Microsoft pitches 'PACT' for managing family gaming

SVU Gamer Stereotype (via The Inquisitr

With its combined efforts in PC, console, and mobile gaming, as well as video and television, Microsoft has a serious presence in the entertainment business. And as Peter Parker's Uncle Ben said, with great power also comes great responsibility. So, Monday evening, Microsoft released a document called PACT that seeks to help parents and kids work out guidelines for entertainment consumption.

PACT is an acronym that stands for Parental Involvement, Access, Content, and Time, and parents and kids are supposed to go through the PACT document and sign off the family guidelines for conduct online and on gaming consoles. The document is meant to be a companion to Microsoft's Get Game Smart initiative for 2011, which encourages parents and kids to work together and have an open dialogue about the family's media choices.

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AT&T sued over iPhone data overbilling

AT&T globe (minus text) main story banner

A California man has sued AT&T for over billing him on data charges for his iPhone, a move that could raise new questions on the carrier's billing practices. Patrick Hendricks claims that the carrier was charging him for usage even when he wasn't using any.

Hendricks uses the $15 monthly 200MB plan, and apparently became suspicious after he was charged overage fees for using 223MB worth of data across 259 data connections. His lawyers say that their research showed that AT&T was regularly over billing customers between 7 and 14 percent over actual data usage, and in some cases as much as 300 percent.

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It's a photo finish: Android, BlackBerry and iOS are tied in US smartphone share

iPhone 4, Nexus S

Which smartphone operating system truly leads the US market. According to Nielsen, none of them. Says Don Kellogg, Nielsen's Telecom Practice Research and Insights senior manager, it's a "three-way tie" between Apple's iOS, Google Android and Research in Motion's BlackBerry OS. Oh, man, it is going to be a bad day for fanboy jockeying for position.

Nielsen strips back any potential contention about unit shipments and focuses on install base. By that measure, among US smartphone owners, 28 percent have devices with iOS and 27 percent each for Android and BlackBerry OS (data is from December 2010). But as the chart above shows, the long-term trend is revealing. Since February 2010, iOS has remained largely flat, with sine-wave like fluctuations between 26 percent and 29 percent install base share, that despite the June 2010 launch of iPhone 4. During the same time period, Android's install base steadily rose from 8 percent share. Meanwhile, BlackBerry OS has steadily declined -- from 39 percent share measured by install base.

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Network operators eye HTML5 for getting into the app store business

iTunes App Store, Android Market, and Windows Mobile Marketplace

Smartphone operating systems and their related app stores effectively cut the mobile network operator out of the value chain, but mobile browsers are giving carriers a foot in the door.

Mobile carriers continue to attempt their own branded app stores to break into the app store goldrush. Just today, Japanese network operator NEC Biglobe launched Andronavi in the United States, saying that it's a better app store than Google's Android Market because it provides reviews and detailed information specifically from the Japanese audience.

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Tip: Take Windows back in time without System Restore

Comodo Time Machine

System Restore is good when you're in a tight spot, allowing you to roll back your computer's key programs and system files to earlier versions in an attempt to fix a problem. But it's not foolproof, and because it doesn't roll back everything, it can't be relied on to always solve your problems.

Comodo Time Machine offers a free, all-encompassing alternative: instead of just rolling back certain files, it allows you to roll back all the files on your Windows drive, sending you almost literally back in time to the point where your chosen snapshot was taken. It's not just good for fixing problems (and we include virus infections in that), it's also great for those who have to install lots of software on their PC for testing purposes, helping keep the PC running without the need for a regular Windows reinstall every six months or so.

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How long before Apple stops selling desktop Macintosh?

iMac

It's a reasonable question to ask, now that, after today, Apple will no longer sell Xserve rack-mount servers. Apple is a far different company in 2011 than it was when Xserve launched about nine years ago. Xserve's ending foreshadows another: The sun setting on immobile Macintosh. Desktop be gone.

During Apple's fiscal 2011 first quarter, iOS devices accounted for about two-thirds of revenue. In the same quarter six years earlier Macs accounted for 45 percent of Apple revenue. In Q1 2007: 34 percent. A year ago: 28 percent. Q1 2011: 20 percent. The Macintosh isn't as important to Apple's bottom line as it once was.

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Apple's server biz relegated to 'prosumer' status with Xserve's end

Mac mini

Today is the last day for Xserve, Apple's nine-year old line of rackmount servers designed for enterprise use.

As the company announced last November, no orders for the server hardware will be accepted beyond January 31.

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Strategy Analytics' Apple and Samsung market share analysis is fair

Galaxy Tab and iPad

Must everything be partisan? In the US Congress, Democrats and Republicans spilt over nearly every issue. Today's strangest debate isn't political, but analytical -- sides supporting or opposing Apple and bloggers and journalists parlaying games of oneupmanship. It's all about how much tablet market share Samsung snatched from Apple during calendar fourth quarter, if any. The debate is simply pointless.

