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Google

YouTube Passes Yahoo As #2 Search Engine 125

Dekortage writes "According to the latest ComScore rankings, YouTube's search traffic for August surpassed Yahoo's. The latter dropped roughly 5% in traffic from July. Among other things, this means that Google now owns both of the top two search engines. AdAge further speculates on Google's experimental 'promoted videos' cost-per-click advertising on YouTube, suggesting the obvious: more money."
Microsoft

Mono 2.0 and .NET On Linux 405

Several readers noted the release of Mono 2.0, which is compatible with Microsoft's .NET Framework 2.0. According to Miguel de Icaza, "... users can move over server applications built for .NET and client applications built with Windows Forms." InternetNews points out that only about half of the .NET apps out there will work on Mono 2.0, for a variety of reasons including (but not limited to) legacy Windows-only libraries and Microsoft's progress on .NET 3.0 and 3.5 APIs.
The Courts

Gov't Database Errors Leading To Unconstitutional Searches? 272

Wired is running a story about a case the Supreme Court will be hearing on Tuesday that relates to searches based on erroneous information in government databases. In the case of Herring vs. US 07-513, the defendant was followed and pulled over based on a records indicating he had a warrant out for his arrest. Upon further review, the local county clerk found the records were in error, and the warrant notification should have been removed months prior. Unfortunately for Herring, he had already been arrested and his car searched. Police found a small amount of drugs and a firearm, for which Herring was subsequently prosecuted. Several friend-of-the-court briefs have been filed to argue this case, some calling for "an accuracy obligation on law enforcement agents [PDF] who rely on criminal justice information systems," and others defending such searches as good-faith exceptions [PDF].
Windows

MS Reportedly Adds 6 Months of Vista Downgrade 244

LiteralKa sends in a poorly sourced Reg story claiming that Microsoft has granted OEMs six more months to sell PCs using Windows Vista with the support to downgrade to Windows XP. OEMs can now offer such arrangements until July 31, 2009 — the previous deadline was January 31, 2009. The article claims as source "a Reg reader" without further details. Neither Microsoft nor any OEM has confirmed the rumor, and only a few scattered bloggers have picked it up.
Windows

Submission + - How do I get refund on my Windows Vista license?

Van Cutter Romney writes: "I recently purchased a Compaq laptop from Staples which came preloaded with Windows Vista (Home Premium) from Staples. Now, I didn't need Windows on the laptpo but the deal was so sweet that I didn't mind getting the laptop with Windows preloaded. When the laptop first booted, I tried to reject the EULA but surprisingly there was no way to do the same. So I called up HP support to help me get a refund on the Vista license only to be notified that only the Staples people could do the same. So I called up Staples and the rep on the phone managed to convince me that even though I could install my own OS I would not be refunded the Vista license fee because I had "agreed" to buy the laptop with Windows preloaded. I'd like to ask Slashdow, is what he saying legal? Am I forced to accept the license when I bought the laptop?

btw, I did try to argue with the Staples rep that a Dell customer was able to get a refund on his laptop when he refused to accept the EULA. But the rep argued back that this was not a policy of Staples."
Google

Submission + - Google news bug causes UAL stock to tank (chicagotribune.com)

bee-17 writes: "A 2002-era news article surfaced in Google News yesterday, causing UAL's stock to tank. Google's official position is that it slurped up the article only after it was listed as one of sun-sentinel.com's "most viewed" stories, and that the absence of a date in the article's byline contributed to its misclassification. Sun-sentinel.com claims their web server logs show that the first hit on the story came from googlebot itself and the story became "most viewed" only after Google's posting of the story as new news. Before deciding whom to believe, consider two other facts:
  1. On the morning of Sep 8, at least one other old article became "new" news. Around 9am CDT, the RealNetworks DVD ripper story on the home page of Google News had its headline link to the 2005-era PCWorld article DVD Ripping Flourishes. Despite having a properly-dated byline, Google news listed that article as been having posted around midnight.
  2. Also on Sep 8, Google news announced historical news articles. Their blog states that "You'll be able to explore this ... by using the timeline feature after searching Google News." I.e., this news archive is integrated into the current google news search.

Did anyone else notice "new" old news yesterday? When a bug in an automated news aggregator leads to an automated propagation of untrue news, which leads to a sell-off that is in large part fueled by automatic sell orders, who is to blame for the multi-billion dollar losses? The dude in Bangalore?"

