Archive for May, 2010

New iPod Touch faster than iPhone 3G

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

The second-generation iPod Touch uses a slightly faster processor than the iPhone 3G.

Touch Arcade reports that the applications processor inside the second-generation iPod Touch unveiled in September is actually running faster than the processor inside the
iPhone 3G, which runs at the same speed that the original iPhone and iPod Touch used. The new iPod Touch’s ARM-based processor is running at 532MHz, while the iPhone 3G’s processor runs at 412MHz.

It seems that Apple has room to boost the clock speed of the processor to 620MHz, according to ARM’s specifications, but that requires striking a balance between performance and battery life.

(Credit:
Apple)

Apple appears to have upped the processing speed of the
iPod Touch in order to help it go after the portable-game market.

With the arrival of the App Store, Apple has been marketing the latest iPod Touch as a gaming device in its latest round of commercials, almost completely ignoring the fact that it’s a music and video player as well.

A game developer interviewed by Touch Arcade noticed a huge difference in 3D-rendering speed as a result of the speed bump. As we remember fondly from our “megahertz madness” days of the Intel-AMD competition in the PC, processor speed is not the only measure of performance, but it is an important one.

YouTube launches platforms for Congress

Monday, May 24th, 2010

YouTube in conjunction with Congress on Monday launched two new platforms, the Senate Hub and the House Hub, that provide easy access to congressional YouTube channels.

While some members of Congress may enjoy futzing around on the Internet as much as the next guy (in this video, Rep. Tim Ryan of Ohio proves his Internet savvy on Facebook), the 111th Congress marks the first full session in which senators and representatives can officially use third-party sites like YouTube. Both chambers voted for the rule change in the fall of 2008.

The pages feature playlists like “Got a Question?” and “Behind the Scenes.” Videos featured allow visitors to watch clips of floor speeches, committee hearings, and other activities on the Hill.

“While we may not see eye-to-eye on everything,” House Majority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) says in a welcome video, shown below, “one thing we can agree on is the importance of utilizing technology to communicate with constituents.”

Visitors can find their senators’ YouTube pages by clicking on a map or using a drop down menu. While Washington, D.C. has no members to boast in either chamber, clicking the capital city on the map will take visitors to channels dedicated to congressional committees. While the hubs are maintained by YouTube, each individual congressperson’s channel is maintained by his or her office.

President-elect Barack Obama embraced YouTube when he started broadcasting his weekly address in both audio and video form, so it may have only been a matter of time before the Congress followed suit.

FriendFeed offers ‘push’ service to Twitter users

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

This could mark the start of export publishing to other services, which VentureBeat’s MG Siegler thinks could be a simple play to drive more traffic to FriendFeed through back linking. As it stands any message sent to Twitter from FriendFeed includes a link back to that conversation, which might be enough to hook people.

I expect we’ll see other services for export publishing in the near future–the question is whether it’s more for the users or FriendFeed’s traffic.

Where I can see some value in this is for something like Delicious. The tools for sorting through Delicious bookmarks are plentiful and powerful, but lately most of my link sharing has been to FriendFeed because I prefer it’s media-rich bookmarklet. Sure, I could keep adding bookmarks to Delicious, then have them get sucked up in FriendFeed, but I know for a fact that my FriendFeed subscribers would probably be more likely to check out that link, or like it if it had a picture and a snippet of text. With a system in place to push out FriendFeed bookmarks to Delicious, I could avoid this problem altogether, and still keep my Delicious library fresh.

Social aggregator FriendFeed has just rolled out a new option for its users to post some or all of their FriendFeed activity over to Twitter.

Earlier on in the start-up’s life the functionality was introduced to send replies (via FriendFeed) to other people’s Twitter messages. This worked as long as you had plugged in your Twitter credentials to give the app permission to post as you.

This new system is similar to that model, although it can be set to do this for everything you publish to FriendFeed. Users can also select which specific services they’d like cross posted, keeping your Twitter subscribers from being inundated with your comments about threads they have no idea about.

