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MESH Computers already selling triple-core AMD Phenom-based systems

March 14th, 2008 admin No comments

Though conspicuous by its absence on AMD’s processor page but announced some six months’ ago, the company is now shipping, in volume, triple-core processors based on its K10 architecture.

Indeed, MESH Computers is already listing at least two triple-core-equipped SKUs, comprising of the Phenom 8400 and Phenom 8600 parts, running at 2.1GHz and 2.3GHz, respectively.

Remember, though, that ‘losing’ a core from a monolithic quad-core architecture – whether by financial design or yield problems – also loses 512KiB of L2 cache, bringing the processor’s total L2 to 1.5MiB. L3 cache, which is shared, remains the same, at 2MiB

Processor-in-a-box models will be available soon, we’re told, although that’s akin to saying how long is a piece of string, right?

Codenamed Toliman, triple-core models will be a mainstay of AMD’s desktop processors business, with 45nm models planned for release later this year. We just hope that the company can roll out B3 stepping (erratum 298-free) models ASAP.

Is a triple-core Phenom faster than a dual-core (45nm) Core 2 Duo clocked in at the same speed? Will it be cheaper to the end-user? We’ll find out in due course.

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Free music site SpiralFrog finally debuts in N America

September 19th, 2007 admin No comments

SpiralFrog.com, a long-waited website that offers free music downloads with money coming from advertisers, finally announced its launch in North America on Monday.    The music service, which has arranged to pay record companies a cut of its advertising revenue, will allow anyone to access and download files from a library of more than 800,000 songs and 3,500 music videos, with new content being added every day. Music fans also will be able to view millions of artist bios, reviews, discography and album art, among other rich content features.

    ”We believe it will be a very powerful alternative to the pirate sites,” said Joe Mohen, chairman and founder of New York-based SpiralFrog Inc. “With SpiralFrog you know what you’re getting … there’s no threat of viruses, adware or spyware.”

    To deter users from posting copies of songs and videos they get from SpiralFrog, the service requires that users register and log on to the site at least once a month. Otherwise, the content locks up and can’t be played.

    Specifically, users must wait 90 seconds before downloading each song, and also must fill out a questionnaire about their music buying habits. Also, the free tracks are in WMA format and cannot be burned to a CD nor played on an iPod. Labels and music publishers receive over half of the income derived from advertising on the site.

    The service was announced in August of 2006, but missed its early 2007 launch and instead underwent an executive shuffle that ended with the ouster of then-CEO Robin Kent.

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Skype Virus

September 12th, 2007 admin No comments

Skype has reportedly confirmed that its users have been affected by a PC virus, which sends fake instant messages.

In the Skype blog, the worm has been dubbed as w32/Ramex.A, which is affecting users of Skype for Windows PC.

Reportedly, the fake chat message has several versions and may appear to be a legitimate chat message, which may fool some users into clicking on the link.

The chat message received either from the Skype contact list or those not on the list carries an Internet link, which points to a .jpg image instead leads the users to a virus file.

By clicking on the link, the Windows Run/Save dialog box pops up asking for permission to save or run a .scr file. This is the virus file and shouldn’t be downloaded or run because users will get infected only after they have downloaded the link and run the malicious software.

Once a PC is infected with this virus, it sends a chat message to other users asking them to click on a Web link, and thus pass on the virus. The virus uses Skype’s public Application Program Interface (API) to access the PC.

Though Skype is updating their software to effectively stop this worm and its side effects, other antivirus vendors like – F-Secure, Kaspersky Lab, and Symantec have already updated their antivirus products to detect and remove the worm.

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Yahoo launches new text messaging service

August 30th, 2007 admin No comments

Yahoo (Nasdaq: YHOO) Latest News about Yahoo launched a new version of its Web-based mail service Monday, incorporating advanced communication functions it says have not been offered before.

The new version of Yahoo Mail includes “real-time communication” in the form of instant messaging and SMS Latest News about SMS (short message service) text messaging as well as several other performance enhancements that will mainly benefit those with up-to-date computers.

Users of Yahoo Mail, a Web-based mail service first launched a decade ago, can now send free text messages to cell phones in the United States, Canada, India and the Philippines, said Yahoo. They are also capable of firing off instant messages (IMs) to people who use the Yahoo Messenger and Windows Live Messenger IM services.

