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Privacy

Blu-ray Update Sent To User Via Credit Card Records 526

wmoyes writes "Back in September I ran into a Best Buy store to buy a Samsung BD-P2550 Blu-ray player. I didn't give the clerk my name, telephone number, or address, just my debit card. The player has sat happily in my living room without ever being networked or registered. Today I was shocked to find a package waiting for me at home from Best Buy — inside was a firmware update CD for the player. I used to think Windows Update was scary, but Samsung's update service tracked me to my house using the mag stripe from my bank card. Has this happened to any other Blu-ray owners?" Or is there a simpler explanation?

Comment Re:Is it just me... (Score 0, Flamebait) 688

It's not just you; there isn't anything funny about hundreds of thousands of people losing their homes and/or jobs, and the options presented on the poll won't provide even any psuedo-insight into the situation.

Which leads to a more interesting question: What mindset and/or situation is the Slashdot staff in that would allow them to think this poll is interesting or funny?

Google

Google Over IPv6 Coming Soon 264

fuzzel writes "Today Google announced Google over IPv6 where ISPs can sign up their DNS nameservers so that their users will get access to an almost fully IPv6-enabled Google, including http://www.google.com, images and maps, etc., just like in IPv4. Without this only http://ipv6.google.com is available, but then you go to IPv4 for most services. So, start kicking your ISPs to support IPv6 too, and let them sign up. Check this list of ISPs that already do native IPv6 to your doorstep. The question that now remains is: when will Slashdot follow?"
The Media

EGM Magazine Shutting Down 70

Gamasutra reports that Ziff Davis Media has sold a number of gaming websites, including 1Up.com, and will be shutting down their popular magazine, Electronic Gaming Monthly. Some of 1Up's staff was laid off as well, though the new owners want to keep the rest of it intact. The sale was motivated by an unprofitable business model made worse by the recent downturn in the economy. 1Up's James Mielke has made a post about the final hours of EGM, and a glimpse at the final issue, saying, "...the final, secret, unpublished issue of EGM will show up here on 1UP shortly in the near future. You will be able to read every hi-res page, ads and all (last time I checked at least) on 1UP, to see the beautiful job that crew did, even with the guillotine hanging over our heads every minute of the day."
Input Devices

Submission + - The 10 Worst PC Keyboards of All Time (pcworld.com)

Harry McCracken writes: "We've posted a slideshow on the 10 Worst PC Keyboards of all time — most of which date from the early 1980s, and all of which are just terrible, with missing keys, keys whee they shouldn't be, and some truly strange design decisions. (I'd forgotten that the IBM PCjr didn't even have characters printed on the keycaps.) If you ever owned any of these, browsing through our picks may make your fingers numb all over again. — Harry McCracken, editor in chief, PC World"
Security

Submission + - Colorblindness risks

Anthony_Mitchell writes: "The use of color to distinguish electrical wires creates risks from the 10% of white American men who are color blind and who work on electrical hardware. Barring colorblind people from working on electronics is not a solution, as this TechNewsWorld [http://www.technewsworld.com/story/56107.html] article argues in the case of the U.S. nuclear weapons stockpile."
Graphics

HDMI-Enabled Graphics Cards Debut 235

TrackinYeti writes "HDMI (High Definition Multimedia Interface), is the first industry supported digital-only interface, that requires a single cable to connect an output source to an HD-ready device, such as a television or monitor and deliver HD video, plus multi-channel digital audio, like Dolby Digital and DTS. Recently, Asus Computer released versions of their GeForce 7600 and Radeon X1600 cards with HDMI outputs on them, driven by an on-board Sil1930 controller. These are some of the first graphics cards to hit the market that can output HDMI natively with an integrated HDCP cipher engine and support HD-audio as well. Just the thing for that HTPC?"
Intel

Intel Stomps Into Flash Memory 130

jcatcw writes "Intel's first NAND flash memory product, the Z-U130 Value Solid-State Drive, is a challenge to other hardware vendors. Intel claims read rates of 28 MB/sec, write speeds of 20 MB/sec., and capacity of 1GB to 8GB, which is much smaller than products from SanDisk. 'But Intel also touts extreme reliability numbers, saying the Z-U130 has an average mean time between failure of 5 million hours compared with SanDisk, which touts an MTBF of 2 million hours.'"
Communications

Mobile Carriers Cry "Less Operating Systems" 217

A NYTimes story says "Multiple systems have hampered the growth of new services, mobile phone executives say. " The story does a good job of capturing some of the changing dynamics in the mobile OS market — but rightly raises the point that given the sheer size of the mobile market, it's unlikely we're going to see the homogenization we have in the desktop market.

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