The ultimate all-in-one Marketing Solutions. Instant Results!
Fake Antivirus Ringleader Must Pay $163 Million Acting on a Federal Trade Commission complaint, a federal court has imposed a $163 million judgment on a woman who allegedly helped run a scareware ring that tricked over one million consumers across six countries into purchasing fake security software.
iPad Mini Won’t Have Retina Display Manufacturers in China have begun assembling a new, smaller tablet computer for Apple, the Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday. Unnamed executives from component suppliers said that production of the tablet is under way. Production typically begins several weeks before Apple brings its new devices to market.
Apple introduced iOS 6 along with the new phone last month. And the hardware understandably captured most of the hubbub and fan chatter, at least on the day of the phone’s announcement. Casual fans who weren’t paying close attention might have missed the fact that the new software also would be available to older phones even before the launch sale date of iPhone 5.
128,000 Dominoes – Falling into past – a journey around the world (2 Guinness World Records) Sometimes we look at a project and wonder if it can ever be completed on time and within budget. This video is a great example that anything can be done with a great team effort.
Facebook users download free apps like kids used to collect baseball trading cards. But in raking in dozens — if not hundreds — of apps, some consumers may expose themselves to privacy risks. (This entails apps on smartphones and tablets, and those that only run on Facebook. It also includes websites that have Facebook Connect included.)
By Mike Snider, USA TODAY Get ready for a whole new case of TV envy. In stores later this year will be new big-screens, known as 4K TVs, that up the ante on HDTV with four times the resolution of sets now.
Online storage service enhancements help it keep pace with rivals like DropBox, Apple’s iCloud, and Google Drive. By Paul McDougall Microsoft has unveiled a major revamp of SkyDrive, and said the cloud storage service has moved beyond the “preview” stage to become fully operational. The enhancements include a new Web front, faster uploading and sorting, new tools for developers, and a forthcoming SkyDrive app for mobile devices that run Google Android.
The physics world was abuzz Monday with early reports that the elusive “God particle” had been detected at Europe’s premier physics lab. Scientists working at the The Large Hadron Collider, the world’s largest atom smasher, may have discovered the existence of “The God Particle.” Discovering the particle, formally called the Higgs boson, would finalize physicists’ understanding of how subatomic particles have mass, which gives an object weight. Two international physics teams at the European Organization for Nuclear Research, or CERN, in Geneva will present their results Wednesday. Their data should reveal a definitive signature that the particle exists as seen in the atom-smasher experiments at CERN. Physicists have been pursuing the Higgs boson for three decades to understand how particles create forces, such as electromagnetism. To physicists, mass isn’t what we carry around on our waists, but the amount of resistance that matter produces as it’s being moved, or inertia. In theory, the God particle, a term coined by physicist Leon Lederman to capture its elusiveness, interacts with the other particles to give them inertia. CERN researchers reported in December they were close to discovering the particle, but the new results are built on twice as much data. Ahead of the expected announcement, the journal Nature reported “pure elation” Monday among physicists searching for the Higgs boson. One team saw only “a 0.00006% chance of being wrong,” the journal said. Officially, the lab is mum about the results until Wednesday. CERN technology official Steve Myers reported only that data collection for the experiments ended last month. “We don’t actually know the answer yet. We are still doing the calculations,” said physicist Paul Padley of Rice University in Houston, who is on one of the physics teams presenting the findings. “It’s endless fun for us to read all these news reports about the results, before we even have finished the calculations,” he said. Martial Trezzini, AP
NEW YORK – That coffee you’re drinking while gazing at your iPad? It cost more than all the electricity needed to run those games, emails, videos and news stories for a year. The annual cost to charge an iPad is just $1.36, according to the Electric Power Research Institute, a non-profit research and development group funded by electric utilities.
Computerworld – While hardware got a lot of attention at this year’s Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC), the event is still really about software. That’s why Apple CEO Tim Cook and other execs offered up a slew of new details about OS X Mountain Lion — due out next month — and, more importantly, unveiled iOS 6, the next version of Apple’s mobile OS.
| M | T | W | T | F | S | S |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| « Oct | ||||||
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | ||
| 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 |
| 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 |
| 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 |
| 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | ||
By Mike Snider, USA TODAY Get ready for a whole new...
MAY 18, 2011 · Optical disc replicators in California...
Avoid using screen tints lower than 15% or higher than...
Online storage service enhancements help it keep pace...
Reform bill introduced to boost USPS’ viability...