Get Out of Beta

Yahoo tested the features in a beta period during which the company sought and received suggestions from users, said Yahoo Mail Vice President John Kremer. “We have always been focused on making it easy for people to connect to those who matter most to them, and during the beta testing period of the new Yahoo Mail, we were able to incorporate a number of enhancements based on valuable feedback from our users.”

The company recognized the popularity of social networking and, in crafting the new mail product, tried to make “a more social e-mail experience,” said Kremer. Because some of the Ajax (Asynchronous JavaScript and XML)-enhanced functions now sprinkled throughout Yahoo Mail are not going to work on older computers, Yahoo is continuing to offer its “trusted Yahoo Mail Classic interface,” said Kremer.

Both versions now include unlimited e-mail storage Learn how SAN/iQ technology works with VMware. and accessibility from any computer or mobile device without the need for a software download.

Souped Up

Yahoo promises the new Yahoo Mail is faster and more user-friendly. The company said it refined the system’s Stay on budget with simple to install HP server technology. search capabilities so that users can narrowly focus their e-mail searches using filters for sender, folder, date, attachment type and message status

Right-click functionality is now available for Yahoo mail subscribers in the United States, enabling them to take additional action with underlined dates, names and keywords within messages. For example, users can right-click to add events directly to their Yahoo Calendars, add friends to their contacts, instantly view a Yahoo Map of an address or conduct a Web search.

Other enhanced features include tabbed navigation, a reading pane, an integrated calendar and an RSS reader. The new interface includes some personalization functions too. Users can choose one of six color themes.

The Web 2.0 Way to E-Mail

Yahoo said the service’s text-messaging feature is built on its IM platform. It says the “sleek, easy-to-use interface” that’s as fast and responsive as a desktop application offers “a more dynamic, Web 2.0 experience” for Web mail users. Yahoo said sending a text message is accomplished by simply entering a mobile phone number, typing the message and hitting send.

Using the instant messaging function is similarly painless, said Yahoo. “People can also easily convert their e-mail messages into IM chats or switch to a text message dialog with the click of a button, when friends come online or go mobile, and vice versa,” promised the company.

Yahoo said it partnered with AT&T (NYSE: T) Latest News about AT&T, Verizon (NYSE: VZ) Latest News about Verizon and the Canada-based Rogers Yahoo Hi-Speed Internet to offer “co-branded” versions of the new Yahoo Mail that will become available later this year. Also scheduled to come soon is a new Yahoo Mail version for Yahoo Small Business Mail users, said the company.

One-Stop Communication Shop

Yahoo has come a long way from its initial role as a search engine. The company is now a communications hub, said Yankee Group analyst Jen Simpson.

“Yahoo, among others, offers a pretty wide range of communication services now,” Simpson told TechNewsWorld. “It’s looking like a communication company as much as an Internet or software company. They are recognizing that, when people are communicating with one another through these services, there is a variety of ways they can do it.”

Simpson noted Yahoo has “a fairly large e-mail base, in the U.S. at least,” and she said the new features “do a nice job of tying people using that e-mail to one of the other additional services such as SMS texting.”

However, Yahoo is not alone in the field. Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) Latest News about Google, with its Gmail service, allows users to chat from the mail client.

Sometimes, all the bells and whistles can actually get to be too much, said tech analyst Alan Chapell of Alan Chapell Associates.

“The functionality, particularly the IM aspect, seems very cool, although I think it’s an open question regarding how many folks will use it given the myriad of alternatives,” he told TechNewsWorld.

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Webcasters fear royalty ruling

March 30th, 2007 admin No comments

Doubling of fees for music could silence ad-free Net radio stations

By Marc Fisher
Washington Post

At Contemporary-classical.com, Adrian Koren plays music that most people don’t want to hear. But for those who relish exploring the classical works of the past century, Koren’s Web radio station is a godsend.

For just the $300 a year he pays Live365.com for bandwidth and music licensing, the Massachusetts software developer can share his beloved music with people around the world.

