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Comment Google Apps, Emailchemy, Google Uploaders (Score 1) 385

I recently did something very similar with mail dating back to 1993 or so in multiple mailbox formats (Eudora, PST, Thunderbird mbox, etc.)

Get a Google Apps account http://www.google.com/apps/intl/en/business/index.html
This allows you to run a gmail interface with mail on your own domain.

If you need more than the available storage for free, you can pay for 25 gigs, but it seems like the free level will work for you.

For the PST files, upload them with Google Apps Migration for Microsoft Outlook
http://tools.google.com/dlpage/outlookmigration

Alternately, migrate the PSTs to Thuderbird using Emailchemy
http://www.weirdkid.com/products/emailchemy/

Then, if you're on a Mac (it seems you are) upload to Google Apps via the Google Email Uploader for Mac
http://code.google.com/p/google-email-uploader-mac/

This will upload everything you have in your Thunderbird environment. And it will take some time. At first it may look like the program has frozen, but give it a half hour or so to sort through all your Thunderbird folders, and then let it upload the mail overnight. It took me a few overnight uploads, but it was worth it.

Once you have it in Google its very searchable and flexible. You can for instance re-organize it using labels, and then re-download to Thunderbird via IMAP if you like.

Security

Submission + - Inside The Secret War Against Internet Spies (businessweek.com)

ahess247 writes: The U.S. government, and its sprawl of defense contractors, have been the victims of an unprecedented rash of similar cyber attacks over the last two years, say current and former U.S. government officials. "It's espionage on a massive scale," says Paul B. Kurtz, a former high-ranking national security official. Government agencies reported 12,986 cyber security incidents to the U.S. Homeland Security Dept. last fiscal year, triple the number from two years earlier. When the deluge began in 2006, officials scurried to come up with software "patches," "wraps," and other bits of triage. The effort got serious last summer when top military brass discreetly summoned the chief executives or their representatives from the 20 largest U.S. defense contractors to the Pentagon for a "threat briefing." BusinessWeek reports that the U.S. government has launched a classified operation called Byzantine Foothold to detect, track, and disarm intrusions on the government's most critical networks.

Comment Apple Can't Afford It, And Its A Bad Business Move (Score 1) 410

I just posted this to the Byte Of The Apple blog at BusinessWeek.com in response. - AAH

http://www.businessweek.com/technology/ByteOfTheApple/blog/archives/2007/11/apple_adobe_umm.html

Apple has $15.4 billion in cash, and as of today's closing price Adobe is worth nearly twice that at $27.5 billion. An Apple takeover would have to include a fair premium on top of that, which would make such a deal worth more than $30 billion easy.

The only way Apple could do it would be to issue stock, which would dilute its value, or take on debt. (Imagine a really big credit card.) And? Apple's stock on such a huge deal would be, um, Applesauce. Investors would flee. They usually do when big acquisitions are announced because they inject uncertainty, and investor hate uncertainty, and let's face it, Apple's on a very solid growth footing right now.

Here's the other problem: Platform Mix. As recently as 2005, the most recent year that Adobe broke the figure out, 75% of its revenue came from the Windows platform, and I'd venture to guess that that figure is about the same if slightly lower now. Watts is suggesting that an Apple-controlled Adobe would be able to encourage Windows users to switch favoring the Mac version of Adobe products, "while letting Windows versions trail behind."

Imagine buying a very expensive car, say a Jaguar, and then taking out its engine and replacing it with an inferior one. Not only have you made your car crappy to drive for yourself, but you've reduced its value substantially. Buying Adobe (which now owns Macromedia remember) and then hobbling the part of the business that brings in two-thirds to three-quarters of its revenue is a very bad business idea, and terrible way to squander Apple's hard-earned cash stockpile.

Sorry Brandon. Good idea? No.
Security

Ebay Hacked, User Info Posted 242

An anonymous reader writes "This morning a hacker posted the personal contact information and credit card data of 1,200 ebay users on the eBay.com Trust & Saftey forums. eBay pulled the Trust & Safety forums off line, but not before one user made a video of the hacked forums and posted it on youtube.com. eBay response is on the eBay chatter page, and seems to try and down play this "fraudster"'s activity."

Feed Engadget: cy-fi: the wireless iPod speaker for your bicycle (engadget.com)

Filed under: Portable Audio, Transportation

Although it's certainly debatable whether or not the cyfi truly is the "world's first wireless bicycle speaker and ultimate iPod accessory," it does look fairly well thought out. Aside from boasting an admittedly stylish design, the device weighs in at around three-ounces, mounts on nearly any frame, plays nice with your iPod / iPod nano and offers up six-hours of battery life. Additionally, it supports "multipoint broadcasting to up to four cyfi speakers," and it's slated to hit bike stores in early 2008 for $149.95.

[Via PlaylistMag]

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!


Feed Techdirt: Supreme Court To Determine If Patent Holders Can Shake Down Entire Supply Chain (techdirt.com)

While Congress continues to fight over patent reform (often missing the bigger issues for those that the lobbyists are most interested in), it's been the Supreme Court that's been doing its best to bring some sanity back to the patent system. After ignoring patent law as being a boring "commercial" dispute for years, the Supreme Court finally realized a few years ago that the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (that handles patent cases) had basically redefined patent law over the last few years, creating much of the mess we're in today. Suddenly, the Court started taking a bunch of patent cases -- and almost every time it slapped down CAFC and brought some common sense back to the patent system. Of course, there's still a lot more to do on that front, and apparently the Supreme Court agrees. It's now taken yet another patent case that could have major ramifications.

