Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Nexus 4 comes back in stock for ordering today

ericcmack Unboxing Google's Nexus 4 smartphone

Google has been a cruel mistress to Android fans looking to get their hands on a new Nexus 4 lately. After the latest Google-designed phone sold out in what felt like nanoseconds -- perhaps better described from now on as 'nexi-seconds' -- it's been two weeks of living in "out of stock" limbo.

Until today. At noon ET (9 a.m. PT), Google says, theNexus 4 will be back on sale via the Google Play store.

Related storiesGoogle Nexus 4 already sold out at U.S. Google Play storeNexus 4 sells out in U.K. on Google Play as site suffersLG Nexus 4 (sort of) has 4G LTE

The Nexus 4 is available unlocked and contract-free for $299, a price that led to a run on the phones in the U.S. and the U.K., causing bottlenecks in the Play Store and sold-out status in mere minutes.

Is there enough pent-up demand from the folks who missed the first crush two weeks ago to see a repeat of the phenomenon today?

Might want to limber up those fingers and practice your fastest clicking, tapping and swiping moves right now, just in case.

Via The Verge



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Microsoft's first Windows Phone 8 update dubbed Apollo Plus?

Football4PDA Twitter account as the source. The Verge subsequently posted that the code name of Windows Phone OS 8's follow-on would be "Apollo Plus." (Maybe the ban on code names ending with "o" doesn't start till Windows Phone 9 OS?)

The Verge's Tom Warren also reported that Microsoft would share details about the update at the Mobile World Congress show in February 2013. The Verge cited unnamed sources as providing the information and said the coming update could include features like VPN support, a Wi-Fi connectivity fix, and audio improvements.

Related storiesWindows Phone 7.8 rumored to launch this weekHow to silence notifications on smartphones and tabletsMicrosoft wants to denigrate your iPhone and Android again

VPN support is an interesting one, given Microsoft officials said in June of this year that Microsoft had decided against including VPN functionality in the Windows Phone operating system (even though it had been included in Windows Phone OS' predecessor, Windows Mobile). A Microsoft official told me that Microsoft has decided instead to rely on things like Secure SSL to address this need... as they considered Secure SSL "a better, light-weight approach" to providing this kind of functionality in the new BYOD (bring your own device) world.

I've since heard from a number of business users that no VPN support was a deal breaker for their organizations in adopting Windows Phone. I've also heard from users in countries with governments that censor their citizens' Web-browsing that VPN is a much-desired feature for circumventing officially imposed firewalls.

I asked Microsoft whether the next version of the Windows Phone OS was code-named "Apollo Plus" and whether VPN connectivity will be part of it. Not surprisingly, a spokesperson said only that the company doesn't comment on rumors and speculation.

If Microsoft does refer to the minor, interim update to Windows Phone 8 OS as "Apollo Plus," that might help dampen user expectations a bit. With Tango, many users were expecting a lot more, feature-wise, than ended up being part of that update because it had its own special code name.

Meanwhile, I also asked Microsoft about the whereabouts of the Windows Phone OS 7.8 update -- the one that is slated to allow existing Windows Phone 7 users to make use of resizable tiles on their phones. A Microsoft spokesperson said: "More information on 7.8 will be available in the coming weeks."

As to the rumors circulating that 7.8 might be available this week, I'm doubtful. I think Microsoft might announce the release to manufacturing of 7.8 this week, but I'm hearing the update may not be available from the carriers until early next year (maybe even as late as February 2013).

This story originally posted as "Apollo Plus: Is this Microsoft's first Windows Phone 8 update?" on ZDNet.



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CNBC's on-air laptops: When Macs aren't really Macs

A MacBook isn't a MacBook when it's a Dell.

(Credit:Dell)

I confess to not watching CNBC too often.

When the channel isn't presenting dour faces promising imminent immolation, it's showing over-excitable bald people telling you which stocks to buy. Well, screaming, actually. There is enough screaming in my life already.

However, this morning, there might be screaming of a different sort at CNBC, because the sleuths at Business Insider have revealed what they say is brand subterfuge. Or, if you like, insider faking.

Indeed, Business Insider insists that the shiny laptops placed before presenters -- which, for all the world, look like Macs -- are mere dolled-up Dells.

The Insiders, you see, managed to get around the desk after a show and discovered that the keyboards of these laptops did not reflect what you'd see on (an) Air.

For the bodies of the machines closely resemble those of Dell's Latitude 2120 Netbooks. Allegedly. And according to photos the site published.

As Business Insider's Jim Edwards explained: "They look like MacBooks because CNBC has disguised them by adding gray lids, along with some CNBC branding where the Apple logo might have been."

More Technically IncorrectStart-Ups: Silicon Valley Ep. 4: Lose it, drink, lose it againFacebook removes pic, confuses elbow for breastBest Buy ad suggests that Santa's an Apple fanboyWhat would Apple have to do to ruin your relationship?The vending machine that dispenses caviar

Who could believe that anything related to money and stocks would possibly involve simulation?

Being of kind mind, I would like to give CNBC some latitude here. The channel isn't telling anyone that these are MacBooks. It's merely suggesting a certain sleekness that's associated with Apple. The producers obviously feel that the opinions offered on their shows would be less persuasive if they were seen to be delivered over the front of some $600 machine.

So they gussy up a Dell in order to project the sophisticated air of, well, Adele.

Every stock needs marketing, doesn't it? Yes, even your own.



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Google fighting German plan for linking fee

Google has kicked off a campaign against a proposed German law that would force search engine providers to pay copyright fees every time they return a news article in their results.

The Leistungsschutzrecht für Presseverleger, or "ancillary copyright for press publishers," would provide an extension of copyright in Germany to cover snippets of articles, such as those that show up in search results so the user can tell what each result is about. It is being proposed by Chancellor Angela Merkel's coalition and follows intense lobbying by publishing giant Axel Springer and others.

Google today launched a petition against the plan, arguing that they would make it much harder for Web surfers to find what they are looking for. Google has complained about the Leistungsschutzrecht before, but is now stepping up its opposition due to the fact that the bill will be debated this week in the Bundestag. "Most people have never heard of this proposed legislation," Google country director Stefan Tweraser said in a statement. "Such a law would affect every Internet user in Germany

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Facebook increases Fab's Thanksgiving sales by 20 percent

(Credit:Fab)

Fab can put another notch on its trendy Facebook belt -- the quirky e-commerce site said it's made at least 20 percent of its Thanksgiving revenue from shoppers who joined Fab through Facebook.

Overall, Fab saw at least 25 percent of its revenue betweenBlack Friday and Cyber Monday come from social media sites. Facebook led the way during the four-day period, now one of the biggest shopping times of the year.

While Fab didn't say how other social media contributed to its revenue overall, CEO Jason Goldberg did post the traffic breakdown in his blog betashop:

• 65 percent Facebook

• 20 percent Pinterest

• 5 percent Twitter

• 1 percent Coolhunting

• 0.5 percent svvply

• 0.3 percent Apartment Therapy

• 0.3 percent Reddit

• 0.3 percent betashop

(The remaining 7.6 percent came from other sources.)

Related storiesLivingSocial promotes Fab for the holidaysFab continues push for customers with free shippingFab reaches 9 million users, opens up holiday shops

It's no surprise that Facebook is a major contributor to this traffic. In addition to the social network's shear size, the two companies have been closely intertwined. In September, Goldberg said the company had a good relationship with Facebook, adding that social media contributed to 50 percent of Fab's signups. Earlier this month, Facebook added Fab to its list of retail partners on its gifting service, Facebook Gifts.

Fab made a big push to cash in on holiday traffic this year. The company launched its holiday stores shortly after reaching 9 million member sign-ups earlier this month and then added free shipping to boot.



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HP claims 'extensive evidence' of Autonomy accounting scam

Autonomy founder and former CEO Mike Lynch

(Credit:HP)

Hewlett Packard says it has discovered "extensive evidence" that an unspecified number of former employees of Autonomy had cooked the books prior to HP's $11.1 billion acquisition of the software company.

In its fourth quarter earnings report last week, HP announced it was taking an $8.8 billion charge related to its purchase of Autonomy. At the time, HP said that it bought the company based on pumped-up and fraudulent accounting. Since then, HP and Autonomy founder and former CEO Mike Lynch have engaged in a public war of words about who was really to blame for Autonomy's disappointing performance and whether there was fraud.