For more than three years, Koren has led listeners – a few dozen at a time – to new discoveries, a process repeated tens of thousands of times on Web stations based in bedrooms, basements and attics. But a new ruling from the U.S. Copyright Royalty Board – an arm of the Library of Congress charged with determining how much radio stations must pay artists and record labels for songs they play – threatens to silence many, and perhaps most, webcasters.

“I run this as a hobby,” Koren says. “I get virtually no income from this – just some small fees from my share of CDs sold through links on the site, and that just helps pay for a few CDs. Copyright law should encourage innovation. If it’s having the opposite effect, something’s wrong.”

That’s not how the feds or the recording industry sees it.

The Royalty Board’s decision to more than double the fees that webcasters pay to play recorded music might seem unfair to mom-and-pop Web radio operators – and to many of Web radio’s 50 million listeners – but it’s about time artists got their share of the money that radio rakes in, says John Simson. He is executive director of SoundExchange, the organization that collects and distributes royalties, half to artists and half to record labels.

The heyday of advertising-free Internet radio might be coming to an end. Simson says small operators who play music and don’t try to sell ads “will have a hard time paying the rate” – a change about which he’s not shedding tears.

“The attitude that really has to change is the idea that the people playing this music on the Web are somehow doing artists a favor,” Simson says. Artists want their music to be heard, of course, and the industry likes the concept of Web radio, but Simson rejects the popular notion that the only thing small webcasters owe artists is the exposure they get from having their work streamed over the Internet.

Web stations are ringing the alarm about their imperiled future. At LuxuriaMusic – a California-based webcaster that offers an alluringly original blend of exotica, lounge, Space Age bachelor pad, bossa, Bollywood, Latin jazz and sophisticated rock – an announcement is running a few times each hour accusing the recording industry of “attempting to shut down all Internet radio stations” unless they cough up “more money than the business could ever possibly make.” The station warns that “only the very rich will be able to afford to broadcast on the Internet.”

That might not be hugely far from the truth, and the organization that represents artists and their labels acknowledges that it sees merit in culling some of the many thousands of Web stations that sprang to life during the wide-open first years of broadband.

“Is 10,000 stations the right number?” asks Simson of SoundExchange, which sought the higher royalties. “Does having so many Web stations disperse the market so much that it hurts the artist? What’s the right number of stations? Is it 5,000? Is it less? Are artists better off having hundreds of listeners on lots of little stations, or thousands of listeners on larger stations?”

But it’s not just hobbyists who could be wiped out by the jump in royalty rates. Kurt Hanson, who writes the Radio and Internet Newsletter at Kurthanson.com, also runs AccuRadio, an online provider of 320 streams of music, ranging from Chinese pop to West Coast jazz. Last year Hanson paid $48,000 in music royalties, with 6 percent of his $400,000 in revenues going to ASCAP and BMI, the umbrella groups that collect fees for composers, and 12 percent of his revenue going to performers and record labels through SoundExchange.

Under the new royalties plan, Hanson says he will owe $600,000 a year, vastly more than his total revenue. “We would literally be bankrupted,” the Chicago-based webcaster says.

Hanson has concluded that even some of the most popular webcasters might conclude that there’s no profit to be had in Internet radio. Pandora.com, the popular, innovative service that lets each listener create a personal radio station based on a recommendation engine (such as Amazon.com’s suggested-reading software), would have to pay $500 for each listener’s station – a cost that would drive the company out of business almost instantly.

Hanson contends that AccuRadio, which reaches as many as about 20,000 listeners at a time during Internet radio’s midday prime time (far more people have access to broadband at the office than at home), helps the music industry even without the new royalty rates. His stations, like most on the Web, go out of their way to promote music sales, selling about $40,000 worth of CDs per month via links to Amazon.com, displaying the names and covers of the discs being played, and streaming at a bandwidth low enough for decent listening quality but not high enough to substitute for owning the CD.

Simson isn’t buying that. He says artists deserve to get their money straight up. “The music is why people come to these stations,” he says. “Web radio is growing exponentially. These little stations develop a popular URL and then flip it and sell it for big money and the artists get nothing.”

But there’s no big money in a Web station such as Streamingsoundtracks.com, Eric Thornton’s hobby. Thornton, a scientist for a pharmaceutical company in Richmond, has played movie soundtracks on the Web for five years, reaching about 200 listeners at a time.

