Sunday, October 29, 2006

U.S. Economy: Growth Slows to 1.6% Rate as Homebuilding Slumps

The U.S. economy grew at a 1.6 percent annual rate last quarter, the slowest pace in more than three years and less than economists forecast, as housing slumped and the trade deficit widened.


The first estimate of the quarter's gross domestic product, the value of all goods and services produced in the U.S., compares with a 2.6 percent gain from April through June, the Commerce Department reported today in Washington. A gauge of inflation watched by the Federal Reserve eased.


Stocks declined and bonds advanced after the report, which showed homebuilding fell by the most in 15 years and the trade gap worsened as consumers bought more foreign-made goods. A drop in energy prices that gathered momentum late in the quarter is sustaining spending and restraining inflation, helping persuade Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke to leave interest rates alone.

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Tags: inflation | forecast | economy | Washington | U.S.

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Get Firefox 2.0 early from Mozilla's FTP servers

A day before the scheduled public release of its long-awaited Firefox 2.0 Web browser, the Mozilla Foundation has posted the final versions of the software on its FTP servers in preparation for the public launch.

The official Firefox 2.0 public launch page has not been activated on the Mozilla site, but the new U.S. versions for Windows, Linux and Macintosh are available now, buried amid the data on the group’s FTP servers. Versions in other languages are also available at Mozilla’s FTP site.

On Friday, Mozilla had said it would make the new Firefox 2.0 browser available tomorrow. The last preview version of the browser, called Release Candidate 3, was posted for public download last Monday. The official Firefox Web page still offers version 1.5.0.7 of the browser for download, but is expected to be updated or replaced to allow downloads of Firefox 2.0.

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Firefox 2.0 hits the web Firefox

Tags: Release | Browser | U.S. | mozilla | firefox

Hungary govt firm after riots, PM blames opposition

BUDAPEST, Oct 24 (Reuters) - Hungary's government pledged on Tuesday to stand by embattled Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany who blamed the opposition for riots that marred the 50th anniversary of the country's anti-Soviet uprising.


Gyurcsany and his coalition of Socialists and Free Democrats have come under attack since the leak last month of a tape in which the prime minister admitted lying about the parlous state of the economy to win a national election in April.


Anti-government protesters have staged daily demonstrations outside parliament demanding Gyurcsany step down amid the worst violence in Hungary since the fall of communism.


"Radical words have turned into radical actions. The leader of the opposition provided the ideology for the riots," Gyurcsany told parliament after receiving support from the coalition for budget deficit cuts.

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Tags: Gyurcsany Ferenc | Riot | Parliament | opposition | Government | coalition | hungary | budapest

Spencer Says "Ugly" Comments About Hillary Fabricated

Republican Senate candidate John Spencer is accusing a Daily News reporter of fabricating his comments about Senator Hillary Clinton that were published in the paper Monday.


The Daily News quoted Spencer as saying, "You ever see a picture of her back then? Whew. I don't know why Bill married her." He also said he was convinced Clinton had millions of dollars worth of plastic surgery.


Last night on Inside City Hall, Spencer denied making the "ugly" comments.

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Tags: surgery | senate | republican | Hillary Clinton | daily | Bill Clinton

Vista secures new enemies

SAN JOSE, Calif. -- Microsoft Corp. is no stranger to antitrust skirmishes and complaints from rivals about unfair business practices.

But the latest fight over its coming Vista operating system pits Microsoft against an unlikely adversary: the security-software vendors that are some of its most intimate partners in protecting its notoriously vulnerable systems from attacks.

As Vista's planned release nears, the company is facing a backlash from such vendors as Symantec Corp. and McAfee Inc., which argue that even the concessions Microsoft recently made to appease European antitrust regulators won't do enough to help them best protect their customers.

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Microsoft says Vista 'on target'

Tags: secures | McAfee Corp | business | Vista | San Jose | Microsoft | Calif.

Get Firefox 2.0 early from Mozilla's FTP servers

A day before the scheduled public release of its long-awaited Firefox 2.0 Web browser, the Mozilla Foundation has posted the final versions of the software on its FTP servers in preparation for the public launch.


The official Firefox 2.0 public launch page has not been activated on the Mozilla site, but the new U.S. versions for Windows, Linux and Macintosh are available now, buried amid the data on the group’s FTP servers. Versions in other languages are also available at Mozilla’s FTP site.