Here's HP's official statement:

HP has initiated an intense internal investigation into a series of accounting improprieties, disclosure failures and outright misrepresentations that occurred prior to HP's acquisition of Autonomy. We believe we have uncovered extensive evidence of a willful effort on behalf of certain former Autonomy employees to inflate the underlying financial metrics of the company in order to mislead investors and potential buyers.

The matter is in the hands of the authorities, including the UK Serious Fraud Office, the US Securities and Exchange Commission's Enforcement Division and the US Department of Justice, and we will defer to them as to how they wish to engage with Dr. Lynch. In addition, HP will take legal action against the parties involved at the appropriate time.

While Dr. Lynch is eager for a debate, we believe the legal process is the correct method in which to bring out the facts and take action on behalf of our shareholders. In that setting, we look forward to hearing Dr. Lynch and other former Autonomy employees answer questions under penalty of perjury.

Related storiesHP now target of a lawsuit over Autonomy troublesAutonomy's wizardry: Bringing still images to virtual life HP gains control of AutonomyHP's Whitman: PC spinoff, Autonomy deal still onHP is having an identity crisis

For his part, Lynch offered a decidedly different narrative in a letter to HP's board that he released publicly on Tuesday.

27 November 2012

To: The Board of Directors of Hewlett-Packard Company

I utterly reject all allegations of impropriety.

Autonomy's finances, during its years as a public company and including the time period in question, were handled in accordance with applicable regulations and accounting practices. Autonomy's accounts were overseen by independent auditors Deloitte LLC, who have confirmed the application of all appropriate procedures including those dictated by the International Financial Reporting Standards used in the UK.

Having no details beyond the limited public information provided last week, and still with no further contact from you, I am writing today to ask you, the board of HP, for immediate and specific explanations for the allegations HP is making. HP should provide me with the interim report and any other documents which you say you have provided to the SEC and the SFO so that I can answer whatever is alleged, instead of the selective disclosure of non-material information via background discussions with the media.

I believe it is in the interest of all stakeholders, and the public record, for HP to respond to a number of questions:

Many observers are stunned by HP's claim that these allegations account for a $5 billion write down and fail to understand how HP reaches that number. Please publish the calculations used to determine the $5 billion impairment charge. Please provide a breakdown of the relative contribution for revenue, cash flow, profit and write down in relation to: 1: The alleged "mischaracterization" of hardware that HP did not realize Autonomy sold, as I understand this would have no effect on annual top or bottom lines and a minor effect on gross margin within normal fluctuations and no impact on growth, assuming a steady state over the period;

2: The alleged "inappropriate acceleration of revenue recognition with value-added resellers" and the "

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Elon Musk's plan for life on Mars

SpaceX founder Elon Musk speaks to the Royal Aeronautical Society in London earlier this month.

(Credit:Screenshot by James Martin/CNET)

Stunning views, lots of elbow room, and complete custom living are just a few of the benefits of space settlements -- and we might just be closer to attaining them than you'd think.

Elon Musk, founder of the private space transport company SpaceX, earlier this month outlined plans for the colonization of Mars, something he says can get under way in the next 10 to 20 years with the first manned mission to the Red Planet. If the first settlement is designed to build and sustain additional settlements, colonization could proceed from there quite rapidly, he explained at the Royal Aeronautical Society in London, as reported by Space.com.

Following a first manned mission, Musk next envisions sending a small team of 10 people to Mars, along with construction supplies to build transparent domes.

Still, the process of building citylike colonies to sustain long-term habitation is expensive and challenging. Unveiling some of his planning specifics, Musk stressed the importance of a reusable rocket to keep costs down.

With initial systems in place, the first people to arrive would then begin to pressurize the domes with Mars' atmospheric carbon dioxide, infusing the soil with nutrients, which would then allow the early Martian migrants to grow Earth crops. Life would likely be hard early on, with high set-up costs to build the life-sustaining machines, he said. But over time the colony would become more established and self-sufficient, and more and more people would arrive -- up to 80,000, perhaps.

Initial equipment would include machines to harvest methane, oxygen, and carbon dioxide from Mars' atmospheric nitrogen, and devices for extracting water from the subsurface ice, Musk explained in London. Once food, water, and shelter are established and life is under way, you too can move to Mars.

But getting there will cost you. Tickets would run up to $500,000, Musk supposes.

All this planning for life in space isn't new. Back in the 1970s, when only a handful of people had ever ventured into space over less than two decades, NASA was envisioning where technology might take us.



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Kill mobile ads with Adblock Plus for Android

With Adblock Plus for Android installed, Google responds to a search query and returns no ads or sponsored results.

(Credit:Screenshot by Jaymar Cabebe/CNET)

Released yesterday, Adblock Plus for Android offers a no-nonsense way to completely remove ads from your mobile computing experience. Simply download and install the app, and let it run behind the scenes. From there, you should notice that display ads, video ads, push notifications, and even many in-app ads are no more.

Related storiesAdblock Plus for Mozilla FirefoxAdblock for ChromeBlock ads with AdBlock Plus

So far, I've seen AdBlock Plus kill ads on several Web sites, including Google, and within the ad-supported Pandora app. According to its developers, though, AdBlock Plus does not work when browsing withFirefox forAndroid, since Firefox does not support Android's system proxy settings.

Adblock Plus works right out of the box for nonrooted mobile devices running Android versions 3.1 or higher. Older versions of Android require you to manually configure proxy settings to get the app to work.



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Conservative groups dump on Pandora's royalty legislation

On Capitol Hill tomorrow, Pandora will argue the Web radio services need to pay less for music.

(Credit:Greg Sandoval/CNET)

WASHINGTON, D.C.--It doesn't take a sophisticated algorithm or genome project to know that Pandora's pitch for a new music royalty rate has been a dud.

Pandora says Web radio services pay too much in music royalties and is backing The Internet Radio Fairness Act. If passed, this federal legislation would reduce the rate these streaming services would pay. Pandora gets another chance tomorrow to convince the public and lawmakers of the bill's necessity during a hearing before the U.S. House subcommittee on Intellectual Property, Competition and the Internet.

The music industry, which will also send representatives to testify at tomorrow's hearing, is throwing its big guns against the bill. Not only have a large number of artists, including Rihanna and Katy Perry, come out against it, but now even conservative think tanks are criticizing the legislation.

The American Conservative Union, Citizens Against Government Waste, and Taxpayers Protection Alliance have all written letters opposing IRFA.

Maybe Pandora's managers saw big tech companies rout the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) and thought Washington politics would be easy. SOPA was crushed last January when the opposition was able rally public opinion by painting it as a threat to free speech So far, Pandora's pitch about IRFA -- that it will benefit music and tech companies by creating more jobs and opportunities -- has fallen flat. And in the case of SOPA, opponents were able to send Republican supporters running for cover. With the recent support from conservative groups, the entertainment industry seems to be covering its right flank.

Related storiesNew Myspace sees big losses -- just like old MyspaceReport: Hollywood big shot Peter Chernin set to join Twitter's boardMaroon 5, Missy Elliot among artists opposing Pandora subsidyNAACP calls Pandora-backed legislation unfairWeb radio growing faster than on-demand services (study)

To the music sector, Pandora's argument goes sometime like this: to help you, we need to pay you less. This isn't going to convince many in an industry that has seen revenue shrink by more than half over the past decade and heard scores of similar claims. IRFA would bring Web royalty rates more in line with those paid by satellite and cable music providers. The music industry supports a competing bill that would require satellite and cable radio providers to pay a rate closer to the one that Pandora currently pays.

Wall Street has lost a lot of confidence in Pandora. Not only were persistent rumors about an alleged plan by Apple to launch a Pandora competitor pressuring Pandora's stock but the share price fell after news broke earlier this month that more than 100 music artists were criticizing IRFA. If the bill fails to pass, Pandora won't be cutting costs anytime soon.

Rogan Kersh, a political science professor at Wake Forest University who studies lobbying, told Businessweek today: "When the very artists they are streaming -- the artists they are featuring, the artists that are even cooler than Pandora -- start to push back, that's a real bind for them. It's a major lobbying setback."

