Blog

  • Happy 20th anniversary, Hubble! | Bad Astronomy

    Tomorrow marks the 20th anniversary of the launch of the Hubble Space Telescope. I spent ten years of my life working on that magnificent machine, from using observations of a supernova for my PhD, all the way to helping test, calibrate, and eventually use STIS, a camera put on Hubble in 1997.

    Last year, I published Ten Things You Don’t Know About Hubble, and I don’t think I can really add much to it here. I also have a lot of new readers since then, so I’ll simply repost it now as my tip o’ the dew shield to the world’s most famous observatory.


    Introduction

    On April 24, 1990, the Space Shuttle Discovery roared into space, carrying on board a revolution: The Hubble Space Telescope. It was the largest and most sensitive optical-light telescope ever launched into space, and while it suffered initially from a focusing problem, it would soon return some of the most amazing and beautiful astronomical images anyone had ever seen.

    Hubble was designed to be periodically upgraded, and even as I write this, astronauts are in the Space Shuttle Atlantis installing two new cameras, fixing two others, and replacing a whole slew of Hubble’s parts. This is the last planned mission, ever, to service the venerable ’scope, so what better time to talk about it?

    Plus, it’s arguably the world’s most famous telescope (it’s probably the only one people know by name), and yet I suspect that there are lots of things about it that might surprise you. So I present to you Ten Things You Don’t Know About the Hubble Space Telescope, part of my Ten Things series. I know, my readers are smart, savvy, exceptionally good-looking, and well-versed in things astronomical. Whenever I do a Ten Things post some goofball always claims they knew all ten. But I am extremely close to being 100% positive that no one who reads this blog will know all ten things here (unless they’ve used Hubble themselves). I have one or two big surprises in this one, including some of my own personal interactions with the great observatory!

    Ten Things You Don’t Know About Hubble

     


  • First real look at Windows Phone 7 Office Hub

    MobilityDigest have been given a more recent build of the Windows Phone 7 Emulator, and was able to record the above video of the Office Hub in action, and as they note it provides a seamless and extremely attractive access to all your documents, both online and off-line.

    Having seen this, are business users reassured? Let us know below.

    Read more at MobilityDigest here.


  • Hublot reveals F1 King Power watch during Chinese Grand Prix

    Filed under:


    Hublot F1 King Power – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Let’s face it, watch fans: few of the supposedly automotive-inspired timepieces out on the market bear much automotive inspiration beyond a logo or maybe the odd design flourish. But this is something else.

    Upon announcing its licensing agreement with Formula One Management last month, Swiss watchmaker Hublot revealed the monochromatic F1 King watch, which by and large followed the same rules as everyone else: slap a logo on there and call it a day. But that was just a stopgap measure until this piece came along.

    Called the F1 King Power, this watch is crammed with racing-inspired design features, from the ceramic bezel made to look like an F1 brake disc to the chronograph push-buttons styled after an F1 steering wheel’s to the rubber-coated Nomex wrist-strap. The case is made of satin-finish zirconium with PVD-coated titanium components, packing the HUB 4100 automatic chronograph movement with a tungsten-carbide rotor and a 42-hour power reserve. Now that’s more like it.

    The watch was unveiled this past weekend in Shanghai during the Chinese Grand Prix. You can view photos from the event in the gallery below and read the details in the press release after the jump.

    [Source: Hublot]

    Continue reading Hublot reveals F1 King Power watch during Chinese Grand Prix

    Hublot reveals F1 King Power watch during Chinese Grand Prix originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 23 Apr 2010 08:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Bill McKibben on ‘Eaarth’ Day

    We have created a new planet. Not entirely new. It looks more or less like the one we were born into; the same physical laws operate it. But the changes that have already happened are large enough that if you were visiting our planet in a spaceship, this place would look really different from the outside than it did just decades ago — call it “Eaarth.”

    Bill McKibben co-founded 350.org. This Wonk Room repost excerpts his new book,EAARTH: Making A Life in a Tough New World.” .

    I wrote the preface to my new book EAARTH on a gorgeous spring afternoon in 2009, perched on the bank of a brook high along the spine of the Green Mountains, a mile or so from my home in the Vermont mountain town of Ripton. The creek burbles along, the picture of a placid mountain stream, but a few feet away there’s a scene of real violence a deep gash through the woods where a flood in the summer of 2008 ripped away many cubic feet of tree and rock and soil and drove it downstream through the center of the village. Before the afternoon was out, the only paved road into town had been demolished by the rushing water, a string of bridges lay in ruins, and the governor was trying to reach the area by helicopter.

