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Keyword: tech

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  • Computer Virus

    06/10/2010 12:07:38 PM PDT · by mimi from mi · 32 replies · 877+ views
    Has anyone in the last week gotten a computer virus from Antispyware Soft? It was a real bear to get rid of. I picked it up over the past weekend, and wondered if I could have possibly gotten it from FR or perhaps the alternate FR site when FR was inoperative sometime over the weekend. When I typed Start/run/msconfig and went to the start menu, there was an item ending in tssd.exe which is the virus. Also in start/run/regedit, there was AV Soft and AV Suite. After many times, restarting and unchecking tssd.exe, and running Microsoft Security Essentials, I believe...
  • Sony's Flexible OLED is Thinner Than a Strand of Hair

    05/26/2010 12:10:42 PM PDT · by TChris · 25 replies · 1,096+ views
    Gizmodo ^ | 5/26/2010 | Kat Hannaford
    One of the main advantages of OLED is that it can be flexible—so flexible, in fact, that it can be wrapped around a pencil. Taking 2007's .3mm prototype Sony's made a new one just 80μm-thick. That's about ten times the size of a red blood cell, or just a tiny bit thinner than a single hair. The whole OLED measures 4.1-inches in size, and has a 432 x 240 resolution and a contrast ratio of under 1,000:1.
  • Photocopier Fallout - Congress, FTC "Concerned"

    05/23/2010 4:26:55 PM PDT · by MamaDearest · 57 replies · 1,565+ views
    cbsnews.com ^ | May 17, 2010 | Armen Keteyian
    (CBS)  A CBS News investigation last month found that nearly every digital copier built after 2002 stores an image of documents copied, scanned or emailed by the machine on hard drives. CBS News chief investigative correspondent Armen Keteyian reports parents and students at Dos Palos High School in Sacramento found out the hard way recently, when CBS affiliate KOVR pulled hundreds of student names, home addresses, cell phone and social security numbers off the hard drive of an old school copier. "The fact that information that we treat very, very carefully somehow got out of our system and is out...
  • "You wrecked my coffee brewer?! Who do you think you are??!"

    05/17/2010 8:41:28 AM PDT · by brycemax · 8 replies · 585+ views
    Some folks just have no respect for other people's property. Especially when they rip parts out of it for their own pet projects. NOTE: The author of this comic requests that you visit his web site and please refrain from copying the cartoon within this thread. Thanks!
  • How an unfixed Net glitch could strand you offline

    05/11/2010 8:33:15 AM PDT · by ConservativeStatement · 7 replies · 520+ views
    AP ^ | May 9, 2010 | PETER SVENSSON
    NEW YORK – In 1998, a hacker told Congress that he could bring down the Internet in 30 minutes by exploiting a certain flaw that sometimes caused online outages by misdirecting data. In 2003, the Bush administration concluded that fixing this flaw was in the nation's "vital interest." Fast forward to 2010, and very little has happened to improve the situation. The flaw still causes outages every year. Although most of the outages are innocent and fixed quickly, the problem still could be exploited by a hacker to spy on data traffic or take down websites. Meanwhile, our reliance on...
  • Is Windows 7 Actually Faster Than Ubuntu 10.04?

    05/08/2010 7:21:34 PM PDT · by Halfmanhalfamazing · 18 replies · 1,219+ views
    Well, that is part one of our Ubuntu 10.04 LTS vs. Windows 7 testing. As much as we would have liked to see Ubuntu's Lucid Lynx handily beat Windows 7, this was not the case, but to some extent the opposite. Windows 7 in some of the tests possessed definitive leads over Ubuntu 10.04 LTS with the OpenGL performance when using the proprietary ATI/AMD and NVIDIA graphics drivers, which have largely shared code-bases between Windows and Linux. Ubuntu 10.04 LTS also had its leads in some areas while in many of the tests the differences between the two operating systems...
  • Microsoft acts to avoid Windows blue screen repeat

    04/16/2010 4:07:32 PM PDT · by ConservativeStatement · 44 replies · 1,282+ views
    Computer World ^ | April 14, 2010 | Gregg Keizer
    Computerworld - Microsoft took steps Tuesday to avoid repeating the debacle two months ago that left Windows XP users staring at the notorious "Blue Screen of Death" error message after they applied a patch. In February, a security update that fixed two flaws in the Windows kernel -- the operating system's most important component -- wreaked havoc when it was applied by users, who almost immediately flooded Microsoft's support forum with reports of crippled computers.
  • RIAA/MPAA Want Government-Mandated Spyware That Deletes 'Infringing' Content Automatically

