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    Last update: December 22, 2009

    +New iMac owners complain about performance problems
      Owners of Apple's new iMacs, including the pricier 27-in. model, have reported major performance problems with their machines, including extremely sluggish playback of Flash-based video, according to posts on Apple's support forum.

    +Chinese banks to fund $1.5B Texas wind farm
      China is taking a big leap into the U.S. renewable energy market with a project in West Texas.

    +Web Marketer Ordered to Pay Facebook $711 Million in Anti-Spam Case
      Facebook said Thursday a California court has awarded the social networking Web site $711 million in damages in an anti- spam case against Internet marketer Sanford Wallace.

    +Little Buddy Child Tracker: $99 and GPS, But Don't Forget the Recurring Fees
      Best Buy has started selling the Little Buddy Child Tracker. The device is supposed to help parents track their children, and it's listed as $99. What isn't mentioned however, are the recurring fees for the service.

    +iPhone comes to China ... without a key feature
      Apple's iPhone is making its long-awaited formal debut in the world's most populous mobile phone market, without a key feature and at higher prices than widely available black market models.

    +Ferrari World, Abu Dhabi
      The external structure of Ferrari World Abu Dhabi, set to be the world's largest indoor theme park and the first ever Ferrari theme park in the world when it opens in 2010, has been completed according to Aldar Properties , Abu Dhabi's leading property development, management and investment company.

    +Happy 40th birthday, Internet
      On October 29, 1969, the Internet came in not with a bang, but with a "lo." Letter by letter, UCLA computer science professor Leonard Kleinrock sent a message from his school's host computer to another computer at Stanford Research Institute.

    +Can "pixie dust"regrow lost limbs?
      After yesterday's article on how stem cells could create made to order human organs , NG explores how they could also lead to lost limbs being regrown.

    +Go Veggie To Save The World
      A government adviser who claimed the public should turn vegetarian to save the planet has been slapped down by ministers.

    +Wi-Fi Warning for Your Laptop
      A warning about using Wi-Fi tonight, potential hackers may be using these hotspots to get into your laptop.

    +New iPhone App Translates English-to-Spanish And Back, As You Speak
      A new iPhone app, Jibbigo, translates English-to-Spanish and back again, but does it without requiring the user to select phrases or enter them manually with the keyboard. Instead, you simply launch the $24.99 app and speak into your iPhone's microphone and the translation is played over the speaker.

    +Apple TV 3.0, iTunes 9.0.2 Released (Yes, It Breaks Pre Sync)
      Apple has released a new version of iTunes, 9.0.2. While admittedly the release has higher aspirations than messing with the Palm Pre, such as adding support for Apple TV 3.0, a new dark background option for Grid View, and additional accessibility support, it does indeed break the Pre's iTunes sync capability, as well.

    +The App Store Closes In On 100,000 Apps
      According to App Shopper, a third-party site that tracks applications in Apple's App Store, while many keep using the last amount quoted by Apple as the number of apps in that repository, the App Store is nearing 100,000 apps, and should hit that number soon.

    +Google's Music OneBox Makes Search More Melodious
      Google has announced a new service, which is being rolled out slowly, as is typical of cloud-based services. It is called OneBox, and what it aims to do, in concert with Google's music search partners MySpace (and its recently acquired iLike subsidiary) and Lala, is allow users to play limited previews and full songs in their search results.

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