    Twenty-one years ago, in 1989, I wrote the first book for a general audience about global warming, which in those days we called the “greenhouse effect.” That book, The End of Nature, was mainly a philosophical argument. It was too early to see the practical effects of climate change but not too early to feel them; in the most widely excerpted passage of the book, I described walking down a different river, near my then-home sixty miles away, in New York’s Adirondack Mountains. Merely knowing that we’d begun to alter the climate meant that the water flowing in that creek had a different, lesser meaning. “Instead of a world where rain had an independent and mysterious existence, the rain had become a subset of human activity,” I wrote. “The rain bore a brand; it was a steer, not a deer.”

    Now, that sadness has turned into a sharper-edged fear. Walking along this river today, you don’t need to imagine a damned thing — the evidence of destruction is all too obvious. Much more quickly than we would have guessed in the late 1980s, global warming has dramatically altered, among many other things, hydrological cycles. One of the key facts of the twenty-first century turns out to be that warm air holds more water vapor than cold: in arid areas this means increased evaporation and hence drought. And once that water is in the atmosphere, it will come down, which in moist areas like Vermont means increased deluge and flood.

    In our Vermont town, in the summer of 2008, we had what may have been the two largest rainstorms in our history about six weeks apart. The second and worse storm, on the morning of August 6, dropped at least six inches of rain in three hours up on the steep slopes of the mountains. Those forests are mostly intact, with only light logging to disturb them but that was far too much water for the woods to absorb. One of my neighbors, Amy Sheldon, is a river researcher, and she was walking through the mountains with me one recent day, imagining the floods on that August morning. “You would have seen streams changing violently like that,” she said, snapping her fingers. “A matter of minutes.” A year later the signs persisted: streambeds gouged down to bedrock, culverts obliterated, groves of trees laid to jackstraws. . . .

    Global warming is no longer a philosophical threat, no longer a future threat, no longer a threat at all. It’s our reality. We’ve changed the planet, changed it in large and fundamental ways. And these changes are far, far more evident in the toughest parts of the globe, where climate change is already wrecking thousands of lives daily. In July 2009, Oxfam released an epic report, “Suffering the Science,” which concluded that even if we now adapted “the smartest possible curbs” on carbon emissions, “the prospects are very bleak for hundreds of millions of people, most of them among the world’s poorest.”

    And so EAARTH is, by necessity, less philosophical than its predecessor. We need now to understand the world we’ve created, and consider urgently how to live in it. We can’t simply keep stacking boulders against the change that’s coming on every front; we’ll need to figure out what parts of our lives and our ideologies we must abandon so that we can protect the core of our societies and civilizations. There’s nothing airy or speculative about this conversation; it’s got to be uncomfortable, staccato, direct.

    Which doesn’t mean that the change we must make or the world on the other side will be without its comforts or beauties. Reality always comes with beauty, sometimes more than fantasy. But hope has to be real. It can’t be a hope that the scientists will turn out to be wrong, or that President Barack Obama can somehow fix everything. Obama can help but precisely to the degree he’s willing to embrace reality, to understand that we live on the world we live on, not the one we might wish for. Maturity is not the opposite of hope; it’s what makes hope possible.

    From the Book EAARTH: Making a Life on a Tough New Planet by Bill McKibben. Copyright (c) 2010 by Bill McKibben. Reprinted by arrangement with Henry Holt and Company, LLC. All rights reserved.

  • UT Alumnus Who Serves as U.S. Army Chief of Chaplains to Visit Campus

    KNOXVILLE — Maj. Gen. Douglas Carver, the U.S. Army Chief of Chaplains and a 1973 alumnus of the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, will speak at the Army ROTC Spring Military Formal on Saturday and meet with campus officials and the campus ministries before heading back to Washington, D.C., next week.

    A native of Rome, Ga., Carver earned his bachelor’s degree in religious studies from UT.

    After serving on active duty for six years after graduation, he resigned his commission to enter the ministry.

    He went on to earn his master of divinity degree from the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Ky., and a master’s degree in strategic studies from the Army War College in Carlisle, Pa.

    He was commissioned as an Army chaplain in June 1984 and became the 22nd Chief of Chaplains in July 2007.

    Carver has served as a field artillery officer and Army chaplain in a myriad of assignments worldwide. He spends most of his time traveling to military installations, meeting with soldiers and their families and developing programs for them. He also advises senior Army leadership on the spiritual well-being of the military.