On Friday, Mozilla had said it would make the new Firefox 2.0 browser available tomorrow. The last preview version of the browser, called Release Candidate 3, was posted for public download last Monday. The official Firefox Web page still offers version 1.5.0.7 of the browser for download, but is expected to be updated or replaced to allow downloads of Firefox 2.0.

source

Tags: Release | Browser | U.S. | mozilla | firefox

Monday, October 23, 2006

Rubber bullets at Hungary protest

Police in Hungary have fired rubber bullets and tear gas to disperse protesters during commemorations of the 1956 uprising against Soviet rule.


Clashes took place with about 1,000 demonstrators close to parliament where officials had earlier laid flowers on the 50th anniversary of the revolt. Some protesters were in a tank they had taken from an uprising exhibition. Hungary has seen bitter political division since PM Ferenc Gyurcsány admitted he lied to win re-election. Some veterans of the uprising refused to shake hands with him. The latest clashes have been in Elizabeth and Deák squares, about 2 kilometers from parliament. The BBC's Nick Thorpe in Budapest said long lines of riot police were moving down streets and firing rubber bullets into crowds. BBC's correspondent said he saw one man being carried away with what looked like a head wound from a rubber bullet.


The disturbances were taking place on the edge of a much bigger, peaceful demonstration, he said, adding that the picture in Budapest was confusing with several groups marching through the city to events at different locations. It was difficult to tell whether the groups carrying Hungarian flags were marking 1956 or taking part in anti-government protests, our correspondent said. In one incident police rushed an unarmed tank - similar to one used by the Soviets to quash the rebellion - that was being driven among the protesters. At least one man was pulled from the tank. The possibility of clashes had prompted the government to close Kossuth square outside parliament and urge the media to stay away. Budapest's police chief said protest organizers had broken an agreement with them and there was a "considerable quantity" of knives and other weapons. The local MTI news agency said tear gas was also used at Budapest's Western Railway Station and that water cannon was used at another location. The agency said the protesters had been throwing rocks and pieces of metal at security forces. Protesters have been present outside parliament for weeks, but were forced back in the early hours of Monday to make way for the official ceremonies.

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Tags: rubber bullets | Western Railway Station | uprising | protest | Parliament | police | hungary | clashes | budapest

Hungary's Revolt Honored; Police Seal Off Parliament

Presidents from across former communist Europe are in Hungary today to mark the 50th anniversary of the region's biggest armed revolt against the regime, while police brace for more protests against the current government.


Streets leading into Budapest's Parliament square were closed off to the public with two cordons of wire fencing. Officers in riot gear formed lines across thoroughfares, forcing groups of flag-waving demonstrators to move to other parts of the capital.


Police bolstered their numbers in Budapest because of concern about an escalation of the protests seen in the capital in recent weeks. A demonstration involving thousands turned violent last month after revelations that Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany lied about the economy to win re-election. The clashes were the worst in Budapest since the 1956 uprising.

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Tags: Government | demonstration | Concern | communist | anniversary | police | Parliament | hungary | Europe | budapest

Riots mar Hungary uprising commemoration

Hungarian police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at thousands of anti-government protesters on Monday, marring commemorations of the 50th anniversary of the country's 1956 uprising against Soviet rule.


Police also used water cannon and some protesters lobbed stones and other missiles at them. The ambulance service said that 20-25 people had been injured, although no one was seriously hurt. One policeman was stabbed in the hand.


As police pushed the crowd of mostly far-right protesters back towards a rally by the main right of centre Fidesz opposition and further away from parliament, demonstrators seized a Soviet-era T-34 tank -- on show for the commemorations -- and drove it at police.

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Tags: rubber | Parliament | anti-government | Zagreb | Riots | police | hungary | budapest

Hungary's day of honour sapped by opposition

Fifty years ago Hungarians ripped the Communist hammer and sickle from their nation's flag as they rose against Soviet rule. Today in Budapest those flags fly again in ceremonies to honour the fallen of those 10 days of heady freedom that briefly blew through the iron curtain.


But most of them are being flown by the opposition, which has now been protesting for weeks against the Socialist-led government, angry at the prime minister's admission the party systematically lied during their successful re-election campaign.