He struggles to break even, relying on listener donations to pay his bills for bandwidth and royalties. Thornton says he’s “all for making artists as much money as possible,” but the only choices he sees under the new rate structure are to base his station overseas or shut it down.

Message boards throughout the music-loving Web have been buzzing with protests and petitions against the new royalties, and Hanson believes that through an appeal, direct negotiations with the recording industry or congressional action, webcasters will win a reprieve from onerous royalties.

Simson pours water on those embers of hope. “This is the process the stations chose,” he says. “It may be unfortunate, but they chose to litigate with this process.”

Where webcasters and the recording industry do agree is on the unfairness of making tiny Web stations pay for performance rights while huge radio companies pay nothing.

Congress decided that Web stations must pay royalties to the composers of each song and to the performers and record labels, even as traditional AM and FM broadcasters continue paying only the composers – a quirk in the law that gives broadcast radio a huge advantage.

Simson agrees that “there’s really no justification for broadcast radio not paying, and we’re going to try to address that.”

Making over-the-air broadcasters pay more wouldn’t do much for Web stations that might be priced out of existence. “Internet radio is one of the few bright spots for the music industry,” Hanson says.

“Artists love Internet radio. Record companies are coming up with promotions for us. It’s the trade association lawyers who are playing hardball.”

Web radio was threatened with a big boost in royalties once before, in 2002. That time, Congress worked out a compromise that saved some stations, while others went dark. Will Congress step in again? The campaign for that to happen is already under way – on Web radio.

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IBM to unveil fast chip with optical connections

March 26th, 2007 admin No comments

IMB is to unveil a prototype chip using optical connections to increase the speed of moving data among chips to eight times that of previous technologies.

William M. Bulkeley, Wall Street Journal
26 March 2007
International Business Machines Corp. scientists plan to unveil a prototype chip today that uses optical connections to increase the speed of moving data among chips to eight times that of previous technologies.

The chip’s speed, clocked at 160 billion bits of data a second, would allow a high-definition movie to be transmitted over a short distance in a fraction of a second, compared with the half-hour it takes over home broadband connections, IBM said.

The technology could pave the way for devices that almost instantly transmit a digital X-ray to a doctor’s hand-held screen, a seismic analysis to an oil engineer’s workstation or movies around home networks.

Analysts briefed on the technology said it represents a breakthrough in combining traditional semiconductor technology with optical transmission of bits of light called photons, which are faster and more energy-efficient than electrons.

The new chip was developed by a team of scientists at IBM’s T.J. Watson Research center in Yorktown Heights, N.Y. The scientists will present their work at the Optical Fiber Conference in Anaheim, Calif.

Bernard Meyerson, chief technology officer for IBM’s hardware group, said that as semiconductor chips have packed more transistors into the same space, “data handling to move data on and off chips has become a bottleneck in terms of power consumption and area.” Today’s chips have copper wires leading off them onto printed circuit boards; the new chip has optical transceivers leading to optical pathways on printed circuit boards.

Source: http://www.moneyweb.co.za/mw/view/mw/en/page94?oid=82419&sn=Detail

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How to keep your browser optimized

March 26th, 2007 admin No comments

1) Make sure you have the latest updates. (do not try to download beta releases, they are not supported by all online websites such as online banking etc…)
2) Delete your temporary files.
3) Delete your cookies.

Categories: Internet Tags:

Browse Anonymously!

March 24th, 2007 admin No comments

When you browse the internet make sure that no one knows your real info. You can hide all your details and your IP address by browsing through a Proxy. A proxy is a medium between yourself and a web address that you are trying to reach/download from. There are a few great web proxy’s out there I will list a few of them for you.

www.proxyz.ca
www.webproxy.ca
www.unblock.ca
www.illusory.info
www.derived.info
www.eraseurl.com
www.eraseurl.info

Good luck

Categories: Internet, Security Tags:

Various Good Tests to make sure your computer is secure

March 20th, 2007 admin No comments

You can always www.dslreports.com for these tests, they have various ones that will make sure that your computer is properly protected. You can also do some other tests over there. For example: Speed Tests, Port Tests, etc…

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