Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Analysts take on Apple’s “on-the-go” Update Gossip


With current rumors going around the web stating the possibility of Apple allowing its users to update iOS without connecting to a PC or Mac, analysts have budged in to comment on the gossip.
Some analysts believe that Apple will never allow over the air updating of iOS because they want people to keep coming back to its iTunes software. Apple has never allowed their users to update without connecting their phone to a PC or Mac.
Other analysts strongly disagree this, and they claim that sometime in the future, Apple may be forced to allow users to update the iOS over the air.
At the very start of this week, many sources were seen claiming that Apple will release iOS 5 with their new phone. Some mentioned that Apple may allow people to update their current OS without connecting it to their PC or Mac.
If this is indeed true, then Apple will be in the same path Android follows. Google Android users have always received updates through their carriers, and they never have to plug their phones to a PC or Mac to get updates on the operating system.Senior analyst from Gartner, Mr. Charles Glovin believes that Apple does this intentionally since they like the way things are.
He believes the reason for Apple using iTunes to distribute the iOS updates is that they want their customers to keep coming back to iTunes, whereas many of the iPhone users do not need to view iTunes.
They tend to buy music and apps right from their phone. He also told that distributing iOS from iTunes significantly improves Apple’s opportunity to better market their content to customers.
He also noticed that one of the reasons Apple may have been hesitant to allow over the air updates is that the actual size of updates are very big. The analyst gave an example of Android, whose updates are not relatively big in size as compared to Apple’s.
Analyst Jack Gold did not agree with Glovin’s perception. He said that Apple have already mentioned that they want iPad and iPhone to replace current computers.
How are they going to make that possible if their updates are required to connect your device to a system?
He strongly believed that Apple in the near future will have to eliminate this method of updating if they hope to achieve their goals.

List of Apps for Learners


The How Stuff Works App for the iPad (free)
This app lets you learn about pretty much everything from complex scientific workings, to the ordinary and banal, to downright bizarre and is brought to you courtesy of the How Stuff Works website                                    This app has something for almost everyone who is even a little intellectually curious, or just curious for that matter. From ecology to technology and the workings of the human being. Fire-arrows from the Chinese? This app will tell you about it. Permian extinction? Check.
History shines through a new perspective through this application, created and developed courtesy of A&E TV.

Free Apps For HP’s Touchpad Owners

According to a recent report, it was revealed that Hewlett-Packard is giving its Touchpad tablet users a chance to get six free applications that are estimated to be worth $30. However, this is a limited time offer which expires at the end of August.
Hewlett-Packard previously announced that it will stop the production of its tablets and Smartphone. Soon after this news, the price of HP’s 16 GB Touchpad tablet declined to $99 from $399.
Furthermore, the price of its 32 GB tablet also reached to a shocking $149 from $499. It has been reported that the sales of the tablets soon rose after the discount in the prices.
Just after the discounted price promotion of its Touchpad, on Thursday, Hewlett-Packard further announced that it will be giving away six free apps to its Touchpad owners.This news was revealed in a blog post where the company mentioned that people need to hurry if they want to get their hands on six free apps that are estimated to be worth over $30.
On the HP Palm log, the company also mentioned that this offer is valid only for a limited time offer and will end by the end of August so people need to rush.
Furthermore, in the post, HP revealed that the six pack app consists of a storybook and two games. The company also specifically mentioned that the offer is only for its Touchpad owners in the U.S. The offer will soon be extended to other Touchpad owners around the world.
One of the apps is called Glimpse. This app is worth $5. Users using this app can enhance the tablets multi tasking abilities. It is an addictive and easy to use app. Another app is called Kung Fu Panda 2 Storybook.
The app is estimated to be priced at $2 and gives users a chance to enjoy the voices from the movie on their Touchpads. Furthermore, a game app called Sparkle HD is also included in the 6 app pack give away. This game is a Touchpad version of the famous computer game.
Lastly, the blog post by HP also stated that the company is planning to give another free 6 pack of apps by the end of September.

Microsoft: 4 million upgrades to Windows 8


Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer said Tuesday that the company has seen early success with its new operating system, Windows 8.
Speaking at the company’s BUILD developers conference, Ballmer said that there have been over 4 million upgrades to Windows 8 since the company unveiled the operating system on Friday.
Windows 8 upgrades cost $40 online, though those who’ve bought a qualifying PC can upgrade to the system for just $15.
Ballmer also said that Microsoft is working quickly to build out its Windows store, the report said, and will soon include applications from Twitter, Dropbox and ESPN.
Microsoft has promised the store will have 100,000 apps in its Windows Store by January. While an impressive number, it still pales in comparison to the 700,000 apps offered on the platforms for Apple and Google devices.
Windows 8 is built to work on touch-enabled and traditional desktops and notebooks. For the new system, Microsoft replaced its Start button with a Start screen that showcases a users’ most frequent or favorite apps, as well as live notifications from their e-mail acc

Can Facebook-Style Elections Produce Candidates We Actually "Like"?