    “With prolonged military operations in both Iraq and Afghanistan, there’s never been a greater need to focus on the comprehensive fitness of our soldiers and their families,” said Lt. Col. Dave Leach, head of the UT Army ROTC Program. “The Army has taken a holistic approach to ensure the Army family has all the necessary resources to cope with the stressors associated with the current operating environment.”

    C O N T A C T :

    Amy Blakely (865-974-5034, [email protected])

  • HDMX Mini Boom Box for the iPod Makes it Easy to Take Your Tunes to the Jersey Shore

    136042123471C 300x300 HDMX Mini Boom Box for the iPod Makes it Easy to Take Your Tunes to the Jersey ShoreThe HDMX Mini Boom Box is an affordable solution if you are looking for a new iPod dock/ radio. It comes in the colors hot pink and black and is pretty affordable at $49.99 from Bed Bath and Beyond. Sound wise who knows what the quality is. It also has a digital FM radio with eight station presets and an LCD clock readout. It’s portable with its big handle and can be used with the power adapter or batteries. It also includes a remote control. The Mini Boom Box supports the Nano, iPod Classic, and Mini – if anyone still has that!.


  • FW 3.30 added remote play for future VAIO PCs

    Going through the system update the other day, Sony told us that the new firmware added Trophy-sorting features, as well as preparation for 3D gaming. Add this to the list of what Sony does to

  • No Surprise: 3D Takes a Toll on PS3 Resolution and Framerates [PS3]

    Whatever Sony’s promises may have been regarding stereoscopic 3D performance on the PS3, we’re going to get what we get. And so far, that’s 1080p content at 60fps (2D) turning into 720p content at 30fps (3D). More »







  • Senator: GM paid U.S. federal loans with other federal money

    GM Renaissance Center Headquarters

    A Republican senator said that General Motors’ payment of federal loans this week was nothing more than a “money shuffle” and said that the company paid federal loans with other U.S. funds. Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa, a senior Republican on the Finance Committee, cited an auditor’s report that GM payment was coming from U.S. Troubled Asset Relief Program funds in an escrow account, rather than from GM earnings.

    “It is unclear how GM and the administration could have accurately announced yesterday that GM repaid its TARP loans in any meaningful way,” Grassley said in a letter to U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner. “The taxpayers are still on the hook, and whether TARP funds are ultimately recovered depends entirely on the government’s ability to sell GM stock in the future.”

    GM announced on April 21 that it made its final payment of $5.8 billion to the U.S. Treasury and Export Development Canada, paying back its government loans in full.

    GM received $50 billion of U.S. assistance in its bailout, much of which was converted into stock. The Obama administration holds 61 percent of the common stock in the Detroit automaker.

    – By: Stephen Calogera

    Source: Automotive News (Subscription Required)


  • Time to hang up on Qwest?

    There’s something of a bond between Qwest Communications (Q) and footnoted. In 2002, my experience as an investor in Qwest prompted me to write Financial Fine Print and the company has been a frequent flyer here on the site, appearing in more posts over the years than any other company.

    So when CenturyTel (CTL) and Qwest announced a $22 billion deal (including $11.8 billion of debt) to merge yesterday, we couldn’t just sit around and let it pass without some sort of commentary. We’ve listened to the hour-long conference call and we looked at the accompanying slideshow, both of which are peppered with the usual M&A buzzwords like synergy and transformational (we stopped counting the number of times synergy was used after we got to 10). There’s also a new (and pretty snazzy) website that provides even more information. And, as if that’s not enough, we counted 8 different filings made between the two companies just yesterday.

    One of the slides that caught our interest was #14, which shows that while this deal is being billed as a merger of equals, all of the top managers are coming from CenturyTel. Ed Mueller, Qwest’s high-flying Chairman and CEO, will join the board, along with three other members of Qwest’s board. Perhaps that has something to do with Qwest’s stock performance since Mueller came on board in August 2007.

    During the call, in response to a question from an analyst — one of the few who thankfully didn’t say congratulations — who asked why would Qwest do a deal now when they were believed to be turning things around, Mueller said he thought it was a really good deal and a really good time. Another analyst — from Goldman Sachs, who did say congratulations — asked CenturyTel CEO Glen Post III the same question, albeit from the other side: was Post worried that Qwest, which was viewed to be improving, might get away? While both CEOs stayed on-script related to the timing and whether there were any other interested parties, we couldn’t help but notice that at least two plaintiff firms have already announced plans to investigate the deal.

