Category: Software

  • Under the Radar Deals: 20-Something New England December Financings Worth $1M or Less

    Radar
    Erin Kutz wrote:

    We recently summarized the major December equity investments in Massachusetts’ tech and life sciences startups, but the New England region also had some more pint-sized deals worth noting. They’re between $100,000 and $1 million—what we like to call the under-the radar-deals tracked by our partner, New York-based ChubbyBrain, an information services company developing tools for investors, startups, and hopeful entrepreneurs.

    While these financings—some based in equity and others in debt—are small enough that we don’t typically cover them in our breaking news briefs or deals roundups, we’ve often looked at them as signs of what’s to come in industry investing, or bellwethers of which stealthy companies are on the rise. The December under-the-radar list brings us companies working on innovative solutions in spaces as diverse as glucose monitoring for diabetics, open-heart surgery alternatives, local advertising for newspapers, ADHD diagnostics, private air travel booking, your golf game, and beer brewing.

    A total of 21 such deals went down in the region last month, with 12 in equity-based funding and nine in debt-related financing. Massachusetts wrapped up the vast majority, with 13 of these smaller deals. Connecticut and New Hampshire each had a trio of December financings, while Rhode Island and Maine each took one home.

    Life sciences companies, particularly in the medical device realm, were prominent on the under-the-radar list, with technologies addressing a myriad of physical and mental ailments, from ADHD to cellulite to respiratory disease. One of the medical devices investments went to Myomo, a Boston-based company we reported on last April after it had slashed staff by 66 percent—from 12 to four full-time employees–and scaled back operations to a more virtual environment.

    The company was slowed by sluggish sales of its robotic elbow brace, designed to help stroke victims recover movement of partially paralyzed limbs. Myomo looks like it has regained some of its footing, though, judging by a December equity investment of $616,765 that VP of communications Matt Burke says comes from a range of private investors as part of a Series C round. An SEC filing reveals the total venture round to be targeting $1 million.

    A good chunk of the region’s under-the-radar financings went to …Next Page »







  • Aplicaciones para crear tu propia distribución Linux

    Muchos de los usuarios de Gnu/Linux que comienzan a meter mano en su distribución se dan cuenta que estas traen muy poco software y una configuración que no se ajusta mucho a sus necesidades.

    Gracias a que el Sistema operativo Gnu/Linux es de libre modificación podemos hacer y deshacer una distribución Linux como nos plazca y luego guardarla en un iso para así, poder distribuirla e instalarla en donde queramos tal y como la teníamos en nuestra PC.

    Estas son algunas de las aplicaciones o medios que nos permiten tener nuestra distribución Gnu/Linux a medida:

    Remastersys

    Esta herramienta tiene una interfaz gráfica de usuario bastante simple y funciona tanto en Ubuntu, Debian como cualquiera de sus derivados.

    Remastersys obras de la transferencia de la distribución se está ejecutando en una imagen ISO. Usted puede optar por incluir la configuración y los datos personales también, que la hace ideal para copias de seguridad.

    Web: http://www.geekconnection.org/remastersys/index.html

    UCK

    UCK es una herramienta que te ayuda a personalizar Live CDs oficiales de Ubuntu (incluyendo Kubuntu, Xubuntu y Edubuntu) y ajustarlos a tus necesidades. Puede añadir cualquier paquete al sistema «live» como, por ejemplo, paquetes de idiomas, aplicaciones, etc.

    Algunas Características:
    * Crea live CDs autoarrancables con idiomas predefinidos basados en un live CD de Ubuntu o Kubuntu usando un asistente gráfico.
    * Crea live CDs con características especiales usando scripts. Es posible personalizar el sistema de archivos raíz (por ejemplo, instalar o quitar paquetes), el contenido de la ISO (añadir y quitar documentos, cambiar nombres) y el initrd (añadir módulos en el arranque, cambiar la secuencia de arranque).

    Web: http://uck.sourceforge.net

    Reconstructor

    Como su nombre lo indica, esta herramienta es una suite completa para crear tus propias distribuciones personalizadas de Ubuntu y Debian desde una imagen ISO existente. Les da la posibilidad de ajustar el fondo de pantalla, temas, iconos, aplicaciones y mucho más.