Feuding between Democratic and Republican leaders has rendered the U.S. government nearly dysfunctional, with the summer 2011 deficit standoff only the most egregious recent example of gridlock run amok. As growing numbers of Americans say they are fed up with both parties, the door would seem open for an alternative. Historically, third parties have failed miserably the most successful independent presidential candidate in modern times, did not win a single state 
in 1992. Technology is changing the electoral rules, though, inspiring reformers to envision a new and more open brand of politics, one built around online voting and Facebook-style campaigns.
For a brief, shining moment last spring, it seemed as if that revolutionary concept might take hold in the United States. founded and initially bankrolled by billionaire venture capitalist Peter Ackerman, launched plans to create a virtual third party via a nomination process that would take place primarily online. By culling centrist candidates from both U.S. parties, it would defuse the extremism that makes governing the country so difficult. At least that was the theory. In reality, so few of Americans Elect’s delegates bothered to participate that by May the 2012 election.
But that does not mean an online party can’t work. A number of experts contend that in spite of some real roadblocks, virtual parties are likely to gain greater traction in the coming decade. Hans Klein, who researches online democracy at the Georgia Institute of Technology, notes that the online election model works in the high-profile global selection of board members for the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, the organization that controls web domain names. Why not apply it to national politics and to the formation and operation of political parties? “It’s a lot easier to find people with collective interests and to sign them up and count their opinions online,” Klein says.

20 Things You Didn't Know About... Cars

They were way more dangerous in the past, they're developing some impressive smart lighting, and they'll drive themselves in the future. In 1760 King George III housed around 30 horses in the Royal Mews stables in London. Today a typical compact car packs a 150-horsepower engine. So a suburban commuter has instant access to five times as much sheer muscle as the king who nearly crushed the American Revolution.
2  By the formal definition of horsepower (the power required to lift 33,000 pounds by one foot in one minute), a real horse musters only about 0.7 horsepower.
3  Not only has the horse been outgunned by the car, it faces the further indignity of not being able to keep up with itself.
 Contrary to legend, Ford’s Model T originally came in a variety of colors…and black was not one of them. The “any color so long as it is black” philosophy arrived in 1913, as Henry Ford sought to simplify production.
5  Volkswagen had the good sense to change the original, Hitler-sanctioned name for its small car, the Kraft durch Freude Wagen (“Strength Through Joy Car”). You know it as the Beetle.
6  The first documented auto fatality in the United States was H. H. Bliss of New York City, who was struck by an electric taxicab on September 13, 1899, while alighting from a trolley car.
 The motor vehicle fatality rate in the United States—the average number of deaths per passenger-mile of driving—has dropped by roughly 80 percent in the past half century.
8  Last year 32,310 Americans died in auto accidents. If the 1962 fatality rate still held, there would be an extra 150,000 deaths annually, equivalent to losing the population of Pittsburgh every two years.
 Credit a mix of improvements, including crash impact standards, air bags, better tires, antilock brakes, and stability control.
10  One of the biggest factors? Seat belts. 84 percent of people now buckle up, compared with 14 percent three decades ago.
11  Please don’t kick the tires. The contact patches—the areas of the tires that actually touch the road at any given moment—cover an area of just over 100 square inches for an average family sedan.
12  In other words, all of the accelerating, cornering, braking, and everything else that your four wheels do, happens on a piece of ground scarcely bigger than your own two feet.
13  Lighting is one of the next frontiers in safety. BMW is developing headlights that highlight nearby people to help focus the driver’s attention, and a Carnegie Mellon University researcher has developed lights that can track droplets and avoid illuminating them, rendering rainfall nearly invisible.
14  In 2004 Nevada hosted the first Darpa Grand Challenge for autonomous cars. None of the contenders finished the course, and one lunged menacingly at spectators. Now Google’s fleet of self-driving cars has completed 140,000 miles on the road with only two small accidents—one of them caused by human error.
15  Betting all-in on robots: This year Nevada became the first state to issue licenses for self-driving cars.
16  Many high-end vehicles are already partly autonomous, with brakes that activate if sensors indicate an impending crash, steering that prevents drifting, sonar systems that navigate into parking spaces, and cruise control that prevents following the next car too closely.
17  Self-driving cars could improve highway flow by regulating distances between cars and ease urban congestion by automating the search for parking (which causes up to three-quarters of city traffic).
18  Could they even eliminate dumb driver errors? “Crashless is the goal,” John Maddox of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration recently told Automotive News.
19  The AMC Gremlin, often cited as one of the ugliest cars ever made, pioneered the high-hood, sloping-side-window look ubiquitous among today’s SUVs. Which makes AMC’s Bob Nixon perhaps the world’s most unsung designer.
20  What is the most beautiful car? Good luck getting any two people to agree, but the 1946 Cisitalia 202 GT was the first to be exhibited alongside the Picassos at New York’s Museum of Modern Art. If it does not make your heart jump, check your pulse.

Killing the Computer to Save It

MENLO PARK, Calif. — Many people cite Albert Einstein’s aphorism “Everything should be made as simple as possible, but no simpler.” Only a handful, however, have had the opportunity to discuss the concept with the physicist over breakfast.

