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Keyword: computers

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  • Anyone here use the "Apps" in Windows 8?

    11/19/2013 3:33:27 AM PST · by Red in Blue PA · 47 replies
    I just upgraded my home PC, reluctantly so because my XP worked so well. But as all support for XP will be stopping in 4/2014, I knew I had no choice. But I have no idea why the people at Microsoft changed the OS from something people got used to over a period of 20 years. I find myself using the desktop almost exclusively and never using what I consider to be silly apps. Am I seeing this incorrectly and these apps are truly useful? After a day of using this, I think I may never use them. Would be...
  • Feds blame spam, consumer computers for new Obamacare glitches

    11/13/2013 1:27:18 PM PST · by Zakeet · 34 replies
    Washington Examiner ^ | November 13, 2013 | Paul Bedard
    Spam filters, overflowing browser histories and web caches on the computers of Americans trying to sign up for Obamacare are now being cited for why consumers can’t complete their applications for federally-sanctioned health insurance.
  • Obama: I'd fix HealthCare.gov myself, "but I don't write code"

    11/08/2013 12:51:16 PM PST · by Zakeet · 121 replies
    CBS News ^ | November 8, 2013 | Lindsey Boerma
    President Obama wanted to go in himself and fix glitches that have plagued HealthCare.gov since its rollout last month, he told a crowd Friday at the Port of New Orleans, "but," he added, "I don't write code." The president couldn't ignore altogether lingering dissatisfaction with the botched health insurance exchanges, despite that the crux of the speech was intended to move back on the offensive with other aspects of his second-term agenda - specifically, job growth through investments in infrastructure and increasing U.S. exports.
  • The Barrier Between the Geeks and the Suits

    11/08/2013 9:36:15 AM PST · by Kaslin · 6 replies
    Townhall.com ^ | November 8, 2013 | Suzanne Fields
    Edward Snowden's stolen secrets and the dismal failure of the rollout of Obamacare is giving electronic technology a bad name. But blaming high-tech tools is more like blaming the messenger. We have to work harder to master the secrets of the Internet, but the human element remains our biggest weakness. It's hardly news that the screening process for giving Snowden access to sensitive data was deeply flawed. So, too, were the instructions to the National Security Agency that enabled the abuse of the rest of us. For whatever good intentions the NSA might have had, the snoops cost America the...
  • Crypto Locker Virus Takes Over Windows PCs With 'Ransomware'

    10/27/2013 10:48:13 AM PDT · by Windflier · 72 replies
    The Inquisitor ^ | 27 October 2013 | James Kosur
    The Crypto Locker virus is a new piece of “ransomware” that is said to be one of the worst viruses to ever infect Windows PCs. The virus takes over a computers files, encrypts them, and then holds the files ransom until a user pays to have them freed by clearing out the virus. The Crypto Locker virus is sent to users through emails that have innocent enough looking senders, such as UPS or FedEx. Once the file is installed a display pops up demanding upwards of $100 to restore a users important files. In same cases users have stated that...
  • What Happened to All of Obama's Technology Czars?

    10/25/2013 4:27:19 AM PDT · by Kaslin · 7 replies
    Townhall.com ^ | October 25, 2013 | Michelle Malkin
    Why does the White House need a private-sector "tech surge" to repair its wretched Obamacare website failures? Weren't all of the president's myriad IT czars and their underlings supposed to ensure that taxpayers got the most effective, innovative, cutting-edge and secure technology for their money? Now is the perfect time for an update on Obama's top government titans of information technology. As usual, "screw up, move up" is standard bureaucratic operating procedure. Let's start with the "federal chief information officer." In 2009, Obama named then 34-year-old "whiz kid" Vivek Kundra to the post overseeing $80 billion in government IT spending....
  • vanity- Heads up interesting spearfishing scam(computer security)

    10/24/2013 8:22:36 PM PDT · by waynesa98 · 37 replies
    happened to me | 10/24/2013 | self
    So I get a private call, dead air for a few seconds, then the phone rings back to the caller. Indian accented man answers claiming my computer is infected with a virus, no company name nothing. So I ask which computer. a few meaningless back and forth. Ask me to google teamviewer.com, instead of just going to teamviewer.com. wanted access to my system, wouldn't tell me the virus. did an off line scan anyway. So note to selfs, do not let anyone your not 100% sure is legit connect to your system with teamviewer
  • Debugging A Live Saturn V

