40754969
submission
Meshach writes:
Story out of Canada about some telephone customers in Canada are receiving bills of up to $100000 due to a coding errors in the billing system. The company is trying to contact all customers impacted by the error.
40439889
submission
Meshach writes:
Google has been found guilty for refusing to take down a libelous search result in an Australian court. Music promoter Milorad Trkulja sued Google for refusing to take down links to website articles promoting libelous claims Trkulja was connected to organized crime in Melbourne. Google has told Trkulja to contact the sites on which the offensive materials were posted, as those webmasters controlled the content but the supreme court found Google was responsible for removing the damaging links the moment Trkulja asked it to remove the content. As a result of the jury's decision in the case, Google will have to pay $200,000 in damages to Trkulja.
39856801
submission
Meshach writes:
Report out of New York claiming that as people use electronic devices more and more persons with nickel allergies are reacting to their phones. Apparently about one-third of BlackBerry devices and 90 percent of flip phones contained nickel, and more than half of flip phones containing cobalt (the most common irritants). Conversely none of the iPhones or Androids studied tested positive for either metal. For those allergic to metals, symptoms range from dry-itchy patches on the face or ears to redness, blistering, lesions, and sometimes oozing.
39720387
submission
Meshach writes:
Interesting article from Toronto about how although they have been virtually abandoned for music cassette tapes are being actively used an an inexpensive storage medium. Companies looking to archive large amounts of data are always looking for a cheaper solution and cassette tapes are the newest fad. Apparently when access time is not a priority they are perfect and they require zero energy use when not in use.
39077887
submission
Meshach writes:
Article in the Wall Street Journal about how Microsoft is entering the retail market for computers. With Windows 8 being released Microsoft is dictating more and more to big-box retailers how their systems should be marketed to consumers. Also The number of Microsoft stores selling directly to consumers is doubling.
39074673
submission
Meshach writes:
Research has suggested that human activity triggered an earthquake in Span that killed nine and injured over three hundred. Drilling deeper and deeper wells to water crops over the past 50 years were identified as the culprit by scientist who examined satellite images of the area. It was noted that even without the strain caused by water extraction, a quake would likely have occurred at some point in the area but the extra stress of pumping vast amounts of water from a nearby aquifer may have been enough to trigger a quake at that particular time and place.
37926587
submission
Meshach writes:
There is an article in the Globe and Mail that says that ase for Blackberry has stopped growing the first time in the companies history and speculates that this is the beginning of the end of RIM. The main problem seems to be that RIM's new Blackberry models like Bold and Torch are selling poorly and their production costs are so much higher then other products manufactured in China. A recent research report says that after BB10 the company will need to sell or drastically change its business model.
36415353
submission
Meshach writes:
Twitter is in the process of updating the API used by third party clients. The changes are making it more difficult for third-party clients to interface with the service by (among other things) requiring them to be inspected and approved by Twitter.
35466099
submission
Meshach writes:
A report out of The Atlantic asks astronomers what odor space has. The reports vary from seared steak to hot metal and welding fumes. But the consensus is clear: space stinks.
30333315
submission
Meshach writes:
A team in Canada has discovered several new species of dinosaurs that may help fill in evolutionary gaps. The new species linked large and small boned dinosaurs and may help fill evolutionary gaps.
30172163
submission
Meshach writes:
Google has been pressuring applications and mobile game developers to use its costlier in-house payment service, Google Wallet for quite some time. Now Google warned several developers in recent months that if they continued to use other payment methods — such as PayPal, Zong and Boku — their apps would be removed from Google Play, The move is seen as a way to cut costs for Google by using their own system.
29604497
submission
Meshach writes:
Last year some physicists in Italy reported they had seen an object travel faster then light. Now that group is retracting the previous claim and blaming the mistake on a loose cable. Apparently more experiments are planned to see if the speed limit for the universe can be exceeded.
29408521
submission
Meshach writes:
After twenty years Microsoft has announced that the familiar flag logo is being dropped from Windows 8 and a new Microsoft logo as been adopted.
29401525
submission
Meshach writes:
New research out of California is suggesting that Stonehenge was based on a 'magical' auditory illusion. Apparently the layout of the stones corresponded to the regular spacing of loud and quiet sounds created by acoustic interference when two instruments played the same note continuously.
28695087
submission
Meshach writes:
There are reports surfacing that Julian Assange will be appearing on The Simpsons February 19. The visit is part of the extravaganza for the shows 500th episode. Assange (who is still under house arrest) recorded his lines over the phone from a spot unknown to The Simpsons producers.