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    Last update: December 22, 2009

    +iPhone Flight Delay Ad Spoofed
      Filed under: Cell Phones, Computers, iPhoneBy now we're sure you've seen the iPod "Delay" ad, in which a pilot, after being told his flight is delayed, checks the weather on his iPhone, and informs air traffic control that the weather is about to clear up. The ad suggests that the information you get from Weather.com is bound to be more up to date that the in house Doppler used by the FAA. This mock ad -- by the brilliant online revival of 'Cracked' magazine -- shows what would really happen if some jerk tried this.We love Apple and it's products, but we can't quite figure out what it is about Apple's TV ads that makes us want to punch Steve Jobs.From CrackedRelated Links:New Jack Black Film 'Destroys' the Internet William Shatner and Mr. T Team Up for World of Warcraft Toyota Ad Spoofs Video Game, Viral Video  Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

    +Power Outage in Russia Forces Doctors to Use Cell Phones for Light
      Filed under: Cell PhonesCellphones are quickly becoming the goto method of illumination for hospitals around the world when power fails. We've reported on an appendectomy in Argentina performed by the light of a mobile handset. Then, in March, Vietnamese doctors delivered a baby via caesarian-section illuminated by cell phones. Now another child has been brought into this world with the help of cell-phone screens.Dozens of cell phones illuminated the delivery room of a hospital in Shelehov, a town in north Russia. When the town lost power, nurses quickly collected mobile phones from patients and employees to aid in the delivery of Rima Pivovarova's child. Both the mother and child are doing well, and it's all thanks to the cell phones.From Textually.orgRelated links:Cell Phones Illuminate Emergency Surgery10 Most Bizarre Science ExperimentsKuwait Rape Case Becomes TXT Messaging Contest Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