One of those is Peter G. Neumann, now an 80-year-old computer scientist at SRI International, a pioneering engineering research laboratory here.
As an applied-mathematics student atHarvard, Dr. Neumann had a two-hour breakfast with Einstein on Nov. 8, 1952. What the young math student took away was a deeply held philosophy of design that has remained with him for six decades and has been his governing principle of computing and computer security.
For many of those years, Dr. Neumann (pronounced NOY-man) has remained a voice in the wilderness, tirelessly pointing out that the computer industry has a penchant for repeating the mistakes of the past. He has long been one of the nation’s leading specialists in computer security, and early on he predicted that the security flaws that have accompanied the pell-mell explosion of the computer and Internet industries would have disastrous consequences.
“His biggest contribution is to stress the ‘systems’ nature of the security and reliability problems,” said Steven M. Bellovin, chief technology officer of the Federal Trade Commission. “That is, trouble occurs not because of one failure, but because of the way many different pieces interact.”
Dr. Bellovin said that it was Dr. Neumann who originally gave him the insight that “complex systems break in complex ways” — that the increasing complexity of modern hardware and software has made it virtually impossible to identify the flaws and vulnerabilities in computer systems and ensure that they are secure and trustworthy.
The consequence has come to pass in the form of an epidemic of computer malware and rising concerns about cyberwarfare as a threat to global security, voiced alarmingly this month by the defense secretary, Leon E. Panetta, who warned of a possible “cyber-Pearl Harbor” attack on the United States.
It is remarkable, then, that years after most of his contemporaries have retired, Dr. Neumann is still at it and has seized the opportunity to start over and redesign computers and software from a “clean slate.”
He is leading a team of researchers in an effort to completely rethink how to make computers and networks secure, in a five-year project financed by the Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or Darpa, with Robert N. Watson, a computer security researcher at Cambridge University’s Computer Laboratory.
“I’ve been tilting at the same windmills for basically 40 years,” said Dr. Neumann recently during a lunchtime interview at a Chinese restaurant near his art-filled home in Palo Alto, Calif. “And I get the impression that most of the folks who are responsible don’t want to hear about complexity. They are interested in quick and dirty solutions.

European Newspapers Seeking a Piece of Google Ad Revenue


PARIS got rich by selling a simple proposition: The links it provides to other Web sites are worth a lot of money, so much that millions of advertisers are willing to pay the company billions of dollars for them.
Now some European newspaper and magazine publishers, frustrated by their inability to make more of their own money from the Web, want to reverse the equation. Google, they say, should pay them for links, because they provide the material on which the Web giant is generating all that revenue.
In several of the biggest European countries, they are close to getting their way.
A bill working its way through the German Parliament would enable publishers to collect a fee from Google and other search engines and news “aggregators” when they display excerpts from news articles alongside links to newspaper and magazine Web sites.
This week, President François Hollande of France threatened Google with similar legislation unless it came up with a way to compensate news sites by the end of the year. Last week, publishers in Italy said they would also lobby for such a law.
But Google so far is standing its ground. Already facing possible sanctions from European antitrust and privacy regulators, Google says that having to pay for links could threaten its “very existence.”
And it warned that the demand for money could backfire. If Google had to pay up, it “would consequently be forced to stop indexing the French sites,” Google wrote in a “position paper” it sent to the French government. Because 30 percent to 40 percent of the traffic on French news sites comes from Google’s links, the company’s threat is not an idle one.
Google said such laws would undermine its commitment to an open Internet and the free flow of information. It would also invert the company’s main business model. A majority of the company’s $38 billion in annual revenue comes from the sale of “sponsored links,” which appear alongside free search results. Google also sells advertisements on behalf of outside partners, including news sites, and shares revenue with them.
European publishers say their existence is even more precarious, unless they can start to generate more money from their Web sites and other digital products, like mobile applications. While advertising revenue continues to rise at Google, it has flattened out or is even falling at many European online publications.
“We effectively feed the search engine and the algorithm, constantly giving them fresh content, content that you can rely on, because it’s checked and it’s accurate,” said Nathalie Collin, the head of the I.P.G., an organization of French newspaper and magazine publishers. “This is why they can sell advertising.”
Mr. Hollande appears to agree with them. In a meeting with Eric E. Schmidt, the executive chairman of Google, at the Élysée Palace this week, the president “expressed his desire that negotiations between Google and news publishers begin rapidly and conclude by the end of the year,” his office said in a statement.
Mr. Hollande “stressed that dialogue and negotiation between partners appeared to him to be the better option, but that if necessary, a law could be implemented on this question, following the example of Germany.”
In a statement, Google played down talk of an ultimatum, saying Mr. Schmidt had “been to France many times to meet government officials and discuss how the Internet can help create jobs as well as export French culture globally.”
The German proposal cited by Mr. Hollande would create a so-called ancillary copyright, protecting online news content and regulating secondary uses of it, including the snippets that search engines and aggregators like Google News display to detail links to other sites.
Business users, like Google, would have to pay royalties in order to display news publishers’ material, even short excerpts. A collecting society, like the agencies that gather royalties on behalf of musicians, would collect the payments and distribute the money owed to publishers.

