Samsung's newest S60 phone will be the first with Safari

Announced last week, Samsung's L870 Symbian S60 3.2 Smartphone will be the first handset other than Apple's iconic iPhone to come equipped with Safari as its native mobile browser.
The S60 default browser is based upon the same WebKit browser engine as Safari, so having Safari on board instead may not necessarily be a great technological leap. Like Safari, the S60 browser currently boasts desktop-quality browsing, and has generally been viewed as an excellent application in its own right.
Will Verizon's FiOS TV in NY dent US cable monopolies?

Although fuller implementation of FiOS won't be easy, Verizon might soon be giving Time-Warner and Cablevision some real cable TV competition in New York City, now that a committee has given its okay to a sweeping franchise plan.
By June 30, 2014, all residents of all five boroughs of New York City will have access to FiOS cable TV, as a result of a vote taken yesterday by the city's Franchise and Concession Review Committee.
TiVo partners with CinemaNow, gets Disney on demand

TiVo has announced that all broadband connected TiVo Series2 and Series3 users will gain Disney on-demand rentals later this year. This in the wake of a new partnership with online content distributorCinemaNow.
This partnership adds to TiVo's existing content deals with Amazon's Unbox, Music Choice, and Jaman, as well as upcoming support for YouTube and other popular Web video codecs. It looks to be part of a broader move to convert TiVo from a simple DVR into more of a media hub, offering an increased amount of on-demand content, along with access to user's personal media.
Belgian newspaper group wants $77 million from Google

The Belgian press editors association Copiepresse has been at odds with Google since last year over the appearance of its member publications' work in Google News, and now it wants to be compensated.
In a court filing earlier this week, apparently with the Brussels federal court, Copiepresse asked for €49 million (approximately $77 million USD) in damages resulting from Google's having excerpted articles from Copiepresse's member publications without authorization.
Europe is not preparing to impose sales limits on Intel

BetaNews has confirmed this morning that a widely disseminated story first published by Financial Times Deutschland, which said the European Commission was preparing to issue sales restrictions on Intel, is false.
The FT story, which appears here in a poor translation from German, stated that the EC was preparing to issue a decision that would force Intel to refrain from giving preferred customers in Europe any kind of discounts. Allegations of Intel playing favorites with certain customers, especially for preferring Intel over AMD, has been central to AMD's worldwide antitrust battle with the market share leader.
Gates says retirement from Microsoft means he'll still be around

Bill Gates is scheduled to retire from Microsoft on July 1, shifting his efforts over to his namesake foundation. But Wednesday night at the Wall Street Journal's D conference, Gates clarified what he means by "retirement."
In an informal question-and-answer session before his keynote with Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer during which the Windows 7 multi-touch interface was briefly demoed, Chairman Bill Gates said that he'll continue to spend 20 percent of his time on Microsoft projects. The remaining 80 percent of his time will be dedicated to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation -- a swap from the 20 percent he devotes currently.
Can a touch-screen interface turn Windows around?

It's no secret that Windows Vista hasn't seen the warm reception Microsoft had hoped. With Windows 7, the company is placing its bets on a multi-touch interface -- like the iPhone UI for PCs. Could it change the public mood?
At The Wall Street Journal's 6th D: All Things Digital conference in Carlsbad, California Wednesday night, Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates and CEO Steve Ballmer offered up a "small snippet" of the next version of Windows after Ballmer acknowledged that he wants to "do better" than Vista. A video showed how Microsoft is bringing the touch technology from its Surface table-tops to standard laptops and desktops.
Google says Viacom suit harms online communications

In a court filing late Friday nearly one year after Viacom's suit was brought against it, Google claimed its outcome could have a chilling effect on all online communications.
According to an Associated Press account Tuesday, Google's filing in US District Court in Manhattan alleged that Viacom's insistence that Google's YouTube unit stop allowing others to post its intellectual property "threatens the way hundreds of millions of people legitimately exchange information, news, entertainment and political and artistic expression."
Samsung to sample 256 GB solid state drive in late Q3

The Korean electronics maker showed off its biggest and fastest SSD in the 2.5" category, bringing its solid state hard drives ever closer to its HDDs in capacity.
Samples of the drive will go out to Samsung's clients in September, with release targeted for the end of the year. Also in development is a 1.8-inch version of the same drive, which is slated for fourth quarter 2008 availability.
Via tries an 'open source' model for its UMPC platform

In a scramble to regain position in a chaotic hardware marketplace, Via Technologies today introduced an ultra-mobile reference design based on its low-power CPU chips.
The company hopes its OpenBook computer assisted design (CAD) documents will persuade manufacturers to use Via motherboards and chips when creating new laptops. The Via framework is for a UMPC that can support up to 2 GB DDR2 DRAM and support a number of different HDDs or solid state drives.
Beta of a new hybrid search engine / SMT tool

At a time when there seems to be a specialized search engine for every possible topic, Paglo today launched a new beta search engine service designed specifically for the IT environment.
Based on the popular Web 2.0 infrastructure, Paglo's software-as-a-service (Saas) was first introduced to the public in November, but today marks the first day it is available for public use. The service will be available for free until the fall, when Paglo says it will implement a paid model.
Facebook confirms plans for open source platform

A Facebook spokesperson this afternoon confirmed rumors circulating all day long that the social networking site will turn its year-old developers' platform into an open source project.
Following on the heels of an announcement last week that Facebook is opening a new developers' sandbox, rumors of the impending open source initiative were first published late last night by blogger Michael Arrington in TechCrunch.
Dell found guilty in New York of misleading, harassing customers

Dell on Tuesday lost a major judgment in New York, in a case that centered around its financing practices for customers in which it was accused of defrauding and even harassing some.
The case was brought by the state's attorney-general Andrew Cuomo one year ago, and alleged that Dell failed to provide "zero-percent financing" to as much as 85% of the customers to whom that rate was promised, or who were otherwise entitled to such a rate. Dell then failed, the suit alleged, to provide customers with the customer support to which they were clearly entitled.
Korean music format MT9 tries to replace MP3 - with a karaoke twist

Yet another format is attempting to replace MP3 as the standard for digital music, but can MT9 really succeed where others have failed for a decade - even with its advanced features?
MT9 was developed by South Korean engineers at Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute (ETRI) in association with venture company Audizen, and the format has been dubbed "Music 2.0." Its creators hope to see MT9 replace MP3, but that lofty goal will likely be replaced by one more attainable: becoming the standard for karaoke.
Novell in beta with subscription management tool

Novell is now in beta with a subscription management tool for SuSE Linux Enterprise, aimed at helping users of Novell's Linux operating environment to manage their software updates.
In an interview with BetaNews, Michael Applebaum, a senior product marketing manager, described the new tool as a package proxy system designed to accommodate customers' regulatory compliance requirements and corporate firewall policies during the software update process.
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