Thursday, April 26, 2007

CALL OF DUTY 4: MODERN WARFARE CONFIRMED


There's good news for all you Call of Duty-ites out there.

First, there's a new Call of Duty game coming.


Second, you won't be storming the beaches of Normandy this time.


Activision has confirmed that Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare, the next installment in the CoD series, will leave the battlefield of World War II for a more modern setting. Where will it be? Who will be fighting? Well, nobody knows. Yet.


The first glimpse of the game will make its stateside debut this weekend during a video that will show during the NFL draft on ESPN in the US at 1pm EDT/10am PDT.


Source: gaming.monstersandcritics.com
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The latest BlackBerry blackout


It took Brooks Cappella about a nanosecond to notice that his BlackBerry wasn't working. He manages the technology operations at a New York hedge fund, Highland Financial, and he was wrestling with some problems on the company's servers when he stopped getting messages late on Apr. 17. Just what he needed to make a difficult day worse. "Any downtime is something we notice right away," he says. "Not having the BlackBerry didn't help."

Gulp. Surprise turned to disbelief as millions of hyperconnected professionals found themselves in the midst of a BlackBerry blackout that lasted from late in the day of Apr. 17 until the early hours of Apr. 18. As the network for the addictive e-mail device crashed, there were pangs of stomach-churning panic in some cases, simple loneliness in others. Research in Motion (RIMM), the Canadian company behind the BlackBerry, says the e-mail service was down for a little less than 12 hours.


Leaving Customers Guessing


Though service was restored relatively quickly, it may take a bit longer to regain full confidence in the BlackBerry network. RIM issued a very brief statement on the issue saying the interruption affected customers in North America and consisted of e-mail delivery being "delayed or intermittent" during the incident. But it didn't address why the network failed or what the company plans to do to avoid similar problems in the future. Analysts and customers were left guessing. "RIM has been rather uncommunicative today about all this," says Todd Kort, analyst with market researcher Gartner Group (IT). "They haven't said anything more than, 'Yes there is a problem and everything has been fixed'."


This is hardly the first time RIM has faced these kinds of issues. The BlackBerry service experienced outages of varying severity in 2001, 2003, 2005, and 2006. RIM addressed the issue in its most recent annual report, saying that "continuity of operations planning" had been a priority during the 2005 fiscal year and that the company had added "additional internal redundancy" in order to improve reliability of its network.


Network Overload?


So why more outages? RIM's rapid growth may have contributed to the problems. Richard Doherty, research director of technology consultant Envisioneering Group, suspects a network overload of some kind was behind the outage, prompted in part by a spike in network traffic related to the users seeking news about the Virginia Tech shooting and compounded by RIM's stunning subscriber growth. The company added more than a million subscribers in its most recently reported quarter, bringing its worldwide subscriber base to about 8 million.


"Networks can only take so much at once," he says. "If 3% of all the people with telephones were to pick up their receivers at the same time, the phone system would collapse. When you build a network you have to plan for peak use."


The center of the problem may have been at RIM's network operations center, or NOC, in Waterloo, Ontario. Jack Gold, an analyst and consultant based in Northborough, Mass., says that would explain why BlackBerry service on multiple wireless networks all stopped functioning. The devices are available from wireless carriers such as AT&T (T), T-Mobile, Sprint (S), and Verizon Wireless, a joint venture of Verizon (VZ) and Vodafone (VOD). "If the NOC fails, so does the e-mail flow," says Gold.


Rivals Rush In


Additionally, the service failure seemed to be more acute among users of RIM BlackBerry Enterprise Server (BES), and less so among users of its BlackBerry Internet Service, says Kort, the Gartner analyst. BES users are classic, corporate BlackBerry users whose companies run BlackBerry server software on their own internal servers. BlackBerry Internet Service (BIS) users tend to be the ones who buy their own devices, and use them primarily to access their personal e-mail accounts. "BIS users seem to have been unaffected or at least less affected than the BES users," Kort says.


