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Entries for the ‘1’ Category

Five free ways to grow your most important organ

Here’s a question for all our elderly readers: Do any of you remember the primitive era affectionately called 1995, and hearing your college professors speak hopefully (or possibly lament) that soon all the information and media ever created would be up on this web thing and easily accessible and available free of charge? Do you [...]

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Coccinella - the whiteboard thrill just doesn’t last

Despite its seriously flawed name, Coccinella, the open source IM client, has some interesting features that might make you do a double take. The idea of chatting and having the ability to draw on a whiteboard, as well as play chess during a chat session sounds like fun, so I decided to give it a [...]

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Regator takes a bite out of the blogoshpere

There are certainly plenty of blog directories and Digg type websites that tell you what the most popular or “best” news of the day is. Regator wants to join the fray.
Regator is a combination of a lot of different methods of news aggregation. Actual people do a lot of the work, reading through and [...]

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CCC’s “Freedom Stick” circumvents China’s firewall, just in time for The Games

Rumor has it that a large quantity of genetically-superior human beings are amassing in Beijing at the moment and attempting to squeeze into spandex-like outfits for your entertainment. Those interested in watching such tight-outfitted goings on are going to find themselves faced with even tighter internet restrictions when they get back to their hotel room [...]

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Quicksilver-like chosr is made for web browsing

chosr is a web based bookmarking and productivity tool. It uses a Quicksilver type interface and apparently, if you’re a Quicksilver user it’s very intuitive. If, like me, you’re not, it takes a little bit to get the hang of the interface. (More about Quicksilver).
The idea is that basic keystrokes move you through a three [...]

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Switched On: WHDI seeks to unplug hi-def

Each week Ross Rubin contributes Switched On, a column about technology, multimedia, and digital entertainment.

The past few years have seen a wide range of wireless technologies proposed to substitute for the now nearly ubiquitous (at least in terms of new HDTVs) HDMI connectors, but the dust is just starting to settle. Some proposals involve squeezing [...]

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Sitemeter bug takes down thousands of web sites (for Internet Explorer users)

Thousands of web sites are currently inaccessible to Internet Explorer 5.5, 6, and 7 users thanks to a new Sitemeter bug. Sitemeter is a free web analytics service used by many popular blogs and web sites including Lifehacker, Gizmodo, and Consumerist. They all appear to be affected as of this morning. It’s worth noting that [...]

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Switched On: WHDI seeks to unplug hi-def

Each week Ross Rubin contributes Switched On, a column about technology, multimedia, and digital entertainment.

The past few years have seen a wide range of wireless technologies proposed to substitute for the now nearly ubiquitous (at least in terms of new HDTVs) HDMI connectors, but the dust is just starting to settle. Some proposals involve squeezing [...]

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Does software piracy hurt the open source community?

Louis Suarez-Potts, the community manager for the open-source Open Office project, says software piracy also hurts the open-source community, and though it can be argued that open-source is bad for innovation, most of us love the open source community. So does the occasional pirated piece of software really hurt our beloved open source projects?
Suarez-Potts thinks [...]

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Microsoft’s Midori — a future without Windows

According to a report, Microsoft isn’t just looking at the next version of Windows (no, not Mojave) for future OS possibilities, but is looking beyond the Windows architecture altogether with a project known as Midori. The new OS is still in the “incubation” phase (which puts it slightly closer to market than R&D projects), but [...]

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