Archive for the ‘off’ Tag

IPhone Design Ripped Off Samsung? Not So Much

IPhone Design Ripped Off Samsung? Not So Much

In this sense, the above picture has begun to explore the blogosphere and started to go viral in nerd circles. The image is a laugh out of Apple, which suggests the absurdity of Samsung cite when Apple pulled the Samsung F700, which had a 2.8-inch screen is spirit.

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Whirlpool Corporation Kicks Off Second Annual Kitchen Clean Up Month

Whirlpool Corporation Kicks Off Second Annual Kitchen Clean Up Month

Here are some tips for spring cleaning, the style of social media. It's time to clean out your closets, take your tax and inflate the tires of the motorcycle. Why not have fun, festive and clean your digital life? Ordering your avatar on Twitter and Facebook will feel as clean as the soul of a goodwill trip. It's that time of year! It has survived hibernation has ended.

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Apple Iphone Knocked Off Top Of Tree As

Apple Iphone Knocked Off Top Of Tree As

The wording of this article (and many others) say they invented a touch screen. And before you burn me, I'm not saying it's a bad thing at all. However, they were the first to adopt this type of phone (as far as I know). But without doubt, is a must with the ability, because it lacks the precision to resist. Chester @ Kartik: Apple did not invent the capacitive touch screen. They have their no. Give support to your application, including the design of an interface that works with your fingers. They did not invent multi-touch. And yes, I have been very successful in popularizing. A request for all? What about the integration of information from multiple "applications" in a useful and informative interface? Now that's smart. Sorry, but this is not just for me. This is a different condition, and of course the feeling that people want these devices to move the calls useful for non-iPhone smartphone users with both its simplicity and talk a while.

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Could A U.S. Government Crackdown Take America Off The Internet?

Could A U.S. Government Crackdown Take America Off The Internet?

We tested whether a block of this kind could happen in America. With the imminent threat of today's demonstrations in Egypt, the Egyptian authorities on Thursday cut the nation to the Internet. No line of communication can happen inside or outside the country.

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Clean The &$#*)@ Off Of Your Social Profiles

Clean The &$#*)@ Off Of Your Social Profiles

Even if you lock your boss and see old photographs, wall post, or any other information that may be discrimination, there may still be some old rumors buried on the last page of your wall or on an album of a friend who the public knew was waiting for someone to see. Do you think your own account on Facebook? Think again.

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Facebook: We’re Not Kicking Wikileaks Off Our Site