I.B.M. Reports Nanotube Chip Breakthrough


SAN FRANCISCO — scientists are reporting progress in a chip-making technology that is likely to ensure that the basic digital switch at the heart of modern microchips will continue to shrink for more than a decade.
The advance, first described in the journal Nature Nanotechnology on Sunday, is based on carbon nanotubes — exotic molecules that have long held out promise as an alternative to silicon from which to create the tiny logic gates now used by the billions to create microprocessors and memory chips.
The I.B.M. scientists at the T.J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, N.Y., have been able to pattern an array of carbon nanotubes on the surface of a silicon wafer and use them to build hybrid chips with more than 10,000 working transistors.
Against all expectations, silicon-based chips have continued to improve in speed and capacity for the last five decades. In recent years, however, there has been growing uncertainty about whether the technology would continue to improve.
A failure to increase performance would inevitably stall a growing array of industries that have fed off the falling cost of computer chips.
Chip makers have routinely doubled the number of transistors that can be etched on the surface of silicon wafers by shrinking the size of the tiny switches that store and route the ones and zeros that are processed by digital computers.
The switches are rapidly approaching dimensions that can be measured in terms of the widths of just a few atoms.
The process known as Moore’s Law was named after Gordon Moore, who in 1965 noted that the industry was doubling the number of transistors it could build on a single chip at routine intervals of about two years.
To maintain that rate of progress, semiconductor engineers have had to consistently perfect a range of related manufacturing systems and materials that continue to perform at evermore Lilliputian scale.
Vials contain carbon nanotubes that have been suspended in liquid.I.B.M. ResearchVials contain carbon nanotubes that have been suspended in liquid.
The I.B.M. advance is significant, scientists said, because the chip-making industry has not yet found a way forward beyond the next two or three generations of silicon.
“This is terrific. I’m really excited about this,” said Subhasish Mitra, an electrical engineering professor who specializes in carbon nanotube materials.
The promise of the new materials is twofold, he said: carbon nanotubes will allow chip makers to build smaller transistors while also probably increasing the speed at which they can be turned on and off.
In recent years, while chip makers have continued to double the number of transistors on chips, their performance, measured as “clock speed,” has largely stalled.
This has required the computer industry to change its designs and begin building more so-called parallel computers. Today, even smartphone microprocessors come with as many as four processors, or “cores,” which are used to break up tasks so they can be processed simultaneously.
I.B.M. scientists say they believe that once they have perfected the use of carbon nanotubes — sometime after the end of this decade — it will be possible to sharply increase the speed of chips while continuing to sharply increase the number of transistors.
This year, I.B.M. researchers published a separate paper describing the speedup made possible by carbon nanotubes.
“These devices outperformed any other switches made from any other material,” said Supratik Guha, director of physical sciences at I.B.M.’s Yorktown Heights research center. “We had suspected this all along, and our device physicists had simulated this, and they showed that we would see a factor of five or more performance improvement over conventional silicon devices.”
Carbon nanotubes are one of three promising technologies engineers hope will be perfected in time to keep the industry on its Moore’s Law pace.
Graphene is another promising material that is being explored, as well as a variant of the standard silicon transistor known as a tunneling field-effect transistor.
Dr. Guha, however, said carbon nanotube materials had more promising performance characteristics and that I.B.M. physicists and chemists had perfected a range of “tricks” to ease the manufacturing process.
Carbon nanotubes are essentially single sheets of carbon rolled into tubes. In the Nature Nanotechnology paper, the I.B.M. researchers described how they were able to place ultrasmall rectangles of the material in regular arrays by placing them in a soapy mixture to make them soluble in water. They used a process they described as “chemical self-assembly” to create patterned arrays in which nanotubes stick in some areas of the surface while leaving other areas untouched.
Perfecting the process will require a more highly purified form of the carbon nanotube material, Dr. Guha said, explaining that less pure forms are metallic and are not good semiconductors.
Dr. Guha said that in the 1940s scientists at Bell Labs had discovered ways to purify germanium, a metal in the carbon group that is chemically similar to silicon, to make the first transistors. He said he was confident that I.B.M. scientists would be able to make 99.99 percent pure carbon nanotubes in the future.

Google Introduces New Emergency Resources in Response to Sandy

Google has scrambled to post online resources for people who want information about the deadly storm Sandy, including maps showing evacuation routes and shelters and a new service that sends emergency alerts to Google users.
On Monday night, the new service, to show warnings about natural disasters and emergencies based on information from government agencies like Ready.gov and the National Weather Service. Google said it had planned to introduce the service later, but sped up the process in response to Sandy. In the future, it will add alerts from other services, like Nixle, which publishes messages from the local police.
The alerts show up in response to searches on Google.com and Google Maps, and appear unprompted on the cellphones of people with the latest version of Android, through Google Now.
“This is part of our continuing mission to bring emergency information to people when and where it is relevant,” Nigel Snoad, a product manager for Google Crisis Response, wrote in a company blog post.
Using Google Maps, the company has created a map of the storm area. Markers show where power is out; the location of evacuation shelters and routes; traffic conditions; and where surges, floods and high winds are expected. There are also public alerts. People can choose different views, including the addition of cloud imagery or location-based Webcams and YouTube videos to the map.
Google has also published  with shelters, Webcams, evacuation routes and other information from NYC Open Data, the city’s Web site for sharing data with software developers.
The public alerts and maps are products  of Google.org, the company’s nonprofit arm, whose focus is to use Google products and engineers to help solve problems. It was started in 2005 in response to Hurricane Katrina and has published online resources for disasters like hurricanes and oil spills since then, including the person finder feature that was used after the Japan earthquake.
For the Sandy maps, Google has drawn information from the Red Cross, the National Hurricane Center, Weather.gov, Storyful and the United States Naval Research Laboratory, among others.
A search on Tuesday for “New Haven flooding” showed a public alert about coastal flooding. A search for “hurricane Sandy” showed, above the usual search results, links to government Web sites with storm updates and to Google’s crisis map.

