Share images online with Hyperdesktop

Hyperdesktop

Whether you want to post a picture on a web forum, show a diagram to work colleagues, or just let family and friends everywhere see your holiday snaps, an online image sharing service can help.

And it doesn't have to take long to set up. In fact, if you download and run Hyperdesktop then it won't take any time at all, as the program will upload your screen grabs or images to the popular Imgur service without requiring any other configuration whatsoever.

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Apple rolls out iOS 4.3 for iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, updates Apple TV

Apple Logo

As expected, Apple's mobile operating system received an update on Wednesday, which includes a faster Safari mobile browser thanks to an upgraded Nitro JavaScript engine; iTunes Home Sharing; enhancements to AirPlay; the ability to use the iPad side switch to either lock screen rotation or mute the audio; and the Personal Hotspot for iPhone 4.

Apple first announced these features when it introduced the iPad 2 last week, but most of the new functions were made public when the CDMA iPhone 4 launched back in January.

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Government program puts tablets, netbooks in hands of 35,000 kids

FCC Logo

Wednesday, the FCC announced the 20 E-rate schools that will be included in the next round of "Learning on the Go" pilot programs, where public schools test how mobile wireless devices such as tablets and notebooks with mobile broadband can be employed inside and outside the classroom.

A large part of the Federal Communications Commission's National Broadband Plan is dedicated to using improved broadband connectivity to improve American education, updating the Industrial Age public school system to one suited for the Information Age. Since technology has already moved into the wireless age, the Commission began testing "Learning On-the-Go" situations last year, exploring how the E-rate program can help schools and libraries offer off-premises wireless access to the Internet. 

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Chrome 10 seeds Google's Cloud OS ambitions

Cloud App

Google is preparing anyone using Chrome 10, which released yesterday, for launch of Chrome OS. The new standalone browser has reached feature parity -- for business, consumer or IT pro evaluator users, anyway -- with Chrome OS browser front-end running on Google Cr-48 laptops. Chrome 10 is a much bigger browser release than even Google's boasting -- "speedier, simpler, safer" -- lets on. Google is beginning its biggest push yet to the cloud, and Chrome OS is quickly, and I do mean quickly, approaching v1 release. Apple and Microsoft had best watch out, because among major platform developers they have the most to lose should Google's cloud ambitions succeed.

Chrome 10's standout features, at least for cloud computing, all begin with "s": sandbox, search, services, simplicity, security, settings, speed, stability and synchronization. Many of these attributes interrelate or aren't new to this browser release -- they're improved for cloud readiness.

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HP will put WebOS on every computer it sells by 2012

HP logo

In a bold move likely aimed at bolstering its software business, HP CEO Leo Apotheker revealed in an interview with BusinessWeek published Wednesday that its WebOS operating system will make it on to every HP PC by 2012. Apotheker's comments confirm earlier ones made at the launch of the TouchPad last month.

At the time, the company said it planned to expand WebOS beyond its current home on tablet and smartphone devices. The move would signal a shift in strategy for HP, which currently only sees about two percent of revenues come from software. Compare this to its hardware business, which makes up about 70 percent of all sales.

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Microsoft hints at Internet Explorer 10 previews for MIX11 in April

IE9 Modified Logo

Microsoft on Wednesday confirmed that it will be releasing the complete build of Internet Explorer 9 on Monday, March 14 at 9pm Pacific (Midnight EST), using the South by Southwest Festival as a platform for the browser's worldwide introduction.

Shortly after the first release candidate of Microsoft's new browser came out on February 10th, the company sent out invitations to a SXSW event on March 14th, inviting attendees to "come celebrate the beauty of the Web." Naturally, this caused everyone to predict the 14th would be the browser's launch date.

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Google releases stable build of Chrome 10 browser

Google Chrome logo (200 px)

In mid-February, Google released the first public beta of Chrome 10, which showed off the browser's updated V8 JavaScript engine known as "Crankshaft," it revised the settings interface, and a handful of other features. Tuesday, Google released the first stable version of Chrome 10.

"With today's stable release, even your most complex web apps will run more quickly and responsively in the browser. (For the curious, this boost corresponds to a 66% improvement in JavaScript performance on the V8 benchmark suite,)" Google software engineer Tim Steele said today.