    While the analysts asked lots of questions about the so-called synergies, one question we didn’t hear was about the hefty severance payments that Qwest executives are likely to receive. Indeed, a quick skim of the proxy that Qwest filed last month includes this pearl:

    For Mr. Mueller the term “good reason” also includes a reduction in title, and for Mr. Euteneuer the term “good reason” also includes a reduction in title or a requirement that he report to any person other than our CEO or Board.

    Given that clause and in light of slide #14 it seems that Mueller and Euteneuer, and probably a few other Qwest executives, stand to make some good money on the deal. Based on the proxy, which assumes a deal on Dec. 31 and a price of $4.21 for Qwest, Mueller stands to make $24.7 million on the deal and Euteneuer stands to receive $10.6 million. The other three named executives stand to receive $32.3 million. The real numbers will likely be significantly higher, given that the deal stock price works out to about $6.02 a share.

    While we’ll still be on the look-out for the merger proxy, which should provide some updated information on those severance payments, it looks like we’ll soon have to hang up on Qwest. But it has been an interesting ride!

    Image source: RedHouse Developments

  • DRM-Ravaged Avatar DVDs May Not Work On Blu-ray Players

    Amazon customers are complaining that Fox has gummed up the Avatar DVDs with DRM, rendering them unplayable on many Blu-ray players in an effort to prevent piracy. That is, if you consider making a copy of a DVD you own as piracy.

    Lee tipped us off to the problem, writing:

    Bought Avatar Blu-ray today along with ten gazillian other people. Only problem is that the digital rights mgmt or copy protection seems to be causing errors on a large number of players (even with updated firmware). Comments are pilling up on the web (see amazon link below). Nice job Fox, keep law abiding cash paying customers from viewing their DVDs so you can keep a few people from ripping copies to their iPods for road trips….

    Have you found the same problem?

    Will not play on many Blu Ray players
    [Amazon: Customer Discussions]

  • Front Burner: Brunch…at Burger King?

    bk_breakfastaprilOh, yes, indeedy. But not here.

    The trade publication Burger Business is reporting that Burger King has begun test-marketing brunch at stores in Massachusetts and Florida. Flush with the success of its BK Breakfast Bowl (left), the fast food giant has decided to test a menu that skews markedly more upscale than its competition. New menu items include an scrambled egg ciabatta sandwich with cheese, tomato, ham and bacon, as well as a mimosa made with orange juice and Moët Champagne Sprite. But if you really want a Whopper for brunch (and what says brunch more than a Whopper?), you can get one of those, too. I know where I’m taking my wife for Mother’s Day brunch!

    In other news:

    • Ziba’s Wine Bar has opened in the old Solstice Cafe space on Boulevard in Grant Park. According to its Twitter feed, the restaurant is BYOB (or BYOW) until its liquor license goes through.
    • Bobby and June’s — the breakfast mainstay in West Midtown — will close after more than 30 years in business. Owner …
  • New market study shows iPhone continues to be big in Japan


    A lot has been written on how the iPhone performs in Japan, the world’s most advanced mobile nation, but the general consensus in this country now is that it sells very well (even though both Apple and provider SoftBank Mobile refuse to break down Japan-specific sales numbers). It’s rumored that the number of iPhones sold in Japan has passed 3 million.

    There are reasons for this success (super-low pricing, aggressive marketing, Apple’s pre-iPhone brand popularity in Japan, clever product positioning by SoftBank, etc. etc.), but we’re talking about a country in which basically every cell phone is a smartphone, a country where you’d be hard-pressed to find a handset without a digital TV tuner or e-wallet function, for example.

    And that means that the 4.9% share the iPhone now commands in the entire Japanese cell phone market, as reported [JP] by a Japanese research insitute today, is more than impressive (Sharp, with 26.2% market share, is the number one).

    The MM Research Institute also says that among those phones that have a non-Japanese OS (i.e. Android, Palm OS or Blackberry), the iPhone even boasts 72.2% market share (see graphic above). In this (relatively small) segment, HTC is ranked second (11.1%), Toshiba is third (6.8%) and Blackberry / Sony Ericsson are both ranked fourth (4.3%).

    We reported about another smartphone market study from a Japanese source back in December. All statistical and other issues aside, both reports indicate that the iPhone seems to do much better than many people believed when it launched in the world’s No. 7 mobile market in 2008.

