Showing headlines posted by jhansonxi

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How To: Video Editing with Handbrake

  • Tom's Guide; By John Corpuz (Posted by jhansonxi on Aug 13, 2012 7:09 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
HandBrake is a simple, open source program designed to convert videos, movies, and obscure media files into formats that can be read by various devices such as the iPod, Apple TV and others. In this tutorial, we'll show you how. You'll be converting videos in no time!

Will Microsoft’s Police Surveillance System Violate Your Privacy?

The Microsoft-powered police surveillance system being installed in New York City is an impressive bit of innovation... The system, dubbed the Domain Awareness System (DAS), sounds like science fiction: Part Minority Report, part 1984. It connects thousands of security cameras in the city owned by the NYPD and private businesses, collecting and archiving up to 30 days worth of their archival footage at a time.

Can Skype 'wiretap' video calls?

The video calling service Skype recently made a change to how it routes calls. Yawn, right? But here's where it get a little juicier: Hackers and bloggers are saying the changes, which push some of the video calling process onto Skype's own computers instead of onto random machines on the Internet, could help the app spy on users' calls, presumably at the request of a court or government.

Microsoft stumbles into crucial financial year

The world's largest software company, whose stock remains mired around $30, had prepared a multi-pronged assault to try and break into the crucial mobile computing space this year and take Apple Inc and Google Inc down a peg.

But on Monday, it announced a $6.2 billion writedown of a 2007 Internet-advertising acquisition - a reminder that Microsoft has a patchy track record when it ventures outside of its Windows and Office comfort zone.

How Hackers Attack

  • The Wall Street Journal; By Sarah E. Needleman (Posted by jhansonxi on Jul 7, 2012 11:10 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
"We see far more infections on Windows than we do Macs, Unix and Linux," says Wade Baker, author of the Verizon 2012 Data Breach Investigations Report, a study based on cybercrime investigations conducted by Verizon's team, which is comprised of data-breach reports from Verizon and various law-enforcement groups around the globe, including the U.S. Secret Service and the Australian Federal Police.

Former Microsoft exec: Microsoft has ‘become the thing they despised’

  • Yahoo!/BGR News; By Zach Epstein (Posted by jhansonxi on Jul 7, 2012 7:19 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Microsoft
Eichenwald uses details learned from dozens of interviews with current and former Microsoft executives as well as confidential corporate records to piece together the long string of decisions that has lost Microsoft its leadership position in several key markets. As Vanity Fair points out, “a single Apple product—the iPhone—generates more revenue than all of Microsoft’s wares combined.”

Indie Royale Summer Bundle

  • Indie Royale; By Indie Royale (Posted by jhansonxi on Jul 2, 2012 8:08 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Indie Royale has a few Linux games in their offer this time. Unfortunately it's only three out of the nine games in the bundle. Harvest: Massive Encounter looks the most interesting.

Did Microsoft Just Give Up on Windows 8 for Businesses?

Despite my recent attempt to categorize what’s coming in Windows 8 for businesses -- and, seriously, it’s not a bad list -- it’s become increasingly clear to me that Microsoft doesn’t actually expect businesses to upgrade to this new system in any meaningful way.

Microsoft shuts German distribution centre in patent row

Microsoft is moving its European software distribution to the Netherlands from Germany after being caught up in patent disputes with mobile phone and tablet maker Motorola Mobility Inc.

Analysts worry that something's amiss at Oracle

Analysts have become increasingly worried that the hardware business Oracle acquired in 2010 with its $5.6 billion purchase of Sun Microsystems has turned into a liability, with sales falling short of expectations.

Former top Microsoft exec says world is over the PC

Ray Ozzie, the man who succeeded Bill Gates as Microsoft Corp's tech visionary, believes the world has moved past the personal computer, potentially leaving behind the world's largest software company. The PC, which was Microsoft's foundation and still determines the company's financial performance, has been nudged aside by powerful phones and tablets running Apple Inc and Google Inc software, the former Microsoft executive said.

Always Innovating wants to make your dumb TV smart with a USB dongle

  • MyCE; By Justin Massoud (Posted by jhansonxi on Mar 4, 2012 9:58 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews
Would you pay a small fee to turn your average HDTV into a smart TV? Always Innovating hopes so. The San Francisco company showed off its HDMI Dongle, which adds Android 4.0 support to non-connected televisions, at this week’s Mobile Web Congress in Barcelona, Spain.

White House pushes online privacy bill of rights

  • CNN Money; By David Goldman (Posted by jhansonxi on Feb 24, 2012 7:01 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
From the folks that brought you SOPA, ACTA, and the Patriot Act:

The Obama administration on Thursday unveiled a new online bill of rights intended to protect consumers' privacy when they surf the Web.

This is about Internet rights..not politics..keep the conversation clean people - Scott

Why 'Android fragmentation' isn't so bad

Even though Android is the most popular smartphone platform in the U.S., and even though there were 10 billion Android app downloads as of December 2011, many Android users are frustrated that they're still treated like a second-class app market. That's because "fragmentation" makes it more complicated to develop Android apps that will run on most Android phones. New research from Localytics claims that Android fragmentation might be becoming less of a issue.

Crypto shocker: four of every 1,000 public keys provide no security

  • ars technica; By Dan Goodin (Posted by jhansonxi on Feb 16, 2012 10:13 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Security
The finding, reported in a paper (PDF) submitted to a cryptography conference in August, is based on the analysis of some 7.1 million 1024-bit RSA keys published online. By subjecting what's known as the "modulus" of each public key to an algorithm first postulated more than 2,000 years ago by the Greek mathematician Euclid, the researchers looked for underlying factors that were used more than once. Almost 27,000 of the keys they examined were cryptographically worthless because one of the factors used to generate them was used by at least one other key.

Cisco challenges Microsoft, Skype merger in EU

Networking company Cisco said Wednesday it is challenging Microsoft's $8.5 billion takeover of Skype at the European Union's top court to ensure Microsoft won't block other video conferencing services.

Microsoft Details Windows on ARM, Desktop Apps Support

  • Tom's Hardware; By Kevin Parrish (Posted by jhansonxi on Feb 11, 2012 2:47 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Microsoft
An interesting overview of how restricted Windows-On-Arm will be.

U.S. government, military to get secure Android phones

Some U.S. officials this year are expected to get smartphones capable of handling classified government documents over cellular networks, according to people involved in the project. The phones will run a modified version of Google's Android software, which is being developed as part of an initiative that spans multiple federal agencies and government contractors, these people said.

Judge: Americans can be forced to decrypt their laptops

  • CNET; By Declan McCullagh (Posted by jhansonxi on Jan 24, 2012 8:08 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
American citizens can be ordered to decrypt their PGP-scrambled hard drives for police to peruse for incriminating files, a federal judge in Colorado ruled today in what could become a precedent-setting case.

Supreme Court upholds copyright law

  • Yahoo! News/AP; By Mark Sherman (Posted by jhansonxi on Jan 19, 2012 10:26 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
The Supreme Court upheld a law Wednesday that extended U.S. copyright protection to books, musical compositions and other works by foreign artists that had been available without paying royalties. The justices said in a 6-2 decision Wednesday that Congress acted within its power to give protection to works that had been in the public domain.

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