Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Samsung Galaxy Tab 8.9 Seriously?


Samsung  Galaxy TabGalaxy tab
Samsung is using the 'Goldilocks' strategy with the new 8.9-inch Galaxy Tab
Clearly, any non-iPad tablet is currently doomed. They’re shifted off to the side in electronics stores (just like Macs used to be) and nobody is buying them. People don’t say “I want a tablet. Let’s go to the store to see what they have.” Nope, people say “I want an iPad.” And then they buy one.
Now, Samsung may have hit on the secret formula, the iPad-killing feature that has until now eluded the best minds in consumer electronics. The seven-inch Galaxy Tab failed. The 10.1-inch Galaxy Tab fared no better. So behold: The Galaxy Tab 8.9. That’s right. Less screen size than an iPad, and less portable than an e-reader. How could it fail?
The other special sauce is LTE, for connecting to all the 4G networks that blanket the world today. The processor is similarly redundant: you get a dual-core chip running at 1.5GHz, so you can enjoy the built-in Adobe Flash plugin stuttering along at a slightly higher frame rate than usual.
Otherwise, not much is new. The screen has a 1280 × 800 resolution, the unit is 8.6mm (0.03 feet) thick and weighs a stout 455 grams (one pound). Expect to see this thing fly off the shelves when it launches (possibly) later this year.

Netflix users, time to pick a plan

The big question in Web video this week is how many Netflix customers will stick with the service in the face of an upcoming price increase.
 
But even those planning to continue with the service might want to make some decisions before time runs out and the decisions are made by the company.
In July, Netflix announced it would eliminate a popular hybrid plan. For $10 a month, users were allowed to rent one DVD at a time as well as obtain unlimited Web access to the company's streaming-video library. That's scheduled to disappear on Thursday.
This is a reminder that if you're a hybrid subscriber and do nothing by then, Netflix will assume you want both plans. That's certainly logical but it may be something you didn't think about. After Thursday, each plan will cost $7.99 per month, or $15.98 per month for both. If you want to go exclusively with one offer or the other, it's time to get a move on.
To make the changes or to cancel just visit your Netflix account page

ITunes' streaming music finally shows up

When Apple CEO Steve Jobs announced the coming of iTunes Match at June's Worldwide Developers Conference, there wasn't a single word about a long-awaited streaming-music feature.
For over a year, music industry sources told CNET that Apple had sought licenses from the four major labels to build a cloud music service that would allow the company to scan a user's hard drive, and then stream their entire music library from Apple's servers back to the user via any Web-connected device.
On Monday, the streaming feature finally poked its head up. Apple launched the iTunes Match developer beta, and included in that is the ability to stream songs. Apple described it this way:

iTunes Match stores your complete music library in iCloud, allowing you to enjoy your collection anywhere, anytime, on any iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, or computer.
Cloud music is supposed to save valuable storage space on users' mobile devices as well as give them ubiquitous access to their music libraries. The iTunes Match costs $25 a year (and scan and match up to 25,000 songs), and the feature also allows users to download songs to devices. Match is expected to be available to the public later this year.

Related links
Apple gives devs early access to iTunes Match
Tower Records to iTunes, NARM seeks revival
Amazon offers unlimited Cloud music storage
The ability to offer consumers a scan-and-match feature is what cloud music services from Google and Amazon missed out on by choosing to forgo licensing music from the labels. Instead, users of those services must upload to those companies' servers each of their songs, which can be laborious if a large library is involved.
One more thing: the licenses that Apple acquired from the four major labels earlier this year included the scan and match. Why the company didn't included it in the June announcement is unknown. Apple reps weren't available for comment early Tuesday. It would seem that TechCrunch's MG Siegler was right that this was a case in which Apple underpromised and overdelivered.