    +Is the Amazon Kindle Really the iPod of Books?
      Filed under: Editor's Picks, Traveler, $500 and Under, Features, Reviews, Holiday Gift GuideHype Check: Amazon KindleLast week, Amazon.com CEO Jeff Bezos unveiled the Kindle, a new electronic book reader that has quickly become one of the hottest gifts of the holiday season (in fact, the device's first run sold out in a mere 5 and a half hours!). We got our hands on one and have been busy browsing, buying, downloading and reading e-books, -magazines, -newspapers, and blogs for the past week so we could report our findings back to you. But is the Amazon Kindle really the iPod of books? Will this new instantly-iconic gadget make a book-lover or info-hound in your life happy this year? Read on to see what found.What it is: The first electronic book-reading device from Amazon.com, which lets you read your choice of more than 90,000 books, as well as dozens of magazines, newspapers, and blogs, on a 6-inch sized screen. Like the recently upgraded Sony Reader, the Amazon Kindle uses E-Ink, a new type of display that has eschews the typical LCD screen's harsh backlight for a glare-free, book-like experience.How it works: The Kindle has built-in high-speed 3G network access, so it lets you browse for and download books directly into the device, either by scrolling through genre categories and lists or by searching by author or title (using the included QWERTY keyboard). Book downloads take less than a minute, while newspaper, magazine, and blog subscriptions are downloaded automatically as soon as something new is published. As for reading, you click on the title of a book or article you want to read, then scroll through pages by pressing "next" and "back" buttons on the right and left sides, respectively, of the screen. Maneuvering around content is easy enough since books, magazines, and newspapers are divided into easy to scan chapters, sections, and headlines. Text size can be adjusted to one of six different settings.Why it's different: E-readers have a bad name because the versions that came out in the late '90s irritated the eyes and never really took off, but the Kindle is part of the new generation of e-readers that uses easy-on-the-eyes E-Ink. The real differentiator, though, for the Kindle, is its ability to let you browse for and download content directly into the device (using a cell phone network, no less). And you just use the same Amazon account you use to buy books and other items on your desktop, so it's oddly reminiscent of that other all-encompassing e-tailer eco-system, iTunes. (The Kindle's wireless service, by the way, is free.) Also, unlike other e-readers, the Kindle is the first to get real newspapers (New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, Le Monde), magazines (Time, Atlantic Monthly, Reader's Digest), and even blogs into the e-edition mix.What we like: Downloads of books are fast (usually around a minute per title). You can try a sample out before you buy for free. Prices for new hardcovers are often more than half what you'd pay for a physical book (about $9.99 a pop). Adjustable text sizes means young and old alike will be able to embrace the future with this thing. The "next" [page] button runs two-thirds of the length of the Kindle's right side, meaning don't have to fumble for the right button to turn a page. E-Ink is truly readable. And, if you don't know what a word means, you can just look it up using the included dictionary! (You can also look up topics with the built-in Wikipedia entries).What we don't: If you're a big browser and shopper, you'll probably spend more time looking for new books and wearing the battery down than reading. (We got only about a day and a half of battery life with heavy browsing and shopping, but about six days with occasionally 10-15 minute reads and the thing otherwise just lying in our backpack.) Even though it offers 90,000 books, the Kindle Bookstore was surprisingly lacking in many titles we wanted, including anything but the latest book by Jonathan Franzen, travel guides, graphic novels, and even certain new translations of Russian novels we were in hot pursuit for!. Yes, you can basically get the New York Times bestseller list and lots of intriguing and obscure fare, but the Kindle bookstore is far from comprehensive - for now. And we fully expect more than the handful of magazines and newspapers to be offered in the near future. And what's with charging 99 cents to read otherwise free blogs? Should you get the Sony Reader or the Kindle? Which one is better and how are they different? Well, the Sony Reader is by far the better designed gadget from a looks and heft perspective - it's about half as thin, about three ounces thinner, and comes in a much more attractive leather case. It also offers a screen that we found to be clearer, a silver body that felt solid versus the Kindle's relatively cheap white plastic body, and faster page-turning. But the Sony Reader doesn't have any of the wireless capability that lets you shop on the fly - you have to buy your eBooks on your computer first and then transfer them manually via USB to the Reader. The Reader is also less expensive. We recommend the Reader to anyone who prefers long-form books over magazines, newspapers and up-to-the-minute news stories - it's simply a more pleasurable experience to read with and you can find plenty of books on the Sony Connect store. But anyone who likes their newspapers and magazines as much as they like their books will want the Kindle, without a doubt.Does the Kindle live up to the hype? Ultimately, yes. We've been using the Kindle for a little over a week now and we have been more or less blown away. We spent almost a whole night downloading books, blogs, newspaper articles and browsing for titles - pretty much the same way we spent all night loading up our iPods with iTunes the first time we gave it a spin. The truth is, this device is a Godsend to anyone who likes daily newspapers or magazines and doesn't want to carry them all around, or anybody who simply likes to read several books at once. And truthfully, we found the newspaper reading experience on the Kindle to be far superior to both real newspapers and newspaper headlines on the Web - the Kindle is lighter than a PC, less awkward to hold than a newspaper (and yet just as portable), and offers the easiest way to scroll through to the articles you actually want to read. It also offers some hope to the increasingly beleaguered print newspaper and magazine industries, not to mention one of the first ways to actually monetize a blog via readers. (Yes, we complained about having to pay for blogs above, but honestly, it's great to be able to catch up on your favorite Internet news sources while on a plane or somewhere else where there's no Internet connection - a convenience we're happy to pay 99 cents a month for!)Is this a good gift? Since it doesn't require a computer for downloading and the wireless service is included in the price, most definitely yes. The book lover and info-hound in your life will love you for it!Price and where to get it: $399, from Amazon.For more great gift ideas, check out the Switched Holiday Gift Guide. %Gallery-11156% Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