    10/22/2013 9:47:15 PM PDT · by Jack Hydrazine · 17 replies
    Zamiang.com ^ | 13OCT2013 | Brennan Moore
    We all have stories, as engineers, of fixing some crazy thing at the last minute right before the demo goes up. We have all encountered situations where we needed to fix something that was our fault and we needed to fix it now. This story is something that I think about in those times to remember to stay calm. No last minute fix could ever be this dramatic or important. My grandfather passed away about a week ago. At the service, I was asked to say a few words and read from his memoirs. This was my choice. RED TEAM...
  • Ada Lovelace Day: A Celebration of the World’s First Computer Programmer

    10/15/2013 3:08:58 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 30 replies
    Metro UK ^ | Tuesday 15 Oct 2013
    If you happen to do anything other than sleep in a cave today, chances are you have Ada Lovelace to thank for it. She is responsible for the first ever computer program. And she came up with it long before the computer even existed. Today is the fifth annual Ada Lovelace Day, celebrating the achievement of a Victorian mother-of-three who would change the world. Let’s travel back through time for a moment. Before the ZX Spectrum and before the Atari 2600, there was a thing that historians like to call the 19th century. The computer may have existed as a...
  • Help with antique computer (vanity)

    10/12/2013 8:25:24 AM PDT · by ottbmare · 46 replies
    Self | Self
    Back in the early 1980s I was a first-adopter and bought an AT&T 6300 PC. Believe it or not, it still fires up and runs (though the monitor fizzes now and won't display anything). It runs MS-DOS and had Wordstar on it. I backed up the work I had on that machine with both hard copies and floppy disks, (you young whipper-snappers might have heard of those), but they were all destroyed in a fire. Always intended to ask someone if there was a way to get the information off the old hard drive, but I kept thinking, "mañana," and...
  • Police foil attempt to steal millions from bank using remote control KVM device

    10/08/2013 6:39:52 AM PDT · by Innovative · 3 replies
    CSO Online ^ | Sept 13, 2013 | John E. Dunn
    The Metropolitan Police have foiled an extraordinary plot to steal millions of pounds from a London branch of Santander Bank using a remote control device planted on one of its computers by a bogus maintenance man. On Thursday evening, the Police's Central e-Crime Unit (PCeU) arrested 12 men between the ages of 23 and 50 years old accused of being involved in the alleged attempted heist at addresses in London, a statement said. A bank source confirmed to press that a KVM (keyboard, video, mouse) was fitted by someone posing as a maintenance worker, something that would have allowed the...
  • Oxford Professors: Robots And Computers Could Take Half Our Jobs Within The Next 20 Years

    09/30/2013 12:37:06 PM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 36 replies
    TEC ^ | 09/30/2013 | Michael Snyder
    <p>What are human workers going to do when super-intelligent robots and computers are better than us at doing everything? That is one of the questions that a new study by Dr. Carl Frey and Dr. Michael Osborne of Oxford University sought to address, and what they concluded was that 47 percent of all U.S. jobs could be automated within the next 20 years. Considering the fact that the percentage of the U.S. population that is employed is already far lower than it was a decade ago, it is frightening to think that tens of millions more jobs could disappear due to technological advances over the next couple of decades. I have written extensively about how we are already losing millions of jobs to super cheap labor on the other side of the globe. What are middle class families going to do as technology also takes away huge numbers of our jobs at an ever increasing pace? We live during a period of history when knowledge is increasing an an exponential rate. In the past, when human workers were displaced by technology it also created new kinds of jobs that the world had never seen before. But what happens when the day arrives when computers and robots can do almost everything more cheaply and more efficiently than humans can?</p>
  • Bill Gates: Control-Alt-Delete was a mistake

    09/26/2013 3:34:53 PM PDT · by shego · 132 replies
    CNN ^ | 9/26/13 | Doug Gross
    If you pressed Control-Alt-Delete to log on before reading this, Bill Gates says he's sorry. The Microsoft founder says the triple-key login should have been made easier, à la Apple's Macs, but that a designer insisted on the more complicated step. "We could have had a single button. But the guy who did the IBM keyboard design didn't want to give us our single button," Gates said Saturday during a question-and-answer session to launch a Harvard University fund-raising campaign. His comments have gained attention since a video of his Harvard Q&A was posted on YouTube on Tuesday....
  • We'll be uploading our entire MINDS to computers by 2045....