United States

Submission + - Top Lawyer Hired For Google Antitrust Suit (informationweek.com)

Van Cutter Romney writes: "The Justice department has secretly hired former Walt Disney Lawyer Sanford Litvack for a possible antitrust suit against Google. As reported earlier the Justice Department is investigating the deal between Google and Yahoo which accounts for 80% of online search advertising. The Wall Street Journal writes today that Justice Department lawyers have been deposing witnesses and issuing document subpoenas for weeks — but that doesn't necessarily mean a case will be brought."
Television

Submission + - Toshiba unveils new DVD enhancing technology (informationweek.com)

Van Cutter Romney writes: "Toshiba which lost the format war to Sony earlier this year unveiled its new technology, XDE or eXtended Detail Enhancement, which enhances current standard DVD format to near HD picture quality. Depending on the television's resolution, the player will upconvert to 720p, 1080i or 1080p. With average consumers sticking to their cheaper standard DVDs rather than buying more expensive Blue-Ray players and with Blu-Ray DVDs costing between $20 and $40, Toshiba sees a new market opportunity in this segment."

Mozilla Unveils Aurora Concept Browser 213

Barence writes "Mozilla has unveiled a spectacular new concept browser, dubbed Aurora. The bleeding-edge browser is part of a new Mozilla Labs initiative, in which the open-source foundation is encouraging people to contribute ideas and designs for the browser of the future. The Aurora browser demonstration shows a highly advanced way of collaborating data gathered on the web, and represents a spectacular introduction to the new Mozilla Labs, which much like Google Labs looks to become a home for offbeat projects which would otherwise probably never see the light of day. More details, and a video demonstration, are on the Mozilla Labs site."
Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft to acquire Powerset

Van Cutter Romney writes: "Microsoft is set to acquire Powerset a San Francisco based natural languages company. Powerset recently licensed their search technology from PARC and used it to create a new Wikipedia search engine.

What does this acquisition mean for Microsoft and more importantly, Live Search?"
Movies

Submission + - Netflix introduces device to watch movies on TV (roku.com)

Van Cutter Romney writes: "Netflix today introduced the Roku Netflix Player which will allow users to watch movies instantly on TV. The device, priced at $99, connects to the TV via component video, S-Video or HDMI and can stream from the Internet using Ethernet or 802.11b/g wireless. It also includes a remote control for navigation, play/pause, forward and volume. The move comes after analysts said Netflix needs to start charging users for the online streaming service."
It's funny.  Laugh.

Submission + - Steve Ballmer gets egged in Hungary (blogspot.com)

Van Cutter Romney writes: "Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer was forced to take cover behind a lectern Monday during an address at Corvinus University of Budapest after a student began shouting and tossing eggs. The student, wearing a shirt with "Microsoft = Corruption" written on the back in big block letters, stood at his seat just seconds after Ballmer opened his talk. The attack was caught on video by one attendee. The attack was reminiscent of the time in 1998 when Bill Gates was hit in the face with a cream pie in Brussels."
Programming

A Decade of OSS, 10 Years After the Summit 132

Jacob's ladder writes "Ten years ago this week, the Free Software Summit arguably marked the beginning of today's OSS movement. Ars Technica interviews many of those in attendance when the revolution began. John Ousterhout, creator of the Tcl scripting language and Tk toolkit and founder of Electric Cloud was there, and notes how much the landscape has changed. 'When I made my first open-source release in the early 1980s (VLSI chip design tools from Berkeley), there were probably less than five open-source projects in the world. By the time of the first O'Reilly conference, there were dozens; now there are probably thousands. Also, open-source software has received substantial mainstream acceptance. 10 years ago, people were suspicious or afraid of it; now it is widely embraced.'"
Censorship

Comcast Blocks Web Browsing 502

An anonymous reader writes "A team of researchers have found that Comcast has quietly rolled out a new traffic-shaping method, which is interfering with web browsers in addition to p2p traffic. The smoking gun that documents this behavior are network traces collected from Comcast subscribers Internet connections. This evidence shows Comcast is forging packets and blocking connection attempts from web browsers. One has to hope this isn't the congestion management system they are touting as no longer targeting BitTorrent, which they are deploying in reaction to the recent FCC investigations."

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