    Herramienta que se ejecuta desde el navegador y requiere instalación, pero requiere de una pequeña cuota para poder utilizar todas sus características.

    Web: http://www.reconstructor.org/wiki/reconstructor/

    Revisor

    A diferencia de las tres herramientas de arriba, esta aplicación es para una distribución basada en paquetes RPM, Fedora. Revisor tiene tanto una interfaz gráfica de usuario y una interfaz de línea de comandos, y puede crear los medios de comunicación USB Live, así como CDs y DVDs instalables.

    En lugar de utilizar las imágenes ISO, Revisor va descargando los paquetes de Internet, por lo que puede tardar algún tiempo en función de tu velocidad de conexión y la selección de paquetes.

    Web: http://revisor.fedoraunity.org

    SUSE Studio

    SUSE Studio de Novell te permite seleccionar los paquetes, establecer diversas configuraciones (incluyendo la detección de la red, la configuración del firewall, etc) y seleccionar un logotipo, fondo y más.

    Se accede desde dentro de un navegador y desde ahí la descargas a la imagen ISO para compartirla con el mundo.

    Web: http://susestudio.com

    Pungi

    Esta es la herramienta que utilizan los desarrolladores de Fedora. Es una herramienta de línea de comandos escrita en Python.

    Como Revisor, la herramienta recoge los paquetes directamente desde Internet y luego automáticamente los divide y crea las imágenes ISO instalable.

    Web: https://fedorahosted.org/pungi/

    MySlax Creador

    La herramienta crea versiones personalizadas de la distribución basada en Slackware-Slax, pero a diferencia de las otras herramientas que hablamos aquí, MySlax trabaja desde dentro de Windows!

    Funciona con imágenes de Slax y te permite añadir datos propios.

    Web: http://sites.google.com/site/myslaxcreator/

    Linux From Scratch

    LFS es una colección de documentos que nos indican los pasos para compilar una distribución Linux desde cero. El proyecto se diferencia de otras distribuciones en que no consta de paquetes y scripts preensamblados para una instalación automática del sistema, sino que sus usuarios son provistos simplemente con paquetes de código fuente y un manual de instrucciones para el armado de un sistema GNU/Linux propio.

    Debido al inmenso trabajo que demanda la instalación de este sistema en comparación a otras distribuciones, los usuarios que deciden hacer uso de LFS son principalmente aficionados que desean aprender sobre el funcionamiento interno de un sistema GNU/Linux y ensamblar un sistema a su medida. Linux From Scratch es también utilizado como base de varias distribuciones, usualmente alejadas de su espíritu original de “metadistribución”.

    Web: http://www.linuxfromscratch.org

    Fuente:  techradar

  • Data Breaches Cost Over $200 per Customer Record

    The cost of a data breach increased last year to $204 per compromised customer record, according to the Ponemon Institute’s annual study. The average total cost of a data breach rose from $6.65 million in 2008 to $6.75 million in 2009. The Ponemon Institute based its estimates on data from 45 companies that publicly acknowledged a breach of sensitive customer data last year and were willing to discuss it. In tallying the cost of a data breach, the Ponemon Institute looks at several factors, including: the cost of lost business because of an incident; legal fees; disclosure expenses related to customer contact and public response; consulting help; and remediation expenses such as technology and training.

    Courtesy of slashdot.org

  • Spinballs – Great Windows Mobile puzzle game

    There are addictive puzzle games & there are very addictive puzzle games. Spinballs is the latter of the two. It’s a unique challenge where you have to rotate any of seven disks to match up coloured balls…

    Read more at BestWindowsMobileApps here.

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  • VCs Are Not Evil: What Entrepreneurs Need To Know

    Jasper Kuria wrote:

    Venture capitalists are not evil. That is the message that Bill Bryant, the prominent Seattle venture capitalist and venture partner at Draper Fisher Jurvetson, had for Seattle technology entrepreneurs earlier this month at the STS (Seattle Tech Startups) meeting. In recent years VCs have been vilified as “vulture capitalists” among tech entrepreneurs for demanding ridiculous exits for the money they invest and forcing entrepreneurs to make “bad” decisions in pursuit of extravagant pay days when more reasonable paths to modest successes, that would assure personal wealth for entrepreneurs, exist. Speaking earlier, Chris DeVore, co-founder of Seattle-based Founder’s Co-op, referred to this phenomenon as a “terminal misalignment of interests” between venture capitalists and entrepreneurs.