This case, officially between LG and Quanta, really concerns the question of how many times patent holders can get a cut of any component found violating a patent. Currently, patent holders will often sue up and down the food chain. So, if you happen to have a patent on a component within a motor that is used in automobile wipers, you could sue the motor maker, the wiper maker and the auto manufacturer -- and get all three to pay, even though the same product is used throughout the supply chain. This case will look at whether or not it makes sense to allow for that type of double, triple or quadruple dipping. Patently O has a good summary of the case, pointing out that it's effectively asking if the concept of the "first sale doctrine," which applies to copyrights, also applies to patents. If the Supreme Court follows its recent trend in overturning CAFC, this could have a big impact on a lot of patent cases. For example, it would entirely derail NTP's latest patent suits. In that case, NTP forced RIM into licensing its (questionable and likely to be invalidated) patents, and is now suing all the service providers who offer RIM's Blackberry -- effectively double dipping. Once again, it's nice to see both the sudden interest in patent law -- and what often appears to be very clear thinking on the part of the Supreme Court on the issue.
Hardware Hacking

Jobs' Next Fight — Dealing With iPhone Hackers 341

An anonymous reader writes "With Steve Jobs' recent announcement of his intention to fight off the independent iPhone developers, the question worth asking is: How will Apple try to defeat the hackers: Software updates, or lawsuits? Will Apple risk losing its most frequently (ab)used legal tool, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, in order to try and punish the developers of the iPhone unlocking tools? This CNET article explores the legal issues involved in this, which make it perfectly legal to reverse engineer your own iPhone, but illegal to share your circumventing source code with others."
Music

Submission + - Inside the Third Gen iPod Nano (businessweek.com)

ahess247 writes: When the leaked photos of the 3rd-gen iPod nano first hit the Web it quicky took the nickname "little fatty," but fat is a better phrase to describe its profits. BusinessWeek reports that a teardown analysis by iSuppli finds that it costs Apple only $58.85 to build the 4-gig iPod nano, and $82.85. But it also reveals some of Apple's suppliers, about which its usually very tight-lipped. Synaptics is back as the supplier of the click-wheel technology, beating out Cypress Semiconductor which had it previously. Also of note: The same Samsung CPU chip that powers the video and audio in the nano is being used in the iPod Classic as well.
United States

Homeland Security Funds LED Light That Blinds, Disorients 455

katzmeow writes "Ryand Singel's Wired blog notes that Homeland security has developed an LED flashlight that uses 'powerful flashes of light to temporarily blind, disorient and incapacitate people.' The idea is to use it to incapacitate people — 'arrest them' — on airlines, borders, etc. without using traditional weapons. The company's president Bob Lieberman says the tool is perfect for confronting 'border jumpers.' 'You don't want to hurt or kill them, just take them into custody,' says Lieberman. 'With this, they don't need to know English to comply.' The 'light saber' can even be scaled up to bazooka size for subduing crowds."
Businesses

Cisco to Kill Linksys Brand Name 262

Mav sent in this article that opens, "In a roundtable with the European press, John Chambers confirmed the "end of life" of the Linksys name, being replaced by the new and redesigned Cisco branding." He explains, "It will all come over time into a Cisco brand. The reason we kept Linksys' brand because it was better known in the US than even Cisco was for the consumer. As you go globally there's very little advantage in that."
Mozilla

Thunderbird to Leave Mozilla Foundation 239

An anonymous reader writes "MozillaZine is reporting that Mozilla Thunderbird is to move to a 'new separate organizational setting' as the Mozilla Foundation focuses more and more on Mozilla Firefox. Citing a blog post by Chief Lizard Wrangler Mitchell Baker, MozillaZine outlines the three possibilities for Thunderbird that are being considered: 'one is to create a entirely new non-profit, which would offer maximum independence for Thunderbird but is organisationally complex. A second option is to create a new subsidiary of the Mozilla Foundation for Thunderbird, which would keep the Mozilla Foundation involved but may mean that Thunderbird continues to be neglected in favour of Firefox. A final option is to recast Thunderbird as community project, similar to SeaMonkey, and set up a small independent services and consulting company to continue development. However, there are concerns over how the Thunderbird product, project and company would interact'. Lead Thunderbird developer Scott MacGregor favours the third option."

BusinessWeek Advocates Microsoft Piracy 181

xzvf writes "In a lengthy editorial, BusinessWeek advocates allowing users in China and India to pirate Microsoft software so that it can obtain the same level of market share there as it has in the US and Europe. From the piece: 'If Microsoft succeeds in discouraging piracy of Windows in China and India, it is far more likely to drive the user of the pirated software into the Linux camp than it is to steer them into the land of paid-up Windows users. Microsoft's IP management strategy in China and India should instead focus on securing the victory of Windows on the desktops of all PC users. That may require deliberately lax enforcement efforts against pirated copies of Windows for the short and medium term. Only after the Linux threat lessens might Microsoft have the luxury of tightening up piracy protections, as it is now doing in the West. Microsoft can afford to be patient.'"

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