And its awesome.You see, this is the first time anything like WikiLeaks has been attempted. Nor did they attract this kind of upset. But the company that hosts WikiLeaks DNS record – everyDNS.com – suddenly realised that WikiLeaks was in violation of its terms of service, and it too, cut WikiLeaks off. This was a more serious blow. WikiLeaks needs a distributed network of servers that are too broad and too diffuse to be attacked. For things to be as if WikiLeaks never was.Meanwhile, the diplomatic cables slowly dribble out, a feed that makes last years MP expenses scandal in the UK seem like amateur theatre, an unpractised warm-up before the main event. This did manage to bring WikiLeaks to its knees (surprising for an organisation believed to be rather paranoid about security), so WikiLeaks moved to a backup server, purchasing computing resources from Amazon, which runs a cloud of hundreds of thousands of computers available for rent. Its the legal cudgel that companies use to have their way with you. US Senator Joe Lieberman told Amazon to cut WikiLeaks off, and within a few hours Amazon had suddenly realised that WikiLeaks violated their Terms of Service, kicking them off Amazons systems.You know what Terms of Service are? They are the too-long agreements you always accept and click through on a website, or when you install some software, etc. And WikiLeaks needs a funding mechanism which can not be choked off by the actions of any other actor.Weve been here before. This is the final terminus of aristocracy; a process that began on July 14, 1789 came to a conclusive end on November 28, 2010. Its likely that the Americans will eventually get their hands on Assange – a compliant Australian Government has already made it clear that it will do nothing to thwart or even slow that request – and hell be charged with espionage, likely convicted, and sent to a US federal prison for many, many years. The mythology of power – that leaders are somehow more substantial, their concerns more elevated and lofty than us mere mortals, who not question their motives – that mythology has been definitively busted. You know, just in case.None of it is very pretty, all of it is embarrassing, and the embarrassment extends well beyond the state actors – who are, after all, paid to lie and dissemble, this being one of the primary functions of any government – to the complicit and compliant news media, think tanks and all the other camp followers deeply invested in the preservation of the status quo. Its a little bit harder to find WikiLeaks now – but not terrifically difficult. How could it be? Its untried, and untested. As PayPal never turns funds over immediately, theres an implication that PayPal is holding onto a considerable sum of WikiLeaks donations, while that shutdown makes it much more difficult to pass the hat and collect additional funds to keep the operation running. Were learning now, and to learn means to try and fail and try again.This failure comes with a high cost. We can choose to embrace this authenticity, and use it to construct a new system of relations, one which does not rely on secrets and lies. With every day, with every passing hour, the power of the state mobilises against WikiLeaks and Julian Assange, its titular leader.The inner processes of statecraft have never been so completely exposed as they have been in the last week. This is 1999, the company is Napster, and the angry party is the recording industry. The new aristocracies of democracy have been smashed, trundled off to the guillotine of the internet, and beheaded.Of course, the state isnt going to take its own destruction lying down. Once again, the fine folks at PayPal had a look at their Terms of Service (stop me if youve heard this one before) and – oh, look! Those bad awful folks at WikiLeaks are in violation of our terms! Lets cut them off from their money!WikiLeaks has undoubtedly received a lot of contributions over the last few days. Formerly quiet seas are now roiling, while everyone with any authority everywhere is doing everything they can to close the gaps in the smooth functioning of power. This is a new thing, and as well thought-out as WikiLeaks might be, it isnt perfect. A week ago that would have sounded utopian, now its just facing facts. But what hes done can not be undone; this tear in the body politic will never truly heal.Everything is different now. In the fine print of that agreement any service provider will always be able to find some reason, somewhere, for terminating the service, charging you a fee, or – well, pretty much whatever they like. Gnutella created the darknet for file-sharing which has permanently crippled the recording and film industries. Now I see the plan. WikiLeaks needs an alternative to the Domain Name Service. And so, over the last week weve been able to watch the systematic dismantling of WikiLeaks. Amazon, paranoid about customer reliability, easily fended off the DDoS attacks, but came under another kind of pressure. They want all of this to disappear and be forgotten. For the first time in my life I see the possibility for change on a scale beyond the personal. Nothing is ever that simple. Why would anyone taking on the state so directly become such a public figure? It made no sense to me. Score one for Assange, who – if the news media are to be believed – is just about to be taken into custody by the UK police, serving a Swedish arrest warrant.Finally, just a few hours ago, the masterstroke. Do you reckon that every other Amazon customer complies with its Terms of Service? If you do, I have a bridge you might be interested in.At that point, Assange & Co could have moved the server anywhere willing to host them – and Switzerland had offered. Within days after the death of Napster, Gnutella came around, and righted all the wrongs of Napster: decentralised where Napster was centralised; pervasive and increasingly invisible. She doesnt like him; he doesnt like them; they dont like any of us! Oh, and shes been scouting around for DNA samples and your credit card number. Everything feels more authentic. The nation state has been revealed as some sort of long-running and unintentionally-comic soap opera. DNS, or Domain Name Service, is the magic that translates a domain name like markpesce.com or nytimes.com into a number that represents a particular computer on the internet. Without someone handling that translation, no-one could find wikileaks.org. Assange knows that someone had to get out in front and fail, before others could come along and succeed. Checkmate.A few months ago I wrote about how confused I was by Julian Assanges actions. It took them a while to strangle the beast, but they did finally manage to choke all the life out of it – for all the good it did them. Assange must know this – a teenage hacker would understand the lesson of Napster. Im hopeful. Assange gets to be the scapegoat, the pinup boy for a new kind of anarchism. These contributions have been handled (principally) by the now-ubiquitous PayPal, the financial services arm of internet auction giant eBay. WikiLeaks is financed by contributions made by individuals and organisations (Disclosure: Im almost certain I donated $50 to WikiLeaks in 2008). Every politician everywhere – from Barack Obama to Hillary Clinton to Vladimir Putin to Julia Gillard has felt compelled to express their strong and almost visceral anger. Even the Afghan and Iraq war logs, released by WikiLeaks earlier this year, didnt hold this kind of fascination. First came the condemnation, then, hot on the heels of the shouts of off with his head for traitor Julian Assange, came the technical attacks, each one designed to amputate one part of the body of the organisation.First up, that old favourite, the distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack, which involves harnessing tens of thousands of hacked PCs (perhaps yours, or your moms, or your daughters) to broadcast tens of millions of faux requests for information to WikiLeaks computers. Yes, there have been leaks prior to this, but never before have hyperdistribution and cryptoanarchism come to the service of the whistleblower. Or was. You would be able to type the name into your web browser, but thats as far as youd get.So Wikileaks.org went down, but Wikileaks.ch (the Swiss version) came online moments later, and now there are hundreds of other sites which are all mirroring the content on the original WikiLeaks site. The failure of Napster was the blueprint for Gnutella.In exactly the same way – note for note -, and which will permanently leave the state and its actors neutered. Now that contact with the enemy has been made – the state with all its powers – it has become clear where WikiLeaks has been found wanting. But to what? Only some diplomatic gossip.Has Earth become a sort of amplified Facebook, where an in-crowd of Heathers, horrified, suddenly finds its bitchy secrets posted on a public forum? Is that what weve been reduced to? Or is that what weve been like all along? could be the source of the anger. Assange has brought out the radical hiding inside me, the one always afraid to show his face. I think Im not alone. We now know that power politics and statecraft reduce to a few pithy lines referring to how much Berlusconi sleeps in the company of nubile young women and speculations about whether Medvedev really enjoys wearing the Robin costume.Its this triviality which has angered those in power.