    04/15/2010 9:19:29 AM PDT · by ShadowAce · 38 replies · 889+ views
    Gizmodo ^ | 15 April 2010 | Adam Frucci
    The RIAA and MPAA have submitted a plan to the Office of Intellectual Property Enforcement. It's basically a plan that they want the government to enact, and it's terrifying. Here are some of the lovely things that they're calling for: * spyware on your computer that detects and deletes infringing materials; * mandatory censorware on all Internet connections to interdict transfers of infringing material; * border searches of personal media players, laptops and thumb-drives; * international bullying to force other countries to implement the same policies; * and free copyright enforcement provided by Fed cops and agencies (including the Department...
  • Please do not change your password

    04/13/2010 10:38:59 PM PDT · by ConservativeStatement · 68 replies · 1,761+ views
    Boston Globe ^ | April 11, 2010 | Mark Pothier
    To continue reading this story, enter your password now. If you do not have a password, please create one. It must contain a minimum of eight characters, including upper- and lower-case letters and one number. This is for your own good. Nonsense, of course, but it helps illustrate a point: You will need a computer password today, maybe a half dozen or more — those secret sign-ins that serve as sentries for everything from Amazon shopping carts to work files to online bank accounts. Just when you have them all sorted out, along comes another “urgent” directive from the bank...
  • Trains delayed by porn-surfing rail worker (Viruses from racy sites crippled system)

    04/08/2010 12:10:13 PM PDT · by Stoat · 32 replies · 1,155+ views
    The Local (Sweden) / Various ^ | April 7, 2010 | Paul O'Mahoney
    Trains delayed by porn-surfing rail worker Published: 7 Apr 10 14:58 CET   A 52-year-old rail worker reprimanded two years ago for visiting pornographic websites at work has escaped with just a second warning despite repeatedly causing trains to be delayed in eastern Sweden. The Swedish Rail Administration's (Banverket) disciplinary board issued the follow-up warning in March after the signal operator's litany of workplace transgressions led to numerous delays at Gävle station.  In the two-year period since his porn habits led the administration's local computer network to become infected with viruses, the 52-year-old has routinely been summoned to formal meetings with his boss to discuss his...
  • For victims of Antivirus 7, is justice an impossible dream?

    03/25/2010 3:13:03 PM PDT · by ConservativeStatement · 43 replies · 1,690+ views
    Washington Post ^ | March 25, 2010 | Robert McCartney
    A loathsome computer scam crippled my laptop, and I wanted revenge. It began nearly three weeks ago. While I was browsing the Internet, a scary red alert popped up on my screen. Viruses and worms had been detected on my computer! I must "click here" for a full security scan! It looked legitimate. The logo and page design reminded me of my own antivirus program. I clicked. Big mistake.
  • Navy grounds pilots for low flyover at Tech football game

    03/22/2010 5:58:30 AM PDT · by rawhide · 46 replies · 1,487+ views
    ajc.com ^ | 3-22-10 | By Larry Hartstein
    Two Navy fighter pilots have been grounded for their low flyover at a Georgia Tech football game in downtown Atlanta in November, according to several media reports. The aviators, identified by the Virginian-Pilot newspaper as Lt. Cmdr. Marc Fryman and Lt. Cmdr. Christopher Condon, are both Tech graduates. They flew F/A-18 Super Hornets a few hundred feet above Bobby Dodd Stadium after the national anthem prior to the Tech-Wake Forest game on Nov. 7. Navy rules require flyovers to be done at 1,000 feet or higher, according to NavyTimes. The Navy assigned Fryman and Condon to non-flying jobs. Several videos...
  • The Best Refrigerator Magnet Ever?

    03/20/2010 7:31:27 PM PDT · by neverdem · 23 replies · 1,551+ views
    ScienceNOW ^ | March 19, 2010 | Adrian Cho
    Enlarge Image Limit breaker? The crystal structure of Fe16N2, which one group of researchers says beats the predicted limit for magnetism in a material. Credit: Jian-Ping Wang PORTLAND, OREGON—There are limits to just how magnetic a material can be. Or so researchers thought. A compound of iron and nitrogen is about 18% more magnetic than the most magnetic material currently known, a team of materials scientists claims. If such magnets could be produced commercially, they could, for example, allow electronics manufactures to equip computer hard drives with smaller "write heads" capable of cramming them with more information. Other researchers...
  • NYT: China Drawing High-Tech Research From US