    Bryant explained that this is primarily because VCs are bad at picking winners. “Entrepreneurs need to understand that we are bad at picking out the winners a priori. Despite doing extensive diligence that leads to the conclusion that every investment we eventually make is going to succeed—otherwise we wouldn’t make the investment to begin with—for every 10 deals we do, we lose all of our money on 5 to 6, we make a modest multiple on 2 or 3, but we make a lot of money on 1 or 2.” Those two successes need to deliver at least a 10x return to compensate for all the losers.

    “Unfortunately I have to penalize the winners because of all the losers—we basically price them all the same at the start since we don’t really know which one will end up in the winner category. I don’t plan for this. I make every investment fully believing that it will be a winner, otherwise I would not invest, but the reality is 5 to 6 out of every 10 will lose all the money we invest,” he reiterated. “When an entrepreneur tells me they are trying to raise $2 million for 15 percent of their company, the way I translate that request is that I now need to believe they have a reasonable chance of reaching at least a $90-$100 million exit, otherwise it doesn’t pencil out.”

    For those who think this is unreasonable, he had these words of sage advice: “Investors and VCs come in all shapes and sizes. There are about 1,700 funds. Find one who makes sense for you. There are a lot of fantastic businesses that will never reach $100 million in revenue. They are just not for us. We simply do not have the time or resources to manage two thousand, half-a-million-dollar deals.” DFJ has about $5.5 billion under management across 20 funds; the typical DFJ investment target per deal is about $12-$15 million.

    Entrepreneurs should realize that VCs have investors too and must produce results. VCs raise money from institutional investors such as pensions, foundations, and endowments for whom the VC investment is just a tiny part of their portfolio. “We are to these very large institutional investors what art collections, luxury boats, and sports teams are to super high-net-worth individuals,” said Bryant. “We need to produce competitive returns to maintain our place in the asset allocation of these investors.”

    Unlike many Seattle tech events where you have a panel of experts who are all in agreement, this was a night of conflicting opinions. The main topic was predicting technology trends for 2010 and areas that entrepreneurs should pursue. One of the speakers, executive coach Michael Schutzler, painted a rosy picture of the future for entrepreneurs, citing the great exits that took place in Q4 of 2009 after a lackluster year—Amazon acquiring Zappos, HP acquiring EDS, and the pending Oracle-Sun Deal, to name a few. In addition, as of December 31, 2009, 92 S-1 forms (the document normally filed before an initial public offering) had been filed. In contrast there were only 6 and 11 technology IPOs in 2008 and 2009 respectively, whereas there are usually 60-80 in any given year. It was notable that none of the S-1s filed were by Facebook, Twitter, or Zynga, companies that have been rumored to be preparing to go public. As of January 4th, many of Schutzler’s clients have suddenly started hearing from VCs who would not take their calls the whole of last year. “These guys are getting desperate to invest and put their money to work” he observed.

    Bryant disagreed and did not mince words. “Exits suck!” he said with finality. He thinks the near-term exit future is bleak for both entrepreneurs and VCs, noting that statistically, IPOs are at levels last seen in 1995 while M&A is down some 50 percent. He provided some data that in 2008, the last full year of data, there were approximately 125 companies that had material exits, while 950 companies …Next Page »







  • Emulador SEGA para el iPhone

    La empresa de video jugos SEGA al parecer esta viendo el gran negocio que hay tras las aplicaciones para iPhone, razon por la cual han desarrollado un emulador que permite correr sus juegos en el teléfono de Apple.

    El emulador se llama SEGA Genesis Ultimate Collection y da la posibilidad de correr los juegos que son para la Genesis / Mega Drive en el iPhone.

    Este Emulador estará disponible en la AppStore de Apple para instalarla en el iPhone de manera gratuita e incluirá con ello el Space Harrier II tambien gratuitamente.

    Lo bueno es que va haber varios juegos mas para hacerlos correr en el emulador pero que (aca viene lo malo) tendran un precio un poco mayor a los 0.99 que tienen unos cuantos juegos para el iPhone.