    +Google Bidding To Enter Wireless Business
      Filed under: Cell Phones, GoogleThe rumors have been circulating for months now, and this morning Google announced that it has applied to take part in the auction of wireless bandwidth freed up by the FCC. Considering its furious lobbying for open access requirements, it would be sort of bizarre if Google sat this one out.Following broadcast television's switch to digital, a large chunk of wireless spectrum was opened up and is set to be auctioned off by the FCC. Google and others view this as an opportunity for another player to enter the wireless provider market. Google won many concessions from the FCC on the wireless spectrum, including the requirement that the winning bidder allow any device to be used on the spectrum and that there be no restriction on the type of software or data used on the new network. Google is expected to face steep competition from Verizon and AT&T for a chunk of the newly open wireless spectrum. What exactly Google plans to do with the spectrum is unknown. Google could build out their own cell phone and data network and try to compete directly with AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile, which would pair quite nicely with its new mobile OS initiative, Android. Or, Google could simply serve as a wholesale provider, selling spectrum to other companies to provide service and devices to consumers. We won't hear much else from Google or anyone else about the auction, as the rules limit the amount and type of information that can be shared until the auction is complete -- which could be as late as March of 2008. If you just have to know, you can follow any available public information at this FCC website.From the Official Google BlogRelated links:New Google Maps Mobile Finds Your Location Without GPSVerizon Wireless Lets You Use Any Phone On Its NetworkGoogle Announces gPhone? Not Quite. Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

    +'Free iPod' Advertiser Fined $650,000
      Filed under: Computers, iPodYou know those banner ads that claim you can get an iPod or an Xbox 360 or any number of other electronics for free just by filling out a survey? We've seen them absolutely everywhere, including our inbox (and our spam folder shortly thereafter). The Federal Trade Commission has seen them, too, and they don't like them any more than we do. Adteractive, one of the most egregious offenders in the "free" ring of advertising, has been fined $650,000 for violating the CAN-SPAM Act. The CAN-SPAM Act, introduced in 2003, requires fines and possible prison time for those who are found to be guilty of sending non-solicited e-mails. Adteractive, which runs FreeGiftWorld.com and SamplePromotionsGroup.com, was definitely guilty, but interestingly one of the FTC Commissioners voted against applying this fine. That's because he thought $650,000 wasn't enough -- a dissenting opinion we agree with. The FTC also slammed the company for its misleading advertising, where "free" products are often available only after people fill out multiple credit card applications or sign contracts for satellite television and the like. Buyer beware, especially if it's "free". From BetaNewsRelated Links: Porn Spammers Get Prison Time Don't Just Call Your Friends, Spam Them! Study Claims 83% of All E-Mail is Spam  Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

    +Teen 'Botnet' Leader Arrested in New Zealand
      Filed under: ComputersIn the realm of cyber terrorism, the botnet is a terrible thing. It's a collection of computers hijacked through malicious software that can be used to stage massive attacks, like the ones that shut down networks across Estonia earlier this year. One of the ringleaders in a global 1.3-milliion-computer botnet has been arrested, and surprisingly, he's only 18.The kid, whose name has not been released due to his age, is known only as "AKILL." He was arrested as part of the FBI's 'Operation Bot Roast', a global effort to discover and shut down cyber-terrorists. Threats from botnets already apprehended by the FBI are estimated to have resulted in the embezzlement of over $20-million. It's unclear whether AKILL himself made any significant amounts of money from his botnet, but it is known that he used it to barter for access to viruses and digital trojans, tools of the trade in the botnet world. These were given in exchange for using his botnet to attack computer networks. That sort of bartering led to a cyber-attack on the University of Pennsylvania in February 2006. While this is a major step, AKILL is just one player in a sea of botnet criminals. He is said to be tied to a botnet gang known as the A-Team, who the FBI hopes will also be behind bars soon.From BBC News and PC WorldRelated Links: Cyber Attacks in Eastern Europe Al Gore's Blog Hacked Hackers Strike Starbucks Wi-Fi Hotspots  Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

    +Excavator to Blame in Cell Phone Death, But the Battery Still Caught Fire!
      Filed under: Cell PhonesWe reported on an AP story yesterday about the death of a South Korean man that was supposedly caused by a cell phone, though we (and AP) later suggested that seemed a bit doubtful given the extent of the man's injuries. Nearly 20,000 of you voted in the associated poll on that story, weighing in on whether you thought the battery was to blame. The results were nearly split, with a narrow margin not believing the story. As it turns out, the phone was indeed not at fault: a co-worker who was operating an excavator has come forward and claimed responsibility.Kwon , who is 58, indicated that he was backing up the excavator, and, upon getting out, saw 33-year-old Seo lying on the ground on fire. Kwon, scared, lied about the battery causing the accident, when in reality it was the impact from the excavator that caused the cell phone battery to rupture and catch fire -- which honestly is still a bit troubling to us. Do we now need to be worried that our cell phone battery might catch on fire anytime we run into something or drop our cell phone. Or is all the hype over the last year about exploding batteries a bit much?LG, the company that manufactured the phone in question, saw its stock price drop five percent in the wake of the incident, but that's now on the rebound given the company is (mostly) in the clear. We're still wondering about that burning cell phone battery, though.How about you? Are you afraid of exploding and/or flammable cell phone batteries?From The Korea TimesRelated Links: Exploding Cell Phone Battery Causes Another Death? Cell Phone Battery Explodes, Kills Chinese Worker Cell Phone Blamed for Train Death Pregnant Woman's Cell Phone Battery Explodes  Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

