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Submission Summary: 0 pending, 52 declined, 24 accepted (76 total, 31.58% accepted)

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Android

Submission + - UI thread or not, I'm optimistic Ice Cream Sandwic (zdnet.com)

ericatcw writes: Android's laggy UI is one of users' biggest complaints. In a Google+ post, ex-Google intern Andrew Munn claimed the problem was due to Android's lack of real-time rendering thread, which iOS and Windows Phone 7 have. Google Android engineer Dianne Hackborn rebutted, saying Android does prioritize the UI thread, though it doesn't give its own real-time one.

While the debate rages on among developers, those of us more in the consumptive mode want to know: will future versions of Android reduce screen herky-jerkiness so that it becomes a moot point? Real-world evidence in the form of contrasting reviews of the Samsung Galaxy Nexus running Ice Cream Sandwich, vs. the ostensibly even-more-powerful Asus Transformer Prime running Honeycomb, offer a strong clue.

Android

Submission + - Is SD Card bricking your Android smartphone? (zdnet.com)

ericatcw writes: "ZDNet reports: for the past 2.5 years, numerous Android users have reported malfunctioning SD cards that have caused their smartphone to crash, freeze and/or lose data. See threads like this. Vendors have not publicly admitted to the problem or provided a fix, leaving users frustrated and unsure whether it's the phone slot, SD card firmware, or Android itself, that is to blame."
Android

Submission + - Furry Cartoon Critters Debate: Tablet or Laptop? (youtube.com)

ericatcw writes: Despite the strong inroads that mobile devices are making (see this online list of mass iPad rollouts), many skeptics remain unconvinced of their usefulness. That's true even when confronted with news of Microsoft's fear, reasoned arguments, or even old-timey anti-laptop rants that, hilariously, echo all of the same criticism today against tablets. Will this Xtranormal cartoon video depicting two furry woodland creatures on opposite sides of the 'Tablet or PC?' debate sway your mind?
Iphone

Submission + - Microsoft shrinks Surface, one-ups iPhone (computerworld.com)

ericatcw writes: Microsoft Corp. researchers have shrunk down its Surface tabletop computer into a pocket-sized package that, with the aid of a few accessories, one-ups conventional touchscreen devices like Apple Inc.'s iPhone. Hooked up to a small webcam and digital projector, the Mobile Surface computer demonstrated by Microsoft Research scientists can create touch interfaces on any nearby flat surface — or even in thin air. Think the XBox's coming Project Natal, but in a tiny, non-gaming device.

Submission + - Apple dissing Adobe's (buggy?) e-book DRM for iPad (computerworld.com) 1

ericatcw writes: Adobe confirms that Apple isn't using its e-book DRM technology for the coming iPad, lending support to reports that Apple will use its own FairPlay DRM, which it uses to copy protect movies sold through iTunes. Adobe says Apple is trying to lock in customers to its iPad the same way Amazon is with its non-open-standard Kindle text formats and DRM. (It also says it can still deliver Flash to the iPad and iPhone, ban or no ban, through clever backdoors). But others say Adobe's DRM is neither as interoperable between e-reader devices nor as secure as promised. So where do you stand on the great Adobe-Apple battle?
Government

Submission + - FAA data: exploding batteries are rare, small risk (bit.ly)

ericatcw writes: While the U.S. government is intent on adding new rules around the shipment and carrying of Lithium-Ion batteries on passenger and cargo planes, data from its own Federal Aviation Agency show that the risk of being on an airplane where someone — not necessarily you — suffers a minor injury due to a battery is only one in 28 million, reports Computerworld, which analyzed the data (skip to the chart here) using the free Tableau Public data visualization service. Getting killed in a car accident, by contrast, is 4,300 times more likely. Opponents say the rules could raise the cost of shopping online and add hassles for fliers.
Government

Submission + - U.S. rules may raise cost of buying gadgets online (computerworld.com)

ericatcw writes: Buying your next laptop or smartphone online could suddenly get a lot more expensive if a little-known U.S. Department of Transportation proposal to tighten rules around the shipment of small, Lithium-Ion battery-powered devices by air goes through, says an industry group opposing the move. The changes, designed primarily to reduce the risk from Lithium-Ion batteries, would also forbid air travelers from carrying spare alkaline or NiMH batteries in their checked-in luggage, according to the head of the Portable Rechargeable Battery Association. The proposal is under review until March 12. It can be viewed and commented upon by members of the public here.
Apple

