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Contributed by Taimur Asad 5 hours ago · There are 3 comments

When you start typing in the search bar at the top right of your homepage, you’ll notice a ‘Search the Web’ option. This is a very clever placement for Live Search, and I expect this to work in favor for Microsoft’s search efforts. The search results are displayed in native Facebook style search results. Related text ads for the search results are shown at the right, showing how the new layout has been thought out well for monetary benefits by Facebook. The search results are provided by Live Search but directly open the search results upon clicking. Notice there is also a link for advanced search.
The search is also accessible from the All Results page, through the Web link.
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Last comment was by thenonhacker
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Posted by Daniel Fleshbourne 11 hours ago · There are 19 comments

He advised security professionals to invest in multiple integrated technologies to cope with different types of malware, including zero-day exploits, rootkits and Trojans. But more important than the technology is an enterprise security policy, according to Kenworthy. "We vendors want to sell you lots of products, but really it's the policy that will drive good security practice in an organisation. If you don't have the policies the technology will be ill-deployed," he said
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Posted by Daniel Fleshbourne 11 hours ago · There are 6 comments

The proof of concept is a powerful demonstration of the spooky implications behind clickjacking. The vulnerability allows malicious webmasters to control the links visitors click on. Once lured to a booby-trapped page, a user may think he's clicking on a link that leads to Google - when in fact it takes him to a money transfer page, a banner ad that's part of a click-fraud scheme, or any other destination the attacker chooses.
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Posted by Daniel Fleshbourne 11 hours ago · There are 2 comments

DMFCs produce electricity from a reaction between methanol, water and air. The only byproducts are a small amount of water vapor and carbon dioxide, so DMFCs are often seen as a greener source of energy than traditional batteries. Another advantage is that they can be replenished with a new cartridge of methanol in seconds.

Google to the rescue! Google has announced "mail goggles". When you enable Mail Goggles, it will check that you're really sure you want to send that late night Friday email. And what better way to check than by making you solve a few simple math problems after you click send to verify you're in the right state of mind?
Google's idea is to prevent those embarrassing mishaps on a Friday evening after a few alcoholic beverages. Perhaps phone manufacturers could implement this too as I regularly need electronic restraint on a Friday evening from txting the wrong person at the wrong time.

AMD will form two companies, one focused on designing microprocessors and the other manufacturing them. Investment for the move is from two Abu Dhabi firms who will inject $6 billion into the two firms.
The move has been expected for weeks and will strengthen AMD's liquidity in increasingly worrying markets.
AMD will confirm the move in a press conference arranged for today at 8am EDT (1pm BST).
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Contributed by rm20010 via Victoria News on 06 October 2008 - 21:49 - updated 22 hours ago · There are 55 comments

Calling his company a dedicated customer that uses Apple hardware and software almost exclusively in its operation, Victoria School of Business and Technology vice-president Christopher Boag said he and partner Dieter Gerhard were surprised to receive a strongly worded letter with no advance warning.
"It was a total shock," he said. "It was like the small guy was kind of getting blown away and Apple was pushing hard in order to get us to (submit to their demands)."
Boag and Gerhard argue that the apple is a "traditional representation of education" and that the logo in question, which incorporates the mountain logo of a sister company and has the words VSBT in one corner, in no way can be confused with the Apple logo.
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Posted by Tom Warren via BBC on 06 October 2008 - 21:47, updated 06 October 2008 - 21:51 · There are 10 comments

The amount is approximately 1,000 staff and hundreds of temporary workers. It is also expected a number of "open" positions will now be closed.
The firm hopes to cut costs and strengthen the organisation and its competitiveness. EBay - which already owns online payment firm Paypal - has signed an agreement to buy Bill Me Later for $820m in cash and $125m in options.
"PayPal and Bill Me Later belong together," said eBay president and chief executive John Donahoe in a statement.
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Contributed by HappyAndyK on 06 October 2008 - 21:51 · There are 38 comments

Hype springs eternal. Lots of technologies, products and services don't merit the praise heaped on them. Here are 10 tech items that don't live up to their billing -- and 10 that deserve respect that they don't receive. Worth a check out.
One comparision among the many : PCWorld feels XP is overated and Vista under-rated.
"Save Windows XP! is the rallying cry of Windows users dismayed by the needless bloat of Vista. But didn't everyone have the same critique of Windows XP when it first galumphed into public view like an unsteady rubber monster?
What did Vista get right? For starters, though the User Account Control feature is like an annoying little sister who constantly pokes you, it makes Vista more secure than XP. Vista also trounces XP in handling mobile devices, networking, multimedia files and photos. On top of that, it has a cleaner, more navigable interface -- one eerily reminiscent of a certain Mac operating system."