Competitors will find it hard to resist pouncing on the problems of RIM, the market leader in wireless e-mail. Motorola (MOT), for instance, has been pushing hard to gain ground in the market, and in January acquired Good Technology, which offers services and software similar to RIM's. "I wouldn't be surprised at all to see Motorola try to capitalize on this," says analyst Sean Ryan of IDC.


Microsoft (MSFT) didn't hesitate. The software giant, which sells its own wireless e-mail technology, reached out to the media after the BlackBerry outage to say that such crashes don't happen with the company's wireless e-mail. The reason: Microsoft's wireless service runs on the same servers as the company's traditional Exchange e-mail—and doesn't require a separate network like RIM's.


"A Short-Term Annoyance"


Rob Sanderson, an analyst with American Technology Research in San Francisco, said the outage would likely have little effect on RIM's business prospects. "In the past this sort of thing has been more a short-term annoyance than having any sustainable business impact," he said. "We don't yet know the cause, but most popular services suffer some periods of growing pain. I think more important is how frequent are interruptions and how quickly service is restored. RIM seems to be pretty reliable and responsive."


If there was one lucky draw for RIM, the outage took place during a period of relatively light e-mail use. The first word of the service break hit the news wires at about 8 p.m. EDT, and was restored before 7 a.m. Greg Tozian, vice-president at Internet advertising firm Overland Agency in Portland, Ore., said he noticed that several e-mails he'd sent from the device were marked with a red 'X' indicating they hadn't been sent. "Then there were scads of e-mail coming in all at once at 6:44 this morning," he says. "Luckily, it wasn't during business hours when I was trying to get something done."


Perhaps a BlackBerry blackout then is not always such a terrible thing, if it happens at night and only very rarely. The outage no doubt led to dinner conversations marked by fewer distractions from vibrating electronic devices and more opportunities for engaging in the world beyond the tiny electronic screen.


Perhaps there was more time for pondering larger philosophical issues about the human relationship with technology. Consider this posting on the Wall Street blog Dealbreaker.com: "If a banker sends a BlackBerry and no-one reads it, does he really exist?"


Source: americasnetwork.com
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Apple Leopard, Blu-ray Disc, and Planet Earth


Ars Technica points to some speculation on Spymac that Mac OS X 10.5 (aka Leopard), delayed until October of this year, will support the Blu-ray Disc high-definition video format. Ars Technica's article also speculates that Apple will introduce Blu-ray Disc players into lower-priced consumer level Macs as well as professional Mac Pro and MacBook Pro hardware.

Apple joined the Blu-ray Disc Association back in March 2005. Spymac says that Apple's DVD Studio Pro disc authoring software currently supports HD DVD but not Blu-ray Disc.


On a sort of related note, engadgetHD reports that High-Def Digest just published reviews of Blu-ray Disc and HD DVD versions of BBC's Planet Earth series. Have you been watching it? The DVDs, released initially in the U.K., are narrated by David Attenborough and are phenomenal. The Discovery Channel is airing an edited version in the United States.


Hi-Def Digest raves about the HD DVD and Blu-ray Disc editions: "...simply put, this disc delivers the kind of breathless demo material that early adopters have been craving."


This production is personally probably the only thing that could get me to shell out for Blu-ray or HD DVD. What about you?


Source: blogs.pcworld.com
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Vista's OK. But Microsoft May Not Be.


It's old news that Microsoft's latest operating system, Windows Vista, is underwhelming. Oh, and late, bloated and buggy. What is news is that this might actually be a problem for Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer and crew.

Not that this is going to stop Microsoft (nasdaq: MSFT - news - people ), in the near-term, from doing what monopolies do: making big piles of money. Microsoft will post third-quarter earnings after the market closes, and analysts expect to see net income of $4.5 billion, or 46 cents a share, up from $3.3 billion, or 29 cents a share for the same period a year earlier, thanks to the January release of Vista. Wall Street expects that sales will to $13.9 billion from $10.9 billion.


So rather than concentrating on Microsoft's numbers Wednesday afternoon, pay attention to what the company says about Vista's prospects over its next fiscal year. It better be good: The company's shares have been flat for the past five years as it repeatedly delayed the release of Vista, originally slated for launch in 2003.


