With so many mobile wireless networks available, and only more coming, IEEE is working on a way they can work together.
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With so many mobile wireless networks available, and only more coming, IEEE is working on a way they can work together.
It's either a minor diplomatic gaffe or an incredibly nuanced commentary on the current state of international copyright protec... nope, definitely a gaffe: The 25 classic DVDs given to British prime minister Gordon Brown when he recently visited President Obama turned out to be more DRM than drama.
The early numbers from Web analytics firm NetApplications indicate a slower than expected, but steady uptick in usage share for Microsoft Internet Explorer 8, a product which was introduced at noon yesterday on the East Coast. It's not being pushed as an update to the Windows operating system, so trading up for now is still a voluntary affair for users.
SpiralFrog, the ad-supported music service launched by Universal Music Group and EMI in 2007, is now defunct.
Up to now, Azure has been a cloud-based staging service for the .NET platform. To go beyond that stage, that cloud has to be able to run native code for its customers.
It's either a simple battle over intellectual property, or it's a move in the war against open source software.
After Sun's wider cloud rollout on Tuesday, two more vendors are jumping into clouds, one on the platform side and the other on the infrastructure side.
Microsoft has listened to user feedback and updated the Windows Mobile 6.5 UI.
Want an iPhone while you're waiting for the Palm Pre? AT&T will have no-contract iPhones starting next week.
In perhaps another sterling demonstration of the effectiveness of Google's own product announcements by way of its blog posts, the world awakened this morning to an experimental capability in Google's Gmail that, if you think about it, you wonder why no one's thought about it before: An independent developer with the handle Yuzo F is distributing a Gmail add-on that gives users five seconds after clicking on the Send button to click on an Undo link that stops distribution from going forward.
Rutkowska's got the whole story on her site. Invisible Things and Duglot's team are all good eggs, so Intel was informed about the exploit well before CanSecWest attendees got the details. The exploit itself (PDF available here) allows for privilege escalation from Ring 0 to the SMM on various newer motherboards with Intel CPUs. "Informing Intel," by the way, turns out to be the weirdest part of the story -- turns out that not only has the company known about the SMRAM-related security gap since 2005, they've mentioned it in a patent application.
There's an evolutionary transition that even the latest Web browsers have yet to make. Three research teams are staking their claim to the browser kernel of truth.
The testing, conducted after an election last June in Humboldt County, Calif., revealed at the time flaws in Diebold / Premier's GEMS system later confirmed by the California Secretary of State. The hearings now underway will help state officials to decide whether to decertify the GEMS v. 1.18.19 system for use in future state elections. The Humboldt testing revealed that the software dropped ballots under certain circumstances. Further investigation by the Secretary of State's office confirmed that problem -- and revealed that the audit logs themselves could be radically altered, sometimes with just one click. The problems with the audit logs, had they been known during the certification process (as Diebold knew for years, it was revealed today), should have disqualified the systems from being certified at all.
Analysts swarm with launch-related questions; now, who stole $5 million in phones?
Apple has turned up the juice on its iTunes movie store and now offers HD downloads of Hollywood motion pictures.