    Juegos pagos y precios:

    Sonic The Hedgehog (5,99 dólares)
    Golden Axe (4,99 dólares)
    Ecco The Dolphin (2,99 dólares)
    Shining Force (2,99 dólares)

    Vía: Universocelular

  • DigiGone brings secure video calls to Windows Mobile

    The encryption which protects GSM and UMTS phone calls have recently been cracked, meaning any dedicated person can listen in on the mobile telephone calls of any other. DigiGone™ Secure Mobile is the solution to this problem, allowing users to communicate with other DigiGone™ Secure Mobile and DigiGone™ Key users through fully encrypted means. DigiGone™ Secure Mobile is loaded as a suite of applications on an SD Flash Drive that is inserted into the Flash port on any smart phone running Windows Mobile 5/6.

    DigiGone™ Secure Mobile features:

    • Encrypted Video and Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) between users of DigiGone™ Secure Mobile, as well as DigiGone™ Executive and Sat-Chat, using 256-bit AES encryption (Mobile to Mobile and Mobile to PC)
    • Encrypted Instant Messaging (IM) between users of DigiGone™ Secure Mobile, as well as DigiGone™ Executive and Sat-Chat, using 256-bit AES encryption (Mobile to Mobile and Mobile to PC)
    • Encrypted transmission of files between users of DigiGone™ Secure Mobile, as well as DigiGone™ Executive and Sat-Chat, using 256-bit AES encryption (Mobile to Mobile and Mobile to PC)
    • Store encrypted or unencrypted files on Flash Drive or internally on the phone

    DigiGone™ Secure Mobile is fully compatible with the DigiGone™ Executive and Sat-Chat, and like the Key, it allows clients to operate their own network of VoIP/IM servers.

    Read more at Digigone.com

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  • For Developers: Windows Mobile 6.5.3 SDK pulled? (Updated)

    5710_image_thumb_4ABB0970Via a tweet from Arktronic we have just learned that Microsoft’s Windows Mobile 6.5 SDK is now no longer available for download.

    On checking the URL where the software used to reside we now only get an error screen.

    Arktronic speculates this may be to issues with Visual Studio 2008.  While we have not been able to confirm this elsewhere, we can say in our attempts to make the emulator visible in Visual Studio has all ended in failure, so that does seem rather plausible.

    We will update this article when more information becomes available.

    Update: Official word from the WMDev twitter channel:

    With regards to 6.5 SDK, we prematurely released an untested SDK which was not ready. We pulled it so proper testing can be completed….

    we’ll def make an official announce when the SDK is ready to go. Those responsible have been sent to the dungeons for execution. ;) ^LU

    Well, that’s one theory ;)

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  • The Apple Paradox: How a Company That’s So Closed Can Foster So Much Open Innovation

    World Wide Wade
    Wade Roush wrote:

    [Corrected and clarified, 1:30 p.m. 1/25/10, see page 2] Come Wednesday, we’ll learn a lot more about Apple’s presumed slate device. What we know right now, first hand, is a big fat nothing. Apple keeps a famously tight lid on its employees, suppliers, and partners, the only exception being the occasional strategic leak designed to spur excitement around its product launches. Even after products come out, the company controls who gets to see and monkey with them; I remember my frustration back in the spring of 2008, in the months between the announcement of the iTunes App Store and the actual launch, when I knew that dozens of local developers were writing apps for the iPhone but none of them were allowed to show their apps to journalists, on pain of ejection from the program. To this day, there’s still a rigorous and unpredictable process for getting an app into the store (though there are signs of relaxation in that department).

    And yet millions of designers, artists, musicians, writers, programmers, and other creative professionals love their Apple products, myself included. The Apple brand is almost synonymous with free-thinking creativity. The programs people are inspired to write for the Mac OS X operating system are routinely more elegant and useful and less annoying than their Windows counterparts. And the advent of the App Store, which allowed thousands of third-party developers to exploit the iPhone’s exceptional capabilities, has fostered a stunning amount of experimentation in software design, dramatically increasing the expectations we place on our mobile computing devices.