Meanwhile longtime rival Apple (nasdaq: AAPL - news - people ) hit a gold mine in digital music, and search engine Google (nasdaq: GOOG - news - people ) evolved into a new threat as it moved from upstart to online goliath. Microsoft's Xbox console has made life difficult for Sony (nyse: SNE - news - people ), but the money-losing business can't match Apple's iPod profit spigot.


The traditional fix for Microsoft, of course, has been to use its ubiquity on the desktop to open up other markets, from Web browsers to office productivity software. But now its unclear how that strength on the desktop will translate into an edge in online advertising, digital media and Web-based business applications.


And just months after its release, Vista is already looking stale. While Microsoft fiddled with Vista, competitors such as Apple, Sun Microsystems (nasdaq: SUNW - news - people ) and Red Hat (nyse: RHT - news - people ) kept cranking out release after release of their alternative operating systems.


Ballmer, moreover, soft-peddled Vista's prospects earlier this year. This may be more than just Microsoft acting coy on all things financial, as it usually does. PC giant Dell (nasdaq: DELL - news - people ), which has always loyally jammed Microsoft's latest software into its PCs, announced earlier this month it will start selling Microsoft's old operating system, Windows XP, once more.


Dell's announcement aside, Vista will dominate the desktop, of course. But the desktop has always been the place from which Microsoft can get a grip on the rest of the computing world. The question: If that strength has turned into a soft spot, then what?


Source: forbes.com
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Sanjaya's star continues to rise


He may have been voted off American Idol but Sanjaya Malakar’s time in the spotlight has yet to end.

Against the odds, Malakar, 17, made it to the top seven in the US competition.


His singing talent was questionable, but his ever-changing hairdos and unfailing positivity in the face of cutting remarks from the judges, earned him a surprising following.


Beatle-esque scenes unfolded when Malakar appeared on the American Idol stage, with teenage girls screaming and sobbing.


Since being voted off the show on April 18, far from fading, Malakar’s fame has escalated.


On Saturday, he attended a White House correspondents’ dinner in Washington and was approached by Elliot Spitzer, the governor of New York who asked for an autograph.


On Monday, he appeared on the Late Show With David Letterman trailed by a now ever-present pack of paparazzi.


Malakar, who Amercian Idol judge Simon Powell described as “a horrible singer,” said he wants to use his sudden fame to become a singer, actor and model


Source: entertainment.timesonline.co.uk
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MySpace, Burnett team up to launch "INDEPENDENT"


MySpace, the most popular social networking site announced Wednesday that they are teaming up with reality TV producer Mark Burnett to launch a new political reality show that will have contestants live in the public eye, interacting with supporters, protesters, activists, and others.

Dubbed INDEPENDENT, the interactive television series will seek the nation's next great politician through an online, offline, on-air multimedia campaign. Focused on finding the next great American politician, the show apparently will help reshape the face of US politics, including the next Presidential election by combining reality-competition television with the Internet.


The News Corp.-owned social network and the mastermind behind hit reality series like ‘Survivor’ and ‘The Apprentice’ hope this political reality show will encourage and empower young Americans to participate in the political process.


Source: themoneytimes.com
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Yahoo! Music Launches Licensed Lyrics Service


Beginning today, song lyrics for hundreds of thousands of songs from major publishers will be incorporated into Yahoo! Music through Gracenote’s growing database, thanks to a new licensing deal between the companies. Through the agreement, consumers can search for song lyrics from the Yahoo! Music Search bar, simply by entering even a partial lyric from the song.

“You mean Bob Dylan isn’t actually saying ‘The ants, my friend, are in a bowling pin?’” asks Ian Rogers, general manager of Yahoo! Music. “Finally, a free, legal and definitive way to settle a bet with the guy sitting next to you at the bar who is certain the Ramones’ most famous anthem declares, ‘I wanna piece of bacon.’”


Source: dailytech.com
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IE also affected by US$10,000 QuickTime bug


The security flaw used to breach a MacBook in a hack-a-Mac competition last week also affects Internet Explorer on Windows PCs, according to TippingPoint.