    Via Asiajin


  • Your Prompt Global Strike Primer

    The New York Times has a good overview of an extremely powerful conventional weapons system that could be fired from a missile in the U.S. and reach anywhere on the planet in an hour. It’s called Prompt Global Strike. It’s an immature weapons system, barely in development, that looks for the moment like it was imagined by Wile E. Coyote. And the Nuclear Posture Review basically held it out as the conventional alternative to nuclear weapons.

    Partly because elements of the technology behind Prompt Global Strike are “not yet even invented,” it’s hard to say what the system will ultimately cost or when it can be deployed. The New START accord with the Russians even had to limit its development because once launched from an intercontinental ballistic missile, it would be hard for Russia or any other power to determine with confidence that such a missile didn’t carry a nuclear payload.

    Relatedly, here’s something that should warm Sen. Jon Kyl’s (R-Ariz.) New START-opponent heart but surely won’t: Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton told a NATO forum that the U.S. won’t withdraw its tactical nuclear weapons from Europe until there’s a follow-on treaty with Russia ensuring the Russians will do the same.

  • Gray Powell Gets Complimentary Flight To Munich and Free Beer For Loosing His iPhone

    Although, Gizmodo’s decision to publicly name and shame Gray Powell was despicable, we are glad that at least something good is coming out of it (and no Gizmodo, you don’t get to take the credit for this).

    Lufthansa Airlines – the largest airline in Europe (in terms of overall passengers carried), has offered Gray Powell free business class transportation to Munich to check out some of the finest German Beer. Quite obviously, Lufthansa Airlines is trying to milk the situation to gain some free publicity. But, we don’t mind. Gray Powell has possibly had a harrowing time over the past couple of days and he definitely needs a break.

    To cut a long story short, Gray Powell – a software engineer at Apple, misplaced his iPhone in a bar. This was picked up by an unknown person who sold it to Gizmodo. After dissecting the prototype for a month, Gizmodo fired a slew of posts in which they publically named Gray Powell.

    It will be interesting to see if Powell accepts the offer. I get a feeling that he won’t. Nevertheless, kudos to Lufthansa for some clever marketing. Here is the open letter shared by Nicola Lange, Lufthansa’s marketing director for the Americas.

    Letter-To-Gray-Powell

    Gray Powell Gets Complimentary Flight To Munich and Free Beer For Loosing His iPhone originally appeared on Techie Buzz written by Pallab De on Friday 23rd April 2010 08:39:06 AM. Please read the Terms of Use for fair usage guidance.

    Don’t miss these Related Posts:

    Join Techie Buzz on Your Favorite Social Networking Sites


  • BMW Concept Gran Coupé – Auto Shows

     

    The German carmaker takes another shot at a high-end, four-door coupe.

    In a move reminiscent of—and likely inspired by—its sultry Concept CS of 2007, BMW is unveiling a new, low-profile, four-door coupe concept at the 2010 Beijing auto show. Called the BMW Concept Gran Coupé, it’s meant to showcase the company’s design abilities and philosophy. It’s also another one-off concept that we wish BMW would actually build.

    According to BMW, the Gran Coupé “concentrates the design expertise of the brand” and “captures a sense of superior dynamic performance and high-quality elegance.” Whatever. It’s a low-slung, long-wheelbase, edgy-looking sedan with a coupe-like roofline and short overhangs. The possibility of it reaching production is probably very low, and details about its powerplant and drivetrain technology are not available. What we can tell you is that the Gran Coupé is a few inches longer than the new 5-series at nearly 197 inches, but is about four inches lower at 55.1.

    Keep Reading: BMW Concept Gran Coupe – Auto Shows

    Related posts:

    1. BMW 5-series Gran Turismo Concept – Auto Shows
    2. BMW 5-series Gran Turismo Concept – Car News
    3. BMW Cancels Gran Turismo Four-Door Coupe – Car News
  • Durable Goods Orders Crash Below Expectations

    auto factory tbi

    Durable goods orders came in at -1.3%, far below the Reuters-based consensus estimate of a 0.3% rise.

    But the good news was a +1.1% revision of February data.

    Read the government report here >

    New orders for manufactured durable goods in March decreased $2.2 billion or 1.3 percent to $176.7 billion, the U.S. Census Bureau announced today. This decrease followed three consecutive monthly increases, including a 1.1 percent February increase. Excluding transportation, new orders increased 2.8 percent. Excluding defense, new orders decreased 1.2 percent.

    Transportation equipment, down two consecutive months, had the largest decrease, $5.9 billion or 12.9 percent to $40.2 billion. This was due to nondefense aircraft and parts which decreased $6.5 billion.