    03/18/2010 3:32:31 AM PDT · by shader · 4 replies · 414+ views
    New York Times ^ | March 17, 2010 | KEITH BRADSHER
    Mr. Pinto is the first chief technology officer of a major American tech company to move to China. The company, Applied Materials, is one of Silicon Valley’s most prominent firms. It supplied equipment used to perfect the first computer chips. Today, it is the world’s biggest supplier of the equipment used to make semiconductors, solar panels and flat-panel displays. On the other side of Xian from Applied Materials sits Thermal Power Research Institute, China’s world-leading laboratory on cleaner coal. The company has just licensed its latest design to Future Fuels in the United States. Future Fuels will ship the equipment...
  • Statement from the President on the National Broadband Plan

    03/17/2010 11:15:41 PM PDT · by Cindy · 31 replies · 587+ views
    Whitehouse.gov ^ | March 16, 2010 | n/a
    Note: The following text is a quote: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/statement-president-national-broadband-plan Home • Briefing Room • Statements & Releases The White House Office of the Press Secretary For Immediate Release March 16, 2010 Statement from the President on the National Broadband Plan America today is on the verge of a broadband-driven Internet era that will unleash innovation, create new jobs and industries, provide consumers with new powerful sources of information, enhance American safety and security, and connect communities in ways that strengthen our democracy. Just as past generations of Americans met the great infrastructure challenges of the day, such as building the Transcontinental...
  • Scientists Successfully Embed Silicon Chips Inside Human Cells

    03/17/2010 4:41:32 PM PDT · by James C. Bennett · 18 replies · 617+ views
    Gizmodo ^ | 17 March, 2010 | Gizmodo
    Scientists have already created mini-cyborgs out of living cells and semiconductor materials, but now biological cells can also contain tiny silicon chips, which could become sensors that monitor microscopic activities, deliver drugs to target cells or even repair cell structures. According to Nanowerk, experiments found that living human cells can ingest or receive injections of silicon chips and continue functioning as usual for the most part. More than 90 percent of chip-containing HeLa cells — the first immortal human cell line derived from a poor, cancer-stricken woman – still survived a week after receiving their silicon loads. Other studies have...
  • HELP! kb971033 has disappeared from updates...

    03/14/2010 3:54:16 PM PDT · by papasmurf · 28 replies · 1,522+ views
    Self ^ | 3/14/2010 | papasmurf
    I received the kb971033 update last Month. I made sure it was unchecked, and did not allow it to install. Yesterday I received more updates, so this AM I looked at them. They were OK, but, I noticed that kb971033 had disappeared from the list of updates waiting to be installed. I did not "hide" kb971033, but, just to be sure, I "unhid" updates, and it was not there either. Then, paranoid that it self installed (as MS has been known to do), I checked Programs in the Control Panel, and it wasn't there either. I did a search...
  • Internet Tax a Bad Idea

    03/12/2010 11:31:04 AM PST · by Kaslin · 47 replies · 821+ views
    Townhall.com ^ | March 12, 2010 | David Harsanyi
    Tyranny is afoot. And this evil arrives in the guise of secondhand books and cheap Chinese trinkets. So beware. Actually, if anyone ever needed an obvious illustration of how government overreach can damage an economy, he need look no further than the Colorado Legislature's foolish attempt to wheedle a few extra bucks out of consumers via an Internet sales tax. After legislation forcing online companies to collect sales tax passed, Amazon.com moved to protect its consumers and long-term interests by severing its ties with Colorado. Unfortunately, this meant closing its associates program, which involved an estimated 5,000 jobs. Amazon's actions...
  • Clearly Something Impressive (Transparent Digital Keyboard)

    03/02/2010 10:42:21 AM PST · by Niuhuru · 35 replies · 5,858+ views
    Computer User ^ | 27 February 2010 10:44 | Alice Winters
    When it comes to computer technology, thin is always in. It’s indisputable that the thinner, lighter, clearer, the better when dealing with the latest computer gadget. This keyboard is the epitome of the high standards expected of the technological version of the fashion industry. It’s based on image as well, that is, image recognition technology.
  • In a doomsday cyber attack scenario, answers are unsettling

    02/21/2010 9:10:03 PM PST · by bamahead · 23 replies · 847+ views
    LA Times ^ | February 17, 2010 | Bob Drogin
    What if a crippling attack struck the country's digital infrastructure? Experts including current and former officials tackle the question. The results show that the peril is real and growing. The crisis began when college basketball fans downloaded a free March Madness application to their smart phones. The app hid spyware that stole passwords, intercepted e-mails and created havoc. Soon 60 million cellphones were dead. The Internet crashed, finance and commerce collapsed, and most of the nation's electric grid went dark. White House aides discussed putting the Army in American cities. "We're in uncharted territory here," was the most common refrain...