Come tomorrow, Pandora will start fresh. Tim Westergren, the affable cofounder of the company, is making way for CEO Joe Kennedy (at least he has the right name for Washington politics), who will testify on Pandora's behalf. Some of the others testifying include David Pakman, former CEO of eMusic who is now a venture capitalist; Jimmy Jam, a music producer and artist; and representatives from SoundExchange and the National Association of Broadcasters.



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Commenters push Facebook policy changes to public vote

Facebook is about to take its policy changes to an official vote among its users. And if history is any guide, turnout will be low and Facebook will proceed to make the changes it wants. That includes how it collects data from Instagram users, which has privacy advocates protesting and urging CEO Mark Zuckerberg to reverse course.

Facebook last week proposed a series of policy changes that, along with changes to how it handles your data, would abolish the social network's practice of allowing users to vote on policy changes.

That's right. Facebook wants to do away with your right to vote -- a right most members clearly don't realize they have. In April 2009, Facebook instituted its own democracy of sorts through a vote that was put before but largely ignored by Facebook's 200 million users at the time (665,654 votes were cast). But the company now argues that the system no longer makes sense because Facebook has become so large and is a publicly traded company.

That 2009 policy says that site governance changes automatically go to a broader vote once a post about the proposal receives 7,000 "substantive comments," which is easy to achieve now that Facebook has roughly a seventh of the world's population as users. For the people's vote to become binding, however, Facebook requires "more than 30 percent of all active registered users" to participate -- and that is far harder to achieve.

Users have until tomorrow at 9 a.m. PT to comment on the post, so it's not official yet. But it will happen, considering that as of now the post is approaching 19,000 comments, and voting will go on for a week. Facebook's vice president of public policy and marketing, Elliot Schrage, wrote the post, Proposed Updates to our Governing Documents, which is now crammed with thousands of comments asking that Facebook maintain its policy of putting site changes to a user vote.



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Apple should double down on Jony Ive, analyst suggests

Gene Munster speaks at the Business Insider Ignition conference today in New York.

(Credit:Dan Farber/CNET)

NEW YORK -- "Apple should double-down on Jony Ive." That's what Gene Munster, managing director and senior research analyst at Piper Jaffray, counseled during a state of Apple presentation at the Business Insider Ignition conference.

"The concept of the Apple's operating system has basically been copied by competitors... The real substance is the hardware side, where Jony Ive plays into it," Munster said. "The difference is in the hardware, and isn't fully appreciated."

In October, Ive was given the leadership role in developing the user interface for Apple's software, in addition to his role as head of industrial design.

After endorsing the tandem of CEO Tim Cook and Ive, Munster -- who has long been one of the biggest proponents of Apple moving into the TV business -- offered his prediction for Apple product launches over the next few years. That list includes an Apple television, an iPhone 5s, and Retina displays for MacBook Airs and theiPad Mini in 2013. 

March 2013: Apple will introduce a radio service, similar to Pandora and Spotify; an iPad Mini with Retina display; and an update of theApple TV box, including an app store.

June 2013: The impact of Ive on Apple software will become more apparent at the annual Worldwide Developer Conference, with previews of iOS 7 and OSX, Munster said. In addition, he expects enhancements to the PassBook digital wallet, commerce integration with services such as Groupon and LivingSocial, and improvements to the maps app. "Letting go of  Richard Williamson (who was in charge of the company's maps software for iOS) is an example of Apple pushing forward on maps improvements," Munster said.

Also on tap in June, MacBook Airs will gain Retina displays, he said.  

September 2013: An iPhone 5S is expected, and it may include NFC, a faster process, and a better camera than the currentiPhone 5. The iPad Mini will get some component improvements, and the 5th-generation iPad will likely come with the A7X processor.

November 2013: An Apple TV, not a set-top box, should be ready for the holiday season. Design would be a critical aspect of the TV, like other Apple products, Munster said. It would cost  $1,500 to $2,000, and be available in sizes from 42-inches to 55-inches.

"The average consumer just wants a better experience with their TV," Munster said.  "People like all-in-one products, like a TV. The selling point will be the interface, fixing the remote  control problem and offering motion capture like the Wii and FaceTime."

 However, he predicted that the Apple TV will not have a la carte channels.

"Apple wants it desperately, but it can be successful without it," Munster said. 

The future: Apple will need to accelerate the iPhone launch cycle with more frequent releases and lower price points:

Apple tried to come out with iPhone 5 to target larger screens, but customers think it's slimmer and faster. Apple hasn't solved problem of bigger screen. Expect two releases a year, with one in fall, the point upgrade, and the S version the spring. A cheaper iPhone for China and other other markets may be available in the next few years.

Munster said he also expects Apple to develop some major innovations in the years ahead, as it did with the iTunes, iPhone, and the iPad.

"Going forward there has been a suspicion that Apple will stop innovating. But over next decade Apple will cannibalize the iPhone with some other devices in the same way the iPhone cannibalized the iPod," he said. Those innovations will likely come from more automation and robotic technology down the road, Munster surmised.   



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Leahy pledges no warrantless e-mail access for feds

Sen. Leahy abandons his warrantless e-mail access proposal, saying he wants to "better protect privacy in the digital age."

(Credit:U.S. Senate)

Stripped of its controversial provision for warrantless e-mail acccess, Sen. Patrick Leahy's bill to rewrite electronic privacy and surveillance law will head for a vote on Thursday.

The Vermont Democrat confirmed in a press release yesterday that his latest amendments to the bill will not include language that would have allowed more than 22 agencies -- including the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Federal Communications Commission -- to access Americans' private e-mail, Google Docs files, Facebook wall posts, and Twitter direct messages without a search warrant.

A CNET article last week disclosed the existence of Leahy's proposal for warrantless access. A public outcry followed, with the ACLU insisting upon a requirement for warrants and the conservative group FreedomWorks launching a petition to Congress, with nearly 8,000 messages sent so far, titled: "Tell Congress: Stay Out of My Email!"

Leahy, the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, responded by abandoning his proposal and saying in a statement that he remained committed to protecting Americans' privacy rights. "I hope that all members of the Committee will join me in supporting the effort in Congress to update this law to protect Americans' privacy," he said.

With the warrantless access sections deleted in the reworked language (PDF) that Leahy posted yesterday, privacy groups and industry representatives are now more likely to support the revised proposal, due for a committee vote Thursday. The proposal, a substitute for H.R. 2471, which has already cleared the House of Representatives, generally requires law enforcement to obtain search warrants for the contents of e-mail, photos, documents, and other private files.

It "protects the central privacy provision that we put forward," says Christopher Calabrese, legislative counsel for the ACLU.

The ACLU is part of a liberal-conservative-libertarian coalition aligned with technology companies to push for updates to the 1986 Electronic Communications Privacy Act that would require search warrants for police searches of e-mail and other private data stored on remote servers. They also want a requirement for warrants before police can track the locations of Americans' cell phones.

At the moment, Internet users enjoy more privacy rights if they store data on their hard drives or under their mattresses than in the cloud. Many companies fear this legal loophole could undermine faith in cloud-based services. And that's one big reason Apple, Amazon.com, AT&T, eBay, Google, Facebook, IBM, Intel, Microsoft, and Twitter have joined what they call the Digital Due Process coalition.

Leahy has, however, retained (PDF) some other sections of his revised draft that, as CNET reported last week, moved in a more pro-law enforcement direction.

One section says providers "shall notify" law enforcement in advance of any plans to tell their customers that they've been the target of a warrant, order, or subpoena. Another allows police to delay that notification for two 180-day periods -- up from two 90-day periods in the original bill.

Hanni Fakhoury, a staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, said Leahy's revised version is certainly "an improvement over the language" that CNET posted last week.

But, Fakhoury added: "I'm less thrilled about extending the delayed notification provisions.... People have a right to know when the government has looked through their electronic communications, and the sooner they find out, the better."

The ACLU's Calabrese also expressed concerns. "We're a little worried that if companies essentially have to notify law enforcement before they tell customers, it may lead to fewer notifications to customers," he said.

One person participating in Capitol Hill meetings on this topic has told CNET that Justice Department officials were unhappy about Leahy's original bill unveiled in September. The department is on record as opposing warrant requirements -- James Baker, the associate deputy attorney general, has publicly warned that requiring a warrant to obtain stored e-mail could have an "adverse impact" on criminal investigations, a position that apparently conflicts with that of the National District Attorneys' Association.