To avoid what could be considered an infinite feedback loop, FriendFeed ignores these Twitter messages, even if you’ve set up your Twitter account to go into your FriendFeed. If other Twitter users reply to you it will simply go into the original FriendFeed entry.

You can now opt to have your FriendFeed entries posted to Twitter, complete with a selection of which services you want it tracked from.

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

Personally I really don’t feel the need to use this feature–at least for Twitter. I think Twitter’s strong suit is that it’s text only, and while links are sometimes handy I don’t think my followers want as many as FriendFeed is likely to spit out. FriendFeed does a far better job integrating photos, videos and other media, which is something I doubt Twitter is likely to add; that is unless it develops a plug-in architecture (which the recently updated side-bar suggests). For the sake of my followers I won’t do this.

Woz I WILL samba tonight! Vote for me!

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

(Credit: CC Eric Rhoads)

I fear I may be saying this for the last time, but the tech world has singularly failed to support the Woz in his quest for toe-twinkling greatness.

Would it really hurt for you all to vote for him, say, 13 times?
For all lovers of high-class entertainment, if nothing else.

The fact that he was in the bottom two last week, coupled with the fact that he himself declared the voting to be scrupulously accurate (having suggested previously that it might actually resemble a four-dollar bill), tells me that Woz’s disciples are sitting on their hands, burying their heads in World of Warcraft, and refusing to dial and click.

"Madam, would you like to see my samba?"

But Steve Wozniak has finally decided that, hamstring be damnedstring, he will samba with his professional partner, Karina Smirnoff, on tonight’s “Dancing with the Stars.”

He said: “(Karina) was of the opinion that if I withdrew from ‘Dancing With The Stars,’ rumors would fly that I was using this injury as an excuse. She has danced with pulled hamstrings many times. I can tell you from how this one felt that it’s not the same for a 20-year-old as it is for a 58-year-old.”

It’s been a tense 24 hours for those who love high-class entertainment.

There are, indeed, few things more poisonous to a man’s reputation than flying rumors. Ask any ABC producer.

However, the artist’s heightened consciousness of subterfuge and conspiracy that so richly decorated Woz’s e-mails of last week has not entirely disappeared.

Woz is extremely concerned that he is behind the other couples in rehearsal time: “We lost nearly two days of rehearsal due to my inability to do anything, not to mention hospitals and MRIs and more over two days. So rehearsalwise, we are behind everyone else, but we are feeling confident that we can do something of value tomorrow. You’ll have to see.”

In a typically emotional e-mail to his Facebook Support Group, Woz revealed that he was wincing when he walked. This is much more painful than mincing.

However, Karina, the wily, sophisticated, slightly moody Russian, has modified their samba routine so that Woz’s strained hamstring can take the strain.

While the great man said he is very tired and would prefer people not to e-mail and call him, he is desperate to be the round mound of rebound of this week’s show (airing at 8 p.m. EST and PST, and 7 p.m. in the central desert).

I will, of course, be glued to the action tonight and describing it as soon after the performance as my joie de vivre allows.

McAfee sees rise in stock scams, social-engineerin

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

The most popular domain for typosquatting, spawning 742 offshoots, is “freecreditreport.com,” followed by “cartoonnetwork.com,” “youtube.com” and “craigslist.”

“It is possible people are already using zero-day threats for financial gain, not simply for embedding them within password-stealing Trojans but for taking short or options positions in equities and derivatives,” he writes. “It’s clear that spammers have figured out ways to profit from securities markets: we have received lots of penny-stock spam.”

One of the more interesting articles is titled “Vulnerabilities in the Equities Markets.”

(Credit:
McAfee Avert Labs)

There have been headlines about people scamming the equities market by circulating false news in the hopes that stocks will move up or down (the false report that Apple’s Steve Jobs had a heart attack being just the latest). What about investors losing or winning based on security news events?

“This is probably because institutional investors or market makers feel Microsoft was oversold the day before because of the bad news and that, in reality, Microsoft’s value as an investment was only negligibly affected,” he writes. “Note that this trend has been consistent during the past three years and continues today.”