In the Turing test a machine seeks to fool judges into believing that it could be human. The test is performed by conducting a text-based conversation on any subject. If the computer's responses are indistinguishable from those of a human, it has passed the Turing test and can be said to be "thinking".
No machine has yet passed the test devised by Turing, who helped to crack German military codes during the Second World War. But at 9am next Sunday, six computer programs - "artificial conversational entities" - will answer questions posed by human volunteers at the University of Reading in a bid to become the first recognised "thinking" machine. If any program succeeds, it is likely to be hailed as the most significant breakthrough in artificial intelligence since the IBM supercomputer Deep Blue beat world chess champion Garry Kasparov in 1997. It could also raise profound questions about whether a computer has the potential to be "conscious" - and if humans should have the 'right' to switch it off.

The application center is the same as Apple and Google's offerings, you browse, purchase, download and rate applications wirelessly.
The Application Center is set to debut with the BlackBerry Storm software version 4.7 and app data will be stored at the carriers locale meaning carriers can put the applications they like on their own store.
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Posted by Daniel Fleshbourne on 06 October 2008 - 15:01 · There are 4 comments

The report, commissioned by Fellowes for National Identity Fraud Prevention Week, found that 97 per cent of UK consumers are not completely confident that the organisations they deal with are taking adequate steps to protect their information. Worse still, 92 per cent of employees at the firms in question confessed that the identity of their customers could be stolen by a fraudster, while 75 per cent admitted that their employers could be doing more to prevent fraud.
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Posted by Daniel Fleshbourne on 06 October 2008 - 14:59 · There are 24 comments

"I was not involved in any of the operational decisions about the Windows Vista Capable program. I was not involved in establishing the requirements computers must satisfy to qualify for the Windows Vista Capable program. I was not involved in formulating any market strategy or any public messaging surrounding the Windows Vista Capable program".
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Posted by Daniel Fleshbourne on 06 October 2008 - 14:57 · There is 1 comment

Like the current model, the PRS-700 can store about 350 e-books in its internal memory and more can be kept in Memory Stick or SD Card media. Sony says the battery supports up to 7,500 pages of continuous reading. It's compatible with e-book formats including Sony's BBeB (Broadband electronic book), Microsoft Word documents, Adobe PDF and the International Digital Publishing Forum's XML-based EPUB format.
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Posted by Daniel Fleshbourne on 06 October 2008 - 14:55 · There are 2 comments

"The strategy from a product perspective is to provide the best answer the first time, everytime," Garrell said. "We want to reduce the distance between your query and the answer you want." If Ask.com can consistently provide direct answers in its search results page, Garrell believes it will grow its user base. It generally takes people 3 to 4 clicks in any search engine to get the desired information, he said.
Archived News - Overview of recent topics
- Google, Yahoo Delay Search Ad Partnership - on 06 October 2008 - 14:53 · 1 comment
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- Thunderbird 3 release has wings clipped - on 03 October 2008 - 11:49 · 20 comments
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- Vendors fixing bug that could crash Internet systems - on 03 October 2008 - 11:43 · no comments
- OpenOffice.org Grows Up - on 03 October 2008 - 11:41 · 21 comments
- Microsoft confirms Zune coming to Windows Mobile devices - on 02 October 2008 - 21:30 · 15 comments
- Neowin Forums get a Mobile skin - on 02 October 2008 - 19:01 · 168 comments
- ATI Plans Expects DirectX 11 Chips Next Year - on 02 October 2008 - 17:00 · 15 comments
- Security giants fail Virus Bulletin test - on 02 October 2008 - 16:56 · 18 comments
- Ecommerce standard tightens up wireless security - on 02 October 2008 - 16:51 · no comments
- Microsoft Settles on Sites for Search Centers in Europe - on 02 October 2008 - 16:46 · 1 comment
- Security researcher reveals iPhone design flaws - on 02 October 2008 - 16:40 · 8 comments
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