Leahy, a former prosecutor, has a mixed record on privacy. He criticized the FBI's efforts to require Internet providers to build in backdoors for law enforcement access, and introduced a bill in the 1990s protecting Americans' right to use whatever encryption products they wanted.

But he also authored the 1994 Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act, which is now looming over Web companies, and the reviled Protect IP Act. A article in The New Republic concluded Leahy's work on the Patriot Act "appears to have made the bill less protective of civil liberties." Leahy had introduced significant portions of the Patriot Act under the name Enhancement of Privacy and Public Safety in Cyberspace Act (PDF) a year earlier.



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Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Copyright scare spreads on Facebook

BridgetCarey

Tuesday's CNET Update has a cyber-shopping hangover:

Today's tech news roundup looks at the Cyber Monday shopping surge and how Amazon's Kindle Fire was a hot seller.

Also, don't be fooled by the status updates spreading on Facebook about copyright. It's a hoax. Nothing that you put in your status message will change the policies you agree to when you sign up for an online service.

In Apple news, iPhone owners can use Siri in some Chevy cars next year, with Chevy MyLink. And the new iMac all-in-one desktops will be on sale Friday.

And change is coming for Android users: If you want to write a review about an app or product in the Google Play store, you'll have to use your real name with a Google

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Samsung's Galaxy Note II Is a Phabulous Phablet

By Jack M. Germain
TechNewsWorld

The stylus is perhaps the main distinguishing factor from other high-end smartphones. The S Pen is more refined in generation two of the Galaxy Note family. The credit for that goes to the new sensor technology built into the screen and software improvements. You do not have to actually use the S Pen, but the enhancements it brings add to the experience.

The Samsung Galaxy Note II could very well be the best high-end smartphone/phablet on the market today. It brings the best features of Android Jelly Bean to this combination of high-powered tablet and state-of-the-art phone.



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Mixtab Delivers Content With a Side of Eye Candy

By John P. Mello Jr.
MacNewsWorld
Part of the ECT News Network

Mixtab has the kind of visual verve found in outstanding news aggregation mobile apps like Flipbook. On its home screen, feed groups appear as large tiles -- called "tabs" -- on a faux wood background. The name of the feed group appears at the top of the tile and the rest of it is made up of a photo and copy, on top of a transparent smoke gray overlay, with information about the latest feed in the group.

Really Simple Syndication is a way for people who produce content for the Web to push that content to people interested in it. For folks like me, it can save time otherwise spent jumping from website to website to gather news.



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Why Cadence Is Canon at Canonical

By Jack M. Germain
LinuxInsider
Part of the ECT News Network

Canonical's rigidly regular release schedule has been the subject of calls for change, but Mark Shuttleworth and plenty of others see no need. In fact, the regularity may be exactly what makes it work, satisfying the needs of both desktop and enterprise users, said Jay Lyman, senior analyst for enterprise software at The 451 Group.

The latest release of Canonical's innovative open source operating system, Ubuntu 12.10, maintains its twice-annual upgrade pattern. Even though the last few releases have generated a steady chorus of cries for longer release schedules, Canonical's leadership stands by the schedule and the rationale behind it.

Canonical CEO Mark Shuttleworth certainly does not think Ubuntu's every-six-month release schedule is part of any ill-perceived problem. During his recent Linuxcon keynote address, he praised that cycle for creating lots of excitement and keeping contributors motivated.

At least one of Canonical's board members favors longer release intervals. Meanwhile, Shuttleworth steadfastly adheres to the mantra: Many eyes make all bugs shallow, so make releases early and often.

Contrary to the criticism, Ubuntu's twice-yearly release cycle has a clear purpose for Canonical's success as a major OS developer. It forms a cadence with several upsteams and other distributions, according to Adam Conrad, Ubuntu Release Engineer at Canonical. That helps the development team keep its fingers on the pulse of current open source development.

"We've put robust mechanisms in place to ensure quality, both with our own products and with various upstream products that we rely heavily on. Our focus on quality permeates from the platform up to the code we write upstream, and our choices of upstream components too. We require tests and gated trunks for all Canonical code bases and prefer upstreams that share the same values," Conrad told LinuxInsider.

Stability Sells

That explanation makes considerable sense, noted Al Hilwa, program director for applications development software at IDC. Fundamentally, it is an execution and planning issue.

"What is important is putting out a predictable schedule and a road map for when projected functionality will be integrated," Hilwa told LinuxInsider.

Whether Ubuntu needs to adjust that cycle is the sticking point, however. The development team has to assess the nature of the code changes versus the intervals available to stabilize the code.

"In principle, most changes can be incrementalized to fit any cycle," Hilwa suggested.

Rigidity Required

Extending the release cycle would not necessarily lead to better overall quality. Rather, it would only give people a longer goal to land the new features they really want to see, in Conrad's view.

Another reason he disfavors a more relaxed release time is human nature. Ultimately, people will always try to get things in at the last minute.

"We do offer our LTS

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Knockoff Sellers Knocked Offline on Cyber Monday

By David Vranicar
TechNewsWorld

Today in international tech news: Cyber Monday inspires a crackdown on sites selling illegal merchandise, a sex offender in Northern Ireland wants Facebook to get rid of a page called "Keeping our kids safe from predators," and Samsung reveals findings from a factory audit in China.

In both 2011 and 2012, U.S. authorities seized domains of streaming sites the week of the Super Bowl. The logic, apparently, was that the Super Bowl was the mother of all illegal viewing events, so it figured to be a good time to knock these sites offline.

The Super Bowl might yet be months away, but something similar has happened.

On Cyber Money -- the Super Bowl, if you will, of online shopping -- U.S. authorities seized some 130 domain names in several countries to prevent them from selling counterfeit merchandise.

According to the Associated Press, this is the third straight year authorities have launched a Cyber Monday counterfeit crackdown. Websites selling knockoff sports jerseys, DVDs and other merchandise were targeted.

The sites were seized after copyright holders confirmed that bunk products were being sold.

Sex Offender Fights Facebook Pedophile Page

A convicted sex offender wants Facebook to remove a page called "Keeping our kids safe from predators," which is devoted to monitoring pedophiles in Northern Ireland.

According to the BBC, the man -- who cannot legally be identified but who did reportedly spend time in prison for sexual assault -- is also seeking an injunction to prevent his photograph and details from appearing on Facebook. He wants Facebook Ireland to terminate the accounts of those operating the page.

The man, who is reportedly in bad health, claims that his neighbors are acting differently toward him, according to the judge hearing the case. Facebook has already removed the man's photograph as well as comments made about him. A Facebook lawyer said further action is not necessary.

Conference to Discuss UN Web Authority

Many countries will use a conference next week in Dubai to push to give a United Nations body broad regulatory powers over the Internet.

According to Reuters, the conference of the International Telecommunications Union, an arm of the UN, will pit "revenue-seeking developing countries and authoritarian regimes" who want more Internet control on one side, and the U.S. and Internet companies that will fight for the status quo on the other.

U.S. Congress and European Parliament have put forth resolutions for the current decentralized system to stay in place. Meanwhile, leaked drafts suggest Russia is pushing for rules that give individual countries "broad permission to shape" what is on the Internet in their countries. A group of Arab nations is proposing universal identification of Internet users.

The Reuters article points out that many countries -- Russia, China and some Arab states among them -- already restrict Internet access within their borders. However, such restrictions would reportedly be greater with validation in the form of an international agreement.

Google asked users last week to take to social media in support an open and free Internet. In addition, Google's Vint Cerf told Reuters that proposals to restrict the Internet were destined to fail.

Samsung Calls Itself Out on China Labor

South Korea-based Samsung has admitted that it found illegal work practices during an audit of more than 100 of its Chinese suppliers.

According to The Guardian, the audit, which reportedly covered more than 65,000 employees, found instances of excessive overtime hours and fines for being late or absent. However, the audit reported that, after conducting interviews with all staff under 18, there were no instances of child labor.

Samsung is the world's biggest maker of mobile phone and smartphones, as well as a huge supplier of memory chips and touchscreens.

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Google Play Takes Away Reviewers' Mask of Anonymity

By Peter Suciu
TechNewsWorld

Google has begun to require that reviewers on Google Play be signed in through Google

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GraphicConverter

GraphicConverter is the best graphic file management and manipulation software for everyone except professional graphics designers.