    Shipments

    Shipments of manufactured durable goods in March, up following two consecutive monthly decreases, increased $2.2 billion or 1.2 percent to $182.2 billion. This followed a 0.5 percent February decrease.

    Machinery, up two consecutive months, had the largest increase, $1.0 billion or 4.3 percent to $24.0 billion.

    Unfilled Orders

    Unfilled orders for manufactured durable goods in March, down following two consecutive monthly increases, decreased $2.3 billion or 0.3 percent to $719.8 billion. This followed a 0.4 percent February increase.

    Transportation equipment, also down following two consecutive monthly increases, had the largest decrease, $4.6 billion or 1.1 percent to $408.6 billion.

    Inventories

    Inventories of manufactured durable goods in March, up three consecutive months, increased $0.5 billion or 0.2 percent to $304.7 billion. This followed a 0.5 percent February increase. Primary metals, up five consecutive months, had the largest increase, $0.5 billion or 1.8 percent to $27.1 billion.

    Capital Goods

    Nondefense new orders for capital goods in March decreased $4.6 billion or 7.5 percent to $56.1 billion. Shipments increased $1.4 billion or 2.4 percent to $59.0 billion. Unfilled orders decreased $2.9 billion or 0.7 percent to $409.1 billion. Inventories decreased $0.5 billion or 0.4 percent to $132.1 billion.

    Defense new orders for capital goods in March decreased $0.4 billion or 4.0 percent to $10.0 billion. Shipments increased $0.1 billion or 0.7 percent to $10.9 billion. Unfilled orders decreased $0.9 billion or 0.6 percent to $131.3 billion. Inventories decreased $0.1 billion or 0.6 percent to $20.6 billion.

    Revised February Data

    Revised seasonally adjusted February figures for all manufacturing industries were: new orders, $384.3 billion (revised from $383.5 billion); shipments, $385.4 billion (revised from $384.9 billion); unfilled orders, $722.0 billion (revised from $722.2 billion); and total inventories, $499.7 billion (revised from $498.3 billion).

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • China court awards Microsoft record damages in software piracy suit

    [JURIST] A Shangai court ruled Thursday that a Chinese insurance company is liable to software company Microsoft for using illegal copies of its products, ordering the insurance company to pay Microsoft USD $318,000 in damages. The $318,000 awarded against Dazhong Insurance is the largest amount of damages ever ordered by a Chinese court in a software piracy suit. This was Microsoft’s first major anti-piracy lawsuit in China, where last November a court ruled that Microsoft had infringed on intellectual property of a Chinese company.
    Microsoft has been a party to many legal proceedings outside the US in recent years. In December, the European Commission (EC) reached a settlement with Microsoft over claims that it violated European anti-trust laws by packing its Internet Explorer web browser with new copies of Windows. Last September, the Seoul Central District Court found Microsoft in violation of South Korea’s antitrust laws for bundling software programs with its Windows operating system. The court found the company’s bundling practice to be in violation of fair competition rules and disruptive to the market. This was the second suit within a few months in which Microsoft was found liable for breach of South Korean antitrust laws. This was the second suit within a few months in which Microsoft was found liable for breach of South Korean antitrust laws. Last June, the same court ruled that Microsoft violated antitrust laws by packaging software with its Windows operating system, also dismissing requests for damages from two Korean software firms on the grounds that the damages were not sufficiently linked to Microsoft’s conduct.

  • Blagojevich says Obama pushed Jarrett for Senate

    By NATASHA KORECKI and CHRIS FUSCO
    Chicago Sun-Times Staff Reporters

    CHICAGO–Former Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s lawyers asked a federal judge today to force President Obama to testify at Blagojevich’s upcoming corruption trial, asserting that Obama played more of a role in the process of selecting someone to replace him in the U.S. Senate than Obama has acknowledged.

    On the day before he was elected president, then-Sen. Obama personally called a union official about his desire for Blagojevich to appoint Obama adviser Valerie Jarrett to replace him in the Senate, according to Blagojevich’s defense filing in U.S. District Court in Chicago.

  • Protect your pictures and documents with mblVault

    As smartphones get more and more advanced, we’re seeing an increasing amount of sensitive information stored on them. RIM provides a secure platform for its BlackBerry devices, but they can’t protect everything. The files store locally on your device, for instance, are at risk if your BlackBerry is lost or stolen. Many developers have released applications to help with this issue, mblware among them. Their application, mblVault, allows you to encrypt your sensitive documents, including image files, so that they’re inaccessible to unwanted parties.

    (more…)