Instead of a potent symbol of Hungary's desire to be independent the flags are mocking the Socialist's management of what should have been a day of national pride and unity. Instead many think the Socialists, inheritors of the defunct Communists, should not be at the commemoration at all.


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Tags: opposition | Honour | Government | freedom | hungary | budapest

Mozilla to release Firefox 2.0 tomorrow

23 October 2006 - Mozilla is release the new version of its Firefox browser, version 2.0, tomorrow on 24 October, just a few days after Microsoft launched Internet Explorer 7.


The browser is Microsoft's chief rival for surfing the web, and claims up to a 30% share in some markets, although across the board it hovers at just over 12%.


The updated Firefox incorporates a number of new features to make search easier and to protect users from scams. Tabs have been visually enhanced and a new “close” button added; in case of unexpected shut-down, Firefox keeps track of open tabs to restore them at restart.

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Tags: version | Release | Browser | October | mozilla | Microsoft | internet | firefox

Thursday, October 19, 2006

McAfee Claims Foul on Vista Security Code

Microsoft last week said it is cooperating with anti-virus and security providers so that they can provide the same protection level as its own products, including OneCare Live. At least one big Microsoft partner and competitor, however, disputes those statements.


“Contrary to what it says publicly, Microsoft has not cooperated with the leading security providers,” Siobhan MacDermott, McAfee’s vice president of worldwide corporate communications, said in a statement. “To date, we have not had any cooperation from Microsoft and no response on McAfee's repeated requests to review the information.”


In a press briefing last Friday, Brad Smith, Microsoft senior vice president and general counsel announced that Windows Vista is on track to ship on schedule worldwide, beginning next month to corporate customers and in January for consumers.

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Tags: Security | protection | Vista | Microsoft | McAfee | CODE

N Korea faces build-up of naval power

THE few Japanese fishing boats still present in North Korean waters have been ordered to leave, as prospects grow of a naval blockade to suppress the nuclear ambitions of Kim Jong-il.


The US, whose 7th Fleet is based in Japan, has mobilised vessels including the aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk and its strike group for "exercises" in the region. Guided missile carriers and destroyers were also being deployed, the US Navy said.


The long-planned naval exercises involving the US fleet and ships from Japan's Self Defence Force are now taking place in an atmosphere of high tension.


United Nations sanctions authorise the boarding of North Korean vessels to search for contraband, but the North Korean leader has said he will treat any boarding as an act of war.

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Tags: Defence strike | naval | aircraft | US | N Korea | JONG-IL | Japan | guided missile | FLEET

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

Symantec Spurns Microsoft's Vista Security Proposal

Microsoft's plan to provide limited access to the Vista kernel in the 64-bit version of the upcoming OS is not enough, a Symantec executive said Tuesday.

"It's not enough at all," said Rowan Trollope, Symantec's vice president of consumer engineering, and the man in charge of the security company's Norton AntiVirus and Norton Internet Security products. "It leaves customers exposed to threats."

Trollope's rebuff is the latest in the increasingly antagonistic brawl between Microsoft and Symantec, which remains a partner of the Redmond, Wash.-based operating system giant. Since September, Symantec has publicly criticized Microsoft's PatchGuard, a technology it will deploy in the 64-bit version of Windows Vista that locks out all access to the kernel. PatchGuard is meant to stop both malicious code and third-party software from making changes at the kernel level, and has been touted by Microsoft as a defense against rootkits and other malware.

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Microsoft unveils Windows Vista product lineup

Tags: Wash. | Trollope | Spurns | version | Security | kernel | access | Vista | Symantec | Redmond | proposal | Norton | Microsoft

Console War: Sony PS3, Nintendo Wii, Microsoft Xbox 360

And so the next-gen console wars will begin.

Sony PlayStation 3 will launch on Nov. 17 and will be available for a base price of $499; Nintendo will go live with Wii on Nov. 19 and it will sell for $249; and Microsoft offers its Xbox 360 for $299, the Times reports.

The three video game systems all include sleek design and a number of features unique to each, but the real war between the electronics titans will likely be waged on the Web, via the three systems’ online connectivity features, according to the Times.

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xboxfaceplate 003 Sony Playstation 3

Tags: video | XBOX | wii | times | sony | Playstation | ps | Nintendo | Microsoft | Japan | Console