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Cisco Linksys Smart Wi-Fi AC 1750HD Video Pro EA6500

The cloud as management console with Cisco Connect Cloud raises the bar for router management and that capability coupled with fine performance makes the EA6500 a four star Editors' Choice for wireless routers.



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Call of Duty: Black Ops II

Some excitement and a few minor innovations can't prevent most of Call of Duty: Black Ops II from feeling like a retread in need of a reboot.



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LibreOffice (for Mac)

Worth having if you don't want to pay for an application suite or if you need to open legacy formats, but far from the first choice among office suites under OS X.



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Hitcase Pro for iPhone 4/4S

The Hitcase Pro will protect your iPhone 4 or 4S, letting you safely and easily capture and share your outdoor adventures, but don't expect the same video quality or options you get with standalone action cameras.



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LG Spectrum 2 (Verizon Wireless)

The LG Spectrum 2 for Verizon Wireless gets you a first-rate smartphone for about half the price as other top picks.



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Fluenz

Language-learning software Fluenz guides new learners through a rigorous and thorough program, adding ample context in English to help the new language not only stick, but also make sense. It's only available in six languages, though.



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HTC Windows Phone 8x T-Mobile

The HTC 8X is the best-looking Windows Phone 8 handset on T-Mobile, but you'll pay extra for the design.

HTC Windows Phone 8X

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Gangnam Style 'most viewed video'

Psy's horse-riding dance has been performed by the head of the UN Continue reading the main storyRelated StoriesS Korea eyes 'Gangnam style' boost WatchPsy pressure to represent countryPsy given YouTube world record Gangnam Style, the dance track by South Korean pop phenomenon Psy, has become YouTube's most-watched video of all time.
It has notched up more than 808m views since it was posted in July.
The video pokes fun at the consumerism of Gangnam, an affluent suburb of the South Korean capital Seoul.
In it, the portly Psy dances as though he is trotting on a horse, holding the reins and spinning a lasso in a manner that has sparked a global dance craze.
The video also features the 34-year-old singer reclining on a sun lounger in tight pink shorts, gazing longingly at a girl dancing on an underground train in tight shorts and gesticulating at a woman working out on a beach - in tight shorts.
The dance has sparked numerous copycat versions, being performed by a diverse fan-base including Filipino prison inmates, prominent Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and a Chinese robot.
Popular parodies include one performed by Eton College schoolboys and another in the Star Trek language Klingon.
Gangnam Style, which won best video at this year's MTV Europe Music Awards, has also been number one in 28 countries.
It holds the Guinness World Record for the most "liked" song ever - currently with a little under 5.4m likes on YouTube.
Previously, Justin Bieber's 2010 teenybopper hit Baby held the record for the most YouTube views.
Bieber's manager Scooter Braun was the first person in the US to tweet a link to the Gangnam Style video.
Have you caught the 'Gangnam Style' style dance bug? We would like to see your copycat version. You can upload your video using the form below.


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Samsung audit finds China issues

Samsung has asked its suppliers to adopt new hiring process with immediate effect Continue reading the main storyRelated StoriesSamsung faces new factory claimsSamsung widens China plant checksSamsung checks child labour claim Samsung says an audit of 105 of its suppliers in China has identified "several instances of inadequate practices at the facilities".
These included overtime in excess of local laws as well as fines for being late or absent from work.
However, it found no evidence of under-age workers at any of the suppliers.
The audit followed a report by China Labor Watch which alleged that it had evidence of long working hours and under-age workers.
"Samsung did not identify any instance of child labour during the audits after reviewing HR records of all workers aged below 18 and conducting face-to-face ID checks," the company said in statement.
The South Korean manufacturer said that it had asked all its suppliers to adopt a new hiring process immediately to address the problems identified.
It said that among other things, it had asked the suppliers to develop a longer term plan to resolve working hour practices by the end of this year and also to correct irregularities in labour contracts.
Samsung said it was reviewing practices at another 144 of its suppliers in China.
Corrective measures
China Labor Watch (CLW), a New York-based campaign group, has published two reports about alleged breach of labour laws at factories of Samsung and its suppliers in China.
Continue reading the main story“Start QuoteExcept the overtime issue, violations covered in the report are not in line with our knowledge”End QuoteSamsung Electronics The first, published in August, alleged that it had found seven children - all of them are under the age of 16 - working at a factory of Samsung's supplier HEG Electronics.
Samsung had carried out an audit of that factory and said it did not find any evidence of child labour.
It was after that report Samsung announced that it would conduct an audit of 249 suppliers in China.
But just as Samsung promised to carry out the checks at its suppliers, CLW published another report alleging "illegal and inhumane violations" at eight Samsung factories in China.
CLW said it had found evidence of "forced and excessive overtime", "extensive labour contract violations", "abuse of underage workers", "lack of worker safety" and "severe discrimination based on age, gender, and individual characteristics unrelated to the job" among other breaches.
Samsung said that it had conducted regular checks as well as unannounced inspections of all its factories in China in October.
"Except the overtime issue, violations covered in the report are not in line with our knowledge," Samsung said.
It added that it would correct its working hours practices and meet the local guidelines by the end of 2014.


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Sex offender's Facebook challenge

A convicted sex offender has launched a legal bid to force Facebook to remove a page set up to monitor paedophiles in Northern Ireland.
The man, who cannot be identified, is also seeking an injunction to stop his photograph and details from appearing on the social networking site.
He claims the case is urgent because he is at real and immediate risk.
Proceedings were brought before the High Court over the Facebook page, 'Keeping our kids safe from predators'.
The man, known only as XY, as he was granted anonymity in court, is currently out on licence after serving a prison sentence for sexual offences.
Following his release he discovered his photo and threatening comments had been posted online.
The judge hearing the case, Mr Justice McCloskey, said: "He deposes to fear and anxiety. He avers that there is a marked change of attitude on the part of his neighbours."
The man, who said he was in poor health, wants Facebook Ireland Ltd to terminate the accounts of anyone operating the page.
His lawyers argue that the company should also be restrained from permitting those responsible from publishing, distributing, broadcasting or disseminating any further information about him on the site.
Monitor
Human rights legislation dealing with privacy and inhumane and degrading treatment is intrinsic to the case.
Facebook has already removed the man's photograph and comments made about him. A lawyer for the company argued that the further relief being sought was neither necessary nor proportionate.
But counsel for the plaintiff confirmed he still wanted the entire page removed. She said the litigation would also try to identify the "mischief makers" before deciding how to proceed against them.
"The case we are making is that Facebook should undertake to monitor," she said.
"The plaintiff recognises that is somewhat onerous, but we would seek a final injunction with regard to that."
Mr Justice McCloskey will hear full arguments from both sides in court in Belfast later this week.
"The court, in consideration and determination of a case of this kind, will obviously have at the forefront of its mind the operation of well-established laws including the law of defamation and the provisions of the Human Rights Act," he said.


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Robot uprising risk to be studied

In The Terminator, the machines start to turn on the humans Continue reading the main storyRelated StoriesWhy are humans scared of robots?Rethinking robots at Innorobo 2012Changing relationship with tech Cambridge researchers are to assess whether technology could end up destroying human civilisation.
The Centre for the Study of Existential Risk (CSER) will study dangers posed by biotechnology, artificial life, nanotechnology and climate change.
The scientists said that to dismiss concerns of a potential robot uprising would be "dangerous".
Fears that machines may take over have been central to the plot of some of the most popular science fiction films.
Perhaps most famous is Skynet, a rogue computer system depicted in the Terminator films.
Skynet gained self-awareness and fought back after first being developed by the US military.
'Reasonable prediction'
But despite being the subject of far-fetched fantasy, researchers said the concept of machines outsmarting us demanded mature attention.
"The seriousness of these risks is difficult to assess, but that in itself seems a cause for concern, given how much is at stake," the researchers wrote on a website set up for the centre.
The CSER project has been co-founded by Cambridge philosophy professor Huw Price, cosmology and astrophysics professor Martin Rees and Skype co-founder Jaan Tallinn.
"It seems a reasonable prediction that some time in this or the next century intelligence will escape from the constraints of biology," Prof Price told the AFP news agency.
"What we're trying to do is to push it forward in the respectable scientific community."
He added that as robots and computers become smarter than humans, we could find ourselves at the mercy of "machines that are not malicious, but machines whose interests don't include us".
Survival of the human race permitting, the centre will launch next year.