Submission + - 5 reasons why netbooks still rule over tablets (computerworld.com)

ericatcw writes: Tablet computing fans are revving the hype engine again, this time declaring that on-the-upswing netbooks — 50 million sold in the past two years — are already on the way out. Mind you, this annual rite is is nearing two decades old, reports Computerworld, without fulfilling its prophecy. The article notes other reasons — economics and ergonomics — why netbooks will still trump over tablets next year.
Databases

Submission + - 3 database kings disagree on how to face Hadoop (computerworld.com)

ericatcw writes: Relational database startups and even established vendors are jumping onto the MapReduce/Hadoop bandwagon, with Sybase and Teradata being the latest. But what about the big three of the database market: Oracle, IBM and Microsoft? Turns out, one is embracing Hadoop, another is dismissing it, while another says it's been offering it for almost a decade.
Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft exec who rose despite THAT BSOD video (computerworld.com)

ericatcw writes: Most /.ers know that old Bill Gates demo where Windows 98 crashes catastrophically after the hapless assistant plugs in a scanner (it's only been watched on YouTube 1.5 million times). Ever wonder what happened to that young guy? Rather than being fired or exiled to the mailroom, Chris Capossela kept rising. Today, he's back in the spotlight, as Microsoft's marketing veep for Office, Exchange, SharePoint and their new hosted equivalents. Capossela explains what Office's ace in the hole is in its fight for big business against Google Apps, how Microsoft is starting to co-opt Twitter, and how the Redmond culture really is a bit like the Borg.

Submission + - Adobe takes on Microsoft role in eBook market (computerworld.com)

ericatcw writes: Barnes & Noble, Sony and other e-book vendors may have the manufacturing muscle, but the brains directing the challenge against Amazon.com's Kindle eBook Reader is Adobe Systems. Like Microsoft, Adobe has built a formidable ecosystem of partners to whom it supplies software such as its encryption/DRM-creating Adobe Content Server. Adobe paints Amazon as being like Apple: secretive and playing badly with others. Amazon argues it just ain't so, and takes a jab, along with other critics, at Adobe's alleged open-ness.
Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft's top devs don't seem to like own tools (computerworld.com)

ericatcw writes: Through tools such as Visual Basic and Visual Studio, Microsoft may have done more than any other vendor to make drag and drop-style programming mainstream. But its superstar developers seem to prefer old-school modes of hacking code. During the panel at the Professional Developers Conference earlier this month, the devs also revealed why they think writing tight, bare-metal code will come back into fashion, and why parallel programming hasn't caught up with the processors yet.
The Courts

Submission + - isoHunt founder: P2P can create post-piracy world (computerworld.com)

ericatcw writes: Despite facing lawsuits from Hollywood AND the Canadian music industry, popular BitTorrent search engine isoHunt has so far evaded the same fate of P2P filesharing networks Napster, SuperNova and The Pirate Bay. One reason, 26-year-old founder Gary Fung told Computerworld, is that isoHunt uses the same approach as Google. Moreover, isoHunt is working with at least one record company to remove torrents leading to copyright-infringing music, says Fung. Fung's real hope is to actually broker a truce between consumers and content owners, and he's launched a new site to do so.
Microsoft

Submission + - Linux's share of netbooks is surging, not sagging (computerworld.com)

ericatcw writes: ChromeOS has yet to arrive to save the dying Linux netbook, but no matter: Linux is doing just fine on tiny laptops. According to Computerworld, about a third of of the 39 million netbooks shipping this year will come with Linux. Linux may actually overtake Windows on netbooks by 2013, according to ABI Research's forecast, as ARM-based netbooks running Moblin, ChromeOS, Android and Ubuntu gain popularity. Could that be why Microsoft recently listed Red Hat and Canonical as official competitors for the first time? ABI analyst Jeff Orr tells Computerworld a tactic that he thinks would help Microsoft stave off Linux on ARM.

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