Saturday, August 27, 2011

Ferocious Hurricane Irene batters New York, moving north

Evacuations in NY, streets empty, transport shut down
Hurricane Irene heading to hurricane


* Giant, slow-moving storm raises fears of storm surge
* At least seven deaths blamed on Irene
By Ben Berkowitz and Dan Trotta
NEW YORK, Aug 28 (Reuters) - Hurricane Irene battered New York with ferocious winds and driving rain early on Sunday, shutting down the U.S. financial capital and most populous city, halting mass transit and causing massive power blackouts as it churned slowly northward along the East Coast.
New York City's normally bustling streets were eerily quiet after authorities ordered tens of thousands of residents to evacuate low-lying areas and shut down its subways, airports and buses. [ID:nN1E77Q042]
Commuters were left to try to flag down yellow taxis and livery cabs that patrolled largely deserted streets.
Irene, still a menacing 480-mile (780-km)-wide hurricane, was enveloping major centers in the northeast, threatening dangerous floods and surging tides.
From the Carolinas to Maine, tens of millions of people were in the path of Irene, which howled ashore in North Carolina at daybreak on Saturday, dumping torrential rain, felling trees and knocking out power.
"The edge of the hurricane has finally got upon us," New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg told the more than eight million people who live in New York as he warned that tropical storm-force winds would hit the city.
Times Square, often called the crossroads of the world, was sparsely populated, mostly with visitors, as Irene rolled into the city with full force.
"We just came to see how few people are in Times Square and then we're going back," said Cheryl Gibson, who was vacationing in the city and had planned to go to the other side of the Hudson River on Sunday. "We can't get to New Jersey and I'm not sure it's any better there," she said.
Bloomberg warned New Yorkers Irene was a life-threatening storm and urged them to stay indoors to avoid flying debris, flooding or the risk of being electrocuted by downed power lines. "It is dangerous out there," he said, but added later:
"New York is the greatest city in the world and we will weather this storm."
Some 370,000 city residents were ordered to leave their homes in low-lying areas, many of them in parts of the boroughs of Brooklyn, Queens and Manhattan.
But many were unwilling to evacuate. Nicholas Vigliotti, 24, an auditor who lives in a high-rise building along the Brooklyn waterfront, said he saw no point. "Even if there was a flood, I live on the fifth floor," he said.
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TAKE A LOOK on Irene [ID:nSTORM]
Reuters Hurricane Tracker r.reuters.com/san78n
National Hurricane Center www.nhc.noaa.gov
Skeetobite Weather www.skeetobiteweather.com
Weather Underground www.wunderground.com/tropical
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STORM SURGE FEARS
Flood waters forced officials in Hoboken, just across the Hudson River from Manhattan, to evacuate a storm shelter, the mayor of Hoboken, Dawn Zimmer, said on Twitter.
"Hoboken faces worst case scenario. Flooding has begun. Moving Wallace Shelter residents to state shelter in east Rutherford," the mayor's tweet said.
The Miami-based U.S. National Hurricane Center forecast a storm surge of up to 8 feet (2.5 meters) for Long Island and metropolitan New York. That could top the flood walls protecting the south end of Manhattan if it comes at high tide around 8 a.m. (noon GMT).
With winds of 8O miles per hour (130 km per hour), Irene was a Category 1 hurricane on the five-step Saffir-Simpson intensity scale. By 11 p.m. (0300 GMT), the center of the storm was 70 miles (115 km) south southwest of Ocean City, Maryland, and 255 miles (415 km) south southwest of New York City.
As it moved into New York, the hurricane center said it was expected to remain a hurricane and weaken only after making its second landfall in New England.
It added that Irene's winds could have a stronger impact on the higher floors of skyscrapers.
Summer vacationers fled beach towns and resort islands on Saturday. More than a million people left the New Jersey shore and glitzy Atlantic City casinos were dark and empty.
This year has been one of the most extreme for weather in U.S. history, with $35 billion in losses so far from floods, tornadoes and heat waves.
SEVEN DEATHS REPORTED
President Barack Obama, who cut his vacation short on the Massachusetts island of Martha's Vineyard to return to the White House, was keeping a close eye on preparations for the hurricane. [ID:nN1E77Q0D3]
After moving across North Carolina with less punch than expected but still threatening, the hurricane re-emerged over inshore waters on its route northward, hugging the coast.
At least seven deaths were reported in North Carolina, Virginia and Florida. Several million people were under evacuation orders on the U.S. East Coast.
Irene left several million people without power in North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland and Delaware and widespread blackouts were reported in New York.
When Irene hit the North Carolina coast at daybreak, winds howled through the power lines, rain fell in sheets and streets were flooded or littered with signs and tree branches.
Hundreds of thousands of people in Irene's path evacuated their homes, many taking refuge in official shelters.
"Things can be replaced, but life can't be," said Robert Hudson, a 64-year-old military retiree, who sought refuge at a shelter in Milford High School in Delaware.
North Carolina Governor Bev Perdue said there may be "a major hit" to tobacco crops, poultry and livestock in her state.
Shoppers stripped supermarkets and hardware stores of food, water, flashlights, batteries and generators.
Torrential rain hit downtown Washington but expected high winds had still not reached the city after midnight and restaurants remained open, some of them almost full.
Irene was the first hurricane to hit the U.S. mainland since Ike pounded Texas in 2008. Emergency workers were mindful of Hurricane Katrina, which swamped New Orleans, killed up to 1,800 people and caused $80 billion in damage in 2005. (Additional reporting by Joe Rauch and Jim Brumm in Wilmington, N.C.; Pascal Fletcher in Miami; Tom Hals in Delaware, Basil Katz and Jonathan Allen in New York; Susan Cornwell and John Crawley in Washington; Michael Fitzpatrick in Long Branch, New Jersey; Writing by Jane Sutton and Pascal Fletcher; Editing by Christopher Wilson and Todd Eastham)

