Tech Blog
AnnouncementsThis is the week that was...
Cheap used Xbox 360s being sold in vast quantities and it's not a good thing
If it's too good to be true, it probably is. Those cheap Xbox 360s have likely been banned from Xbox live (preventing online gameplay and updates):
The systems haven't been "bricked," in other words, meaning they'll
still turn on and players can still use them to play pirated games
offline, but their ability to connect online--even employing an
unbanned Xbox LIVE account--has been permanently compromised.
Dolly Parton (??!) promoting IE8 Webslices?
Muh brain, it boggles.
It's an awfully charming video by one of the greatest musicians of all
time. This 63-year old mega-millionaire is downright folksy when
talking about web browsers.
Jailbroken iPhones hit by hackers in two incidentsHacker Rickrolls Jailbroken iPhones -- change your default SSH password, if you have SSH installed.Silent but deadlyArs Technica is reporting
about a software application that can gather personal data from your
Jailbroken iPhone, again, if you've installed SSH and not changed the
default password:Unlike the previous versions, which merely replaced the wallpaper image
to alert users that they have been cracked, the new version silently
copies personal data—"e-mail, contacts, SMSs, calendars, photos, music
files, videos, as well as any data recorded by any iPhone app." It then
sends the data back to the machine running the software.
iTunes store approval process has Rogue Amoeba running
Developers have had a love-hate relationship with Apple's iTunes store approval process: little feedback, unknown approval time thresholds, it seems like a black hole, stuff goes in, nothing comes out:
The company introduced its Airfoil Speakers Touch 1.0 app for the
iPhone months ago, became aware of some issues (with audio sync that
could be heard when audio was playing to multiple outputs) in the app
and sent in an update. An update which took Apple three and a half
months to approve...
Steve Jobs lead 'inventor' of odd Apple enforced advertising patent?
The NY Times had this little gem on an process design patent application submitted by Apple:
The technology can freeze the device until the user clicks a button or
answers a test question to demonstrate that he or she has dutifully
noticed the commercial message. Because this technology would be
embedded in the innermost core of the device, the ads could appear on
the screen at any time, no matter what one is doing.
Google Wave gets a following
Which should help clean out the overflowing inboxes when you view or contribute to public waves:
When someone adds you directly to a wave, or if you contribute to a
wave, you will automatically be following that wave. When you see a
public wave that you would like to get updates on, you can chose to
follow it by hitting the follow button in the wave panel toolbar. You
can remove these waves from your inbox by hitting the "archive" button,
but when there is an update they will pop back in. You can switch
between following and unfollowing a wave as much and as often as you
like.
I just saw them a moment ago
Twitter rolled out, then recalled the ReTweet function...seems there were issues:
We’ve been contending with an elevated number of errors since late last
night. We’ve ruled out a number of causes of this problem but are still
working to reduce the number of errors on the site.
Twitter hooks up with LinkedIn
Interesting concept lets you selectively (or not) send tweets to your LinkedIn status:
The idea is simple: When you set your status on LinkedIn you can now
tweet it as well, amplifying it to your followers and real-time search
services like Twitter Search and Bing. And when you tweet, you can send
that message to your LinkedIn connections as well, from any Twitter
service or tool.
Google launches new programming language
Google Go, a new
C-like programming language from Google has developerati all a twitter
as they ponder the implications. According to Google, Go is:
… fastGo compilers produce fast code fast. Typical builds take a fraction of
a second yet the resulting programs run nearly as quickly as comparable
C or C++ code.
… safeGo is type safe and memory safe. Go has pointers but no pointer arithmetic.
For random access, use slices, which know their limits.
… concurrentGo promotes writing systems and servers as sets of lightweight
communicating processes, called goroutines, with strong support from the language.
Run thousands of goroutines if you want—and say good-bye to stack overflows.
… funGo has fast builds, clean syntax, garbage collection,
methods for any type, and run-time reflection.
It feels like a dynamic language but has the speed and safety of a static language.
It's a joy to use.
… open sourceGo for it
I'll pass, I'm still trying to figure out Objective C
Your Turn So, did I miss anything? What online story really got you going this week? Link to it in the comments!
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