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FTC Lets Google Off The Hook, Europeans Still Fuming

FTC Lets Google Off The Hook, Europeans Still Fuming

Its not surprising that the investigation was abandoned a few days after complaints arose from European countries, Google has acknowledged that access was previously thought. However, it is a small victory for a company faces several lawsuits in Europe, and an investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice the acquisition of ATI. One Down, many to go.

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Is The TV Industry Ripping Consumers Off?

Is The TV Industry Ripping Consumers Off?

All this talk about 3D TV with Internet capability is exciting, but neglects the fact that consumers are advised not to replace only the TV, and the receivers, the HDMI cables and even DVD and Blu-ray. At present, there is something I have to get off his chest. Yes, the new specification for TV and HDMI is so different from last year that you can not use anything on your current system, even for cable, if you want 3D and Internet capabilities. I think my area has gone mad! Completely crazy cliff.

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How Far Off Are Real ?superhero? Powers?

how far off are real superhero powers photo

Therefore, Sentinel, which patrols in the Riverwest neighborhood of Milwaukee and other parts of the city in a red mask and black trenchcoat loose to help hide his identity, even if the fat "W logo on his shirt and latex clothes red to identify themselves as a member of the super heroes in real life, a web-based group to support and inspire efforts at street level to make a difference – in costume or not ..

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Microsoft Takes Off Gloves Against Google

microsoft takes off gloves against google photo

In a blog entitled "the competition authorities and research," Microsoft Vice President and Deputy General Counsel, said Dave Heiner part of the reason and try Microsoft's Yahoo search is "we are worried about Google's business practices that have tend to block publishers and advertisers and make it harder for Microsoft to get the search volume. "The position comes after a week in which the European authorities have asked Google to explain its search algorithms, following complaints competitors – one of which is owned by Microsoft.

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