    In short, there’s a big gap between the way Apple sees the world and the way most of its customers see things. This is especially true when it comes to the relationship between power and knowledge. To all outward appearances, Steve Jobs believes that knowledge and information confer power only if they are carefully guarded. But for most of the creative types who use Apple products, the big rewards in life—the opportunity to gain reputation, advance professionally, and earn money—come from sharing knowledge. The reason I use Apple hardware all day long is not so that I can be like Steve, but because the company makes the best technology I’ve found for staying informed, synthesizing what I learn, and passing it along to others.

    A blog post this month by photographer, designer, and career coach Tasra Mar, who spent a year working at Apple, puts the attitude gap in stark, visual terms. Mar shares several photographs of a simple length of rope. In one picture, the rope is tightly coiled; in another, one end of the coil is unfurled; in a third, the coil has been loosened into a spiral, opening a path to the center.

    The tight coil, for Mar, represents the belief many people hold “that there is scarcity of knowledge or that they will be harmed or impacted by sharing that knowledge.” Having worked at Apple, Mar writes, “I know firsthand about the tight hold that is placed on knowledge and information—basically everything is on a need to know basis. No open discussions, forums or free conversations.”

    Not that there’s anything wrong with that, Mar hastens to add: there are times, she says, when guarding information is appropriate. That’s why we have NDAs and laws protecting trade secrets. Mar is absolutely right when she points out that this closed philosophy has “paid off handsomely” for Apple.

    The paradox—and it may be one that goes to the heart of digital-age capitalism—is that Apple’s style of closed innovation results in technology that is so conducive to open innovation. Even more conducive, in fact, than its makers may have intended. Shortly after the iPhone was announced in January 2007, Steve Jobs told the New York Times: “We define everything that is on the phone. You don’t want your phone to be like a PC. The last thing you want is to have loaded three apps on your phone and then you go to make a call and it doesn’t work anymore. These are more like iPods than they are like computers.” By 2008, though, Jobs had apparently realized that in its quest to “define everything,” the company was leaving a lot of money on the table. The 120,000 apps you’ll now find in the iTunes App Store—with Apple collecting 30 percent of every paid-app sale—are testimony to the wisdom of the shift.

    Given the smashing success of the App Store, you have to wonder why Apple has reverted to its black-ops secrecy culture for the iSlate (or the iPad, or whatever it’s going to be called). Presumably, Apple wants the device to be part of the larger ecosystem it’s building around digital content—music, movies, TV shows, apps, and soon books and magazines, if all the reports of Apple’s talks with publishers are to be believed. Wouldn’t the company have been better off working with its existing community of developers to figure out what features a tablet-style device should have? Couldn’t it have given iPhone developers a few hints about how the iSlate will work, allowing them to …Next Page »







  • Ground Truth Emerges from Stealth, Provides New Window Into Mobile Internet Usage

    Ground Truth
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    It’s been hard to keep a company like Ground Truth under wraps for this long. The secretive Seattle startup, led by prominent entrepreneurs Sterling Wilson and Michael “Luni” Libes, is emerging from stealth mode today, after raising $2.6 million in venture funding from Voyager Capital and Steamboat Ventures last summer. Although many in the startup community already know (or think they know) what Ground Truth is building, the company has just released some interesting details—while withholding many others.

    The problem Ground Truth is solving is a big one. Everyone from marketers to media companies to wireless carriers wants information about things like how many mobile users are accessing which websites on their smartphones. The mobile Web has long been considered the next frontier for advertising and publishing, but nobody has had access to reliable and complete data on mobile users’ behavior. That’s because measurement methods from companies like comScore, Nielsen, Hitwise, and Google, while useful for the traditional Web, are limited for the mobile Web in terms of their scope, detail, and timeliness.

    “The market needs a precise map of the landscape and a reliable route to navigate, and Ground Truth’s reliable, actionable data provides it,” said Wilson, the company’s CEO (and former president of Seattle mobile commerce firm Qpass), in a statement.

    “The only data source that can provide precise measures of mobile media usage is the mobile network itself,” added Libes, Ground Truth’s founder and chief technology officer, also in a statement. Libes started building the patent-pending technology while at the mobile search firm he previously co-founded, Medio Systems.