Ben Edelman, assistant professor at the Harvard Business School, writes about typosquatting in the McAfee Security Journal.

This screenshot shows code from the backdoor Trojan hidden in a PDF file related to the Olympics that was e-mailed to a pro-Tibet group. It allows an attacker to compromise the computer.

He notes that Microsoft’s stock price tends to go down on “Patch Tuesday,” the day it issues its monthly batch of security fixes, and when it issues an advance notification of the security bulletins for the month. Then on “Exploit Wednesday,” which is the day after “Patch Tuesday,” there is, on average, an uptick in the stock price.

If you think there are a lot of phishing scams cramming your e-mail in-box now, just wait–fraudsters have more tricks up their sleeve.

The report is on McAfee’s Web site.

Ben Edelman, assistant professor at the Harvard Business School, writes about the problem of incorrectly typing a Web address. “Typosquatting” is the practice of registering domains that are very close to popular Web site domains in order to get traffic from people who make a spelling error or typo in the URL address bar. The Web sites that appear when you make such a wrong turn on the Internet could have malware on them, but more likely are just making money off ads.

That’s the message from McAfee Security Journal, due out Monday. Most of the articles deal with ways in which scammers use social engineering –not hacking–to dupe people into downloading malicious software to their computers or giving out their personal information, passwords, and bank account details to malicious Web sites.

It’s already happening, writes Anthony Bettini, a senior manager at McAfee Avert Labs.

McAfee Avert Labs' Anthony Bettini, author of "Vulnerabilities in the Equities Markets."

However, lawsuits against typosquatters are making the practice less desirable, Edelson writes. Microsoft has received more than $2 million in typosquatting settlements, he says.

There also has been a jump in the number of malicious programs posing as updates or software from security vendors, writes Elodie Grandjean, a virus researcher for McAfee Avert Labs in France. The programs lure people into downloading malicious software that instead of protecting the computer infects it with malware and interferes with legitimate security software actions. Such “scareware” has prompted Microsoft and the attorney general of Washington to file lawsuits.

There’s nothing really scary with that. But the notion that stock price fluctuations are occurring after vulnerability and patch announcements could give rise to more serious threats. “What would happen if a person built up a short position in a major software company and posted a handful of vulnerabilities with exploits to the Full Disclosure mailing list?” Bettini writes, before speculating on the legal consequences of such an action.

(Credit:
McAfee)

(Credit:
McAfee)

Another article in the McAfee Security Journal deals with the prevalence of spam and phishing attempts that piggyback on news events to grab the attention of people. For instance, malware writers exploited the broad interest in the Olympic Games to distribute e-mails that dropped malicious software on the recipient’s computer that creates a back door for remote attacks, according to an article titled “A Prime Target for Social Engineering Malware.”

Ultrasound cuff to stop internal bleeding on battl

Monday, May 10th, 2010

(Credit:
DARPA)

Internal bleeding can cause irreversible haemorrhagic shock within 30 seconds or progressive shock within eight hours, either way, it’s not good and the military wants a portable, noninvasive way to detect and stop it right on the battlefield.

A medic applies the cuff to the injured limb, the DBAC automatically locates the bleeding and triggers a dose of high-intensity, focused ultrasound toward it, this prompts quick coagulation and an end to the bleeding.

To that end, the Defense Advance Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has contracted with Siemens Healthcare, the University of Washington’s Centre for Industrial and Medical Ultrasound and Texas A&M to develop something called the Deep Bleeder Acoustic Coagulation cuff (DBAC). The cuff is a semi-automated, ultrasound device designed to cut blood loss and shock resulting from combat limb injuries, one that can be operated by any GI with minimal training.

As it stands now, a wounded soldier can quickly lose 25 percent of blood volume while waiting to be evacuated. This can lead to progressive shock and death. On the spot treatment with the cuff would curtail these needless combat deaths and amputations, according to the military.

Blood mimicking fluids and heat resistant, tissue mimicking phantoms were custom created to allow DBAC testing on a full-sized leg mockup. DARPA hopes to be able to have a prototype in 18 months.

