Python Desktop Server

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Apple plugs 25 Mac OS X flaws

Fourth security update this year addresses vulnerabilities that could let attackers hit Macs.



Memory Stick : Storage Space No Longer A Constraint

Memory Stick is a digital storage device which makes use of the removable flash memory card format. Different types include Memory Stick Pro, which is one of the most capacious device with fast file ...


FTC Drinks The Telco Kool-Aid

It's sad to think parts of our free market economy have failed, become gummed up by the sludge of its own engine. It's supposed to work, to drive us, keep us ahead of everyone. Only, it's not so much anymore, the engine is aging, and though we try to wish it away, reality is setting in, even as vested storytellers perpetuate the myth to keep us wishing.

FTC Drinks The Telco Kool-Aid
FTC Drinks The Telco Kool-Aid

Not that the whole car is bad. It just needs some maintenance from time to time. In the 20th Century it was the robber barons, Big Blue and Ma Bell, and in this century it's, well, the descendants of Ma Bell gumming up the works.

So the FTC, after researching the matter of Net Neutrality, has come out in opposition, coming to the perplexing conclusion that lack of choices for broadband access and tight control over development is driving more competition in the space, not less. The commission is drinking the same Kool-Aid as the FCC lately, it would seem, which has some amnesia-causing agent within.

Commissioner Majoras' opinion that "the net effects of potential conduct by broadband providers will be on all consumers" are not known has the tinny echo of voices carried over phone lines, clearly stating to Verizon, et alia, "yes, I can hear you now."

The Kool-Aid is strong. And if so, if the administration and its regulators are so enamored with corporate talking points to the extent that AT&T's signal is heard above the public's (a data plan they'd like to continue), it may be time to remind the FTC what these incumbent providers have brought to America, how they've paid us back for our support, and what they plan to do for us in the future.

What the Free Market (Electronic Communications) Economy Had Gotten Us:

1.    Default on $200 billion taxpayer loan to build out broadband services.

2.    Broadband prices 40 times cost.

3.    Text messaging at over 7000 percent markup.

4.    Median download speed of 1.97 megabits per second. Japan has 61 megabits per second.

5.    A telco/cable duopoly whereby nearly 100 percent of the public has two choices of (slow) broadband providers.

6.    Lies about the nature of broadband competition. All other alternatives (broadband over power lines, satellite, 3G wireless) currently cannot match speed, pricing, and availability.

7.    Enormous cost barriers to entry into the broadband service market.

8.    Reneged promises. Cable was supposed to be commercial free, and consumers were supposed to have a choice in channels, not packages of channels.

9.    The possibility that telecommunications and cable companies will follow their already established cable TV and mobile phone practices – controlled, pre-packaged programs at exorbitant costs.

10.    Efforts to block competition by ensuring the soon-to-be-available 700 MHz wireless spectrum (ideal for true wireless broadband) is bought up and hoarded by incumbents.  

Just to name a few. They want a tiered, discriminatory, small business crushing Internet, and have said so. They say Net Neutrality provides no incentive to invest all the while knowing the future is in fiber, which they will own and control. Yet history, facts, reality and stated intent have done nothing to sway US regulators. Something is very, very wrong.

Google's Richard Whitt, the company's Washington Telecom and Media Counsel, has written an excellent two-part blog post about the realities of the US broadband market, type-based differentiation, and Google's objections to telco/cable talking points with technical details.

Also an excellent read is Bob Frankston's "Sidewalks: Paying by the Stroll," which analogizes the Net Neutrality issue to "Sidewalk Neutrality" in a very real and down-to-earth way. 

 


Game world gets ready for E3 show

Game world gets ready for E3 show Although smaller than in previous years the three-day event will be a showcase of the latest and greatest in the gaming world. The focus in 2007 has shifted from hardware to games and attendees will expect to see previews and launches of some keenly-awaited titles. (Read on Source)


10 Advantages of SaaS for the Call Center

Adoption of the Software as a Service model is rapidly increasing across the enterprise, but particularly in the call center as companies are discovering the advantages today's hosted solutions offer over premise-based systems. Applications such as speech analytics, predictive dialing and CRM can be hosted on a shared platform in a data center and delivered to agents via the IP networks.


Cellphones interfere with hospital equipment: study

Cellphones interfere with hospital equipment: study A new Dutch study of cellphones finds that the electromagnetic fields they generate can disrupt the functioning of critical care equipment. (Read on Source)


Pandora: From zero to addicted in 10 minutes

I waited a long time to try it out, and it just took about eight songs to hook me.


U. of Houston Plans to Buy an Illumina Sequencer for New Science and Engineering Center

NEWSBRIEF (Read on Source)


Guide to Cheap Computer Networking - Part 2

How to select the best Cheap Computer Networking for your home and office.


Google shares info on suspected pedophiles

Yes, Google will share account information with Brazilian authorities on suspected pedophiles.


"Skip Intro" Button Appears In Google's Search Results

A site's flash intro may be appealing the first time you see it.  The second, third, and four hundredth times, not so much.  So what appears to be a new "skip intro" button from Google is an interesting gift.

read more


Bibliography: Making the Switch from Print to Online: Why, When and How?

