Latest Technology News

YouTube Increases Upload Limits, Provides Batch Uploader

YouTube announced yesterday that it had increased the size limit for videos to 1 GB, and also introduced new software that allows users to simultaneously upload multiple videos.

Users may still opt to upload their videos to the site through the browser form if they do not wish to put a piece of YouTube software on their hard drives, or in the case of Mac users, if the software isn't supported at all.

Continue reading

iPhone Goes On Sale in Germany, UK

Apple's iPhone went on sale in Europe on Friday, with at least 10,000 of the devices sold already in Germany. Sales are said to be brisk in the UK as well.

Sales of the phone in Germany, where T-Mobile is the partner, began at midnight local time (6pm ET Thursday) at some locations. UK would-be buyers could not get their hands on the iPhone until just after 6pm local time (1pm ET).

Continue reading

Xbox Is #2 in Japan -- For a Week

In a potentially historic milestone, the Xbox 360 has outsold the PlayStation 3 for the first time in its history in Japan, according to statistics from Media Create. Sales of Microsoft console shot up some 500 percent on the back of the Bandai release Ace Combat 6: Fires of Liberation, which debuted at #2 on the Japanese video game charts this week.

The console sold 17,673 units during the week, up from 3,718 in the week previous. This was just enough to place it in the #2 spot ahead of the PS3, which sold 17,434 consoles. This was down week to week from 18,785 units two weeks ago. Nintendo's Wii is still outselling both by far, with 37,617 consoles sold. "Kiss your loved ones, hug your friends, because if this keeps up we've reached the end of days," Alexander Sliwinski wrote for Joystiq in reporting the news.

Continue reading

WiMAX Future Looks Cloudier as Sprint, Clearwire Call It Off

In a further indication that the business model for WiMAX service in the United States has yet to materialize, Sprint Nextel and broadband service provider Clearwire - the latest venture to be founded by wireless telecom pioneer Craig McCaw - have called off their joint project, announced just last July, to roll out WiMAX service throughout the US.

The strange Xohm brand (pronounced "zoam," rhyming with "foam") will continue, although Sprint is now writing it as a word and not a false acronym ("XOHM"). And Sprint's ongoing project to roll out WiMAX service to the Baltimore/Washington and Chicago markets will apparently continue, as those projects were already well under way before the partnership ever took root.

Continue reading

Apple Likely Close To Offering Movie Rentals

Apple has been repeatedly rumored to be close to offering movie rentals from the iTunes Music Store, and one blogger claims to be holding the answer as to when this may happen.

Evan DiBiase, a student at Carnegie Mellon University, says that while doing a dump of the strings from the old version of iTunes to compare them with the new ones, he discovered several new strings.

Continue reading

Radiohead: comScore's Numbers Are Wrong

comScore's report that only 40 percent of Radiohead fans paid anything for the band's album download is now being challenged by the band itself.

In a statement provided to MTV and without giving exact figures, the band described comScore's findings as "wholly inaccurate." Since the sale was done on a private site, there would have been no way for anyone to know truly how the album sold.

Continue reading

Sony CEO Declares Stalemate in Blu-ray/HD DVD Battle

A widely circulated Associated Press report early this morning quotes Sony CEO Sir Howard Stringer, speaking before a "Captains of Industry" lecture at the Cultural Center of the 92nd Street Y in Manhattan yesterday, as having declared the format war between the Blu-ray format his company champions and HD DVD a "stalemate."

Sir Howard reportedly punctuated those remarks by saying things had been going well for Blu-ray until last August, when rival Viacom unit Paramount decided to end its support for both formats and support HD DVD exclusively.

Continue reading

AT&T Adds Subscription-Based Pandora Service

AT&T today announced the availability of yet another subscription-based music offering on select handsets, this time a mobile version of Pandora, a music recommendation service.

While Pandora can be ad-supported or subscription based when used in a browser, the mobile version will only be available for an $8.99 monthly charge, and integrates user data from the online version.