Initially, the flaw was thought to be exploitable only through Apple's Safari and Mozilla's Firefox Web browsers on both Macs and Windows PCs. Researchers at TippingPoint have now determined that the bug, which lies in Apple's QuickTime media player, also impacts Internet Explorer on Windows.


"New facts have emerged," Terri Forslof, manager of security response at TippingPoint, said in a statement Wednesday. "We have now verified that this issue affects both Windows and Mac operating systems, including Windows Vista through Internet Explorer."


Source: zdnet.com.au
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Monday, April 23, 2007

For the Next Five Minutes, Blu-ray Is Winning


The argument continues to rage, with no end in sight. HD DVD was winning last week, with rumors of cheap HD DVD players flooding the market via Wal-Mart (who else?). Augmenting that was a sales spike in HD DVD discs, though one that was caused by an artificial (or at least, unsustainable) sales spike caused by fervent fanboys.

This week, the Blu-ray camp is reclaiming some lost ground on the battlefield of public opinion.


Reporters are citing research by Home Media Magazine that says Blu-ray movies outsold HD DVD movies 70% to 30% in the first quarter of this year. (The research was apparently backed up by Nielsen VideoScan data.)


Source: gizmodo.com
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A Mac gets whacked, a second survives


Shane Macaulay strode into the conference hall at the CanSecWest conference on Friday afternoon, balancing a MacBook Pro on his palm and making a beeline for the table displaying two more of the silver laptops.

The well-known security researcher had just spent the morning testing an exploit designed to take advantage of a vulnerability in Apple's Safari browser. He set down his MacBook, connected to the network and started up a web server from which he would host the attack. A conference staff member entered a URL into the Safari browser running on the target machines and, just like that, Macaulay took control of the machine and became the first winner of the CanSecWest conference's PWN to Own contest.


With the hack, Macaulay laid claim to one of two MacBook Pros offered up as a prize to the anyone who could compromise them. While the flaw required some user interaction, the conference organisers, as well as every security researcher interviewed for this article, ranked the vulnerability as a critical flaw and a real threat.


Source: theregister.co.uk
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Last year: Nintendo, who? This year: Nintendo, wow!


A year ago in the world of video games it was Nintendo who? This year it is Nintendo, wow!

A year ago the Japanese company's new game console's name (Wii, pronounced we) was laughable. Today the console is flying off store shelves almost as quickly as the company can produce them. And the buzz about the Wii has overshadowed the even greater success Nintendo has had with the Nintendo DS, a portable game player that still is selling briskly more than two years after its introduction.


Nintendo's surprising turnaround is prompting broader changes throughout the industry as game makers that were caught off-guard by Nintendo's strength -- including powerhouses such as Electronic Arts, the world's largest publisher of games -- hurry to development games that take better advantage of Nintendo hardware.


Source: news.xinhuanet.com
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Friday, April 20, 2007

Darkness casts shadow over Sony's Q2 lineup - PlayStation 3 News at GameSpot


After slowing to a trickle in recent weeks, the flow of PlayStation 3 games is poised to resume full force. Today, Sony Computer Entertainment America announced it plans to release more than 100 games--including many PS3 titles--in North America during the second quarter of 2007, which ends on June 30.

The PS3's Q2 slate contains several rereleases of games already available on other platforms. These include Vivendi Games' shooter F.E.A.R., already out for the Xbox 360 and PC, and Ninja Gaiden Sigma (June), a reworked version of the critically lauded Ninja Gaiden Black--which was itself a revamp of Ninja Gaiden for the Xbox. The Sony-developed baseball sim MLB 07: The Show (May 15), which was released on the PlayStation 2 and PlayStation Portable last month, is also on the docket.


SCEA's second-quarter PS3 schedule also includes several all-new games, including another baseball game, 2K Sports' The BIGS (June 25, also due out on the PS2 and PSP). Foremost among these is The Darkness (also June 25), a comic-book-inspired shooter from The Chronicles of Riddick: Escape From Butcher Bay developer Starbreeze Studios and 2K Games. Just after its film inspiration hits theaters, Spider-Man 3 (May 4) will swing onto the PS3, with another film-inspired game, Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End (May 22), arriving on the console during the quarter. (Both Spider-Man 3 and At World's End are coming to the PSP and PS2 as well.)


