Cloud Security

Data Centers Eye Second Raid on Your Cellphone

As reported on Wired. BY ROBERT MCMILLAN Is this the future of the data center? Photo by Ariel Zambelich/Wired   A few years ago, Christos Kozyrakis was looking for something new. He’d been teaching computer science at Stanford for nearly a decade, and he thought that spending some time as a visiting professor at Microsoft might be fun. In 2010, he spent a few weeks at Microsoft’s campus in Redmond, Washington, and he continued to collaborated with…

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Apple Education

Can the iPad Rescue a Struggling American Education System?

As reported on Wired. BY CHRISTINA BONNINGTON Illustration: Alex Washburn/Wired. Photo: Kajojak/Flickr   Matthew Stoltzfus could never get his students to see chemistry like he sees chemistry until he added an iPad to his lesson plan. Stoltzfus, a chemistry professor at Ohio State University, struggled for years to bring complex chemical equations to life on the blackboard, but always saw students’ eyes glaze over. Then he added animations and interactive media to his general chemistry curriculum. Suddenly,…

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Government

FAA and FBI investigating pilot’s report of a drone over Brooklyn (updated)

As reported on The Verge. By Adi Robertson An Alitalia jet pilot claims he saw a small unmanned aircraft flying over New York on Monday afternoon. According to CNN, the pilot was landing at JFK Airport when he saw the plane: “We saw a drone, a drone aircraft,” he’s quoted as saying in a broadcast picked up by LiveATC. Other pilots apparently did not see the plane, and the pilot was able to land safely. Now, the FAA tells CNN it’s…

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Legal Microsoft

EU fines Microsoft over $730 million for failing to include browser ballot in Windows 7 SP1

As reported on The Verge. By Sean Hollister Nearly 20 years later, the decision to bundle a web browser with Windows is still giving Microsoft grief. Today, the European Union has decided to fine the company €561 million (around $732 million) for breaking a 2009 antitrust agreement. At the time, Microsoft agreed to include a browser ballot box in every new copy of Windows, allowing users to pick any one of the 12 most popular browsers rather than defaulting to Microsoft…

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Entertainment Social Networking

YouTube To Launch Music Subscriptions

As reported on TechCrunch. by VICTORIA HO YouTube plans to launch a music subscription service later this year, to allow people to listen to tracks online, and to possibly cut out the ads that precede each video for subscribers, according to Fortune. The largest storehouse of streaming video, YouTube relies on selling banner ads on the site and running short clips before each video, giving a cut back to record companies. YouTube has released a statement that…

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Business Mobile

HTC Reports Lowest Sales Since Jan 2010, Worst Revenue Decline In 4 Months, As February Sales Fell 44% To $384M

As reported on TechCrunch. by INGRID LUNDEN The new HTC One unveiled last month is increasingly feeling like last-chance saloon for the troubled Taiwan handset maker. Today HTC noted that its sales for the month of February fell by nearly 44% to 11.37 billion Taiwan dollars ($384 million), from NT$20.3 billion for the same month one year ago. Looking at thebigger picture, that NT$11.37 billion is barely higher than what HTC made in January 2010, when it reported NT$11.12 billion in…

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Entertainment

Beats is either ‘in talks’ with Apple over new music-streaming service, or it’s just very good at marketing

As reported on Engadget. By Sharif Sakr Excuse us, but we find it hard to swallow some of the hype that swirls around theBeats brand. That sounds harsh, maybe, but it’s borne out of experience. Anyway, we do trust Reuters, and that outlet claims to have it on good authority that Beats is “in talks” with Apple over a partnership involving the forthcoming Daisy music-streaming service that was formerly MOG. The word is that Tim Cook attended an “informational” meeting with Beats CEO Jimmy…

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Microsoft Story Tablet

Samsung will stop sale of Windows RT tablets in Germany due to weak demand, according to reports

As reported on Engadget. By Sharif Sakr We already know that Samsung was too timid (or maybe too sensible) to launch its Windows RT-based ATIV Tab hybrid in the US, but now it appears the manufacturer is having doubts about European demand too. Heise.de and our friends atMobileGeeks are reporting that Samsung will stop selling its ATIV Tab in Germany — Europe’s biggest economy — and some other unspecified European countries after speaking to retailers about the level of interest they’re seeing for Microsoft’s stripped…

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Automotive

Volvo revamps its pedestrian detection system to automatically break for cyclists (video)

As reported on Engadget. By Alexis Santos Cars that automatically stop when a pedestrian is in the way have been in Volvo’s fleet for a while now, but the automaker has just unveiled an update to its existing tech that’ll stomp on the brakes when cyclists are too close for comfort. Announced at this year’s Geneva Motor Show, the revamped system detects how close objects are with a grille-mounted radar and then uses a high-def camera within an auto’s rear-view mirror to discern…

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Business Culture

Learn to Manage Up to Keep Your Boss Happy and Off Your Back

As reported on LifeHacker. by Alan Henry You know that a bad boss is bad for you, but a good way to keep a boss from going bad in the first place is to get a handle on their expectations and manage them while they manage you. After all, it’s a two-way street. “Managing up,” as the saying goes, is easier said than done, but it’s not impossible. The real key is to learn your boss’s prefered communication style,…

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