    Using extensive data from mobile operators and other providers, Ground Truth has analyzed the weekly mobile Internet usage of 2.5 million subscribers in the U.S. It has what it thinks is the most accurate and complete dataset so far on mobile Web use—including mobile traffic estimates for a large number of sites (unique visitors, pageviews), length of browsing sessions, and where a given site’s traffic comes from and where else it goes. In doing so, the company apparently has solved some difficult technical problems while keeping individual mobile subscribers’ privacy intact.

    Ground Truth’s timing certainly seems good. The field of mobile Web metrics looks wide open, even as more and more people use their iPhones, BlackBerries, and other mobile devices to access the Internet. And with giants like Amazon, Apple, Google, AT&T, and Verizon (just to name a few) increasing their focus on mobile content and advertising, a company that makes tools that help …Next Page »







  • Does the HTC HD2 have an FM transmitter?

    fmtransmitter There is a pretty active thread going on on XDA-Developers started by hoss_n2 discussing the possibility of the HTC HD2 having a FM Transmitter built into its WIFI chip, and the tantalizing suggestion this may be activated.

    The theory is rooted in the belief the WIFI chip in the HD2 is actually the Broadcom BCM4329, which is a WIFI N-capable chip (just like the HD2) and therefore also capable of being a FM Transmitter also.

    Interestingly the circuit diagram shows the Broadcom chip using the same hardware for transmitting as receiving, including the antenna, suggesting all that is needed to activate this latent feature is the right software.

    BCM4329-circuits

    Of course veteran Windows Mobile users will have much experience with having devices with under-utilized hardware, and some (much less) experience with that hardware being unlocked.  Examples include the GPS chips on some devices, the FM radios on others, and the hardware graphics acceleration on a few more. Some devices have even been found with VGA screens posing as QVGA.

    Follow this thread for the latest developments in in this matter, and I am sure the posters would love the help of a good hardware hacker also.

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  • Bill Gates uses Twikini

    billgatestwitter

    Ok, we admit its what I call a SND (Slow News Day), which means we don’t mind posting a completely fluff story.

    On the other hand, I am sure Twikini would not mind being endorsed by one of the richest men in the world.  I guess we can be sure Bill Gates is not using a HTC HD2.

    See the original tweet here.

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  • Monitor your car using your phone and ElmScan OBD-II reader

    By law many cars now have a standard interface to access the engine management system. Unfortunately its still not that easy to actually get to the data.

    The video above shows the ElmScan 5 Bluetooth wireless scan tool, which interfaces over Bluetooth with your smartphone and is said to have a range of up to 300 feet.

    It supports all OBD-II protocols, features automatic protocol detection and interfaces with standard OBD software such as OBDKey for Windows Mobile.

    Read more about the hardware at Scantools.com here.

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  • Los 10 Hackers más famosos de la historia

    Odiados y admirados por muchos gracias a sus conocimientos. Estas son las 10 personas mas conocidas en lo que a hacking y cracking se refiere.

    Kevin Mitnick: Es mundialmente conocido como el “hacker más famoso” y por haber sido el primero en cumplir condena en una prisión por infiltrarse en sistemas de ordenadores.

    Gary McKinnon: Este escocés de 41 años, también conocido como Solo, está considerado como el ejecutor del mayor hack de la historia de la informática a un sistema militar.

    Vladimir Levin: Este bioquímico y matemático ruso fue acusado de haber cometido uno de los mayores robos a un banco mediante la técnica del cracking.

    Kevin Poulsen: Si bien hoy es periodista y colabora con el rastreo de pedófilos en Internet, Poulsen acarrea a sus espaldas un intenso pasado como cracker y phreaker. El suceso que le proporcionó más notoriedad fue la toma de las líneas telefónicas de Los Angeles en 1990.

    Timothy Lloyd: En 1996, la compañía de servicios informáticos Omega, proveedora de la NASA y la armada estadounidense, sufría una pérdida de alrededor de 10 millones de dólares.

    Robert Morris: Hijo de uno de los precursores en la creación de virus, Morris en 1988 logró infectar a, nada más y nada menos, 6000 ordenadores conectados a la red ArpaNet

    David Smith: No todos los hackers pueden contar con el privilegio de haber sido los creadores del virus que más rápido se ha expandido en ordenadores a lo largo y ancho del globo.