Yes, Driverless Cars Know the Way to San Jose

 THE “look Ma, no hands” moment came at about 60 miles an hour on Highway 101.
Brian Torcellini, Google’s driving program manager, had driven out of the parking lot at one of the company’s research buildings and along local streets to the freeway, a main artery through Silicon Valley. But shortly after clearing the on-ramp and accelerating to the pace of traffic, he pushed a yellow button on the modified console between the front seats. A loud electronic chime came from the car’s speakers, followed by a synthesized female voice.
“Autodriving,” it announced breathlessly.
Mr. Torcellini took his hands off the steering wheel, lifted his foot from the accelerator, and the Lexus hybrid drove itself, following the curves of the freeway, speeding up to get out of another car’s blind spot, moving over slightly to stay well clear of a truck in the next lane, slowing when a car cut in front.
“We adjusted our speed to give him a little room,” said Anthony Levandowski, one of the lead engineers for Google’s self-driving-car project, who was monitoring the system on a laptop from the passenger seat. “Just like a person would.”
Since the project was first widely publicized more than two years ago, Google has been seen as being at the forefront of efforts to free humans from situations when driving is drudgery. In all, the company’s driverless cars — earlier-generation Toyota Priuses and the newer Lexuses, recognizable by their spinning, roof-mounted laser range finders — have logged about 300,000 miles on all kinds of roads. (Mr. Torcellini unofficially leads the pack, with roughly 30,000 miles behind the wheel — but not turning it.)
But the company is far from alone in its quest for a car that will drive just like a person would, or actually better. Most major automobile manufacturers are working on self-driving systems in one form or another.
Google says it does not want to make cars, but instead work with suppliers and automakers to bring its technology to the marketplace. The company sees the project as an outgrowth of its core work in software and data management, and talks about reimagining people’s relationship with their automobiles.
Self-driving cars, Mr. Levandowski said, will give people “the ability to move through space without necessarily wasting your time.”
Driving cars, he added, “is the most important thing that computers are going to do in the next 10 years.”
For the automakers, on the other hand, self-driving is more about evolution than revolution — about building incrementally upon existing features like smart cruise control and parking assist to make cars that are safer and easier to drive, although the driver is still in control. Full autonomy may be the eventual goal, but the first aim is to make cars more desirable to customers.
“We have this technology,” said Marcial Hernandez, principal engineer at the Volkswagen Group’s Electronics Research Laboratory, up the road in Belmont, Calif. “How do we turn it into a product that can be advertised to a customer, that will have some benefit to a customer?”
With all the research efforts, there is a growing consensus among transportation experts that self-driving cars are coming, sooner than later, and that the potential benefits — in crashes, deaths and injuries avoided, and in roads used more efficiently, to name a few — are enormous. Already, Florida, Nevada and California have made self-driving cars legal for testing purposes, giving each car, in effect, its own driver’s license.
Richard Wallace, director for transportation systems analysis at the Center for Automotive Research, a nonprofit group that recently released a report on self-driving cars with the consulting firm KPMG, said that probably by the end of the decade, “we would be able to have a safe, hands-free left-lane commute.” In 15 to 2

In Shake-Up, Apple’s Mobile Software and Retail Chiefs to Depart

Scott Forstall at an Apple event in September.
Updated Apple fired the executives in charge of the company’s mobile software efforts and retail stores, in a management shake-up aimed at making the company’s divisions work more harmoniously together.
The biggest of the changes involved the departure of Scott Forstall, an Apple veteran who for several years ran software development for Apple’s iPad and iPhone products. Mr. Forstall was an important executive at the company and the one who, in many respects, seemed to most closely embody the technology vision of Steven P. Jobs, the former chief executive of Apple who died a year ago.
But Mr. Forstall was also known as ambitious and divisive, qualities that generated more friction within Apple after the death of Mr. Jobs, who had kept the dueling egos of his senior executives largely in check. Mr. Forstall’s responsibilities will be divided among a few other Apple executives.
While tensions between Mr. Forstall and other executives had been mounting for some time, a recent incident appeared to play a major role in his dismissal. After an outcry among iPhone customers about bugs in the company’s new mobile maps service, Mr. Forstall refused to sign a public apology over the matter, dismissing the problems as exaggerated, according to people with knowledge of the situation who declined to be named discussing confidential matters.
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Gmail gets small update


Google is previewing a small change that will affect every e-mail that you write, the company announced Tuesday.
The company made a change to the “Compose” button, which now opens in a pop-up window similar to the way the company displays chats. The change, Google product manager Phil Sharp said, will make it easier to reference old e-mails while composing new ones.