    +Malicious Websites Trick Google, Infect Computers
      Filed under: ComputersA number of malicious websites have popped up online over the past few weeks, and unlike most dangerous destinations that lurk in the dark recesses of the Internet, these have been showing up at or near the top of some seemingly innocuous Google searches for words like "Christmas". The sites, believed to be run by a high-tech wing of the Russian mafia, used flaws in older versions of Microsoft's Internet Explorer browser to install malicious software that could take control of your computer.The delivery of malicious software through web sites is nothing new, but what is new was the rank these pages were able to achieve at search engines like Google and MSN Search. Through extensive campaigns of comment spam, posting innocuous things on popular blogs with links to their bogus sites, these sites were able to work up a virtual reputation. Google and other search engines see these links from popular blogs and are tricked into thinking that the site being linked to is also reputable, resulting in prioritized search results.The sites of course were not reputable, and Google at least has already removed most of them, but it's a troubling trend that's all too similar to the hacking of Al Gore's blog earlier this week. So, as always, be safe out there and keep your operating system and browser up to date.From BBC NewsRelated Links: Al Gore's Blog Hacked Did China Hack the Pentagon? Cyber Attacks in Eastern Europe  Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

    +New Google Maps Mobile Finds Your Location Without GPS
      Filed under: Cell Phones, GoogleYesterday, Google updated its mobile Google Maps application with a new 'My Location' feature. This new version will find your specific location even if you don't have GPS. The new Google Maps Mobile finds your location by triangulating information from nearby cell phone towers.Sadly, we've yet to see the new location-finder in action as device support is fairly limited. Despite Google's claims that it will work on most Windows Mobile phones, it seems all the most popular (Blackjack, Q9, Dash, Treos), have been left out of the My Location fun.From EngadgetRelated links:Users Reporting Deleted E-Mail from Gmail AccountsGoogle Maps Coming to Gas Pumps, but Is it Complete?Google Announces gPhone? Not Quite. Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

    +Atari Classics Now on Xbox Live Arcade
      Filed under: Video GamesIf you signed on to your Xbox Live Arcade account today, you may have noticed two new games waiting there for you to play: 'Asteroids' and 'Asteroids: Deluxe' (pictured above).These two classic Atari titles won't be alone for long. Microsoft has promised that others are on the way. 'Battlezone', 'Tempest', and 'Warlords' will be available sometime after the holiday season. Personally, we can't wait for 'Yar's Revenge.'All the games are true to the originals, including the prehistoric graphics. The only tweaks made have allowed online multi-player support and widescreen aspect ratios for HDTVs.%Gallery-11111%From TG DailyRelated links:Xbox 360 Halo 3 EditionMicrosoft Celebrates Five Years of Xbox Live With a Free GameESPN Games and Shows Now Available on Xbox Live Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

    +Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree Goes Green
      Filed under: Cameras, Green Tech, Gift NewsThis year the Christmas tree at Rockefeller Center is going green. By green, we mean environmentally friendly, of course. The 30,000+ lights on the massive conifer have been replaced with energy sipping LEDs that have cut the tree's power consumption to abouta third its normal level. In fact, the amount of electricity required by the tree has been reduced enough that the whole thing is powered by solar panels resting atop a nearby building.When the season finally ends (likely sometime in July) and the tree is taken down, it will be milled and donated to Habitat for Humanity, which will use the lumber to construct doorways for shelters built by the charity.From TGDailyRelated links:Nintendo Ends Up at the Bottom of Green Electronics ListHonda Testing Clean Hydrogen Fuel Cell CarFive Percent of U.S. Electricity Wasted by "Vampire" Electronics Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