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Is there still a need for Cyber Monday?

Filed under: WebSTORY HIGHLIGHTS Cyber Monday has been the biggest single shopping day of the year for online retailersBut retailers are spreading their online sales throughout the Thanksgiving holidayAs a result, Cyber Monday's growth is flatteningAnalyst: Cyber Monday will phase out eventually
(Mashable) -- Seven years ago, Cyber Monday was established as the online counterpart to Black Friday, a day when Internet retailers would band together to lure holiday shoppers to web storefronts through steep discounts, free shipping and other promotions.
So far, Cyber Monday has delivered on its mission, becoming the biggest single shopping day of the year for online retailers. And it keeps getting bigger: Sales on the day amounted to $1.25 billion in the U.S. in 2011, up 22% from 2010

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Nikon D3000 dual-lens-kit deal of the day

Its feature set is basic even by entry-level standards, but the Nikon D3000 delivers the photo quality and performance you expect when stepping up to a dSLR, with an optional interface that's very beginner friendly.

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Panasonic DMP-BDT220 Blu-ray player for $75 on Amazon

The Panasonic DMP-BDT220 is the best Blu-ray value of 2012, with built-in Wi-Fi, tons of streaming-media apps, 3D compatibility, and a simple user interface.

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Apple shares have fallen far enough, Citi says

Citi prefers to be optimistic when it comes to Apple.
It's not really alone in this (as the firm notes, 51 out of 56 analysts recommend investors buy Apple shares), but what is different is the optimism comes after a rough patch for Apple's stock.
Apple shares have dropped pretty badly over the past couple of months -- down about 18 percent from a high of $705.07 in September -- but that decline is likely about over, Citi says.
The firm today started coverage on the electronics giant by recommending investors buy shares and saying the stock should reach $675 over the next 12 months. It notes that Apple shares typically climb 20 percent to 50 percent following sell-offs similar to the most recent drop.


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Motorola Atrix HD now 99 cents

For $99.99, the Motorola Atrix HD is a great deal if you can live with its mediocre camera and short battery life.

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Google Maps helps man walk 5,000 miles

Winston Fiore (left) has walked 5,000 miles for smiles.(Credit:Winston Fiore)
Imagine hiking 5,000 miles through Asia, with only Google Maps as your guide. Winston Fiore, a U.S. marine formerly deployed to Senegal and Afghanistan, did it in about a year, calling the journey his "Smile Trek."
The inspiration for "Smile Trek" came in 2007 when Fiore witnessed "an incredible amount of poverty" while in Senegal. He then decided to set aside a year for traveling, and found a cause to throw his weight behind: the International Children's Surgical Foundation (ICSF), a nonprofit that provides free corrective surgery for kids in developing countries with cleft lips and palates.
For the past year, he has hiked through Malaysia, Thailand, Laos, Vietnam, China, Taiwan, the Philippines, Brunei, and Singapore. He completed his journey last week.
Speaking to CNET Asia in Singapore, his start and end point, Fiore says he didn't carry any physical maps and only relied on Google Maps to map his daily walking route. (Probably a good thing Fiore wasn't using aniPhone 5 -- we all know about the Apple Maps kerfuffle.)
Along with Google Maps, Fiore relied on Google Translate (to communicate with locals); Google Latitude (for keeping his family, friends, and supporters informed of his whereabouts); and MyTracks (to record his speed, distance, and places visited).


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PC gaming does Cyber Monday: Downloadable PC games

Amazon's site navigation is kind of a mess. You can find the discounted, downloadable PC games here.
In total, Amazon lists 429 results, encompassing full games and downloadable content (DLC), with discounts up to 75 percent. You also get a $5 credit with any downloaded game purchase to use in January 2013 on any "2012 Editor's Choice" game.
Amazon's deal inventory dwarfs that of its major competition. In comparison, GameStop has 20 discounted PC titles. Valve Software has six.
The trick for Amazon is that it lists bundles as well as individual games. A bundle can include an entire series of games, a la the Bioshock collection, or a game and its season pass, as with Max Payne Complete. The latter entitles you to the core Max Payne III game, as well as all current and future DLC.
Of Amazon's offers, XCOM: Enemy Unknown is a highlight. Amazon sells it for $24.99. Other online retailers only have it for upward of $35.
Other standout deals on Amazon include the aforementioned Max Payne Complete for $19.99, and Kingdoms of Amalur Complete for $11.99, or $4 less than publisher Electronic Arts' own discounted version. (I'll offer the fact that I just purchased the discounted Kingdoms of Amalur as a cautionary tale about the perils of conducting this research).
For more family-oriented games, Amazon lists the Disney Kids and Family pack download for $9.99 (including Toy Story 3, Lego Pirates of the Caribbean, and G-Force games), along with an assortment of card and puzzle games. Again, click here for Amazon's complete list of discounted downloadable PC games.


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Monday, November 26, 2012

Facebook adds iTunes to Facebook Gifts

The social network's move to add Apple to its retail partner list for Facebook Gifts comes shortly after it announced the inclusion of more than a dozen new partners at a media event earlier this month.
The Apple partnership is an important one for Facebook. Although the social network is reportedly pushing for its employees to use Android phones in hopes of improving itsAndroid apps, Facebook and Apple have close ties; For example, Apple has integrated the social network's sharing feature into iOS 6.
Facebook Gifts already features digital gifts from companies like Hulu, Pandora, and Rdio, but Apple's iTunes gives Facebook a big mainstream tech/media brand to tout as the social network tries to get members to use the new service.
Related storiesFacebook uses posters to push employees to switch to AndroidIrish regulators seek 'urgent' clarity on Facebook data changesThe Onion's joyous crucifixion of social media gurus
Launched at the end of September with about 100 merchants, the gifting service lets users buy and send gifts right off friends' Timelines and Facebook takes a cut.
Although Facebook won't say how big of a cut it gets from these sales, including the deal with Apple, the new service lets Facebook make money on something other than advertising.


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Nintendo's Fils-Aime: Microsoft, Sony need to react to us

" adding that the device's performance to this point is "quite comparable" to the Wii, indicating the Wii U could match what is one of the most popular consoles of all time.
In the end, Fils-Aime doesn't see the Wii U as a standalone piece of hardware, but as "a living, breathing" product that will continue to be improved over the coming years.


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T-Mobile offers HTC One S for free

The HTC One S is the best phone you can get on T-Mobile (for now), wrapping Android 4.0, 4G data speeds, and a beautiful 4.3-inch AMOLED screen into one svelte package.

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Versatile indoor grill makes turkey sandwiches all year round

The Thanksgiving tradition of finding new ways to cook leftovers continues.(Credit:Amazon)
It's time to talk turkey. A lot of turkey. As in turkey sandwiches. It is that time of year, after all. However, as high as the leftovers may be piled up in the refrigerator, that doesn't necessarily mean it's easy to figure out what to do with them. One can only eat so many sandwiches. Unless of course, there can be found new ways of constructing them.
The Frigidaire FPPG12K7MS Professional Panini Grill (about $120) takes an old classic and smashes it -- in a good way. But panini sandwiches are just the start. The indoor grill opens flat and each side has an individual temperature control. The reversible cooking plates can be used to grill or griddle so when it comes time to fry up some bacon for that turkey sandwich, this one countertop appliance has you covered.
Finding creative ways to deal with Thanksgiving leftovers is a delicious tradition, but sometimes it's the classics that really hit the spot. The device features five adjustable height settings that can be used to find the perfect pressure for creating pressed sandwiches. With 1,500 watts and 240 square inches of cooking area, the indoor grill makes it easy to cook up some classic leftover combinations -- or perhaps to use that extra cooking area to come up with some new ones.
Topics: Cooking Tags: indoor grill, Frigidaire, griddle Brian Krepshaw A San Francisco resident, Brian has access to some of the best dining in the world. With a deep appreciation for the kitchen, he is always on the lookout for that perfect appliance that combines style and grace with the ever-popular ability to save time. Don't Miss

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Two hard drive deals for Cyber Monday

Despite a few minor shortcomings, the GoFlex Satellite makes an excellent direct-attach external storage solution for anyone and a must-have for those who frequently travel with Apple's iPad.