“We’re always trying to make Gmail faster and easier to use, so today we’re introducing a completely redesigned compose and reply experience that does just that,” Sharp wrote.
With the new design, users will be able to keep an eye on their inboxes, reference older e-mails and conduct searches while still writing a new e-mail. You can also minimize a new message in the same way you can minimize chats — meaning that you can keep multiple draft e-mails in front of you at a time.
Google is also making some changes to the address line. Users can easily drag names between the “to” “cc” and “bcc” fields — much the way that users can on mobile mail clients — and pictures will show up next to the names of people in your address book as you type.
Both of the address line features were already present in Sparrow, the popular third-party mail client that Google purchased earlier this year.
Sharp said that Google will be previewing the new design to some users and rolling it out to everyone in the coming weeks.

Google officially announces Nexus 4, Nexus 7 and Nexus 10


Google, after canceling  a Mahnatan launch event , announced in a blog post that it will release three more gadgets before the holidays — two tablets and a new smartphone — in its Nexus line.
“Today, we’re excited to announce three great new Nexus devices … in small, medium and large,” wrote Andy Rubin, Google’s head of mobile and digital content. All three devices will run an updated version of Android, Android 4.2.
The devices are much as rumored. The Nexus 4, Google's smartphone, has a 4.7-inch display and an 8 MP camera to take advantage of Photo Sphere. It will cost $299 for 8GB of storage or $349 for 16 GB of storage, unlocked. Consumers can also pick up the smartphone for $199 with a two-year contract on T-Mobile.
It will go on sale at T-Mobile on Nov. 14, the carrier said in a release.
As for tablets, Google has revamped its Asus-made Nexus 7 to double the memory on the device while keeping the same pricing structure. For $199, users will get 16GB of storage; for $249, they have access to 32GB. Google also added a cellular data version of the 32 GB tablets, which costs $299, unlocked. It will run on any HSPA+ network, including AT&T, the company saidin its post. T-Mobile also runs an HSPA+ network.
The Nexus 10, built by Samsung, has a high-definition screen with a better resolution than the iPad and is designed to make it easy to switch between user profiles on the same device.
“[You] can add multiple users and switch between them instantly right from the lockscreen,” Rubin wrote, calling it the “first truly shareable tablet.
The Nexus 10, available Nov. 13, will cost 16GB for $399; 32GB for $499. This is the first time Google has stepped up directly to compete with larger tablets such as Apple’s iPad or the Microsoft Surface.
The company also announced that it will bring a “scan-and-match” feature to Google Music, which will keep users from having to manually upload their libraries into Google's cloud. The feature will hit Europe first, the company said, and will follow in the U.S. within a couple of weeks. The service, unlike Apple’s iTunes Match service, will be free
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Google finally catches up to Apple with 700K apps

The Google Play Store now has 700,000 Android apps, finally catching up to roughly the same number of programs in Apple’s App Store.

A Google spokesperson confirmed the new numbers to VentureBeat, but it has not yet made a formal announcement.


Back in September, Apple announced that it had hit 700,000 apps in the App Store, while Google said it had 600,000 apps back in June. Apple likely still has the lead still, but now we can say that both companies have around the same number of apps.
Hopefully we can all agree that 700,000 is more than enough apps for a mobile platform and now there needs to be an emphasis on quality control and being able to find the best apps. Apple has tried to do this with the latest version of its app store in iOS 6, but it can still be tough to find the best apps for regardless of platform.
As for other platforms, Windows Phone hasmore than 100,000 apps. Research in Motion is currently trying to convince developers to build for its BlackBerry 10 platform.
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Growing tablet market means more choice, confusion for gadget-lovers



This holiday season is turning into a battle among tech giants for the hand-held computer that every tech geek, executive, student and child will be carrying around next year.
Analysts expect tablets to be a top gift this year as the appeal of the devices grows to a wider audience looking to move up from e-readers or down from laptops. It will probably be a make-or-break few months for new market entrants,  as consumers wade through the myriad choices.