    MafiaBoy: Durante febrero del 2000, muchas de las empresas online más importantes de los Estados Unidos -como eBay, Yahoo o Amazon- sufrieron un desperfecto técnico denominado denial of service (negación del servicio)

    Masters of Deception (MoD): Los MoD fueron una ciber-pandilla neoyorquina de hackers que tuvieron su apogeo a principios de los 90. Escudados en diferentes alias, sus mayores ataques están relacionados con la toma de lineas telefónicas y de centrales de la naciente Internet.

    Richard Stallman: Este Neoyorquino con aspecto de hippie es uno de los más activos militantes a favor del software libre desde principios de los 80, cuando era un hacker especializado en inteligencia artificial.

    Via 10puntos

  • New version of Windows Live for Windows Mobile out

    wlwm2 A new version of Windows Live for Windows Mobile is out on Marketplace

    Version 11.1 has been released on the 22/1/2010. Unfortunately the update comes without a changelog, and I have not been able to download the latest version to compare.

    Luckier readers can download the app here and let us know what’s new.

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  • Snow Rally City Stage racing game reviewed – conclusion: Smartphones need D-pads

    BestWMApps have reviewed Snow Rally City Stage, and besides lamenting the poor graphics, short game play and price, what is really obvious from the video is how difficult game place is on a device without a hard D-pad.

    As far as we know D-pads are now completely passé and no-one is any longer interested in placing them on any device. And of course, this is a real shame.

    Read the full review at BestWindowsMobileApps here.

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  • Unofficial Count Has Android Market Hovering Near 25,000 Apps

    It has been barely a month  since we talked about the number of apps unofficially hitting the 20,000 mark and we’re ready for another milestone.  At some point in the next few days, the tally should put the Android Market at 25,000 apps.

    Keep in mind that these numbers from Androlib don’t match exactly the totals in the market but as there are no other proven way of getting these figures from the official Market pages they can still be considered an indication of the growth.

    So the predictions we’ve made in December about hitting 30,000 in the next 2-3 months might have been underestimated!

    It is also interesting to note that, the number of paid apps is getting (slowly) higher. Last September it was 35.7%, in December 37.7% and today 39.2%.

    In term of satisfaction, 62.14% of users are happy with their apps with 42.8% of them at 5 stars rating (English Market). Considering there sheer volume (so far), it sounds like a lot of crappy applications polluting the Market.

    Other Great AndroidGuys Posts


  • Cool new graphical lock screen for the Samsung Omnia 2

    [See post to watch Flash video]

    In Korea, where the Samsung Omnia 2 is a pretty big deal, Prompt has developed some pretty cool graphical lock screens for the device.

    The software comes with 4 interfaces, and only works on the Omnia 2.

    It features:

    • The device sensor senses the movement of the device and changes the background accordingly.
    • The 3D background also changes according to the time of the day.
    • By simply tilting the device back, the screen shows missed calls, messages, or mail information received while it is locked.
    • When the user touches the screen, animation changes according to the applied theme.
    • Touching the screen long enough unlocks the device.

    The video above shows the Yellow man, but 3 further screens, including Butterfly and Hummingbird are available.

    To add some more fun to your Omnia 2 visit WMSkins here for the download links.

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  • Official Facebook client for Windows Mobile Standard updated

    Facebook1_2Standard Pocketnow reports that the official Facebook client for Windows Mobile Standard has been updated to version 1.2.

    Improvements include being able to read and respond to comments and a search feature that lets you find acquaintances. The software can be found in Marketplace.

    An updated version for Windows Mobile Professional is not available yet.

    Read more at Pocketnow here.

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  • Samsung App store expands to more countries

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    Samsung Apps store has now expanded from UK to many more countries.

    Now Germany, Singapore, Brazil and China , France and Italy will be able to get access to games and applications like Guitar Hero from Mobile Bus, Need for Speed from Electronic Arts, Spiderman from Gameloft and other big names, all localized to their language.

    From mid-February, the Samsung Store will come preinstalled on devices sold in Germany and Singapore.  To add the store to a current device visit samsungmobile.com and download the client there.

    Read more at GSMArena here.

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