Jon peters ordered to pay damages on sexual harrasment claim


Hollywood producer Jon Peters was ordered Friday to pay $822,000 in damages to a former personal assistant after a Los Angeles jury found that she was sexually harassed and subjected to a hostile work environment.
Jurors also decided that Peters, 66, the former boyfriend of singer Barbra Streisand, acted with malice, a finding that triggers a further court hearing to determine if punitive damages should be awarded to Shelly Morita, who sued the producer and his company, J.P. Organization Inc., in December 2006.
Morita, 44, alleged that Peters inappropriately touched her at his Malibu home, crawled into bed with her at an Australian hotel and exposed himself to her and her then-2-year-old daughter in an outdoor restroom at his Santa Barbara ranch.
Morita, who worked for Peters for a year starting in February 2005, also claimed that the producer’s influence in Hollywood prevented her from obtaining another job after she quit his firm.
Defense attorneys contended that Morita had signed a release of all claims against Peters in January 2006, and they asserted that she had no witnesses to prove her allegations of sexual harassment.
Peters was a successful hairstylist in his family’s salon, where he made contacts in the movie industry. He went on to become the producer or the executive producer of such films as "Caddyshack," "Rain Man," "Bonfire of the Vanities" and "Superman Returns."

5 Top executives who will run Aplle after steve jobs departure


Steve jobs
              
The departure of Steve Jobs from the role of CEO leaves Apple Inc. with a deep bench of executives who have been with the company for more than a dozen years — an unusual lineup for a company in the fast-moving technology world.
Here’s a who’s who of the top names in Apple:



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Tim Cook, the new CEO, was chief operating officer and has filled in for Jobs during his medical leaves. He joined Apple Inc. in 1998 as senior vice president of worldwide operations and has been credited with tuning Apple’s manufacturing process to solve chronic product delays and supply problems. As the guy who kept things humming in the background, Cook hasn’t participated much in product launches.
Before Apple, Cook worked in supply chain management at Compaq Computer, now part of Hewlett-Packard Co., and IBM Corp. He has an MBA from Duke University.

 Peter Oppenheimer is Apple’s chief financial officer, a position that in many companies is a stepping stone to the CEO position. But at Apple, financials seem to take a back seat to technology and design. Oppenheimer wasn’t mentioned in the speculation over who would take over as CEO after Jobs, before it became clear that Cook was the crown prince. Oppenheimer started at Apple in 1996. He has an MBA from the University of Santa Clara.

Philip Schiller is the head of product marketing and frequently participates in Apple’s trademark product launch events. Yet he’s worked in the shadow of Jobs, who’s been a highly visible front man for the company and deeply involved in the company’s marketing and presentation — Jobs’ even been known to answer e-mails from customers. Schiller’s career has followed a similar trajectory to Jobs: He started worked there in the 80s, left to work at other companies, then returned in 1997 when Jobs did. He graduated from Boston College with a major in biology.