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Are mobile developers violating open-source licenses?

iPhone 4, Nexus S

Yes. That's the conclusion OpenLogic reached after scanning 635 representative popular paid and free mobile applications, 66 of which contained open-source code. Among them, 71 percent of Android and iOS apps failed to meet open-source license requirements, by varying degrees. The most egregious violators placed copyrights where they shouldn't be. But the most surprising results came from Android apps, where GPL/LGPL license compliance was 0 percent. You're not misreading -- 0 percent.

Kim Weins, OpenLogic senior vice president of products and marketing, is presenting the results later this afternoon at AnDevCon -- the Android Developer Conference -- in San Francisco. OpenLogic evaluated compliance with GPL/LGPL and Apache open-source licenses, using four, basic criteria. For GPL/LGPL: "provide source code or an offer to get the source code" and "provide a copy of the license." For Apache: "provide a copy of the licenses" and "provide notices/attributions."

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Opera's device-agnostic app store could have widest reach of all

opera mobile store

Opera Software on Tuesday launched its browser-based app store which carries applications for all of the mobile platforms that Opera Mobile and Mini support, with the exception of Apple's iOS.

Mobilestore.opera.com was built on Appia's white-label app store plaform (formerly known as PocketGear) and can be accessed by any browser on any platform.

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Adobe releases Flash-to-HTML5 conversion tool to developers

Adobe

Some may see it as capitulation to Apple's longstanding position on Flash, others as acceptance of trends in digital media. Either way, Adobe has apparently decided to insulate itself from the threat of HTML5 by releasing a Flash-to-HTML5 converter codenamed "Wallaby." The free application is built on its Adobe AIR platform.

Adobe says that the application will be able to convert most Flash files by simply dragging and dropping into the Wallaby interface. The release of the tool is especially significant for iOS users -- meaning developers will now have an easier way of making their Flash sites compatible with the iPhone and iPad devices.

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Google Instant Preview comes to Android 2.2 and iOS 4+

Google Instant Preview mobile

Last year, Google unveiled Instant Preview a feature which lets users view a full-page preview of search results without actually navigating away from Google's results page. Today, Google has made this feature available on mobile devices running Android 2.2+ and iOS 4.0+.

Instant Preview pops up a thumbnail view of search results on the main Google results page. It works quite well in full-sized desktop browser situations, but would not work on screens between 3.5" and 4" in size.

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Facebook moves into movie rentals with Warner Bros. deal

Facebook main story banner

In a move that highlights Facebook's ever increasing presence in our daily digital lives, the social networking site announced with Warner Bros. that it would begin offering streaming movie rentals. The first movie to be offered would be The Dark Knight, available to those who liked the movie's page.

The title would be available for 30 Facebook credits or $3 USD, and the movie would be available for immediate viewing following purchase. Warner said that it plans to offer additional titles in the coming months, although it did not specify which movies would be sold.

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Signatures by finger on touchscreen: still not carved in stone

A live demonstration of sensitivity to three hands at once, from Synaptics' multitouch demo.

Have you noticed the paper signature has all but disappeared from transactions where goods and money are exchanged? In common day-to-day commerce, you're far more likely to sign your name on a credit card terminal's touchscreen than to put a pen down on an actual slip of paper. Likewise, if you deal in the transport and exchange of packages or heavy shipments of materials and supplies, you're increasingly likely to apply your signature only to digital signature capture pads.

Yet when it comes to legally binding contracts, similar practices have not become nearly as common. As a member of the press, I frequently get emailed nondisclosure forms or loaner agreement forms which I have to print out and physically sign, and then either fax, or re-scan and return, despite the fact that I have five touchscreen devices at my disposal at any given time, and could easily apply a digital signature.

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WinRAR 4.0 improves decompression performance by 30%

WinRAR

After four months of intensive testing, WinRAR 4.00 finally gets to drop the "beta" tag, with its first full public release appearing today.

The new build benefits from significantly improved RAR decompression speeds, although this does depend on data type. Text unpacking is unchanged, but more complex file types will see decompression performance improve by up to 30 percent.

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CyberDuck quacks its way from Macintosh to Windows

CyberDuck

David Kocher has announced the final release of CyberDuck 4.0 for Mac and Windows. CyberDuck is a FTP client that is also capable of providing access to various cloud-based storage providers, including Google Docs, Amazon S3, WebDAV and Windows Azure (but not Windows Live SkyDrive) through a desktop application.

Version 4.0 represents the first official release for Windows users -- the version number has jumped straight to 4.0 to provide synchronicity with the Mac client, which was developed first.

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