Making the Switch from Print to Online: Why, When and How? by Ho, Adrian K. and Toth, Joe (2008) This bibliography was created for an ALCTS Collection Management & Development Section program at the 2008 American Library Association Annual Conference. It annotates selected articles published from Jan. 2006 through April 2008. Source: DLIST (Read on Source)


3 Simple Steps for Driving Your Audience to Action

3 Simple Steps for Driving Your Audience to Action As mentioned recently here on Copyblogger, Narcissus is alive and well, even as his marketing campaigns die of thirst. It’s too common a problem. One of my all-time favorite quotes came from Dennis Miller: ?You see? I run everything through this narcissistic little prism and ask ?how does this affect ME??? While this approach is [. (Read on Source)


The 3G iPhone Suits Up for Work

A year after becoming the stylish pocket PC for consumers, the iPhone is ready to go to work. The latest version of the mobile device, which goes on sale Friday, will take advantage of a faster wireless network -- dubbed 3G for third-generation -- making it more attractive for business use by improving what many consider to be the current version's key flaw -- its slow Web access.


Verizon Wireless agrees to pay $21 million over termination fees

Verizon Wireless is the first major carrier to settle a case with customers who claim the company's early termination fees are excessive and unfair.


Indecency penalty against CBS is rejected

An appeals court said the Federal Communications Commission should not have held CBS responsible for the brief exposure of Janet Jackson's breast during the Super Bowl halftime show in 2004.


del.icio.us goes through overhaul, domain change

Social bookmarking site Delicious on Thursday announced it has refined its services greatly, while also adding a new domain name through which the site can be reached, Delicious.com. According to a post on Delicious' blog, the various refinements have allowed the company to enhance speed, search capability, and overall layout of the site. The domai...


Building a Diskless Computer Network On Ubuntu 8.04

BeginLinux: "Linux Terminal Server Project (LTSP) provides a way for you to build a server and then add diskless computers to the server thus creating a huge savings for an organization. To the user, they will not recognize that the computer they are at is without a hard drive. They typically notice the fast speed at which the workstation runs and the features that are available."


Buy evidence of my husband's adultery on eBay (Reuters)

Reuters - An Australian woman has taken revenge on her cheating husband by putting a photograph of his lover's underpants up for sale on the auction site eBay.


FDA's Fraud Finding In Study Means Claims Against Company Are Not Preempted, Court Says

PHILADELPHIA - A plaintiff's claims against a contract research organization are not preempted because the Food and Drug Administration found that the company engaged in fraudulent reporting of clinical study data, a Pennsylvania federal judge said Oct. 25 in denying summary judgment (Eileen Wawrzynek, et al. v. Statprobe, Inc., et al., No. 05-1342, E.D. Pa.). Full story on lexis.com


Casting Couch: Affleck Chasing Ambulances (E! Online)

Casting Couch: Affleck Chasing Ambulances(E! Online)E! Online - The prospect of another mouth to feed has Ben Affleck heading back to work.



Jon Stewart is brilliant

Watch him demolish the Republicans with their own hypocritical words. Read the comments on this post... (Read on Source)


Who Wants to Buy an Android?

After years of development, Google's first Android-powered phone is finally here -- well, almost. T-Mobile is expected to unveil the HTC Dream at a closed media event Sept. 23, with the device rumored to hit store shelves by mid-October. The question, then, is whether the Dream -- and the Android concept on the whole -- can actually deliver.


Network Management: Tips for Managing Costs

... branch office could require replication of the security infrastructure through technology like a point-to-point VPN connection. The network may need to add a multiprotocol labeling service (MPLS) to provide ...


Captive Breeding Introduced Infectious Disease To Mallorcan Amphibians

A potentially deadly fungus that can kill frogs and toads was inadvertently introduced into Mallorca by a captive breeding program that was reintroducing a rare species of toad into the wild, according to a new study in the journal Current Biology.


SF Tidbits for

SF Tidbits for John Picacio shares the awesome triptych he did for Jeffrey Ford's Well Built City trilogy. I saw the original shadowbox piece and it was endlessly fascinating. Interviews and Profiles: @SciFi Wire: Jonathan Carroll ( The Ghost in Love ). @Neth Space: Matthew Stover ( Caine Black Knife ). @TV Guide: J.J. Abrams . "Can Star Trek Make Optimism ... (Read on Source)


XO Communications Marks 15,000 Business VoIP Customers

... enhanced XO IP Flex with new features including higher-bandwidth options, integration with XO's MPLS IP-VPN service, adding Unified Communications capabilities with XO Anywhere, and offering the industry's first simplified, ...


Teach an Old Shell New Tricks With BashDiff

Linux.com: "BashDiff is a patch for the bash shell that can do an amazing number of things. It extends existing bash features, brings a few of awk's tricks into the shell itself, exposes some common C functions to bash shell programming, adds an exception mechanism, provides features of functional programming such as list comprehension and the map function, lets you talk with GTK+2 and databases, and even adds a Web server right into the standard bash shell."


US Economy Contracts Most Since the 2001 Recession (Update1) - Bloomberg


Yahoo

US Economy Contracts Most Since the 2001 Recession (Update1)
Bloomberg - 42 minutes ago
By Shobhana Chandra Oct. 30 (Bloomberg) -- The economy suffered its biggest decline since 2001 in the third quarter, ushering in what may be worst recession in a quarter century and boosting the chances of Barack Obama and his fellow Democrats in next ...
Economy Shrinks on Weak Spending Wall Street Journal
More pain: Economy shrinks CNNMoney.com
Reuters - International Herald Tribune - New York Times - TheStreet.com
all 317 news articles


First Images of Asteroid 2008 TC3 Impact Aftermath

First Images of Asteroid 2008 TC3 Impact Aftermath A month after asteroid 2008 TC3 hit the Earth's atmosphere, the first ground-based image of the event has surfaced on the Internet. Admittedly, it's not the fireball everyone has been waiting to see, but it is visual evidence that something hit us above Sudan on October 7th. The image above was taken from a frame [...] (Read on Source)