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Submission + - PS3 to enable 3D movies on Blu-Ray and YouTube (builderbrush.com)

An anonymous reader writes: In another move by Sony to bring 3D content to the masses, the 35+ million Playstation 3 consoles out there that currently lead the pack in 3D games will be getting new 3D video capabilities with upcoming firmware updates...
Games

Submission + - Adobe 3D Flash Player on the horizon (digg.com)

b00m3rang writes: This is going to be huge. The biggest barrier to 3D content creation and distribution is is about to fall, with the upcoming addition of a 3D environment to the ubiquitous Flash Player. It's a great time to be a 3D artist!
Image

Man Put On "No-Fly List" While In Air To NYC Screenshot-sm 300

An unnamed man flying from Nigeria to New York City found out he was added to a no-fly list somewhere above the Atlantic Ocean, when the plane stopped to refuel in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Officials won't say what he did or why he was added to the list after he had already boarded a flight. He was not immediately charged with a crime and Customs and Border Protection will only say that he is a "potential person of interest." From the article: "The man, a citizen of Gambia, was not on the no-fly list when he boarded the aircraft in Dakar, Senegal, said a US official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the issue publicly."

Comment Are you sure about that ? (Score 1) 326

I'd be hard pressed to believe anyone is releasing professionally pressed CDs from master recordings that clip. I've also not heard a recording that sounded worse after peak normalizing to 0db. That'll give you good dynamic range, but won't ever clip. Some of the newer all-digital gear doesn't have as much headroom as the old analog gear, but you also don't have to push the levels as hard to get a clean recording.

iPod Lawsuit Lawyers Sue Their Own Plaintiff? 424

Guinnessy writes "Jason Tomczak, who is mentioned as the lead to the iPod Nano 'Scratch' Class Action law suit filed against Apple computers has published an open letter to the mac community. In it he claims that he never asked to be represented by David P. Meyer & Associates or Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro, the lawyers in the case. He spoke to them once by phone about his scratched iPod case and asked that his name not be used. In fact, the two firms agree there is no signed document proving that Tomczak asked for representation. However, because Tomczak wants nothing to do with the case, David P. Meyer & Associates or Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro are currently suing him to try and stop him from pulling out. They also say Tomczak is legally liable for their fees if they lose the court case against Apple. Needless to say Tomczak isn't happy with the arrangement, and is likely to still lose thousands of dollars under the best scenario."

New Patent on TV Forces You to Watch Ads 470

WebHostingGuy writes "A patent application filed with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office says researchers of the Netherland-based consumer electronics company have created a technology that could let broadcasters freeze a channel during a commercial, so viewers wouldn't be able to avoid it. Philips acknowledged that this technology might not sit well with consumers and suggested in its patent filing that consumers be allowed to avoid the feature if they paid broadcasters a fee."

New 25x Data Compression? 438

modapi writes "StorageMojo is reporting that a company at Storage Networking World in San Diego has made a startling claim of 25x data compression for digital data storage. A combination of de-duplication and calculating and storing only the changes between similar byte streams is apparently the key. Imagine storing a terabyte of data on a single disk, and it all runs on Linux." Obviously nothing concrete or released yet so take with the requisite grain of salt.

Web Site Attacks Against Unpatched IE Flaw Spike 268

An anonymous reader wrote to mention a Washingtonpost.com article about an increase in attacks against IE users via a critical, unpatched flaw. The bug allows software to be downloaded to the vulnerable PC even if the only act the user takes is browsing to a web site. From the article: "[A] password-stealing program landed on the Windows PC belonging to Reaz Chowdhury, a programmer for Oracle Corp. who works out of his home in Orlando, Fla. Chowdhury said he's not sure which site he browsed in the past 24 hours that hijacked his browser, but he confirmed that the attackers had logged the user name and password for his company's virtual private network (VPN)."

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