Confirmed: Time Warner Cable users impacted by DDoS attack

Time Warner Cable logo (symbol only, square)

When users of Time Warner Cable systems report issues concerning slow broadband performance affecting a wide region, they've been happy to see prompt responses from JeffTWC -- one Jeff Simmermon, who's the company's New York-based Director of Digital Communication. In recent days, though, Simmermon's Twitter feed has been exploding with complaints.

As it turned out, there's a serious reason for concern, as Simmermon explained in a longer-than-Twitter post late yesterday: Time Warner Cable systems are the apparent target of an orchestrated denial-of-service attack.

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Facebook's new terms of service: Direct Democracy 2.0

Facebook

In light of Facebook's recent Terms of Use conflicts, users' pages are now stamped with a message linked to a blog post from founder Mark Zuckerberg announcing suggested changes to how Facebook may be governed in the future.

Two documents, called "Facebook Principles" and "Statement of Rights and Responsibilities" have been posted for user review and comment. These will not go into effect until they have been voted upon and changed by the users. The comment period closes at 12:01 am Pacific Time on March 29.

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Bartz wields Yahoo's terrible swift sword, Jorgensen falls

Carol Bartz, the Autodesk CEO widely considered to be the next head of Yahoo

Yahoo CFO Blake Jorgensen is out and the much-rumored reorganization is on as CEO Carol Bartz blows up the "notorious silos" that have left the company sluggish in recent years, and makes visible moves to renew the company's consumer focus.

Current CTO Ari Balough will now hold sole managerial responsibility for all of Yahoo's technology and products. The company will seek a new CFO, and Jorgensen will fill in during that period.

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Nintendo to replace Wii classic controllers that triggered patent suit

Wii Classic Controller Pro

Last May, Texas company Anascape won $21 million from Nintendo in a patent infringement suit regarding the video game giant's "classic controller" for the Wii. The analog stick architecture of a number of Nintendo's controllers infringed on a patent held by Anascape, and the future of the Wii classic controller became uncertain.

Predictably, sales of the controller saw a brief 207% explosion after the ruling.

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Where have you gone, Joe Nacchio? (Jail, possibly.)

Former Qwest executive Joe Nacchio

The Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals on Wednesday reinstated former Qwest CEO Joe Nacchio's 19 insider-trading convictions. He's appealing the 5-4 decision to the Supreme Court, but unless the Supremes grant a stay within the next couple of weeks, Nacchio's on his way to federal prison.

The appellate court ruled that the judge in Nacchio's trial, US District Judge Edward Nottingham, was within bounds when he excluded a particular defense witness. It sent the case, its six-year sentence and its $52 million forfeiture back to a three-judge panel for review, but it also chucked an earlier ruling that Nacchio could be free on bail during the the appeals process and lifted a stay on his prison stint.

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Dell Studio XPS 435 goes up for sale

Dell XPS 435 internals

Dell's newest performance desktop is now available for purchase online. Geared toward the "power user," the XPS 435 has six DIMM slots, and three drive bays for a maximum potential of 24 GB of DDR3 1066 MHz Tri-Channel memory, and 4.5 TB of storage.

The XPS 435 is powered by Intel Core i7 processors -- for the base configuration priced at $1,099, a 2.66 GHz i7-920. For an additional $470, that can be upgraded to the i7-940 that runs at 2.93GHz. The top speed i7 processor available in the XPS 435 is the 965 which hums at 3.2 GHz but tacks on an additional $1,170 to the overall cost.

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Can Lenovo afford to take the Dell route for product support?

Lenovo

Just like every other major player in the PC industry these days, Lenovo is having to rethink the way it has already rethought its short-term business plan. After already having shuffled its executive ranks earlier this month, the company's reassigned CEO Yang Yuanqing announced yesterday an additional 450 job cuts, in addition to the 2,500 the company already decided to make, with the new cuts affecting workers in Lenovo's native China.

But the part of Yang's message that rang the loudest bell yesterday was this: "While our business in China remains very strong, many of our global support functions have employees based in China," an indication that the latest round of additional cuts will impact Lenovo's product support team first.

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Digital Music Forum: Age matters, but how much?

"album view" from Internet radio stations are NOT blocked in screengrabs

According to conventional wisdom, teens are the ones actively downloading all the hot new tunes from the Internet on to their iPods. Baby Boomers, on the other hand, hit the shopping mall once or twice a year to lazily fill in missing pieces in their personal CD collections of Golden Oldies.