Continue reading

EU Trade Commissioner Pressures US to End Internet Gambling Ban

As a demonstration of the rapidly growing payoff from the falling value of the US dollar against foreign currency, European Union Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson was in Washington today as part of an effort to compel Congress to repeal a ban on Internet gambling signed into law last year. Comm. Mandelson argued that the ban was unfair to Europe, where much of the world's online gambling operations are centered.

"It's not in the interest of American consumers to have good responsible competitors in this market excluded by regulatory mechanisms," Reuters quotes Mandelson as having told a Capitol Hill press gathering.

Continue reading

Whistleblower: AT&T Maintained a 'Secret Room' for the NSA

Bringing his claims to Capitol Hill for the first time, former AT&T network technician Mark Klein appeared yesterday at a press conference to reiterate his astonishing claim: AT&T operated a 24 x 48-foot room in one of its network operations centers in San Francisco, where Klein discovered his employer was cooperating with the National Security Agency in the monitoring of all Internet traffic over a major backbone line.

"I have first-hand knowledge of the clandestine collaboration between one giant telecommunications company, AT&T, and the National Security Agency to facilitate the most comprehensive illegal domestic spying program in history," Klein remarked in his press conference yesterday.

Continue reading

Microsoft to Remove Eolas Barrier in IE

Microsoft has begun advising customers on planned changes to IE now that it has licensed technology from Eolas, however it may have accidentally let slip a release window for Vista SP1 and XP SP3 to boot.

UPDATED The Redmond company said Thursday that it will release an update in April 2008 as part of its regular cumulative update for Internet Explorer that month. Microsoft will make the functionality available via a preview release in December.

Continue reading

Some Blu-ray BD+ Equipped Discs Now Duplicable, But For How Long?

A mere five months after the initial specification for the long-awaited BD+ copy protection system for Blu-ray Disc was formally released, the manufacturers of the media disc backup utility AnyDVD HD released a beta that has apparently been proven capable of copying BDs equipped with BD+ protection.

The beta of version 6.1.9.6 is apparently not without problems or exceptions, as indicated by a check of manufacturer SlySoft's forums today. Users reported problems copying Fantastic Four, Live Free or Die Hard, Sunshine, The Hills Have Eyes, and Spiderman 3 - which collectively constitute the bulk of all BD+ titles currently available. 20th Century-Fox was the first label to produce BD+ titles, and continues to be a principal champion of the system.

Continue reading

HP to Depart Digital Camera Market

Three years ago, Hewlett-Packard announced it would revamp its digital camera lineup and invest $1 billion in research and development over 18 months to become a leading vendor. In a stunning about-face today, HP announced that it is now seeking an outside OEM to design and distribute HP branded digital cameras.

The company will continue to sell its own models through the holiday season, and then cease in the first half of 2008, when a partnership is intended to be in place. The company that will take over production has not yet been determined.

Continue reading

Vonage Struggles to Move Past Lawsuits

Despite its continuing legal troubles, Vonage was still able to add new customers and is on the verge of settling a suit brought against it by AT&T.

The two sides have agreed to terms in principle that have Vonage pay AT&T $39 million over five years to settle all claims. Both sides will dismiss any legal actions outstanding.

Continue reading

FTC Fines Six Companies Over Do Not Call Violations

The Federal Trade Commission showed that it was serious about prosecuting those who did not follow the Do Not Call list, announcing six settlements totaling some $7.7 million in fines.

Since the law was enacted in 2003, the FTC has filed some 34 cases against violators, and nearly 134 million numbers have been placed on the list. Altogether some $16 million in penalties have been collected, the largest of which was a $5.3 million fine levied on DirecTV in 2005.

Continue reading

BetaNews, your source for breaking tech news, reviews, and in-depth reporting since 1998.

© 1998-2025 BetaNews, Inc. All Rights Reserved. About Us - Privacy Policy - Cookie Policy - Sitemap.