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Google ups the ante against Amazon's cloud service

Google has added 36 new types of server to its rentable cloud infrastructure. 
The additions to Google Compute Engine, the company's infrastructure-as-a-service technology, were announced by Google on Monday.



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Grab a Vizio 70-inch TV for $1,699

If you're looking for a TV with a big screen and most of the bells and whistles then you might be interested in Vizio's E-Series 70-inch Razor Smart TV, which is on sale for Cyber Monday at 1699. It's usual price is $1999 and it is the larger version of the 60-inch E601i-A3 which itself got a solid 3.5 stars from David Katzmaier. Vizio says the 70-inch version is quite different with an even better picture and so we were unable to review the TV as part of a series as we usually do.
The E701i-A3 unit features 'Razor' LED backlighting and comes with Vizios spiffy new 22mm bezel design. It comes with a 120Hz refresh, built-in Wi-Fi with Smart TV, and a reversible QWERTY remote. Unfortunately it lacks 3D, but unless you watch Avatar religiously you won't miss it.
The TV is available from Costco, Amazon and Walmart. CNET anticipates receiving a 70-inch E701i-A3 shortly so look out for more information soon.
Tags: cyber monday, vizio, 70-inch

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Xbox SmartGlass: Not Quite the One, But Worth a Date or Two

By Chris Maxcer
MacNewsWorld
Part of the ECT News Network
If I'm going to be searching for content -- opposed to browsing or navigating to it -- using the Xbox SmartGlass app is a good choice, if only for the ability to use a virtual keyboard. As for the rest of it, it doesn't exactly fill a glaring need, but it does extend the Xbox experience just a bit farther.Xbox SmartGlass, an app by Microsoft for iPhone and iPad, is available free in the Apple App Store.


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Acer Aspire V5-571-6891

Can you get full quality in a laptop for under $500? Yes, you can, with the Acer Aspire V5-571-6891 desktop replacement laptop.



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LaCie Little Big Disk Thunderbolt (1TB SSD)

Tight deadlines? The LaCie Little Big Disk Thunderbolt (1TB SSD) gets you your data quicker than you can think.



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PC Tools Registry Mechanic

PC Tool Registry Mechanic is a stripped down version of PC Tools Performance Toolkit that doesn't deliver the same performance-enhancing punch as competing products. Furthermore, the three-PC license is an antiquated model in the multi-PC home.



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PTLens 8.9

PTLens was a pioneer in lens-based corrections, but bigger fish have since swum past it.



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Innovation vs. Magic: Why Apple and Microsoft Need James Bond

By Rob Enderle
TechNewsWorld
The Surface and Windows Phone announcement events arguably were better than the last several Apple events. It's as though Apple lost the Steve Jobs script and Microsoft found it somehow. Still, anyone who tries to read the script will be overshadowed by Jobs -- until someone with magic gets on stage and owns it.After seeing the new Microsoft offerings, Steve Wozniak recently lamented that Microsoft is nowout innovating Apple. Wozniak is the surviving founder of Apple, and his perspective clearly isimportant, but he was the guy who got the product to work. It was the other Steve who was largely responsible for creating the entity that was Apple, and it was the other Steve that made it a huge success.
Steve Jobs was moreof a packaging and marketing guy; once he got something that worked, he didn't mess with it much --he simply refined it and convinced us we loved the refinements. The products weren't truly magical,any more than a magic show is magical, but he convinced us they were something special -- and they weregood enough that we saw them through his eyes.
Apple wasn't the first with smartphones, tablets or even MP3 players. It was just the first to package a set of compelling technologies, wrap them upwith marketing, and get us to line up to buy them.
Windows 8 is innovative, but it is only part of something that makes up a whole; without the rest, it'snot magical. Surface comes close, but I think what's missing is a magician. Let me explain.
I'll close with the Dell XPS 12 tablet -- the first Windows 8 tablet I've received to review, and onewith the most innovative screens of the bunch.
Apple's Dying Magic
Thinking back on the first introduction of the iPod, what I didn't recognize at the time was that I was at an Apple magic show. Like most magic shows, the audience was filled with shills to create an atmosphere. In this case, they knew when to cheer and applaud.
Given that we mostly thought MP3 players were crap at the time, it was critical for us to see it assomething new and different. Even so, there were a lot of skeptics -- and for good reason. The iPod was awhopping US$500 in a market populated by under-$200 products that weren't selling. You'd have to havebeen nuts to believe a product would sell for more than twice-market.
However, that is what makes magic magic -- getting people to believe the impossible is possible. You need a magician, though. I kind of wonder if he could be Steve Wozniak?
Borrowed Magic: Surface/Windows Phone
Both of Microsoft's recent launches were directly out of the Apple script. They had people in theaudience who cheered at the right times, the products both were in areas where Microsoft had failedin the past, and both products were clearly very different from the products in market.
Unlike that first iPod, the Surface tablet is competitive with other products in the same size class, as are the newWindows Phones. In addition, unlike Apple at the time of the iPod launch, Microsoft is in good financialshape and isn't living under a cloud of impending failure.
Now there are some minor problems with the Surface tablet, and the Windows Phone 8 is having afew teething pains as well. But the first iPod used FireWire, had little capacity, wouldn't workwith Windows PC, and did nothing but play music. A lot of people who bought it ended up returningit, largely because they didn't realize it wouldn't work with their hardware. Yet it was thefoundation for the new Apple.
The Magician
Now part of why Jobs was a magician is that he was legendary in the valley. He was the founder of Apple andthe face of the company. He was amazing in front of an audience. It wasn't just the fact that he couldremember a script after one reading, either. He had presence -- he could touch you.
If you've ever seen a play with a famous actor and then gone back with a friend and seen the same play with an understudy, you can perhaps get what I mean. The understudy says the words right, even has the intonations right, but it just isn't as good. Part of the reason, I think, is that you know it won't be.
With Jobs, you knew the event was going to be legendary. Even if he was off his game, your braincould in the gaps and create the magic. At the end, this was likely more habit than performance -- buteven sick Jobs could outdo anyone who has succeeded him.
Microsoft Outdid Apple
Now the Surface and Windows Phone announcement events arguably were better than the last severalApple events. It's as though Apple lost the Steve Jobs script and Microsoft found it somehow.
Still, anyone who tries to read the script will be overshadowed by Jobs -- until someone with magicgets on stage and owns it.
Wrapping Up: Skyfall
Bet you were wondering where the James Bond reference was going to go. Well, over all the JamesBonds stood Connery -- every one of them was a pale echo of the first James Bond. However, in Skyfall, Craig and the writers reset the franchise -- Skyfall is arguably the best Bond movie ever made.
That's because itembraced the Connery history and made it part of the new future for the franchise. A hand-off is what's alwaysbeen missing -- a sense of continuity or closure, if you will, and that moment is magical. I think anyone who steps into Jobs' shoes will have to take the stage like he did, accept the unpassedbaton, and create a similar form of continuity. Then we won't see a mere attempt at magic -- we'll see a truemagician.
Product of the Week: Dell XPS 12


