HP intros SimpleSave external drive for 'hands-free' PC backup


Offered in capacities up to 2 TB, HP's new SimpleSave External Hard Drive spares users from installing backup software. The four gadgets in the line-up each come with software that runs right off the drive, stated Mark Ostendorf, HP's business development manager for PC accessories, in a meeting with Betanews at Pepcom's Digital Experience press event in New York City.
When you plug the drive into a PC's USB port, SimpleSave starts to back up your data automatically. Following the first back-up, the gizmo automatically checks for file changes each time the PC is idle for five minutes, also performing incremental backups.
First US peek at HTC Hero phone with Sense interface


HTC's Hero, finally formally introduced in London on Wednesday after months of rumors, was shown at Pepcom's Digital Experience event in New York City earlier this week, and Betanews got a peek.
Reps in the HTC booth focused on the phone's widget-based interface, known as HTC Sense. Up to now, HTC's G1 has been the only Android phone in commercial use. But HTC is also working on differentiating its Android devices from others that will spring up in the future, according to a rep.
HP, Lenovo lead off with the first free Windows 7 upgrades


Yesterday, Microsoft announced it was giving PC manufacturers the option to offer buyers of new PCs with Windows Vista pre-installed, starting today, free upgrades to Windows 7 on October 22. Betanews asked the big five PC manufacturers directly, will you be offering free upgrades? This morning, global #1 manufacturer Hewlett-Packard is the first to respond with an emphatic "yes."
"The program will enable customers who purchase qualifying HP PCs to enjoy the benefits of a new Windows-based PC immediately, and receive a free upgrade to Windows 7 when it becomes available in October," reads HP's statement to Betanews. "Following general availability of Windows 7 on October 22, qualifying customers will receive the Windows 7 upgrade and an upgrade utility disk with a step-by-step guide for installation at their convenience."
What's Next: Britain rises up against cyber-terrorism, slowly


On a difficult day for many of us to be talking about high technology and protocols and gadgets, when we'd rather be singing and remembering how lucky we are to be alive and to have friends and people we love, Betanews would like to take a moment -- just one moment -- to ask for blessings for the memory of a lady who used her public platform to make one of the first true public demonstrations that domestic abuse is wrong, and that anyone being abused has the right to fight back, and fight hard. And for giving us the honor of helping her fight her last battle in spirit. Thank you, Farrah. We appreciate you.
The UK's new cyber-terrorism crackdown heads up What's Next this morning, but first, a look at the last 24 hours...
Gen-X childhood icons go boom, take the Internet with them


TV critic Alan Sepinwall asked Thursday afternoon, of no one in particular on Twitter, if this was the biggest double-celebrity-death day since Jim Henson and Sammy Davis Jr. both exited (May 16, 1990). And for a generation it sure felt like the world, or one's youth anyway, was coming to an end.
Or one's Internet connection, as the relatively muted testimonials to Farrah Fawcett Thursday morning gave way to moment-by-moment coverage of Michael Jackson's end in the afternoon -- from the photos a tourist on a tour bus outside Mr. Jackson's rental home snapped of the ambulance call to the avalanche of tweets from more or less everyone with ears as events unfolded. And the publication of record this time was TMZ.com -- an appropriate end, perhaps, for an artist who lived his life not just in the tabloids but in some fantasy of The Future, a place we suspect doesn't have newspapers.
Senate confirms Genachowski for FCC chair


It took almost half a year to get it done, but the Senate has confirmed the appointment of Julius Genachowski as the next head of the Federal Communications Commission. The Senate also confirmed Robert McDowell, the sole Republican member among those currently seated, to his second five-year term.
The FCC has been operating shorthanded for quite some time, with just three seated for five positions on the bipartisan-by-law commission. President Obama on Thursday nominated two candidates for those slots. For the remaining Republican position, the White House named Meredith Atwell Baker, who has served previously in the Commerce Department's National Telecommunications and Information Administration, or NTIA -- the very organization in charge of distributing those $40 upgrade coupons for consumers needing help with the digital-TV switch. Mignon Clyburn has been nominated for the Democratic position. A former newspaper editor and publisher, Ms. Clyburn is a longtime member of South Carolina's Public Service Commission. She is the daughter of Rep. James Clyburn.
Microsoft updates its controversial Firefox plug-in for .NET 3.5


