak Peek at CS4

Adobe's next generation of Creative Suite (CS) graphic design, Web development and video editing applications are edging closer to official release. The company's Adobe Labs site has posted publicly available betas of Dreamweaver, Fireworks and Soundbooth ...

Hop-On Hawks 10-Buck Bare-Bones Backup Handset

Hop-On, a small cell phone company based in Irvine, Calif., has released what it says is the antithesis of Apple's iPhone -- the HOP1800, a US$10 bare-bones GSM (global system for mobile communications) cell that doesn't take pictures, doesn't play music, movies or podcasts, doesn't surf the Web, and doesn't even do text messaging. In fact, it doesn't even have a screen of any kind.

Microsoft’s ODF Policy Gets Skeptical Reception From EU

It didn't take long for the European Union (EU) to react to Microsoft's Wednesday announcement that it would provide support for additional document formats in its market-dominating Microsoft Office productivity suite. Shortly after Microsoft announced that it would support the Open Document Format (ODF) v1.1 with the future release of Microsoft Office 2007 Service Pack 2 (SP2), the EU released a short statement noting that its European Commission is aware of Microsoft's promise.

Netflix Pushes Select Flicks Through Set-Top Box

Netflix has launched a new set-top TV box that may usher in a new generation for the company's movie distribution model -- online streaming downloads directly to a consumer's television. To get the job done, Netflix has teamed with Roku to build the new box, called "The Netflix Player by Roku." ...

Firefox Inches Closer to V3 With First Release Candidate

Mozilla is creeping ever closer to dropping the final version of the much-anticipated Firefox 3 Web browser. The latest build is the first Release Candidate for Firefox 3 (RC1), which means it's gone beyond the beta stage and is picking up a couple of last-minute polishes before it's offered up live to the whole world as a completed browser ...

INSIGHTS

Bringing High-Def Into Focus

It seems as if everywhere I look these days, HD (high-definition) is there. An increasing number of TV programs come with an "available in HD" logo at the bottom of the screen, and it looks as though every consumer store that sells any form of electronics has photos of widescreen televisions plastered all over the advertisements they jam into the Sunday newspaper. Step into any of these stores and the new HDTVs easily outnumber traditional television sets in both number and the real estate taken up by their seductive flickering images...

Verizon Snags $678M Deal to Overhaul DHS Network

Verizon Business has won a massive government contract to deploy and manage a global IP network for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS). The contract is for a cool US$678.5 million over 10 years, and to bank the bucks, Verizon will act as the primary service provider under the DHS OneNet program, an advanced next-generation network effort designed to consolidate multiple legacy networks into a new, secure IP network.

Study: Cox, Comcast Play Traffic Cop Day and Night

Cox Communications is actively blocking BitTorrent file-sharing users from enjoying unfettered Internet services, according to a new study based on more than 8,000 Internet users. Like Comcast, which was the first major cable Internet service provider (ISP) to be outed for throttling peer-to-peer data, Cox says it interferes with the traffic to ensure quality service for all of its customers...

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