In reality, though, a lot of under-20-year-olds are scouring the Web for information on the Beatles, while their parents trade songs with their own peers on Facebook or MySpace, according to participants in this week's Digital Music Forum in New York City.

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Asus Eee drops $100 in price

Asus eee 900

Asus ushered in the netbook craze with its Eee PC in 2007 by hitting a sweet spot in price, features, and aesthetic appeal. When all of those aspects are in harmony, and the timing is right, the overall value of the product soars. We could be seeing a jump in value right now.

The 8.9" solid state, Linux-driven, Eee PC 901is being sold with a $100 rebate from Asus until March 8. It is equipped with a 1.6GHz Intel Atom N270, 1GB of Ram, 20GB of solid state memory, a 6-cell battery that promises up to 6 hours of use, and the Xandros Linux operating system.

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Microsoft sues TomTom over Linux kernel

MS Linux

This week, Microsoft issued a copyright infringement suit in US district court and with the US International Trade Commission against Dutch PND maker TomTom, claiming the company has violated eight of Microsoft's patents.

From Microsoft's filing with the USITC, the company says, "The portable navigation computing devices in question run a version of the Linux operating system, which is a general purpose operating system capable of supporting a wide variety of software applications. For example, the Linux operating system on the portable navigation computing devices executes a navigation application that uses the GPS data provided by the GPS receiver to generate driving directions. The Linux operating system used in the personal navigation computing device and/or the software applications supported by the operating system also provide the devices with additional functionality such as file system support for long and short file names, memory management for flash memory commonly used on such devices, and a platform for integrating and controlling various electronic components used with the portable navigation computing devices, such as other components in a vehicle."

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Microsoft's 'green dashboard' manages energy costs and consequences

Microsoft Dynamics AX' Environmental Sustainability Dashboard

Once, businesses were interested in green computing mainly as a matter of corporate responsibility. But now, increasing regulatory pressures and skyrocketing fuel prices are spurring companies to want to take a very hard look at both their carbon footprints and energy costs, according to Jennifer Pollard, a senior product manager at Microsoft.

Earlier this month, Microsoft released the first edition of a tool aimed at taking the heavy lifting out of measuring the environmental impact of business activities and tracking your company's expenditures on oil, gas, and other forms of energy.

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Nokia 'looking very actively' at making laptops, says CEO

Nokia Internet Tablet

Convergence is happening on all sides. PC makers Acer and HP pushed their way into the smartphone market this month, and now we await the push by a phone maker into the PC business.

Statements from Nokia's President and CEO Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo yesterday affirmed his company's interest in making notebook computers, if nothing else. Kallasvuo told Finnish broadcaster YLE that Nokia is "looking very actively" at producing a PC.

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Digital Music Forum: State of the industry in 2009

Vista MCE Music

Although music enthusiasts are out there online Googling for downloads and information, a lot of musicians still find it tough to connect with fans and to sell their music over the Web, said speakers at the Digital Music Forum here in New York City today.

A big part of the challenge is that those likely to buy music online constitute a small and elusive bunch. "In the US, 50 to 65 percent of people don't buy any music at all," noted David Card, VP and principal analyst at Forrester Research.

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Nokia's Comes with Music to launch in both US and Australia this year

Nokia 5310 phone with 'Comes With Music'

Nokia will introduce Comes with Music in the United States later this year, disclosed Tom Erskine, director of global sales in Nokia's Music Division , during the Digital Music Forum in Manhattan on Wednesday.

Comes with Music offers subscribers unlimited downloads of millions of tunes in the Nokia Music Store.

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Apple Safari 4 beta raises the bar for speed, compliance

The first Safari 4 beta for Windows blows by the Acid3 test.

Download Safari for Windows 4.28.16.0 Beta from Fileforum now.

We've been hearing quite a lot from every browser manufacturer, including Microsoft and Mozilla, about the incredible speed increases that eventually, pretty soon now, right around the corner, will be realized the moment one of them bites the bullet and installs a new, faster JavaScript interpreter. Well, consider the bullet officially bitten. Betanews tests of Apple's new beta of Safari for Windows, using a freshly cleaned Windows Vista SP1 virtual machine "white box," demonstrates significant speed improvements even over previous Safari versions, which were already quite fast.

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