    +AT&T CEO Says High-Speed 3G iPhone Coming Next Year
      Filed under: Cell Phones, iPhone>AT&T CEO, Randall Stephenson, told Bloomberg that the 3G iPhone that we had all hoped for is coming next year. Most of us expected the addition of near-broadband data capability to the iPhone, but confirmation such as this lets us rest easy since the device's current slower EDGE network (for surfing the Web and getting e-mail) is so five years ago! No date or any specifics are known beyond that, but presumably the phone will run on the same HSDPA network that the new BlackJack II uses.Stephenson cited battery life as the reason the first generation was saddled with the pokey EDGE data network, saying that 3G chipsets are "real power hogs." Stephenson says the faster download speeds of AT&T's HSDPA network will come as battery technology improves, and hopes to get the talk time back up in the five-hours-plus range.What does this mean for you? Well, if you haven't bought an iPhone already and can wait up to a year for the latest and greatest, you should definitely hold off! This is a real boon to anybody who's got a year left on their Sprint, T-Mobile or Verizon Wireless accounts.From Bloomberg (via Engadget) Related Links:T-Mobile Selling $1,500 Unlocked iPhone in Germany iPhone Named Time's "Invention of the Year" Apple Founder Steve Wozniak Calls for Open iPhone  Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

    +Study Shows Racial Divisions on Social Networks
      Filed under: ComputersNotiong of the online realm ushering in a new age free of any racial and societal divisions may be somewhat misplaced if the results of a new study out are to be believed. The study, which polled 1,000 college freshmen entering Northwestern University, showed that clearly divided lines exist among the various social networks preferred by various races. For example, white students tended to prefer Facebook, Hispanic students were more likely to sign up for MySpace, while Asian-Americans were most likely to use Xanga and Friendster. The results are interesting if not exactly surprising, but given the rather limited sample here (just 1,000 students compared to the hundreds of millions of registrants on MySpace alone), we 'd advise readers to not be too quick in drawing sweeping conclusions here.From DailyTechRelated Links: Students Arrested After Planning Shooting on Columbine Anniversary Facebook to Drop "is" From Status Updates 'Lust, Caution' Sets Off Frenzy of Virus and Anti-Sex Warnings  Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

    +Monkeys Control Robotic Arms Via Internet
      Curious George prefers eating bananas, but playing with robots will do to pass the time. A team of scientists at Duke University took the world by surprise in 2003 when it successfully used monkeys to control robotic arms with only their brains. Don't be surprised, but the Duke team just one-upped itself. Implanting electrodes into the monkeys' brains, the researchers were able to train the primates to move robotic legs in this iteration of their experiments. Nothing special there, right? Well, the new wrinkle that they presented at this year's Neuroscience Conference was the monkeys' ability to movethe robotic legs from thousands of miles away, with the primates and robotic limbs linked only by the Internet! While the monkeys were at the conference in San Diego, they moved the legs, which happened to across the Pacificat the Advanced Telecommunications Research Institute International in Kyoto, Japan.In 2005, the Duke scientists announced that their original work caused the monkeys' brain cells to adapt. Even though the 2003 experiment showed that the monkeys could control the robotic arms as if they were moving their own limbs, it was inconclusive as to whether the monkeys' brain cells were changing in response to the task. The study two years later definitively proved that the primate brain is very adaptable, which suggests that the human brain is much the same. If the human brain can adapt to using similar technology, then its significance for the disabled is unparalleled. Should the brain be as adaptable as the 2005 work intimates, it would allow the handicapped to experience greater independence and self-sufficiency by using these brain-operated devices to control robotic assistants or limbs. Want to know more? Check out back issues of the journal Neuroscience. Until then, let's hope these monkeys have a less mischievous inner child than George. From New Scientist (via Engadget)Related Links:Bionic Arm Restores Sensation and Mobility to Amputees iRobot Create Gibson's Robot Guitar Tunes Itself  Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

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