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Linux and the GPL: A Storm Erupts

blogger Gonzalo Velasco C. mused. "The development of FLOSS in such a capitalist and competitive world demands solidarity, talent, idealism and passion. So when it comes to discussing the inclusion (without malice) of not-FLOSS code inside Linux, things get very hot -- that's when the passion comes in."Now that Thanksgiving has come and gone in the land of stars and stripes, it's a pretty safe bet that blood pressures are rising and tensions are high here in the Linux blogosphere.
The holiday season is hard upon us, after all, and Linux Girl, for one, has resorted to her preferred coping strategy of warming the barstools down at the blogosphere's seedy Punchy Penguin Saloon. This too shall pass, thank goodness -- why not enjoy a few Tequila Tux cocktails along the way?
Anyhoo, it was during one of her extended sojourns at said establishment that Linux Girl recently overheard what sounded like the start of a fierce brawl.
'Please Explain'
"Your company appears to be shipping kernel features in RTS OS that are not made available under the GPL," charged Linux developer Andy Grover, a software engineer at Red Hat, in a posting on the kernel developer mailing list directed at Nicholas Bellinger, cofounder and CTO at RisingTide Systems.
RTS OS is a unified storage operating system from RisingTide, which is a Red Hat competitor.
"Your company appears to be violating the GPL," Grover added. "Please explain."
Here in the Linux community, of course, one would be hard-pressed to come up with a weightier accusation, as Bellinger was quick to point out.
'We Are Not Violating GPL'
"Andy, accusing us of violating GPL is a serious legal claim," Bellinger wrote in response. "In fact, we are not violating GPL.
"In short, this is because we wrote the code you are referring to (the SCSI target core in our commercial RTS OS product), we have exclusive copyright ownership of it, and this code contains no GPL code from the community," he explained.
Was the dispute resolved politely over a nice cup of tea? No, it was not. In fact, it hasn't yet been resolved at all. Instead, lawyers, GPL experts and, of course, the debate-loving Linux masses have been quick to get involved.
'When Will the Dinosaurs Get FLOSS?'
Close to 400 comments appeared in short order on Slashdot, for example, and at least as many could be heard down at the Punchy Penguin Saloon.
Linux Girl took it upon herself to record some of the highlights.
"Achhh! When will the dinosaurs get FLOSS?" exclaimed blogger Robert Pogson, for instance.
'Does Greed Have No Limits?'
"FLOSS is a huge advantage to any business," Pogson explained. "To get the best advantage of FLOSS they have to 'give back,' sharing what they add to FLOSS.
"How simple can it be? If you get free ice-cream and you add sprinkles, why try to charge the children for the ice-cream?" he added. "Does greed have no limits?"
The best strategy is to "sell hardware and service," Pogson advised. "You don't need to sell software."
'No One Owns Ideas'
Software is a service, "but you should expect to do some work making money from it," Pogson added. "Creating software is not a license to print money. Software is an expression of ideas common to all people: arithmetic, logic, movement. It's not magic, and no one owns ideas."
In short, "businesses run by people who think they can have the benefits of FLOSS without giving back are rude, selfish people who deserve to be shunned," he concluded. "The world can buy products and services from more enlightened beings."
Indeed, "I find GPL violators seem to take a 'What's mine is mine and what's yours is mine' thought process, where they focus only on the amount of work they put into their own product while ignoring the order of magnitude more work that others put in before them," consultant and Slashdot blogger Gerhard Mack agreed.
'Exploited by Both Sides'
And again: "What a mess," opined Chris Travers, a blogger who works on the LedgerSMB project. "The fact is that neither the GPL nor copyright law is that clear on this area, and the resulting open questions are exploited by both sides."
In the United States, at least, "one key consideration is that practical elements are not given copyright protection, and expressive elements are only given protection to the extent that they can be separated from the practical elements," Travers pointed out. "For this reason, each individual recipe in a cookbook is not subject to copyright protection, but the selection, ordering and layout may be.
"I think the way this would have to be applied to software would be that use of interfaces would get no more protection than a recipe in a cookbook, but copy of code beyond what is necessary for interoperability purposes might give rise to copyright violations (so header files would be subject only to very weak protections, while .c source files would get stronger protections)," he added.
'You Have to Show a Lot More'
Then, too, there's the fact that "the court said in SCO v. IBM that derivation was not transitive," Travers noted. "In other words, if program A is derived from program B, and program B is derived from program C, you still have to prove that expressive elements of program C made their way into program A in such a way as to make it a derivative work."
So again, "the wrapper/proprietary driver approach is unlikely by itself to be sufficient to implicate the GPL, assuming that 'based on' in the GPL means 'based on' in copyright law in the sense that a movie is 'based on' a book, and mere aggregation means the same thing as a compilation in copyright law," he said.
Of course, "I am not a lawyer," Travers added, but "I think that you have to show a lot more than just linking before the GPL comes into play. An actual fork of Linux would be bound by the GPL, but a mere piece of software that links might not."
Sooner or later, though, "these issues will have to be decided by the courts," he concluded. "This level of uncertainty cannot be maintained forever."
'Why Is Anybody Listening?'
There's not much difference between what RisingTide is doing and what Nvidia does, Slashdot blogger hairyfeet suggested.
"And why is anybody listening to a competitor making claims? If MSFT said Linux gives you cancer and Apple said Linux would make you poor, would you believe them, or even give their words a second thought?" hairyfeet pointed out. "So why in the world would you listen now?
"This helps Red Hat even if there isn't a shred of proof (which FYI there isn't, they haven't shown a single shred of evidence before making libelous claims) because it makes a competitor look shady even if they are not," he concluded.
'FLOSS Should Be FLOSS'

Last but not least, "this is a hard one," Google

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Xbox SmartGlass: Not Quite the One, But Worth a Date or Two

By Chris Maxcer
MacNewsWorld
Part of the ECT News Network
If I'm going to be searching for content -- opposed to browsing or navigating to it -- using the Xbox SmartGlass app is a good choice, if only for the ability to use a virtual keyboard. As for the rest of it, it doesn't exactly fill a glaring need, but it does extend the Xbox experience just a bit farther.Xbox SmartGlass, an app by Microsoft for iPhone and iPad, is available free in the Apple App Store.



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UK Tweeters Face Libel Threats Over False Rumors

By David Vranicar
TechNewsWorld
Today in international tech news: A British politician seeks apologies from Twitter users -- or else! Also, Renesas shareholders approve a government bailout, YouTube has a new most-viewed video and French parliament members are caught playing games and ordering wine on their tablets.As many as 10,000 Twitter users in the United Kingdom face the threat of legal action because of their tweets regarding recent sexual abuse allegations.
According to The New York Times, the tweeters could be in trouble because of comments -- either posted to Twitter or forwarded to other people -- in which they refer to a BBC report that incorrectly linked a former Conservative Party official to sexual abuse of a child. No official was named, but the BBC report contained enough tidbits that people -- lots of them -- were able to out Alistair McAlpine.
The BBC apologized for the fallacious report and promptly settled a libel claim with McAlpine for almost US$300,000.
McAlpine, who also received a settlement from a television station that reported the story, is additionally seeking libel damages from 20 "high-profile tweeters," including a comedian, the wife of the speaker of the House of Commons and a columnist for The Guardian.
That's not all: McAlpine is reportedly going after thousands of other Twitter users who had retweeted people's comments.
Tweeters who think they may have run afoul of McAlpine, but who have fewer than 500 followers, can apologize via a website created by McAlpine's law firm and try to settle their cases that way. Such users will have to read a letter, download a form and answer questions about their tweets.
British courts have a streak of being tough on tweeters. Courts have, for instance, ruled that Twitter can be ordered to turn over personal details of users, although there is no word on whether this has happened in this case. Earlier this year, the High Court in London awarded a New Zealand cricket player nearly $150,000 when an Indian cricket official tweeted that the Kiwi was match-fixing.
Renesas Shareholders Approve Bailout
Shareholders of Japan-based Renesas Electronics have approved a government-led bailout.
According to Reuters, which cites the Nikkei newspaper, the bailout will be worth $2.4 billion and is due for December. The deal stipulates that the government spend $2.2 billion and take a two-thirds stake in the company, while eight additional manufacturers, including Toyota and Nissan, will cover the remaining amount.
A spokesperson for the company said nothing had been decided.
By market share, Renesas is the world's biggest maker of microcontroller chips.
South Korean Pop Star Sets YouTube Mark
Psy, a South Korean pop star, now owns the most-watched video in YouTube history.
According to the BBC, Psy's track "Gangnam Style" has eclipsed 808 million viewers. Posted in July, the video mocks a suburb of the South Korean capital of Seoul.
Justin Bieber's 2010 hit "Baby" previously held the most-viewed title.
As the BBC reports, the dance moves contained in Psy's video had been mimicked -- and posted to YouTube -- by people ranging from Filipino prison inmates, Chinese artist Ai Weiwei and UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.
The song has reached No. 1 in 28 different countries and holds the Guinness World Record for the most Liked song; it has 5.4 million likes on YouTube.
French Parliament in Session and Online
Several French lawmakers were caught fiddling around on tablet computers during a recent session.

According to The Telegraph, not all the MPs were using their devices to bone up on proposed legislation. Indeed, cameras reportedly caught some of the parliamentarians accessing poker sites, reading cartoons, looking at clothing catalogs and -- France being France -- placing orders for fine wines. 

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