Earlier today, Bloomberg reported on data from Strategy Analytics stating that Android tablets captured 22 percent market share in Q4, based on 2.1 million shipments, essentially punching market leader iPad smack in the touchscreen. By Strategy Analytics' reckoning, iPad's market share dropped from 95 percent to 75 percent in a single quarter.

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Splashtop Remote Desktop for iPad offers basic control of your PC

Splashtop Remote Desktop for iPad

Last week, we looked at LogMeIn Ignition, just one of an increasing number of remote access tools available for iOS. Another remote access app that has received a great deal of attention recently is Splashtop Remote Desktop for iPad; we thought we would take a look at the app to see how the two compare. Just as with LogMeIn Ignition, Splashtop Remote Desktop for iPad can be used to control your PC or Mac from your iPad once the necessary desktop software has been installed.

From a functionality point of view, there is little difference between the two apps. Configuration is kept to a minimum thanks to the fact that computers that are on the same network as an iPad running Splashtop Remote Desktop are automatically detected. Providing the desktop software is installed, you need simply enter the password that was configured during the initial setup and a connection can be immediately established.

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Jalbum 9.0 gets low-key release

Jalbum

An application's move to a whole new version number is normally accompanied by much publicity, as the authors boast about the many exciting new features they've included. Popular photo sharing package Jalbum 9.0 appears to be a rare exception, though, with the release slipping out so quietly that it didn't even rate a mention on the company blog.

That's a pity, because while this isn't as nearly as revolutionary an update as the move to Jalbum 8.0, the latest version does include some useful enhancements that will make a real difference to anyone who uses the program.

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Tip: Clone or rescue your hard drive with HDClone 4 Free Edition

HDClone

Here's the rub: you want to upgrade your hard drive to a bigger model, but you don't want to go through the rigmarole of setting everything up from scratch on your new drive. Or maybe you've suddenly found that Windows has badly corrupted and will no longer load -- your data is safe on the drive, but inaccessible. What you need to do is back up the drive somewhere safe, then restore Windows before recovering your precious data.

In both scenarios, there are plenty of tools, many of them free like Macrium Reflect Free, for disk cloning and backup purposes. Unfortunately, they all work from within Windows, so what to do? Thankfully, there's a free solution that can be run directly from a bootable CD in the form of HDClone 4 Free Edition.

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avast! Free 6 beta adds features from commercial version

avast Free

Free antivirus tools can occasionally be short on features, a little lacking in comparison to their commercial brothers. Avast! has always been an exception, though, and the first public beta of avast! Free 6 extends the program even further with a host of useful capabilities.

The new AutoSandbox, for instance, can automatically detect a suspicious program as it's launched, and execute it in the avast! sandbox, an isolated environment where there's little chance that it can infect or damage your PC.

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Ericsson sets MC-HSPA speed record with prototype device

Ericsson

Swedish telecommunications hardware maker Ericsson on Monday announced it had set the world record for multi-carrier HSPA downlink speeds using a prototype consumer device and standard commercial network equipment. The record-setting rig achieved 168 Mbps on the downlink and 24 Mbps on the uplink.

Multi-Carrier HSPA is a technology still quite a long way from being available to consumers. It is not yet included in the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) specification for High Speed Packet Access, and only a select few carriers worldwide even offer support for its precursor, dual-carrier HSPA, the evolution of the wireless technology included in 3GPP release 8 (standardized in 2008.)

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Canalys: Android tops Symbian in smartphone shipments -- twice as many units as iPhone

Android

Android's ascendency to smartphone supremacy hit a new high in fourth quarter 2010, according to research firm Canalys. Global Android smartphone shipments topped Nokia Symbian-based handsets -- 32.9 million to 31 million, respectively -- or twice iPhone (16.2 million). By another accounting, including OMS and Tapas platforms, Google ranked higher still: 33.3 million units.

Canalys' shipment data means Google is activating more than the previously disclosed 300,000 Android handsets per day. The number exceeds 350,000. During Q4, just two manufacturers, HTC and Samsung, accounted for 45 percent of "Google OS-based handset shipments," which includes OMS and Tapas.

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Intel allies with ARM in new Mobile Communications business

Intel logo (200 px)

On Monday, Intel Corp announced it had completed the $1.4 Billion acquisition of Infineon AG's Wireless Solution business (WLS), to finally tie baseband processors into the company's CPU solutions. The WLS unit will be part of the new Intel Mobile Communications group, a standalone business unit within Intel's Architecture Group.

With the new portfolio of 2G, 3G and LTE baseband products acquired from WLS, Intel is going to move forward with a business to "serve a broader array of customers and market segments."

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