Latest Technology News

Redlasso video sharing service threatened by big media

Redlasso, a service that syndicates live television and radio and which also allows users to create their own clips from footage to embed in their own sites, has received a cease-and-desist order from three major TV networks.

Fox, CBS, and NBC have jointly sent Redlasso a written demand giving it until May 29th to shape up or get sued for, among other things, unfair competition, false designation of origin, and trademark infringement. The networks charge that copyright law has been violated because the service syndicates video and audio material that neither belongs to it, nor that it has been given permission to use.

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Next Office 2007 service pack will include ODF, PDF support options

In a breakthrough development, Microsoft has announced its future editions of Microsoft Office, beginning with Service Pack 2 for Office 2007, will enable users to choose OpenDocument support as an alternate default option.

Microsoft's director of corporate standards, Jason Matusow, and its senior product manager for ISO 29500-based products, Doug Mahugh, jointly confirmed the news to BetaNews personally.

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Microsoft tries to lure Google, Yahoo searchers with cash

Microsoft wants you to start using Windows Live Search to shop instead of rivals Google and Yahoo, and in return is willing to pay you cash.

The new program, called Live Search cashback and rolled out at the Advance 08 advertising conference in San Francisco Wednesday morning, promises to pay back users who find and buy products using its search engine between 2% and 30% of the purchase price.

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Opera seeks a wider platform with release of Widgets SDK beta

With the sad status of being the world's #4 browser settling hard upon it, how does Opera find a niche? This morning, it answered that question by demonstrating itself literally picking up the pieces of an old project, and calling them an SDK.

According to recent statistics from the Web developers' educational site W3Schools.com, about 1.4% of the world's browsers last month responded as being Opera. That on the low side of where Opera's share of HTTP requests has been hovering for at least the last five years.

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US sinks to 15th place worldwide in broadband, says OECD

In broadband access, the United States has now slipped from twelfth to fifteen place versus other countries, according to new research released this week by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development.

The OECD study points to factors ranging from pricing to download speeds as possible reasons why the US may be losing ground, at least compared against other countries. Unlike some other broadband studies, which compare access rates across wider numbers of countries, the OECD research looks only at penetration rates among its own 30 member nations.

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Time Warner Cable spinoff officially under way

Though rumors began in 2006, actual news of Time Warner separating its cable division into a standalone company came in late April of this year. Today, the "complete legal and structural separation" of the two entities was announced.

In spinning off Time Warner Cable, parent Time Warner stands to gain $9.25 billion of a total $10.9 billion in shareholder dividends. For those counting, that means the media conglomerate holds 85.2% of the cable company's common stock.

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AT&T opens Wi-Fi networks to 3G customers using Windows

iPhone users aren't the only ones who will get free access to AT&T's 17,000 Wi-Fi hotspots, as the company is also opening the doors to its 3G customers signed up for LaptopConnect plans. But the offer has one catch: it requires Windows.

AT&T recently signed a deal to power the Wi-Fi networks at all Starbucks and Barnes and Noble locations, boosting its hotspot number by 7,000. As part of the agreement, it decided to grant iPhone users free access to its network. AT&T is the exclusive iPhone carrier in the United States, giving it an incentive to support those users.

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Lavasoft broadens its malware scope with Ad-Aware 2008 releases

Download Ad-Aware Free 2008 version 7.1.0.7 from FileForum now.

It was perhaps the first great advertising tracker purging system, and may have single-handedly redefined the public's notion of malware. Now, Ad-Aware is growing up, becoming more of a fully-fledged anti-virus product.

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Twitter experiences another flutter

In an environment predicated upon all users updating as frequently as possible, social microblog Twitter has revealed its hamartia: that it can absolutely not sustain downtime.

Granted, the service experienced numerous outages in the course of two weeks -- to say nothing of the past few months -- but in combing through the Twitter support forum under the heading "May 20: Twitter Downtime," it becomes apparent that every time the site experiences a service disruption, users are left stranded.

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CBS opens up more of its classic TV library

Like Nintendo doling out classic games on the Wii Virtual Console, CBS Home Entertainment has opened up its vault and pulled out some classic shows to be viewed freely on CBS.com and on its partnering CBS Audience Network sites.

Starting today, clips and full episodes of The Love Boat, Beverly Hills 90210, Twin Peaks, Family Ties, and Perry Mason will be available on over 300 participating CBS Audience Network sites. Partners include the recently-acquired CNET and its related subsidiaries, AOL, Microsoft, Comcast, Joost, Sling Media, Veoh, and Bebo.

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Researchers: Bugs in open source software are waning

Developers of the Linux OS, Apache Web server, and about 250 other different open source projects have removed more than 8,500 individual bugs from their code over the past two years, according to a study released this week.

Linux developers, according to the Scan Report on Open Source Software 2008, accomplished this feat using a scanning Web site developed by Coverity, Inc. with support from the US Dept. of Homeland Security. In this expansive study, researchers reported a 16% reduction in static analysis density since 2006, among many other findings.

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Sprint confirms it's implementing data usage caps

A number of Sprint mobile broadband users have shown their disgust over an internal memo that indicated the company has placed a cap on its mobile broadband service.

In an e-mail and phone correspondence with BetaNews, Sprint officials discussed the reasoning behind its decision to implement a 5 GB per month overall use cap, and 300 MB per month for off-network roaming.

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Sugar Labs founded to extend OLPC Linux software to more laptops

Now that One Laptop Per Child has unveiled the Windows XP edition of its XO laptop, a top official of the nonprofit group is leaving to form an organization that will extend the reach of the OLPC's original Linux-based platform, Sugar.

Walter Bender, who served as OLPC's president of software and content, will now help to set up the Sugar Labs Foundation, and so will many core Sugar developers.

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Gartner: Mobile IM making gains against texting

Research firm Gartner says that SMS continues to increase in usage, however the increasing prevalence of IM clients on phones is shifting that balance.

Some 2.3 trillion messages will be sent worldwide during this year, a 19.6 percent increase over the year previous. However, at the same time revenues have leveled off due to increased competition.

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Second release candidate for Hyper-V virtualization tool now available

Download Hyper-V RC1 for Windows Server 2008 x86 from BetaNews FileForum now.

Microsoft's ambitious, if somewhat reduced, goals of making hardware-supported virtualization a common feature of Windows Server, are one small step closer to fruition this afternoon.

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