Source: gamespot.com
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Microsoft and Samsung pen broad patent deal


Microsoft Corporation and Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd have this week confirmed that they have entered into a “broad patent cross-licensing agreement” which will result in South Korea-based Samsung obtaining access to Microsoft’s patent to be implemented throughout a range of Samsung’s existing and future product lines. Similarly, American software giant Microsoft will be granted access to Samsung’s considerable portfolio of digital media and computer-related patents, also for addition to future Microsoft products.

Samsung, which already holds the status of the largest publisher of U.S. patents during 2006, and is also the proud owner of one of the most substantial known U.S. patent lists, will be profiting from the two-way deal thanks to the introduction of Microsoft patents in products equipped with proprietary software such as set-top boxes, digital media players, camcorders, televisions, printers, and various other home devices. Samsung will also benefit by obtaining coverage from Microsoft for its customers’ use of selected Linux-based products.


Source: tech.monstersandcritics.com
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Thursday, April 19, 2007

Limited Attack Potential From Microsoft DNS Worm


While Microsoft has not yet said when it will release a patch to fix an under-attack flaw in its server software, most properly protected servers should not be vulnerable.

"Any machine that gets successfully hit by this is poorly set up," says Ronald O'Brien, a senior security analyst at Sophos, a business security company.


The Delbot worm (known as Delbot, Nirbot, or Rinbot) exploits a zero-day flaw in the Domain Name System service on servers running Windows Server 2000 Service Pack 4 and Windows Server 2003 Service Pack 1 and Service Pack 2. Following a successful attack, the worm infects the machines with a 'bot' type of malware that gives the attacker remote control over the server, according to Sophos.


Source: pcworld.com
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Internet Radio Dealt Potentially Fatal Blow


The Copyright Royalty Board (CRB) delivered a severe blow to Internet Save 15% on Your Next Domain Purchase. Click Here. radio operators Monday when it upheld its earlier decision regarding royalty rates that must be paid to artists for music played online.

The result is -- unless Congress intervenes -- royalty rates webcasters must pay will increase on May 15 between 300 and 1,200 percent, retroactive to January 2006. As a result, "the very large majority of Internet radio stations will go bankrupt," Jonathan Potter, executive director of the Digital Media Association (DiMA), told TechNewsWorld.


Source: technewsworld.com
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More about Microsoft's $3 software plan


In Beijing this morning, Bill Gates announced plans for Microsoft to offer a package of Windows, Office and other software for $3 to government programs that distribute subsidized PCs to students around the world. The "Student Innovation Suite," to be released later this year, is part of a new push by the company to increase access to computers around the world, and in developing nations in particular. See this story from today's paper for details.

The company says its goal is to double the number of computer users in the world by 2015, adding another billion people. Of course, it's far from the only one trying to spread the reach of PCs in the developing world. And there's a major business angle in all of this. Among other things, Microsoft wants those new PC users to run Windows, not Linux -- which has been making major strides in developing nations.


Source: blog.seattlepi.nwsource.com
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This is only a test

This is only a test. This is only a test. This is only a test. This is only a test. This is only a test. This is only a test. This is only a test. This is only a test.
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Monday, April 16, 2007

This is only a test

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This is only a test

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This is only a test

Please ignore.
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NASA's secret settlement of Columbia disaster uncovered


NASA paid 26.6 million U.S. dollars to the families of seven astronauts who died aboard the space shuttle Columbia in a secret settlement, which was covered for more than two years, according to media reports Monday.

The space agency recruited former FBI Director William Webster, also a former federal judge, to act as a mediator and adviser in negotiating the out-of-court settlements, said documents released to the Orlando Sentinel through a federal Freedom of Information Act request.


"The members of the (survivors') families wanted this to be a private matter," said Webster. "They were healing, and they were ready to discuss, properly, their rights. Everyone felt it had a better chance of coming together without seeing their name in lights," he added.


Source: news.xinhuanet.com
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Safe Journey Atlantis STS-115

Tags: Beijing | Columbia | Orlando | Technology | astronauts | died | Shuttle | William Webster