If you're wondering what Microsoft is doing producing a plug-in for Mozilla Firefox, then perhaps you haven't heard the complaints from Firefox users who are not only wondering how that Microsoft plug-in got there, but are puzzled as to how to get rid of it. Today, Firefox users are seeing an update for that plug-in in their Automatic Updates for Windows XP, Vista, and Windows 7 RC.
Whenever Microsoft automatically installs a service with an Orwellian sounding title, automatically folks become skeptical. In this case, the .NET Framework Assistant is a device that allows a kind of security pre-authorization feature that Microsoft tried to make prettier with the marketing name ClickOnce -- which works in Internet Explorer -- to extend to Firefox.
Clearwire snags WiMAX leftovers


WiMAX operator Clearwire
has acquired the remaining WiMAX licenses from Oneida Communications for an undisclosed amount. Last year, Oneida sold the majority of its licenses to Sprint, but held onto an unspecified number, which now belong to Clearwire. The company did not divulge how many licenses each company obtained or which markets will benefit from the acquisitions.
In 2005, Oneida Communications Group was formed with the purposes of acquiring licenses in the 2.5 GHz spectrum, known as Broadband Radio Service (BRS) licenses, which are crucial to the implementation of point to multi-point WiMAX networks. That spectrum range has been found ideal for high-bandwidth, non-line of sight installations, and has been dominated by Sprint and Clearwire.
There's now a Firefox 3.5 Release Candidate 3


Download Mozilla Firefox 3.5 Release Candidate 3 for Windows from Fileforum now.
Early Betanews tests indicate some noticeable changes in the performance profile of a Release Candidate for Mozilla Firefox 3.5 that was posted to the organization's servers this morning. Overall, performance has improved by 1.7% in RC3 over RC2, released Monday, although underneath the surface, there appear to be some big gains and some setbacks.
A wish list for Office 2010

Swedish court declares Pirate Bay judge unbiased


Stockholm District Court Judge Tomas Norström, whose impartiality was called into question after his guilty judgment in the Pirate Bay trial, has been found bias-free by Swedish courts.
Judge Norström is a member of two Swedish copyright reform groups, the SFU and the SFIR, which include some highly outspoken members of the Anti-Piracy Bureau and IFPI. It was thought Norström's link to these individuals could be grounds for a bias against the Pirate Bay.
Lenovo launches ThinkPad T400s with a thinner design, new keyboard


CORRECTION FROM THE M.E.: Here's a correction Betanews is happy to make. Although information Angela Gunn and I received last month appeared to verify that the big blue ThinkVantage button that was one of IBM's original signature ThinkPad features would be discontinued starting with the T400s unveiled earlier this week, Betanews was told by Lenovo today that not only does the T400s include the ThinkVantage button, but that the feature is not being discontinued after all.
What's more, the feature will do what it has done in the past, including give users the ability to recover their systems starting with the single button click. Though there will be changes to the feature over time, Betanews was told that the plan now is for those changes not to be nearly as drastic as had been indicated last month.
Windows 7: Will you pay to upgrade or won't you?
Upgrade to Apple TV adds gestural control


Yesterday, Apple began to push out the Apple TV version 2.4 software update, which adds several usability improvements, including one tied into the iPhone 3.0 software update.
It's by no means a monumental update, and its minor improvements now allow users to view movies by genre, title, or unwatched status. TV shows and podcasts may also now be viewed according to date, show title, or unwatched status. A Flickr tag search has also been added, which allows the user to find new photos or use them as Apple TV screensavers.
Semanti Firefox plug-in ties up with Facebook


Semanti, formerly known as Semantifind, is a Firefox 3 plug-in that works with a user's chosen search engine to assign context to queries, preview results in line, save good search results, and provide suggestions derived from community use.
This week, Semanti v. 2.0 was released, with features that now include "Social Search," or search results based upon your Facebook friends' search behavior. For example, when Semanti provides an answer to your query that you find particularly effective, you can save that result so that when your Facebook friends search for the same terms, the results that you approved of appear as the top answers to their query. It's something like "starring" the highest quality answer so your friends don't waste time poking around less pertinent results.
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