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Submission + - Microsoft Revives Its Hardware Conference (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: Microsoft's Windows Hardware Engineering Conference, or WinHEC, was an annual staple of the '90s and '00s: every year, execs from Redmond would tell OEMs what to expect when it came to Windows servers and PCs. The conference was wrapped with software into Build in 2009, but now it's being revived to deal with not just computers but also the tablets and cell phone Microsoft has found itself in the business of selling and even making. It's also being moved from the U.S. to China, as an acknowledgement of where the heart of the tech hardware business is now.

Submission + - Japanese Phone Company Wants To Buy Dreamworks Animation (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: Softbank is the scrappy number three mobile phone company in Japan, and, since it bought Sprint last year, fills a similar niche in the United States. Dreamworks Animation has produced hits like "Shrek" and "Kung Fu Panda" but has never matched its rival Pixar. They seem to make an unlikely pair, but that hasn't stopped Softbank from trying to buy the animation studio.

Submission + - EU Data Protection Authorities School Google On Privacy Policy (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: In a letter to Google (PDF) that was published Thursday, the Article 29 Working Party, an umbrella group for European data protection authorities, said Google's privacy policy, in addition to being clear and unambiguous, should also include an exhaustive list of the types of personal data processed. But if all that information is overwhelming to users, Google should personalize the privacy policy to show users only the data processing it is performing on their data.

Submission + - U.S. Government's Interest In Yahoo's Data On The Decline

jfruh writes: Yahoo has seen a marked decline recently in government requests for the variety of personal data it stores about users of services ranging from Yahoo Mail to Flickr to Yahoo Answers. While it might be tempting to say that the government is laying off on the spying, Google saw an increase in requests during that period, which might just mean that Yahoo's declining popularity is a boon to its remaining users' privacy.

Submission + - World's Smallest 3G Module Will Connect Everything To The Internet (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: The U-blox SARA-U260 chip module is only 16 by 26 millimeters — and it's just been certified to work with AT&T's 3G network. While consumers want 4G speeds for their browsing needs, 3G is plenty fast for the innumerable automated systems that will be necessary for the Internet of Things to work. So look out, because with chips this tiny, pretty much everything's going to be online soon.

Submission + - Midwest Tech Companies Move Downtown To Attract Younger Workers (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: Tech companies in the U.S. Midwest have had a problem retaining talented young workers who migrate to the coasts seeking excitement and cultural offerings. But many are discovering that the solution was nearby all along, and are moving from suburban campuses to downtown offices, where the excitement of city life can happily co-exist with a reasonable Midwest cost of living.

Submission + - How Techies Should Pick A City To Live In (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: You've just graduated from college with a technical degree, and you're more mobile than you've ever been in your life or ever will be again. How do you decide where to settle? If you're trying to advance your technical career, you might want to try working through the checklist offered by Fred Shilmover. Shilmover is the CEO of a cloud-based company but his guidelines could apply to anyone in a technical field. (He picked Boston, by the way.)

Submission + - Dell's Unexpected Next Act: Stylish, High-Quality Tablets And PCs

jfruh writes: If Dell has a reputation in the PC market, it's as the company that got low-end PCs to customers cheaply. But after the great drama of founder Michael Dell taking the company private, the company is following a new path, adding higher-quality (and more expensive) products like the Venue 8 7000, the thinnest tablet on the market today, to its lineup. One analyst notes that "Because they are no longer reporting to Wall Street, they can be more competitive."

Submission + - IEEE Standards Group Seeks To Impose Order On The Internet Of Things (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: The so-called Internet of Things (IoT), under which tens of thousands of smart objects will interact with each other seamlessly, has a problem: a lack of uniform communication standards that will allow all those things to speak a common language. The IEEE is embarking on an ambitious effort to solve this problem, creating a standards group to bring order to IoT chaos.

Submission + - Braving Dengue Fever To Buy New iPhones In Tokyo (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: Do you think sitting on a cold sidewalk for a few days in a true testament to how much someone wants to be the first to get a new iPhone? But people lining up outside an Apple Store in Tokyo have an extra hazard to deal with: Japan's first outbreak of Dengue fever in 70 years, spread by mosquitos making their home in a nearby park.

Submission + - iPhone 6 Expected To Fetch Over $3,000 In China's Grey Market (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: Apple has yet to say when the new iPhones might arrive in China, but grey market dealers in Beijing expect unofficial shipments of the iPhone 6 from Hong Kong and Australia to start arriving in China this weekend. Saying 'Chinese people will buy anything,' Beijing electronics dealer Wang Qingyun said he expects initial prices will reach over 20,000 yuan ($3,251) and perhaps up to 25,000 yuan, depending on how many iPhone 6 units actually make it to Beijing.

Submission + - Scary Video Highlights Danger of Damaged Lithium Ion Batteries (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: As part of its work testing electronic components, the Japanese National Institute for Technology and Evaluation (NITE) tested batteries about the size of those used in cellphones. They were struck with a hammer then left on a work bench, unconnected from any apparatus. Later — the period of time is unclear from the edited footage — one of the batteries ruptures with a bang, flying across the laboratory. A second clip shows a similar battery erupting in a shower of sparks.

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