    09/18/2013 5:15:51 PM PDT · by GrandJediMasterYoda · 79 replies
    dailymail.co.uk ^ | 9/18/13 | By VICTORIA WOOLLASTON
    We'll be uploading our entire MINDS to computers by 2045 and our bodies will be replaced by machines within 90 years, Google expert claims Ray Kurzweil, director of engineering at Google, believes we will be able to upload our entire brains to computers within the next 32 years - an event known as singularity Our 'fragile' human body parts will be replaced by machines by the turn of the century And if these predictions comes true, it could make humans immortal In just over 30 years, humans will be able to upload their entire minds to computers and become digitally...
  • What Works And What Doesn't In 3D Printing: A Talk With Terry Wohlers

    09/13/2013 9:36:02 PM PDT · by 2ndDivisionVet · 12 replies
    Forbes ^ | September 12, 2013 | Rakesh Sharma
    The hype around 3D Printing bothers Terry Wohlers, president of Wohlers Associates, a research consultancy focused on additive manufacturing and 3D printing. “It’s unsettling to read this oversimplification (of 3D printing technology) where you push a button and out pops a shiny new thing,” he says. The reality, of course, is different. 3D printed objects “pop out” only after a long design and (depending on object size) printing process. This disconnect bothered Wohlers so much that he wrote a post about it. Wohlers knows what he is talking about. The fifty-five-year-old former Colorado State University faculty member has been working...
  • Need new Laptop should I stay with with Windows 7? (avoid Win 8)

    09/10/2013 7:24:03 AM PDT · by Don@VB · 87 replies
    9/10/13 | Me
    I have seen several laptop models I like but they have Windows 8 installed. I need to stay with a Windows OS, but having read poor reviews, it appears Win 8 may become the next Vista. Is it that bad? I like Win 7 but it limits my selection. As always, any suggestions/input appreciated.
  • NYC Engineer Wants to Help Homeless Man With Software Coding Classes

    08/24/2013 3:52:54 PM PDT · by Innovative · 43 replies
    ABC Yahoo ^ | Aug 23, 2013 | JOANNA STERN
    McConlogue approached Leo, a 36-year man who lives on the streets of lower Manhattan, on Thursday and gave him two options. The first was $100 in cash. The second option on the table was a laptop, three JavaScript books and two months of coding instruction from McConlogue. Soon, McConlogue will deliver him a Samsung Chromebook with 3G connectivity, three JavaScript books, a solar charger for the laptop and something to conceal the laptop in. He will spend an hour before work every morning teaching him the basics of software coding.
  • MakerBot’s $1,400 Digitizer 3D Scanner now available for pre-order

    08/22/2013 9:17:01 PM PDT · by 2ndDivisionVet · 12 replies
    Digital Trends Blog ^ | August 22, 2013 | Jennifer Bergen
    In case you haven’t noticed, 3D printers are all the rage these days. People are using 3D printers to print Aston Martin replicas, there’s a number of household items you “manufacture,” and even NASA’s bringing a 3D printer onto the International Space Station. But with all these 3D printables, you either need to download the code from a site like Thingiverse, or create the 3D code yourself with your printer’s included software. What if you want to print a replica of something that already exists without building the code yourself? MakerBot, one of the leading innovators in 3D printing, has...
  • Xerox 7655 Overview Picture (Obot claims to replicate Obama LFBC pdf w/floating signature)

    08/07/2013 6:29:11 PM PDT · by Seizethecarp · 1,057 replies
    The following image is a composite created by scanning the WH LFBC using Xerox WorkCentre 7655 upside down using the automatic feeder. The resulting file was opened in Preview, the image rotated 180 degrees and printed to PDF. The resulting PDF was opened in preview, the layers unlocked and moved to the side. In addition, a close up of the signature was ‘blown up’ to show how the background layer, not surprisingly, has filled in some of the white that resulted from the separation of the background and foreground layers. Note how for example the signature block is fully separated.
  • Anger Management: Over 33 Percent of Americans Verbally or Physically Abuse Their Computers

    08/06/2013 5:44:50 PM PDT · by Dallas59 · 43 replies
    Hot Hardware ^ | 8/2/2013 | Hot Hardware
    It doesn't matter if you're a saint or a frequent sinner, a sailor with a potty mouth or a monk who took a vow of silence. If you own a computer, then at some point you've belted out a line of obscenities that would make Andrew Dice Clay wince in astonishment. PCs have a way of bringing out the worst in us when things go wrong, and according to a recent nationwide survey conducted by Harris Interactive on behalf of Crucial in June 2013, some even tend to get physical. Out of over 2,000 U.S. adults ages 18 and older...