Windows, Revamped and Split in 2


  This may be the biggest week in  37-year history. The company is releasing its very first computer , a new phone operating system (Windows Phone 8), and, believe it or not, two PC operating systems.
Stuart Goldenberg
I’m not talking about Windows 8 and Windows RT, which are, in fact, two new and distinct operating systems from Microsoft. I mean the two different worlds within Windows 8 alone, one designed primarily for touch screens, the other for mouse and keyboard. Individually, they are excellent — but you can’t use them individually. Microsoft has combined them into a superimposed, muddled mishmash called Windows 8, which goes on sale Friday at prices ranging from $15 to $40, depending on the offer and version.
You can easily imagine how Microsoft got here. “PC sales have slowed,” some executive must have said. “This is a new age of touch screens! We need a fresh approach, a new Windows. Something bold, fluid and finger-friendly.”
“Well, hold on,” someone must have countered. “We can’t forget the 600 million regular mouse-driven PCs. We also need to update Windows 7 for them!”
And then things went terribly wrong.
“Hey, I know!” somebody piped in. “Let’s combine those two Windows versions into one. One OS for all machines. Everybody’s happy!”
Whoops.
Let’s tackle each version one at a time. (A note: I have written a how-to manual for Windows 8 for an independent publisher; it was neither commissioned by nor written in cooperation with Microsoft.)
DESKTOP WINDOWS This is my name for the traditional Windows: the land of overlapping windows, menus and the taskbar across the bottom. Here, you can run any of the four million traditional Windows apps, which Microsoft calls desktop apps: Photoshop, Quicken, tax software, games.
Windows 8’s desktop is basically the well-regarded Windows 7 with a few choice enhancements, like faster start-up, a Lock screen that displays a clock and notifications, and more control over multiple-monitor arrangements.
You can now log into any Windows 8 PC with a Microsoft ID. Boom: your wallpaper, online mail accounts, contacts, photos and SkyDrive contents are instantly available. (SkyDrive is Microsoft’s free seven-gigabyte online hard drive.)
The Task Manager now offers a table of open programs, showing which are the memory and processor hogs. File Explorer (formerly Windows Explorer) now has a collapsible toolbar. A new Refresh option lets you restore Windows to its virginal, factory-fresh condition without disturbing programs and files.
There’s a superb new feature called Family Safety, which provides you, the all-knowing parent, with a weekly summary of how much time your offspring have spent on the PC, and which Web sites, searches, programs and downloads they’ve used. You can also set time limits for weekdays and weekends.
Finally, there’s no more Start menu. The taskbar is still there, but the Start-menu icon isn’t on it. More on this in a moment.
TILEWORLD The enormous, controversial change in Windows 8 is the overlaying of the second “operating system,” intended for touch screens.
(It’s not really called TileWorld. But Microsoft doesn’t have a good name for it. Insiders know it as the Metro interface — that was its code name — but Microsoft simply refers to it as Windows 8, which is so infuriatingly confusing you feel like firing somebody. I’m going to go with TileWorld.)
TileWorld is modeled on Microsoft’s lovely Windows Phone software. It presents a home screen filled with colorful square and rectangular tiles. Each represents an app — and, often, that app’s latest data.
For example, the Calendar tile displays your next appointment. The People tile (your address book) shows the latest post from your social networks. The Mail tile shows the subject line of the latest incoming message.
TileWorld is absolutely fantastic for tablets. The tiles glide gracefully with a swipe of your finger. You can “pin” frequently used tiles to the Start screen: programs, Web sites, playlists, photo albums, people from your contacts list, mail accounts or mailboxes, icons from Desktop Windows, and, of course, apps. The tiles are fun to rearrange, resize, cluster into groups and so on.

Nuclear Fusion Project Struggles to Put the Pieces Together


ITER
The world's largest scientific project is threatened with further delays, as agencies struggle to complete the design and sign contracts worth hundred of millions of euros with industrial partners, Nature has learned.
ITER is a massive project designed to show the feasibility of nuclear fusion as a power source. The device consists of a doughnut-shaped reactor called a tokamak, wrapped in superconducting magnets that squeeze and heat a plasma of hydrogen isotopes to the point of fusion. The result should be something that no experiment to date has been able to achieve: the controlled release of ten times more energy than is consumed.
That's the dream. But so far, ITER has been consuming mostly money and time. Since seven international partners signed up to the project in 2006, the price has roughly tripled to around €15 billion (US$19.4 billion), and the original date of completion has slipped by four years to late 2020. Many of the delays and cost increases have come from an extensive design review, which was completed in 2009 (see 'Fusion dreams delayed').
Now, sources familiar with the project warn that the complex system for buying ITER's many pieces could put the project even further behind schedule. Rather than providing cash, ITER's partners have pledged 'in kind' contributions of pieces of the machine. Magnets, instruments and reactor sections will arrive from around the world to be cobbled together at the central site in St-Paul-lès-Durance in southern France. Because no one body holds the purse strings, designs for the machine's components face a tortuous back-and-forth between the central ITER Organization and national 'domestic agencies', which ensure that local companies secure contracts for ITER's components.
Nowhere is the problem more pronounced than the tokamak, the central structure that will eventually house ITER. The construction of the building is meant to be contracted out by Fusion for Energy (F4E), Europe's domestic agency. But the ITER Organization could not tell the agency what needed to be built, says Rem Haange, ITER's technical director, until it received data from the other domestic agencies on the numerous systems and subsystems that the building must house. That process was seriously behind schedule when Haange arrived in 2011, he says. "Not a single piece of data had been given by the domestic agencies."
Haange says, however, that the project remains firmly on schedule, and he is racing to make up for lost time. A task force of engineers is working through the tokamak building design floor-by-floor to finalize it. "We have a deadline for every floor level, and we are just about making it," he says. The final design will be finished in March next year, but to keep the project on schedule, F4E must tender the construction contract by the end of this year.
Contract compromises
F4E is also encountering trouble on another key contract, for the giant poloidal field coils that will wrap around the girth of the machine. The coils are among the largest in ITER, and the bottommost ones must be completed before the machine can be assembled. The ITER Organization authorized procurement of the coils in 2009, but F4E's tender received just a single, joint bid from the French firm Alstom and the German company Babcock Noell.
F4E rejected the bid because it came in far above the agency's cost expectations, according to multiple sources, who declined to be named because of the sensitivity of the bidding process. Isabelle Tourancheau, a spokeswoman for Alstom, said that the bid had failed after "long and difficult technical and commercial negotiations". Aris Apollonatos, a spokesperson for F4E, says that the contract will now be broken into seven parts to make it more attractive to competitors and put it back out to tender. A meeting earlier this month garnered interest from 27 companies, he says.