The system uses doppler-based “automated bleed detection algorithms,” according to DARPA. The software used is based on “unique spectral and power Doppler bleeder signatures that, when coupled to volumetric data, allows for automated bleed detection and localization.”(PDF)

Which apps are using the new Facebook APIs

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

Posting of notes through Ping.fm is up and running. “We’re still assembling some other ideas on how to use their new features,” says founder and CEO Sean McCullough. Worth a mention is that many of the services on this list go through Ping.fm to re-syndicate user messages.

Apps that we pinged but have not yet responded: Feedalizr, Moodswing/blast, and Gwibber. We’ll update this post if we hear back.

“Yes, we are actively working on implementing the new Facebook API and rolling it out ASAP,” says Regan Fletcher, Yoono’s VP of business development. Our overall objective really is to maximize our use of the Facebook API in order to allow users who have added Facebook to Yoono to have the best possible experience and functionality.”

“Sociagami has always been committed to deep integration with social networking sites like Facebook and MySpace and we will definitely be taking advantage of the new API features in 2.0,” says Charlie Robbins, director of social network integration for Sociagami. “Unfortunately, using an API-based implementation will mean that Sociagami 2.0 will not have the messaging and wall posting features that came with 1.0.”

“It does look like some of this new functionality is available via the REST API, which we use and we can run FQL queries (which we do),” says AlertThingy creator Clive Howard. “We will be revisiting this prior to the next version and if we can do, then I’m sure it will make it into 3.x.” Version 3 of AlertThingy was released on Monday morning.

“We are excited about the new direction Facebook is going in and strongly believe that the browser will play a critical role in providing social context by way of encouraging conversations to occur around external links (i.e., blogs, videos, articles, photographs, etc.)” says Dan Burkhart, Flock’s VP of marketing and business development. “Flock is working to build functionality into the browser that will extend and enhance this ability for users to share a broad variety of sites and web services with their friends.”

We’ve talked to the people at each one to see when you should be expecting to be able to make use of the new API in each app:

Working on it for an upcoming build. “The video part will be an important one!” says Loic Le Meur, CEO of Seesmic which acquired/owns Twhirl. The latest version, which was released on Monday, added in Ping.fm support, letting you cross post messages to your Facebook profile.

Friendbar creator Edo Segal says “we love the fact that facebook [is] opening up more services,” and “definitely plan to include support for these API’s in upcoming versions.” Segal also says he wants a higher level of access to that data. “For example, to be able to post comments to users photos and status updates, and to directly send a Facebook message to a user via the API.”

“Blogo already supports Facebook status updates through its integration with Ping.fm,” says Benjamin Jackson, Blogo’s technical director. “As for more robust Facebook integration, you can be absolutely certain that we’ll be running to integrate this as quickly as possible. We’ll be shooting to send out a beta next week.”

This past weekend’s announcement by Facebook that the company would be opening up its APIs to allow for posting of notes, videos, and more has left some companies scrambling to add new functionality to existing applications. Below we’ve highlighted a handful of the ones that let you post to Facebook from a desktop client, be it standalone or something that plugs into your browser.

Video For Ozzie, Azure is the OS as a service

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

On Tuesday, Microsoft introduced Windows 7, the successor to
Windows Vista, and discussed changes coming in Office 14, a new version of the desktop application suite now in development.

PDC 2008 continues on Wednesday with a keynote address from Rick Rashid, senior vice president of Microsoft Research.

Does a “cloud operating system” replace your desktop or server operating system? How does it work with mobile devices?

Ultimately, in Microsoft’s view, Azure is intended to make it easier for people to manage the devices around them, from PCs and servers to cell phones.

Microsoft’s Ray Ozzie, the company’s chief software architect, tells CNET News’ Ina Fried that Windows Azure won’t make desktop and server operating systems obsolete. Instead, Azure–which Microsoft launched Monday at its PDC 2008 conference–gives developers more options when deciding where applications should be developed and delivered.

Check back throughout the day for continuing coverage.