 Jonathan Ive has led Apple’s industrial design team, responsible for the look and feel of the hardware, since 1996. That means he predates Jobs’ return to the company in 1997. Ive has guided the design of iconic products such as the original iMac, the iPod and the iPhone. He’s the winner of several design awards. In a 2007 interview with the Design Museum in Britain, he says Apple’s design process is characterized by “fanatical care beyond the obvious stuff: the obsessive attention to details that are often overlooked, like cables and power adaptors.”
 Scott Forstall heads Apple’s development of software for the iPhone and iPad and helps demonstrate their features at launch events. He worked with Jobs at Next, the company Jobs founded after leaving Apple in the 1980s, and joined Apple when it bought Next in 1997. Forstall is one of the architects of the current Mac operating system, OS X. He has bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Stanford University

Investigators probe suicide attack on UN in Nigeria

Investigators probe suicide attack on UN in Nigeria




 Investigators on Saturday probed a suicide attack at UN headquarters in Nigeria after the bomber managed to penetrate tight security and ram his car into the building, killing at least 19 people.
Top UN officials, including the world body's security chief, were due to arrive in Nigeria on Saturday night and rescue workers combed through rubble at the building to ensure no one remained trapped.
Emergency officials visited area hospitals to check on casualties amid calls for blood donations. Dozens were wounded with various degrees of injuries, and a doctor at the national hospital called the situation "overwhelming."
A man claiming to be a spokesman for the Nigerian Islamist sect known as Boko Haram said in a phone call to an AFP journalist that the group carried out Friday's attack.
The veracity of his claims could not be confirmed and police said all possibilities were being considered.
The sect has not previously been known to target international organisations, but there have been growing concerns over whether it has formed links with extremist groups outside of Nigeria, including Al-Qaeda's north African branch.
The death toll from the huge bomb that blew out the first two floors of the building climbed to 19, according to emergency management agency spokesman Yushau Shuaib, one more than a previous toll provided by police.
It was believed that everyone had now been evacuated from the building, with a number of people rescued after apparently having been stuck in a lift for hours on Friday afternoon, said Shuaib.
But rescue teams arrived at the compound on Saturday morning saying they wanted to be sure no one was left inside.
"There could still be some people under the rubble," a member of the rescue team who did not want to be named told AFP.
One of the victims was earlier confirmed as a 30-year-old Norwegian woman, and the rescue team member said she had been pulled from under a collapsed wall at the reception area on the building's ground floor following an effort involving five people on Friday.
The building houses some 26 UN agencies and departments, with hundreds of employees with a variety of nationalities believed to have worked there. It was among the bloodiest attacks targeting the United Nations globally.
United Nations chief Ban Ki-moon strongly condemned the attack and dispatched Deputy UN Secretary General Asha-Rose Migiro and UN security chief Greg Starr to Nigeria.
"They are arriving tonight," UN spokesman in Nigeria Charles Nosa Osazuwa said. He declined to provide further details for now.
Questions have been already been raised at the UN over how the bomber managed to make his way through two gates before ramming into the building.
Police spokesman Yemi Ajayi said it was too early to say who the main suspect in the bombing would be.
"Let the end of the investigation reveal that," he said. "We're taking several approaches to the investigation, so we don't want to put our mind in one place. That alone may jeopardise the investigation."
Security was increased throughout the capital, with key areas under 24-hour guard and checkpoints mounted. Police had also been put on alert nationwide in Africa's most populous nation and its largest oil producer.
A bomb blast that rocked a car park at national police headquarters in Abuja in June and killed at least two people was claimed by Boko Haram. Police first said it was the result of a suicide blast before later retracting their statement, saying they could not be sure.
Most of the attacks blamed on the sect have occurred in the country's northeast, but a number have been carried out elsewhere, including the previous explosion in Abuja as well as several in Suleija near the capital.
The Islamist sect launched an uprising in 2009, put down by a brutal military assault that left hundreds dead.
It went dormant for about a year before re-emerging in 2010 with a series of assassinations of security personnel and politicians, as well as religious and community leaders.
Nigeria's 150 million population is roughly divided in half between a mainly Muslim north and predominately Christian south.