Hurricane Sandy Knocks Out Gawker and Other News Sites


The power outages that swept through the East Coast, including large swaths of Manhattan, in the wake of Hurricane Sandy, darkened millions of homes, as well as several major Web sites, including the hive of sites in the Gawker Media network, including Jezebel and Gizmodo. The Huffington Post and social media news site Buzzfeed also went dark.
The sites appeared to go off around 7 p.m., not long after Hurricane Sandy made its first contact with land. The sites seemed to share a common Internet service provider, Datagram. It is housed in the financial district in Lower Manhattan, which lost power on Monday evening. Although Datagram uses backup electricity generators in the event of a storm, its offices were flooded, knocking those machines out as well.
Buzzfeed alerted its readers to the outages and said it was able to get portions of the site back online with the help of Akamai, a site that hosts its content at various servers distributed around the globe. The company also encouraged readers to follow the site’s Tumblr and Twitter feeds for updates.
Gawker went dark Monday night after its servers were knocked out by flooding. The company has been updating its readers using Twitter and is encouraging people  for news and updates.
On a message posted to Twitter, the company promised it was “continuing to work on our servers and will be back online as soon as is possible. We miss you already. Stay dry.”

Lawyer Withdraws From Case by Man Claiming Facebook Ownership

Paul Ceglia, who claimed he owns half of Facebook, at home in 2010.
The lawyer representing a man claiming to own a substantial stake in Facebook withdrew from the case on Tuesday, just a day after he defended his client 
Federal prosecutors arrested the entrepreneur, Paul Ceglia, last week on fraud charges, accusing him of forging the e-mails and contract that supported his two-year-old claim against the social networking giant.
Dean Boland, the lawyer for Mr. Ceglia, notified the court that he was dropping out of the civil lawsuit. His reasons for withdrawing were filed under seal, but in the public portion of his filing, Mr. Boland supported his client.
“The undersigned feels it is important to emphasize in the strongest terms possible, that the reasons underlying this request, provided to the court for its review, have nothing to do with any belief by the undersigned that plaintiff is engaged in now or has been engaged in during the past, fraud regarding this case,” Mr. Boland wrote.
In an interview with The Times on Monday, Mr. Boland backed his client’s claims and said he would continue to pursue the case against Facebook. He said that the government’s criminal charges would help his client’s cause because it suggested that some of Mr. Ceglia’s evidence was authentic.
Prosecutors say that Mr. Ceglia, 39, of Wellsville, N.Y.claiming that Mr. Zuckerberg, as a Harvard freshman in 2003, promised him an at least 50 percent in the social network, and that he doctored, fabricated and destroyed evidence to support his claims.
“Ceglia’s alleged conduct not only constitutes a massive fraud attempt, but also an attempted corruption of our legal system through the manufacture of false evidence,” Preet Bharara, the United States attorney in Manhattan, said in a statement. “Dressing up a fraud as a lawsuit does not immunize you from prosecution.”
Mr. Ceglia has been detained since his arrest on Friday and is expected to make an appearance and enter a plea in Federal District Court in Buffalo on Wednesday. A federal public defender represents him in the criminal case.
Mr. Boland is the latest lawyer to withdraw from his civil case.
Mr. Ceglia’s lawyers since 2010 have included Robert W. Brownlie of DLA Piper, the world’s largest law firm, a former New York attorney general now in private practice. Mr. Brownlie and Mr. Vacco dropped out of the case after Kasowitz Benson Friedman & Torres, another law firm that had briefly represented Mr. Ceglia, notified them that it believed Mr. Ceglia’s supposed contract with Mr. Zuckerberg was a sham.
Mr. Brownlie, who last year staunchly defended the legitimacy of his client’s claims to The Times, has not returned multiple calls and e-mails seeking comment. Mr. Vacco declined to comment, citing attorney-client privilege.
In his withdrawal filing on Tuesday, Mr. Boland, of Lakewood, Ohio, said that no one had proved that Mr. Ceglia’s claims were fraudulent.
“Myself and prior counsel all have and had a duty to bring to this court any evidence of fraud, even fraud by our own client, should we have come across it,” wrote Mr. Boland. “No prior counsel and current counsel, including the undersigned, have done so. The undersigned, at no time, has encountered evidence of fraud by plaintiff.”
Facebook’s lawyers at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher have suggested that Facebook could pursue disciplinary claims against some of the lawyers that represented Mr. Ceglia.